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By Megan Lisago
Jan. 29, 2003
Unisys moving on TSA systems
Despite the uncertainty over the federal
budget for fiscal 2003, Unisys Corp. has
awarded 40 subcontracts to help it get
the Transportation Security Administration's
information technology infrastructure
off the ground.
TSA tapped Unisys Aug. 2, 2002, for its
billion-dollar Information Technology
Managed Services (ITMS) program. Later
that month, the agency awarded the first
two work orders under the deal.
The first order covers the creation of
enterprise and security operations centers.
The second covers IT equipment for TSA
headquarters, 429 airports nationwide
and field offices.
The funding for fiscal 2003 is estimated
at $67.5 million for the first order and
$154 million for the second, officials
said. Congress is still wrangling over
budget details, and TSA, like most civilian
agencies, is operating under a continuing
resolution.
Meanwhile, Unisys is moving on the ITMS
job and Kronos Inc. is the latest to sign
a subcontract -- to automate pay policies
for TSA's 60,000 employees.
According to Unisys, many other companies
have finalized agreements to provide such
services as telecommunications and networking.
They include:
Advanced Management Technology Inc.,
ARINC Inc., BearingPoint Inc., Client
Network Services Inc., Computer Sciences
Corp., DynCorp Systems and Solutions LLC,
IBM Corp., PEC Inc., Reliable Integration
Services Inc., RS Information Systems
Inc., Technica Corp., Veridian Information
Solutions Inc., Communications Cabling
and Technology Inc., NRC Government Systems
Corp., World Wide Technology Inc., Apropos
Technology Inc., Art Technology Group
Inc., Darwin Partners Inc., Eteam Inc.,
Farragut International LLC, FDM Group
Inc., Information Systems Support, Intellitech
Consulting, Learning Systems International,
MCA Computer Group, Okena Inc., OpalSoft
Inc., Oracle Corp., Parsons Construction
Co., Preferred Systems Solutions Inc.,
Quality Support Inc., Qualserv Inc., Sabre
Inc., Sapphire Technologies, Summit Technologies,
SundRy Inc., TekSystems Inc., The Moore
Group, and VistaRMS.
Beyond their individual contributions,
those partners are part of a larger project.
ITMS emphasizes managed services, a relatively
new procurement strategy in which an agency
pays a company for technology solutions
that help fulfill defined goals as set
out by its mission.
The approach has received cautious praise
from the federal IT community, which is
watching to see how Unisys and TSA proceed.
President Bush signed legislation creating
the agency in November 2001.
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