General Information Company Information Create My Account

Free 5-day trial.

Once you sign-up, you can add 4 additional team members within your EZGovOpps Portal. If you have a team member that already has an EZGovOpps account, ask them to get add you. If you sign-up for your own trial you will not be able to experience the extensive collaboration tools that are available within EZGovOpps.

First name:

Last name:

Title:

Email:

Phone:

Company Information

Company:


Primary NAICS:


Postal Code:


Employees:

How did you hear about EZGovOpps?:
If your selection has a * symbol,please
share more details as to your selected choice


Do you have a unique socio economic status?:
Small Business
Total Small Business
Hubzone
WOSB
8(a)
Emerging Small Business
VOSB
SDVOSB
Economically Disadvantaged WOSB


Is your company registered with the Federal Government (Sam.gov)?:
Yes
No
Not Sure

Create Account

Referred By:



Your trial will expire at Midnight on .



I agree to the EZGovOpps Terms of Service
    Terms and Conditions
I am also interested in SLED (State, Local and Educational) opportunities. Please create credentials for the SLED portal for me

Congratulations! Your 5-Day free trial awaits.

Your activation email should arrive in a few minutes.
If you don't see it, please check Spam/Clutter.

Step 1) Validate Sign-Up via EmailStep 2) Login to EZGovOppsStep 3) Experience EZGovOpps free!
Need assistance? EZGovOpps Ultimate Member Support can be reached by email at support@ezgovopps.com

Schedule a personalized demo to enhance your evalution.

EZGovOpps Member Portal Secure Log In

Enter your email address and we will send you password reset instructions.

Get started with your free 5 day trial.

Say goodbye to legacy technology!

Stuck with old technologies and need a jumpstart to the new age? Then you’ll want to know about the IT resolving fund worth $3.1 billion for IT modernization. The bill was introduced was first proposed by  Federal Chief Information Officer Tony Scott and introduced by into the House by Maryland minority whip representative Steny Hoyer on April 11th, 2016. The fund, H.R. 4897, aims to distribute money through the GSA to agencies for the revamp of old, legacy technology in an effort to bolster cybersecurity across agencies.

Several agencies currently use technologies that are extremely outdated, increasing the susceptibility of attack. Agencies that participate will have to reimburse the fund for any product and/or service the agency uses to modernize their technologies. The fund gained momentum in the light of FY 2015 statistics from GAO, which showed that 70% of the total $80 billion spent on IT, approximately $61.5 billion, was spent solely on operations and maintenance. Agencies that still use outdated and vulnerable technologies, such as the Pentagon using floppy disks in its nuclear arms management system, cite lack of funding.  550 unsupported software and/or operating systems plague agencies in status quo with each agency hiring a total of 3,400 IT professionals who specialize in bygone languages such as COBOL and FORTRAN to maintain legacy systems.

This fund, however, may be in danger. As the November elections loom in the near future, Congress is still undecided on the outcome of this bill. In addition, the fact that agencies must have their desired technological changes pre-approved by the GSA is a definite impediment to agencies taking advantage of the fund. The bill currently has 20 cosponsors. The bill faces definite opposition from the Republicans in the House. However, Jason Chaffetz, Republican Rep. from Utah and the chairman of the Oversight and Government Reform Committee, is on edge about the bill and has been reported saying “We have a $4 trillion budget, it’s way too much. We will have to give up something else in order to do something that we know will produce results. So, I’m going to work with the Democrats, and have been, to try to find a good, plausible solution that will actually work.”

If passed, this game-changing bill puts agencies on the path to modernization, thus averting exorbitant spending in O&M.

Leave a Reply