Twenty-two employees across the Army Materiel Command enterprise are receiving recognition for missions they accomplished in the fourth quarter of 2020 and the first quarter of 2021.
The employees, including logistics management specialists, contracting officers and program analysts, received AMCâs Employee of the Quarter honors for their work going above and beyond to meet deadlines and exceed expectations. They represent AMCâs âbest of the bestâ employees across the world.
âOur workforce is the foundation of all we do at Army Materiel Command,â Maj. Gen. Bob Harter, AMCâs chief of staff, said. âThe Employee of the Quarter awards allow us to recognize the outstanding contributions and impactful performance of those who have gone above and beyond. These great leaders set the example for others to follow.â
46 REDSTONE ARSENAL, Ala. Twenty-two employees across the Army Materiel Command enterprise are receiving recognition for missions they accomplished in the fourth quarter of 2020 and the first quarter of 2021.
The employees, including logistics management specialists, contracting officers and program analysts, received AMC’s Employee of the Quarter honors for their work going above and beyond to meet deadlines and exceed expectations. They represent AMC’s “best of the best” employees across the world.
“Our workforce is the foundation of all we do at Army Materiel Command,” said Maj. Gen. Bob Harter, AMC’s chief of staff. “The Employee of the Quarter awards allow us to recognize the outstanding contributions and impactful performance of those who have gone above and beyond. These great leaders set the example for others to follow.”
By
Sydney J. Freedberg Jr. on December 09, 2020 at 4:12 PM
The Army remains the leading user of Other Transaction Authority, but the other services are starting to catch up. SOURCE: Center for Strategic & International Studies (CSIS)
WASHINGTON: The Pentagon’s use of Other Transaction Authority, which bypasses a sclerotic contracting system, rose 75 percent in fiscal 2019 alone, according to a new analysis of Defense Department data by the Center for Strategic & International Studies. Since 2015 – the year Other Transaction Authority first took off, spurred on by congressional reforms – the annual value obligated under OTAs has soared
712 percent.
CSIS scholar Rhys McCormick delved deep into the Federal Procurement Data System database to come up with both those staggering big-picture trendlines and some intriguing caveats.