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Keeping America safe
Virginia companies are snagging
major federal contracts to protect the homeland.
And they’re developing new tools to fight terror.
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by Garry
Kranz
for Virginia Business
September 2006
Jack Hermansen always believed
in the power of his company’s
name-recognition software. But if the chief technology
officer needed a clincher, it arrived via e-mail on Sept.
13, 2001, two days after terrorists slammed jetliners
into the World Trade Center towers and the Pentagon.
Sent by a U.S. Immigration and Naturalization agent,
its message was pleading.
“
He said, ‘How much does it cost, when can you get
it here, and have you broadened the coverage of names?’” recalls
Hermansen.
His Herndon company, then known as Language Analysis
Systems Inc., provides patented computational-linguistics
software that enables extensive data searches about particular
individuals.
Hermansen packaged the software
and dashed it off to the INS. Soon after came the results:
INS agents used
the application’s powerful searching capability
to quickly identity some 9/11 terrorists and trace them
to Florida, where they had enrolled in flight-training
schools. It was an epiphany for Hermansen’s small
defense contracting company. “That’s when
we all realized this was not some academic exercise,
but that it had tremendous value,” says Hermansen.
Apparently IBM agreed, acquiring the company earlier
this year and changing its name to Global Name Recognition.
Seldom have Virginia’s
defense contractors moved with such speed and sense
of purpose. As the United States
prosecutes the global war on terror and hunts down
potential enemies within its borders, Virginia firms
are assisting
in the fight. They are developing innovative technologies
that enable government security and military agencies
to identify and track known terrorists, choke off their
money supplies and communicate information more seamlessly
about potential threats to national security.
In fact, on the fifth anniversary
of 9/11, Virginia’s
homeland security industry has grown more over the last
five years than any other industry in the commonwealth.
Largely in response to the government’s broadened
focus on homeland defense, Virginia companies have
created 50,000 new information technology jobs. Plus,
they have
started more than 300 economic development projects,
worth $1.66 billion in new investment, according to
the Virginia Department of Economic Development.
Proximity to the nation’s
capital, especially to defense and intelligence agencies,
gives Virginia an
advantage over most states. Defense contractors, and
other Virginia firms, are capturing lucrative defense
contracts to provide a host of high-tech services:
from systems integration to secure communications networks
and specialized applications. Contractors include huge
conglomerates such as General Dynamics Corp. as well
as smaller firms serving special niches.
The growth has occurred despite the fits and starts that
characterized the federal procurement process during
the 2003 organization of the Department of Homeland Security
(DHS). In 2004, Virginia defense firms received a total
of more than $2 billion in procurement contracts from
the new federal agency, or about one-third of all contracts
awarded, according to the Consolidated Federal Funds
Report of the U.S. Census Bureau. That is about a 40
percent increase from 2003, when Virginia companies captured
about $1.43 billion in contracts. By 2005, some government
contractors were reporting record profits.
Foiling other threats
Getting a piece of the federal pie isn’t the
only motivation, though. Booz Allen Hamilton, a global
IT
consultancy headquartered in McLean, is on a mission
to bring down terrorists. Three Booz Allen employees
died at the Pentagon on 9/11. The event serves as motivation
for its Virginia work force of nearly 10,000 people,
many of whom are former members of military and intelligence
agencies. Booz Allen is fighting back the
best way it can, by foiling other would-be threats.
As part of a $250 million DHS
contract, Booz Allen is partnering with about a dozen
other companies (all but one from Virginia) to help
develop and deploy systems that would prevent attacks
involving
chemical, nuclear, and biological weapons and explosives. “The
attack [on 9/11] was something that affected our organization
up and down the ranks,” says Dennis O. Doughty,
Booz Allen’s managing director for global functional
capabilities. “There’s a high degree of
patriotism and love of country among our employees,
and a desire
to do what we can to make a difference in its defense.”
To execute such contracts, Booz Allen expects to create
as many as 4,600 new jobs in Virginia during the next
several years, paying average salaries of $79,000. Already
since 2004, 1,400 newcomers have joined Booz Allen as
part of a $133 million expansion of its facilities in
Fairfax County. Doughty says a disproportionate number
of the new employees will provide critical services and
support to defense, intelligence and homeland security
agencies.
Patriotism also runs high at
SRA International Inc., a Fairfax-based defense contractor
that went public three
years ago. Its technology is being used to help overwhelmed
intelligence analysts solve the problem of “info
glut,” having too much data and not enough time
or resources to thoroughly examine it all. SRA provides
a proprietary hardware platform and automated computational-linguistics
software that enables users to quickly pull out specific
items of data from reams of gathered intelligence.
“
The ability to share information between the national
level down to the state and local levels is especially
key to having an effective program that stops terrorist-type
activities early in their life cycle,” says Pat
Burke, senior vice president and director of SRA’s
command and control, communications and intelligence
sector.
In July, SRA snagged a DHS contract
that could be worth as much as $42.2 million during
the next four years to
provide “strategy and execution support services” to
the agency’s Office of Interoperability and Compatibility.
SRA also recently began providing support and data
analysis for the Smart Border Alliance, a DHS initiative
involving
numerous companies to create a tighter entry-and-exit
system for use at more than 400 ports, airports and
border crossings.
CEO Renato DiPentima says SRA
will hire 400 to 500 new full-time workers in 2006,
roughly half of whom will
provide specialized expertise in some facet of homeland
security. That is in addition to about 1,200 to 1,300
new workers hired during each of the past three years.
The new positions are needed to keep pace with the
company’s
growth. In 2005, SRA set records for contract awards
and revenue, reporting a 43 percent increase in revenue
to $881.7 million.
Even military hardware makers
are getting in on the action. For decades General Dynamics
in Falls Church made its
name as a leading manufacturer of armored tanks, submarines
and destroyers. Although those platforms still account
for the lion’s share of its business, General
Dynamics has diversified by providing information services
and
technology to the government in the areas of tactical
communications, intelligence analysis and professional
services.
In June, the company completed a $2.2 billion acquisition
of systems integrator Anteon International Corp. of Fairfax,
including most of its 9,600 workers. The move enables
General Dynamics to compete for several new pieces of
defense work. One involves a Homeland Security presidential
directive to develop commonly readable biometric identification
cards for federal employees. Another centers on providing
modeling, simulation and war-games tactical training
to soldiers getting ready to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan.
“
All these segments are high-growth sorts of things where
General Dynamics can apply its major strengths to do
a good job on the program and generate a good profit,” says
Roger Baker, the firm’s vice president for federal/civilian
agencies.
The single largest DHS award — an eye-popping $550
million — rests with Rosslyn-based Integrated
Coast Guard Systems (ICGS). The 200-employee company
was formed
in 2002 as a joint venture of Lockheed Martin Corp.
and Northrop Grumman Corp. ICGS is overseeing construction
and delivery of new deepwater assets for the Coast
Guard,
commonly known as the Integrated Deepwater System.
ICGS won the right to manage the initial phase of the
performance-based
contract from 2002 to 2006 and recently won a second
award term through 2011. The project is rebid every
four years or so.
The massive contract calls for
new deepwater assets, including a new fleet of ships
and maritime patrol aircraft,
to be purchased by the Coast Guard during the next
quarter century. ICGS serves as prime contractor, managing
a
sprawling ring of about 600 subcontractors scattered
across more than 40 states. Highlighting the undertaking
is construction of a new 418-foot-long National Security
Cutter, known as USCGC Bertholf, scheduled to enter
service in 2007. “This will be the most capable surface
ship the Coast Guard has ever owned and operated,” says
Leo S. Mackay Jr., ICGS’s president and a former
Top Gun-qualified F-14 pilot.
Indeed, the cutter will be about
40 feet longer than its predecessor and feature a displacement
of 4,300 tons.
That’s about the size of a midsize cruise ship.
Illustrating the Coast Guard’s increasing role
in homeland security, it will feature a greater array
of aviation facilities, command-and-control electronics
and intelligence capabilities. Up to eight Bertholf-class
cutters could be produced by 2012. Northrop Grumman
Ship Systems in Pascagoula, Miss., is building the
high-tech
vessel, with program managers in Rosslyn overseeing
timetables and cost schedules.
Along with the Bertholf, ICGS also is producing a new
medium-range maritime air patrol craft. The Spanish-made
CASA CN-235 plane will be equipped with forward-looking
infrared radar and other critical systems used for sea
surveillance. As many as 36 aircraft could be built during
the life of the contract.
While new deepwater assets are
under construction, ICGS has been busy modernizing
the Coast Guard’s existing
fleet, upgrading access to classified intranets inside
defense, intelligence and security agencies. This reflects
the Guard’s stepped-up role in intelligence gathering,
surveillance and collaborating with other departments
in DHS, says Mackay.
Enough business to go around
Virginia companies that provide high-end, secure
communications systems also are getting a chance
to shine. Bantu Technologies
in Falls Church, for instance, is zeroing in on one
of the sore points raised by the 9/11 Commission:
government’s
inability to rapidly and easily communicate information
across various networks. Specifically, Bantu has implemented
its instant-messaging software across different enterprise
portals used by
the Army, Navy and Air Force. Bantu’s technology
provides the underlying communications platform that lets military leaders rapidly
and securely exchange data. The company’s technology is designed to adhere
to the military’s stringent security requirements.
Equally innovative is McLean-based
Tenix America, a subsidiary of Australian company The
Tenix Group. The Virginia firm finished its fiscal
year in June with
year-over-year revenue growth of about 500 percent, a spurt that will probably
lead the company to add about a half dozen employees during 2007. President
Sam Maccherola, although declining to disclose revenue,
says his firm’s homeland
security business produces about 10 to 15 percent of its entire operations.
Tenix sells a data diode, similar
in size and shape to a small DVD player, to numerous
DHS agencies. It is the first company to receive the
highest level of
certification from the National Security Administration after tests proved
its software could guarantee the security of classified
information. Known as EAL
7, the certification permits Tenix to market its product with a “100 percent
guarantee that data cannot leak back down” and be seen by unauthorized
users, Maccherola says.
Virginia’s critical mass
of defense contracts is prompting some localities to
make homeland security a linchpin of economic development.
Defense companies
in Arlington County received DHS contracts worth more than $818 million during
2004, or roughly 30 percent of the total procurement for the Washington, D.C.
area, according to a recent Virginia Tech study. To capitalize on their edge,
Arlington economic leaders are studying various ways to nurture existing defense
companies while luring new entrants. Strategies include waiving gross receipts
taxes for a few years for qualified defense companies.
Along those lines, the Fairfax County Economic Development Authority has opened
a new office in Palo Alto, Calif., to help high-tech firms in Silicon Valley
explore potential federal contracting opportunities here.
But the state’s homeland security industry is not confined to Northern
Virginia. Virginia Beach is marketing itself as “Pentagon of the South” in
hopes of attracting more defense contractors. Virginia Beach economic development
officials like to point out that Hampton Roads is home to the U.S. Navy’s
Atlantic fleet, 98,000 active-duty military personnel, and seven of the 10
largest military commands in the U.S.
What does the future hold?
Yet, there are some dark clouds on the horizon. Three years after 22 federal
agencies moved under the DHS umbrella, the counterterrorism agency is being
criticized for wasteful spending. Some lawmakers are calling for tighter
reins on private
contracts after a congressional report in July noted that half of the money
spent on contracts in 2005 was awarded without competitive bids. Altogether,
the U.
S. government spends more than $40 billion a year on homeland security, double
the amount spent prior to 9/11. Another problem: since much of
their work for the government is highly sensitive,
defense contractors worry about finding enough job
applicants who can pass the
government’s rigorous requirements for obtaining security clearances.
Being unable to fill jobs rapidly could threaten future contracts.
“
It’s like running out of iron ore in the middle of the Industrial Revolution,” says
SRA’s DiPentima. “Except that this is a knowledge revolution, and
we’re running out of knowledge workers.”
SRA relies on employee referrals for about 40 percent of new hires, says DiPentima,
and also is broadening its reach to recruit candidates outside Virginia. Compounding
the problem in Northern Virginia are home prices soaring well above income growth.
Addressing that issue is costing companies money. Booz Allen, for instance, is
sweetening relocation expenses and other amenities to persuade out-of-state recruits
to move here.
Besides rising home prices, Northern Virginia faces another hurdle: What happens
when federal contracts begin to dry up? Observers sense that already may be happening,
noting that government spending is bound to moderate soon, after several years
of massive investment. John McClain, deputy director of the Center for Regional
Analysis at George Mason University in Fairfax, says companies throughout Virginia,
and especially in Northern Virginia, should be exploring other commercial applications
for their technologies.
“We’ve been great beneficiaries of this ramp up in federal spending
during the past 15 years. By the same token, if federal policies or spending
philosophies change, which they could, we could suffer the most impact,” says
McClain.
Last month’s foiled plot
to blow up U.S.-bound trans-Atlantic flights was a
grim reminder of the war on terror. The U. S. government
needs more than bombs
and guns. Increasingly, it needs high-tech intelligence systems and tools that
deliver information quickly to the battlefield. Virginia firms are stepping
up to supply the goods.
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