Procurement and the AI EO — Helping federal CAIOs navigate the path ahead

Recently, the White House issued Executive Order 14110 – Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Artificial Intelligence. It’s the first governmentwide directive encouraging the responsible use of artificial intelligence.

Welcome CAIOs!

For many agencies, implementing EO 14110 means formalizing a new position: the Chief Artificial Intelligence Officer, who will drive the creation of each agency’s AI strategy and establish new governance. CAIOs will be tasked with implementing sophisticated risk management requirements so the projects they oversee comply with all applicable laws, regulations, and policies, including those addressing privacy, confidentiality, copyright, human and civil rights, and civil liberties.

In industry, companies of all shapes and sizes have brought on CAIOs to manage their workflows and augment their organizations’ skill sets. I’m encouraged to see their counterparts arrive in government, including our own at GSA, Zach Whitman.

So, to the AI specialists and leaders joining federal agency C-Suites, welcome! We at GSA’s Federal Acquisition Service are excited to help you get the tools you’ll need to accomplish your missions.

The work ahead

The promise of AI is incredible. The latest advancements in Large Language Models and Generative AI take a field that has been building up for more than 50 years to a new level. We can see agencies using AI to speed up workflows, improve how the public interacts with federal information, reveal new insights in our data, and improve how we design and deliver programs.

Over the next few months, CAIOs will work on strategies to drive innovation and manage the risks of AI. According to EO 14110, CAIOs will serve as the senior AI advisors to agency leadership and start weighing in on strategic decisions. You’ll work closely with Chief Information Officers and Chief Information Security Officers to set up the right safeguards for how the AI tools your teams and others within your agencies use will meet cybersecurity standards and best practices. Working together with leaders and staff throughout the organization, you may even prototype solutions that can illustrate the capabilities and risks of AI when delivering on your agency’s mission.

But wait, there’s more! You’ll also compile inventories, evaluate products, influence workforce development, prioritize projects, remove barriers, document use cases, assess performance, implement internal controls, and ensure your agency’s AI efforts comply with a host of existing laws and policies.

Time to prioritize

That is a big to-do list! To succeed, you may need outside resources like AI-centric development environments and hardware; SaaS providers who can provide access to AI modules; and early assistance from AI experts who can create custom AI solutions for specific purposes in your agency. You will also need to implement training for agency staff on how to use AI systems.

Several different GSA acquisition solutions can help CAIOs procure the AI products, services and solutions they need to achieve their missions. Here are a few:

  • GSA offers easy access to AI development tools from Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program (FedRAMP) – approved cloud service providers on the Multiple Award Schedule – IT Category.
  • Our Governmentwide Acquisition Contracts — Alliant 2, 8(a) STARS III, and VETS 2 — help agencies quickly and efficiently bring on IT service providers, some of whom can provide targeted AI services.
  • GSA’s Rapid Review report service scans the Multiple Award Schedule and provides a list of approved vendors that meet particular criteria, including common AI services from coding to training, typically in as little as one day. To get started, visit our Market Research as a Service page and order a Rapid Review.

Above all, remember that we’re here to facilitate the business of connecting you with the right technology solution. Contact us with your needs and we will guide you there.

Know the risks

EO 14110 provides the most comprehensive guidance to date on the necessity for agencies to fully consider the risks from their use of AI.

AI tools will be subject to rigorous assessment, testing, and evaluation before they may be used. After that, according to EO 14110, CAIOs must ensure that their AI systems undergo ongoing monitoring and human review, that emerging risks are identified quickly, that its operators are sufficiently trained, and that the AI functionality is documented in plain language for public awareness.

Importantly, EO 14110 charges CAIOs with ensuring their agency’s AI will advance equity, dignity, and fairness. This will require a mix of thoughtful stakeholder engagement and the sophisticated use of data and analytics to anticipate, assess, and mitigate disparate impacts. That includes being alert to factors that contribute to algorithmic discrimination or bias and proactively removing them.

We’re constantly calibrating the balance between convenience and compliance, which is particularly important when preparing to acquire technologies like AI that are new and evolving. Our contracts require vendors to comply with rules, policies, and regulations — including EO 14110 and the NIST AI Risk Management Framework — to ensure you have a safe, secure, sustainable IT infrastructure.

More to come

In 2020, GSA launched the AI Community of Practice to get practitioners from across government talking and sharing best practices, then set up an AI Center of Excellence to put their knowledge into action. Much of their work helped lay the intellectual infrastructure needed to carry out the governmentwide objectives of EO 14110. GSA itself is named in three:

  1. Develop and issue a framework for prioritizing critical and emerging technologies offerings in the FedRAMP authorization process, starting with generative AI.
  2. Facilitate access to governmentwide acquisition solutions for specified types of AI services and products, such as through the creation of a resource guide or other tools to assist the acquisition workforce.
  3. Support the National AI Talent Surge by accelerating and tracking the hiring of AI and AI-enabling talent across the Federal Government through programs including the Presidential Innovation Fellows and the U.S. Digital Corps.

As you can see, there will be much more to come as the government’s AI strategy goes into action. To quote GSA Administrator Robin Carnahan, “GSA is proud to play key roles in supporting this Executive Order to help ensure the federal government leads the way in the responsible, effective use of AI.”

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Acknowledging our Veterans, their contributions to the IT Category

In celebration of Veterans Day, I want to thank our Veterans for their service and dedication. I’m grateful for the sacrifices they have made for us. Our Veterans exemplify the qualities that enable our country to overcome the greatest obstacles.

GSA partnering with Veterans

GSA is dedicated to supporting Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Businesses (SDVOSBs) in the federal IT market. ITC currently has hundreds of highly skilled SDVOSBs between our Multiple Award Schedule – IT (MAS-IT) and the Veterans Technology Services 2 (VETS 2) and 8(a) STARS III IT services Governmentwide Acquisition Contracts (GWAC).

While SDVOSBs have many opportunities to participate in the IT marketplace, VETS 2 is currently the government’s only GWAC set aside exclusively for SDVOSBs.

I’m happy to say that the VETS 2 option was exercised earlier this year in February 2023. In total, 45 industry partners received their option. This will provide federal agencies with continued use of this best-in-class solution for their long-term IT service project needs, with the performance of task orders extending out through 2033. As of August 2023, VETS 2 has had more than 200 task order awards with over $1.4 billion in Obligated Sales and a Total Estimated Sales of over $3B.

The VETS 2 team has been hard at work training government agencies on the use of VETS 2, with more than 3,000 customers trained so far. If you’re interested, visit www.gsa.gov/events for a list of upcoming training opportunities.

SDVOSBs bringing real mission impact

Last year at this time, I shared several examples of the great work of our Veteran partners and I’m happy to bring fresh ones this year:

  • One of the DoD agencies recently awarded a $404 million order through VETS 2 to provide Enterprise IT Support Service for their Combat Capabilities Development Command Aviation and Missile Center (AvMC). Through these IT support services, the SDVOSB will fill the agency’s need to provide the personnel, services, and supplies necessary to enable the full lifecycle of IT support requirements across AvMC.
  • Another DoD agency also awarded a $24M task order award for extensive cybersecurity services. Our VETS 2 industry partners provided the defense agency with a service that is essential to protecting our nation’s security. Cybersecurity has become a fundamental IT service needed to keep our country safe and secure and VETS 2 can deliver these mission-critical national security services.

Veterans, looking to the future

Our commitment doesn’t stop with our existing contracts. Our next small business GWAC, Polaris, will have an SDVOSB pool as well. Polaris is being designed to assist agencies in acquiring customized IT services and IT services-based solutions while expanding opportunities for SDVOSB firms. Stay tuned to our Small Business Community of Practice Interact page for updates.

I’m grateful for the meaningful partnership we have with our SDVOSBs and for their continued hard work and dedication to helping agencies achieve their missions every day. I’m really excited for what the future holds.

Visit our website to learn more about VETS 2, MAS-IT, and Polaris or use our IT Solutions Navigator to find the vehicle that’s right for you.

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Fed tech for emergency preparedness: The GSA schedule and public safety

Preparing your agency to respond to an emergency is not limited to hurricane or wildfire season. From ensuring continuity of operations to how citizens and employees receive critical communications; emergency preparedness is a continuous effort and an integral part of being agile, disaster-ready, and capable of carrying out essential duties in various emergency situations.

What’s in your emergency preparedness toolkit?

Wireless technology is an important part of the federal government’s emergency preparedness strategy. Knowing what technology is available, how and when to integrate it into your telecommunications plan, and how to best leverage the capabilities of the vendor community is a key responsibility of every telecommunications program manager. GSA can help.

GSA’s Best-in-Class Wireless Mobility Solutions Program gives agencies an integral piece for their emergency preparedness toolkits.

Federal, state, local and tribal agencies can access wireless mobility solutions like cell phone services, Wireless Priority Service, special capabilities for first responders, enterprise mobility and satellite communications (SATCOM), and deployable cell towers and infrastructure.

Buying through GSA helps you connect with the best provider for your agency, and incorporate the capabilities to best serve your agency and citizens.

Along with Best-in-Class solutions and competitive vendor offerings, outstanding technical support is available from GSA through sdintake@gsa.gov.

Don’t fly the COOP; GSA has a Wireless Mobility Solution

Continuity of Operations planning (COOP) is another aspect of emergency preparedness and a fundamental responsibility of public and private entities. COOP is a federal initiative to ensure agencies are able to continue the performance of essential functions under a broad range of circumstances. Today’s changing threat environment increases the need for continuity capabilities and plans at all levels of government.

GSA’s Wireless Mobility Solutions team is focused on readiness for communications and information systems, and they can help agencies shape and improve their COOP strategy with cost-effective and secure offerings.

Whether you’re looking for new solutions or updating your existing emergency preparedness plans, GSA’s Wireless Mobility Solutions team is ready to assist.

Ready to learn more?

Attend GSA’s Wireless Mobility Solutions webinar “Wireless Solutions for Emergency Preparedness,” Nov. 6, 2-3 p.m. ET.

This webinar is for government staff who manage IT, agency mobility programs, purchase or manage mobility, or have a role in emergency preparedness or public safety. Learn more about trustworthy wireless solutions that support emergency preparedness and public safety, and can help your agency build mission resilience.

Topics will include:

  • Solutions to help ensure your agency is better prepared for an emergency;
  • How 5G will impact emergency preparedness and how you can plan for it; and,
  • Agency considerations for wireless technology for public safety and mission resilience.

Speakers from AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon will discuss some of the important issues facing public safety today, what technologies can better enable emergency preparedness, and what agencies should be doing right now to be better prepared.

Sign up today!

Also, visit our website to learn more about Wireless Mobility Solutions for your agency, or use our IT Solutions Navigator to find the vehicle that’s right for you.

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