Government Industry Archive

February 2009

U.K. Health Software Grows

By Matthew Potter | Feb 3, 2009

The Times of London reports on an investigation they did into large software programs contracted for by the U.K. government. Not surprisingly like many large programs these have seen significant growth in cost and schedule. They highlight a plan to build a comprehensive database of health records that would like doctors and hospitals. This program is now four years late and its costs have...

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Universities Wait for Stimulus Bill

By Matthew Potter | Feb 2, 2009

This article in Bloomberg describes the various groups of scientists and researchers hoping that the House version of the “stimulus” bill will pass. The bill includes several billion dollars for research into new sources of energy as well as making current systems more efficient. This being the Federal government the bill alone contains a variety of funds for different purposes....

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U.S. Government Delays E-Verify Rule

By Matthew Potter | Feb 2, 2009

The U.S. Government had implemented a rule that all companies receiveing defense contracts of over $100,000 had to use the E-Verify System to check their workers immigration status. Previously this had been voluntary. The original rule required use after January 15th, but this was delayed to February 20th by a lawsuit. Now the rule had been delayed again to May. HR.BLR.com reports that the...

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Earnings Up for CACI

By Matthew Potter | Feb 1, 2009

Continuing the trend seen with L-3 Communications CACI reports growth of almost 15% for the last quarter. PR Newswire carries the press release stating that earnings were up 15.9 percent for the quarter ending December 31. The company did increase its revenue projection for all of 2009, but did not raise their earnings. CACI feels that some of their increased U.S. operations will be offset...

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About Government Industry

BNET Government provides daily industry trends and global news coverage with insights for managers and executives within the world wide business of government contracting. We analyze new and interesting contract awards, government policy changes, and the trends in procurements and spending. There will also be discussions of the sector with a focus on small and innovative companies and business lines. The world's governments spend billions each year on a variety of hardware and services and the site will discuss how the money is being allocated.