Author: Mary-Louise Hoffman|| Date Published: August 24, 2017
A subsidiary of Huntington Ingalls Industries (NYSE: HII) has received a potential five-year, $78 million task order to support the U.S. Marine Corps‘ efforts to manage consequences from accidental or intentional chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear and high-yield explosive attacks.
Huntington Ingalls’ Camber business will provide engineering and technical support services to the CBRNE Consequence Management program, the Defense Departmentsaid Wednesday.
The program encompasses methods and measures designed to safeguard U.S. forces, businesses and the general public from inadvertent or deliberate releases of CBRNE agents.
The task order was awarded through the General Services Administration’s Acquisition Solution for Integrated Services contract vehicle and has a one-year base period valued at nearly $15 million.
Work will occur in Washington, D.C., and could extend through Aug. 22, 2022, if all options are exercised.
Newport News, Virginia-based Huntington Ingalls completed its $380 million acquisition of Camber in late 2016 to form a government services segment called Technical Solutions.
Client Solution Architects has appointed Ellen Barletto as chief growth officer, expanding her leadership responsibilities after nearly two decades with…
Brian Meyer, federal field chief technology officer at Axonius Federal, said cybersecurity asset management could help government agencies make dozens…
“Technology transformation company Red River has acquired Invictus International Consulting to expand its cybersecurity and enterprise modernization capabilities to support…
Synergy ECP, a software engineering, cybersecurity and systems engineering services provider, has acquired NetServices, a company offering secure, mission-focused technology services. The…