Alaska Native Firm Played Role In Failed Medical Review Board Software Project
Work on a botched program to develop software for the Defense Medical Examination Review Board was performed by an Alaska native company, said Steven Davis, a spokesman for the Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command. The command’s Atlantic center contracted with software engineering firm Barling Bay LLC to support development of a medical records system that has come under fire for failing so severely that responsibility for the work was transferred to the General Services Administration.
Barling Bay is a subsidiary of Three Saints LLC, a holding company headquartered in Anchorage. Under federal law, Alaska native firms receive preferential treatment in government contracts. Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., chairwoman of the contracting oversight panel for the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, charged in a Dec. 7 letter to Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Jonathan Greenert that SPAWAR’s management of the contract for service academy exams was “so inadequate that the General Services Administration had to assume responsibility.” The review board determines the medical qualification of more than 50,000 applicants annually for appointment to a U.S. service academy, the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences and the Reserve Officer Training Corps...
- Tags:
- Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA)
- Barling Bay
- Claire McCaskill
- Department of Defense (DoD)
- General Services Administration (GSA)
- Information Technology (IT)
- integrated Electronic Health Record (iEHR)
- Jonathan Greenert
- medical records
- Military Health System (MHS)
- Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR)
- Steven Davis
- Three Saints
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