Office of Science and Technology Policy Blog

  • RFP-EZ 2.0: Expanding Opportunities for Small Businesses

    The RFP-EZ Marketplace is an online platform and built tools that make it easier for innovative small tech businesses to bid on government contracts, while also making it easier for federal agencies to identify the bids that offer the best value for taxpayers. RFP-EZ was launched by the U.S. Small Business Administration in January 2013 and was developed by the SBA and one of the inaugural Presidential Innovation Fellows teams.

    Before RFP-EZ was launched, most such Requests for Proposals contained highly specialized language that only seasoned government contractors understood.  By simplifying the language and streamlining the process, RFP-EZ has opened up the bidding process to hundreds of small businesses offering services at significantly lower prices.  RFP-EZ has yielded very promising results and is already saving taxpayer dollars, with prospects for even more savings going forward.

    Building on the early successes of the program, SBA recently announced that the new and improved RFP-EZ Marketplace is ready for business and another round of Federal procurement innovation is underway. The RFP-EZ Marketplace has been enhanced to include simplified bidding, simplified listings, and an expanded selection of opportunities such as web design, mobile application development, content management, and video production and transcription. Check out existing opportunities at https://rfpez.sba.gov/.

    Leveraging feedback we received from entrepreneurs and Federal contracting officers, the current class of Presidential Innovation Fellows will continue work to improve the platform, scale its initial results across the Federal Government, and add innovative new capabilities.

    If you’re interested in helping to move the ball forward on PIF projects, please get involved!  You can learn about current and future rounds of the PIF program at whitehouse.gov/innovationfellows, contribute code on GitHub, or visit Data.gov to help turn openly available government data into new products, services, and jobs.

    John Paul Farmer is a Senior Advisor in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy

  • Accelerating Broadband Infrastructure Deployment Across the United States

    Broadband access is essential to the Nation’s global competitiveness.  It drives job creation, promotes innovation, expands markets for American businesses, and supports improved education, health care, and public safety.  Today, however, too many areas still lack adequate access to this crucial resource.
     
    One way the Administration is working to bolster broadband deployment is by reducing barriers for companies to install broadband infrastructure on Federal properties and roads. The Federal Government owns or manages nearly 30 percent of all land in the United States, including 10,000 buildings nationwide. These properties can provide excellent pathways for deployment of broadband infrastructure. That’s why, last year, President Obama signed an Executive Order to make broadband construction projects along Federal roadways and properties cheaper and more efficient. 
     
    Today, we are announcing new steps to build on this progress, including the launch of several new tools and resources to help make it easier for companies to build out high-speed Internet, particularly in underserved communities, and the release of a progress report  on implementation of the President’s Executive Order. Both the tools and the report were developed by a Federal Working Group made up of 14 Federal agencies charged with managing Federal properties and roads. 
     
    Some of the tools and resources for broadband carriers released today, in response to recommendations from the Working Group, include:
    • An interactive mapping tool  that allows carriers and communities to view and identify opportunities to leverage Federal properties for the deployment of high-speed Internet networks. For example this map can help the wireless industry identify Federal rooftops where commercial antennas can be placed to support wireless networks. The national map includes data on broadband availability, environmental or historic information, property locations, and contact information so companies can easily obtain more information. The map was built with open government data, displayed in a new way to make it easier for carriers to take advantage of Federal assets in planning or expanding their networks. 

    Broadband Map of Federal Property

    This interactive map displays Federally owned buildings and lands, with point of contact information, where a commercial antenna installation might be sited. The map also contains several layers of data useful to broadband deployment. The map layers offers visibility into, for example, the location of National parks, protected wilderness areas, and lands of tribal significance. (Screenshot from 9/16/13)

    • A “Dig Once” guide,  which includes best practices and policies to help carriers time their broadband deployment activities to periods when streets are already under construction—an approach that can reduce network deployment costs along Federal roadways by up to 90 percent.

    • A new broadband inventory toolkit  that can serve as a one-stop shop for companies to access permitting forms, lease agreements, and other Federal broadband application documents from various agencies. This web page will make it easier for carriers to navigate the process for accessing Federal lands and properties, which can involve multiple Federal and state agencies that have their own processes for granting access to their assets.  In addition, the General Services Administration, as directed in the Executive Order, is working to implement common forms and templates across agencies, such as a single master application for deploying broadband on Federal properties, to provide multiple broadband service providers and public-safety entities with streamlined business documents for the deployment of wireline and wireless facilities on Federal property. Going forward, the Department of Agriculture is also working to develop an on-line electronic application form to further streamline the process.

    • In the coming weeks, we will also be launching an online broadband projects platform, located on the Department of Transportation’s Federal Infrastructure Projects Permitting Dashboard , which will allow agencies to identify and expedite key broadband projects and to publicly track their status.

    These are just a few examples of advances resulting from the Working Group’s efforts over the past year to identify challenges in deploying broadband infrastructure and develop solutions to improve the process. 
     
    While much work remains ahead, the Obama Administration is committed to continued collaboration across all levels of government and with the private sector and general public to help accelerate broadband deployment and drive meaningful community outcomes.  
     
    Ron Hewitt is the Director for the Office of Emergency Communications at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and Martha Benson is the Public Buildings Service Assistant Commissioner at the General Services Administration’s Office of Real Property Asset Management. Ron Hewitt and Martha Benson are the Co-Chairs of the Broadband Deployment on Federal Property Working Group.
     

  • Nominate a Connected Educator as a White House Champion of Change

    In honor of Connected Educator Month this October, the White House will host a “Champions of Change” event to celebrate local leaders in education, whose creative approaches in using technology to enhance learning serve as examples of what we should strive for in every classroom, for every child. These leaders will be invited to the White House to celebrate their accomplishments and showcase their actions to support more connected schools and students.

    This past June, President Obama launched the ConnectED Initiative, a bold effort to connect 99% of America’s students to high-speed wireless internet in five years, calling on the FCC to modernize its existing E-Rate program to meet this goal. As part of the initiative, the President challenged the federal government as well as states, districts, schools and communities to help prepare all teachers to thrive in a connected classroom and leverage technology to re-imagine learning.

  • Space Laser: Testing an Interplanetary Internet from the Moon

    Space Laser To Prove Increased Broadband Possible

    Artist's rendering of the space laser communications demo. (Image courtesy NASA)

    Tonight, if you’re around the East Coast, you may be able to see a bright object quickly rising near the horizon about a half hour before midnight.

    NASA's Lunar Atmosphere Dust Environment Explorer (or LADEE) mission is scheduled to launch from the Wallops Flight Facility on Virginia’s Eastern Shore at 11:27 pm EDT tonight. It should be visible (clouds permitting) up and down the East Coast, and as far inland as Pittsburgh.

    LADEE is a robotic mission that—after taking about 30 days to make the trip—will enter orbit around the Moon to gather detailed information about the extremely thin lunar atmosphere, conditions near the surface, and environmental influences on lunar dust. A thorough understanding of these characteristics could help scientists understand other planetary bodies and inform any future exploration—human or robotic—of the Moon.

    But there’s more to LADEE than just dust.

    In President Obama’s historic 2010 Kennedy Space Center speech, as he challenged NASA to send humans into deep space for the first time, he also noted that this type of exploration would require investments in and development of breakthrough space technologies.

    LADEE will be testing one of these breakthrough technologies—specifically, a new kind of laser communications. One of the big problems with any space mission is getting data back to Earth. Right now, all of those cool pictures from our Mars rovers are only able to come back to Earth very slowly—think of the early days of dial-up Internet.  Just one image from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter takes about 1.5 hours to transmit back to Earth. LADEE includes the first test of laser communications that can potentially lead to higher data rates from deep space, which could mean broadband speeds from the Moon. Some might call this the first step of an Interplanetary Internet.

    Future and more complex missions will require significantly higher data rates than existing communications allow, enabling entirely new missions of scientific discovery using next generation instruments and high-data-rate communications for exploration. The technology demonstrated by optical communications on LADEE is directly applicable to the next generation of NASA's space communications network. This is why NASA’s newly created Space Technology Mission Directorate is pursuing the Laser Communications Relay Demonstration—the next step in developing space communications systems of the future. The demonstration will use lasers to encode and transmit data at rates 10- to 100-times faster than radio.

    Optical laser communications will enable a variety of robust future science and human exploration missions—providing a higher data rate, and delivering more accurate navigation capabilities with reduced size, weight, and power requirements.  Someday, maybe, the Solar System will be peppered with a high-speed interplanetary communications network much like the wireless Web currently spinning here on Earth.

    Tonight’s scheduled launch will be carried live on NASA TV. You can also track mission status by following @NASALADEE or at the mission website.

    Phil Larson is a Space Policy Advisor at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. Mike Gazarik is NASA Associate Administrator for Space Technology.

  • Inspired to Innovate, Students Drive Entrepreneurship on Campus

    Last year, President Obama proclaimed November as National Entrepreneurship Month—a time to celebrate the hard work, ingenuity, and courage of America’s thinkers, doers, and makers.

    Inspired by that Proclamation, a number of groups at the University of Michigan—including the Center for Entrepreneurship, the Entrepreneurship Commission, and more than a dozen student-entrepreneurship organizations on campus—partnered to hold the first-ever university-wide Month of Entrepreneurship. This past spring, that effort resulted in more than 30 unique events relating to entrepreneurship and innovation.

    Below, University of Michigan Student Body President, Manish Parikh, shares his experiences helping to coordinate the Month of Entrepreneurship and promote entrepreneurship on campus.

  • White House and Hill Reps Single-minded on the Value of Neuroscience

    This summer I joined with Congressman Chaka Fattah (D-PA) and more than 40 scientists, advocates, and business leaders at Philadelphia’s University City Science Center to discuss recent advances in neuroscience research. The meeting gave OSTP and the Congressman an opportunity to brief some of the Nation’s top brain researchers and thought leaders on Federal investments and initiatives in neuroscience and related areas, and the importance of public-private partnerships in advancing neuroscience exploration.

    The Obama Administration is committed to harnessing science to understand the underpinnings of brain diseases, improve the diagnosis and treatment of traumatic injuries to the brain, and apply the latest discoveries about the neuroscience of teaching, learning, and development in educational settings across the country. In April, for example, the President announced the launch of the Brain Research Through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative, which is focusing in part on developing better technologies and tools to accelerate progress in this important domain.

    The Administration has had a longstanding interest in neuroscience. At the Philadelphia meeting, I provided an overview of a series of related initiatives and activities in areas such as neurodegenerative disease, mental health, behavioral science, and neuroethics. Such efforts would be difficult indeed without the strong support of leaders like Rep. Fattah, who worked closely with OSTP in 2011 to establish the Interagency Working Group on Neuroscience, which coordinates research among more than a dozen agencies under the National Science and Technology Council. For a more detailed description of the recent Philadelphia meeting, click here.

    Philip Rubin is Principal Assistant Director for Science at OSTP