Announcement of Competition Under the America COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2011: Badges for Veterans Contest, 11195-11197 [2012-4314]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 37 / Friday, February 24, 2012 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Fiscal Service
Surety Companies Acceptable on
Federal Bonds—Name Change and
Change in State of Incorporation:
Nations Bonding Company
Financial Management Service,
Fiscal Service, Department of the
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This is Supplement No. 10 to
the Treasury Department Circular 570;
2011 Revision, published July 1, 2011,
at 76 FR 38892.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Surety Bond Branch at (202) 874–6850.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Nations
Bonding Company (NAIC #11595) has
formally changed its name to Merchants
National Bonding, Inc., and has
redomesticated from the state of Texas
to the state of Iowa, effective January 1,
2012. Federal bond-approving officers
should annotate their reference copies
of the Treasury Circular 570, 2011
Revision, to reflect this change.
The Circular may be viewed and
downloaded through the Internet at
https://www.fms.treas.gov/c570.
Questions concerning this notice may
be directed to the U.S. Department of
the Treasury, Financial Management
Service, Financial Accounting and
Services Division, Surety Bond Branch,
3700 East-West Highway, Room 6F01,
Hyattsville, MD 20782.
SUMMARY:
Dated: February 15, 2012.
Laura Carrico,
Director, Financial Accounting and Services
Division.
[FR Doc. 2012–4204 Filed 2–23–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–35–M
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS
AFFAIRS
Announcement of Competition Under
the America COMPETES
Reauthorization Act of 2011: Badges
for Veterans Contest
Department of Veterans Affairs.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
To encourage creation of
systems which help good jobs find
Veterans and Veterans find good jobs,
the Secretary of Veterans Affairs (VA)
announces a prize contest under Section
105 of the America COMPETES
Reauthorization Act of 2011, Public Law
111–358 (2011) (the ‘‘Act’’).
DATES: Entries will be accepted until 5
p.m., Eastern Standard Time, February
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:34 Feb 23, 2012
Jkt 226001
27, 2012. Winners will be announced on
or about March 1, 2012.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
James M. Speros, Special Assistant to
Chief Technology Officer, Office of the
Secretary, Department of Veterans
Affairs, 810 Vermont Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20420; (202) 461–7214.
(This is not a toll-free number.) Also, see
Section 6.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Veterans
rejoin the civilian community with upto-date, cutting edge job skills
developed during training and work
experience in their military service.
These job skills are highly valued and
desired by civilian employers. Veterans
report challenges in ‘‘translating’’
military job skills to their civilian
counterparts and in obtaining civilian
credit for military training. The easier
task is drawing direct linkages between
skills acquired in the military and the
duties performed in civilian jobs. More
challenging is obtaining civilian
recognition of military training when
formal education or other credential is
a prerequisite for employment, self
employment, or licensure leading to
employment.
Through the Badges for Vets Contest
(‘‘Vets Contest’’), VA and its
collaborators, the U.S. Departments of
Education, Labor, and Energy, seek an
easily understandable means to translate
military training and experience into
their civilian equivalents. The badges
created under this system will be
marketable credentials enabling
employers to quickly identify Veterans
as among the best qualified in any job
applicant pool, or which identify
Veterans as qualified to perform services
if self-employed.
Because a Veteran employed or selfemployed in a civilian occupation can
far more readily re-enter non-military
society, Veteran employment is an
objective of several programs
administered by VA and its Government
collaborators. The Badges for Vets
Contest will advance the mission of VA
by encouraging the development of
systems which help good jobs find
Veterans and Veterans find good jobs.
The Vets Contest will be conducted in
cooperation with the ‘‘Badges for
Lifelong Learning Competition’’
(‘‘Competition’’) administered by the
Humanities, Arts, Science, and
Technology Advanced Collaboratory
(HASTAC) Initiative with the support of
the Mozilla Foundation and the
McArthur Foundation, https://www.dml
competition.net/Competition/4/badgescompetition-cfp.php. The goal of the
Competition is support for the creation
of digital tools to identify, recognize,
PO 00000
Frm 00133
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
11195
measure, and account for skills,
competencies, knowledge, and
achievements acquired during the
course of lifelong learning. The Mozilla
Open Badge Infrastructure, https://
openbadges.org, has been selected to
enable interoperability and seamless
collection of badges. The Vets Contest is
described generally at https://www.dml
competition.net/Competition/4/badgesprojects.php?id=2667.
VA does not anticipate that it will
issue badges or, except as an employer,
actively participate in the resulting
badges program. Instead, VA believes it
can serve Veterans and employers by
acting as a catalyst for the development
of meaningful badge systems for use by
Veterans and employers.
Contest Requirements and Rules
1. Subject of the Contest. The goal of
the Vets Contest is to support the
development of systems that deliver
real, substantial and sustainable benefits
to employers and to Veterans by
enabling employers to quickly identify
Veterans who have military education
and skills that meet requirements for
civilian jobs, or which help Veterans
who want to start their own business
demonstrate their qualifications to their
customers.
2. Amount of the prize. VA will award
up to $25,000 to as many as three
entrants. VA may elect to award two
additional prizes of up to $25,000 each.
3. Participation in the Contest will be
through the Badges for Lifelong
Learning Competition.
a. The Vets Contest will be
administered by VA according to the
rules and requirements posted on the
Competition Web site,
https://www.dmlcompetition.net/
Competition/4/badges-competitioncfp.php, including those on the ‘‘Terms
and Conditions’’ page, https://www.dml
competition.net/Competition/4/badgesterms-and-conditions.php#IP.
b. The rules in this Notice supplement
the rules on the Competition Web site.
If there is any conflict between any
requirement stated on the Competition
Web site and the provisions of this
Notice, the provisions of this Notice will
govern.
c. Important: Entries must be made
through the Competition Web site:
https://fastapps.dmlcompetition.net/
user/login?url=application
%2Fsubmit%2Fdmlc-4v. Before
submitting an entry, an entrant must
register for a FastApps account at https://
fastapps.dmlcompetition.net/user/
register. Registration for a FastApps
account constitutes ‘‘registration to
participate in the competition’’ required
by Section 105(g)(1) of the Act.
E:\FR\FM\24FEN1.SGM
24FEN1
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
11196
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 37 / Friday, February 24, 2012 / Notices
d. Entries must comply with form,
content and length requirements set
forth on the Competition Web site,
including https://www.dmlcompetition.
net/Competition/4/badges-stage-2.php.
4. Basis on which a winner will be
selected:
a. An entrant must demonstrate to the
satisfaction of the judges that the
entrant’s proposed badge system will
deliver real, substantial, and sustainable
benefit to both employers and Veterans
by achieving two separate but
interrelated goals. First, an entrant must
demonstrate that a significant number of
employers will accept the badge as a
credential demonstrating occupational
qualifications actually desired in a
specific occupational area. Second, an
entrant must demonstrate to the judges
that Veterans will have clear and
achievable pathways to acquire badges
which are desired by employers. Entries
which the judges determine do not meet
these criteria will not be awarded a
prize.
b. Badges must address one of the
following priority occupational areas:
• Supply Administration and
Logistics, which may include specialties
such as a supply chain procurement,
automated logistics management, and
lean Six Sigma.
• Law Enforcement, which may
include specialties such as criminal
investigation and analysis.
• Medical Care and Treatment, with
specific focus on Physicians’ Assistants.
• Motor Vehicle Operators, with
specific focus on occupations requiring
a Commercial Driver’s License.
• Automotive Service and Repair,
with specific focus on emerging
technologies such as electric-drive
vehicles and alternative fuels.
• Information Technology, including
all phases of software development and
IT project management.
Included in these priority areas are
those with the largest number of
Military Occupational Specialty (MOS)
Codes earned by recently discharged
Veterans for specific training and
experience during military service, as
identified by Department of Defense.
c. Badges must incorporate the
Mozilla Open Badge Infrastructure,
https://openbadges.org.
d. When determining whether an
entry meets the criteria to be awarded a
prize and when rating and ranking
multiple entries, judges may consider
any factor mentioned on the
Competition Web site and in addition
may consider the following:
i. Pathways to badges. In some of the
priority occupational areas, Veterans
may be able to earn digital badges
designating specific civilian-marketable
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:34 Feb 23, 2012
Jkt 226001
skills based solely on military training
and experience (MTE). In these cases,
judges may consider whether a
proposed badge system can deliver
value to employers and Veterans by:
• Identifying specific skills and
competencies desired by employers;
• Verifying that Veterans can
demonstrate those skills based on
relevant MTE; or
• Awarding and validating digital
badges that employers will recognize
and Veterans can use to demonstrate job
qualifications.
Judges may also consider whether
badge systems provide pathways by
which Veterans can:
• Acquire formal civilian education
or other credit based on their MTE;
• Acquire civilian licensure or other
credential based on MTE; or
• A combination of the two.
When state licensure or occupational
certification is required to be marketable
in a priority occupational area, judges
may consider whether a badge system
supports pathways by which Veterans
supplement MTE with specific required
education.
ii. Effectiveness and Sustainability.
Judges may consider whether the
proposed badge system is likely to be
effective and sustainable and may assess
the following:
1. Whether proposed badge systems
are built on partnerships with
organizations that:
• Are widely representative of
employers who have a recurring need to
employ individuals with skill sets in the
priority occupational areas;
• Have—or demonstrate that they can
develop—programs and processes that
deliver validated credentials or
accomplishments in the priority areas;
and
• Can demonstrate they have or can
develop:
Æ Programs to validly assess prior
learning acquired from education,
training or experience and particularly
MTE;
Æ Articulation agreements with
accredited institutions that support
formal recognition of MTE through the
granting of academic credit or
satisfaction of prerequisites;
Æ Programs that identify additional
training or experience required to meet
essential prerequisites for occupational
certification or licensure;
Æ Programs to assist Veterans to
obtain financing for additional training
or experience necessary to earn a
specific badge, license or professional
certification; or
Æ Programs that assure a Veteran who
chooses to acquire additional training or
experience is prepared for success when
PO 00000
Frm 00134
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
seeking formal occupational
certification or licensure.
2. How a program will define its
success if implemented. Measures of
success may include the number of
issued badges or other credentials.
Judges may determine that more
meaningful metrics include:
• Dropout and success rates for
Veterans who seek additional training.
• Market share of employers that
accept the badge as meeting
qualification requirements.
• The number of Veterans who are
actually hired into positions for which
a badge shows they qualify.
• Six-month retention and one-year
promotion rates.
• Employer and Veteran satisfaction.
5. Eligibility. To be eligible to
participate in the Vets Contest and win
a prize, an entrant:
a. Must create an account on the
Challenge.gov Web site by supplying
their name and email address. Creating
an account will constitute ‘‘registration
to participate in the competition’’ as
provided in the Act.
b. If an individual, must be a citizen
of or permanent resident of the United
States; and if an entity, must be
incorporated in and maintain a primary
place of business in the United States.
c. May not be a Federal entity or
Federal employee acting in the scope of
the employee’s employment.
d. Must agree to assume any and all
risks and waive any claims against the
Federal Government and its related
entities (except in the case of willful
misconduct) for any injury, death,
damage, or loss of property, revenue or
profits, whether direct, indirect, or
consequential, arising from their
participation in the Vets Contest,
whether the injury, death, damage, or
loss arises through negligence of
otherwise. Provided, however, that
participants will not be required to
waive claims against VA arising out of
the unauthorized use or disclosure by
the agency of the intellectual property,
trade secrets, or confidential
information of the entrant.
e. Shall be responsible for obtaining
insurance to cover claims by any third
party for death, bodily injury, or
property damage or loss resulting from
an activity carried out in connection
with or participation in the Vets
Contest.
f. Must have complied with all
requirements of this Notice and all
requirements established by the Act.
6. Procedures for obtaining additional
information.
a. During the period of the Vets
Contest, VA will operate and maintain
a moderated discussion board at
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 37 / Friday, February 24, 2012 / Notices
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
https://challenge.gov/VAi2/262-badgesfor-vets to which potential participants
or entrants may submit questions to VA.
b. VA may choose not to respond to
any question or comment or to delete
questions or comments which it
determines are not relevant to the
competition. VA’s responses to
questions on the discussion board are
not official guidance.
c. VA will also maintain a blog on the
https://challenge.gov/VAi2/262-badgesfor-vets, Web site on which it may post
official guidance related to the Vets
Contest. All entrants are bound by
official guidance on the blog which is
posted prior to submission of a
participant’s entry.
7. Intellectual Property.
a. VA does not accept any
responsibility for a registered entrant’s
lack of compliance with Intellectual
Property or other Federal law. Entrants
are subject to the Competition’s
Intellectual Property (‘‘IP’’) policies set
forth on https://www.dmlcompetition.
net/Competition/4/badges-terms-andconditions.php#IP.
b. The winner of the Vets Contest
will, in consideration of the prize to be
awarded, grant to VA a perpetual nonexclusive royalty-free license to use any
and all intellectual property pertaining
to the winning entry for any
governmental purpose, including the
right to permit such use by any other
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18:34 Feb 23, 2012
Jkt 226001
agency or agencies of the Federal
Government.
c. VA may, in its sole and exclusive
discretion, choose to negotiate with any
registered entrant to acquire a license to
use any intellectual property developed
in connection with the Vets Contest.
8. Judges and Judging Procedures.
a. Subject to the requirements of
Public Law 111–358, Sec 24(k), the
Director, VA Innovations Initiative,
acting on behalf and with the authority
of the Secretary of VA, will appoint one
or more qualified individuals to act as
judges of the Vets contest, and may
appoint himself as a judge. Judges may
include individuals from outside VA,
including from the private sector and
individuals nominated by the
Competition. Judges will operate in a
transparent manner.
b. A judge may not have a personal or
financial interest in, or be an employee,
officer, director, or agent of any entity
that is a registered entrant in the Vets
Contest, and may not have a familial or
financial relationship with an
individual who is a registered entrant.
c. Specific tasks related to the judging
process may be delegated to VA
employees or employees of a
collaborating Federal agency.
d. Judges shall have the authority to
disregard any minor error in any entry
that does not create any substantial
benefit or detriment to any entrant.
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 9990
11197
e. Decisions of the judges are final.
9. Payment of Prizes, use of Prize
Money and Post-Award Performance.
a. Prize money will be paid in
quarterly installments starting on or
about April 1, 2012, and must be used
specifically for the awarded project
according to the budget proposed by the
winning entrant.
b. Post-award performance will be
monitored by HASTAC in accordance
with Competition rules and procedures,
and payment of installments is
contingent on (1) receipt by HASTAC’s
of acceptable quarterly financial and
progress reports, (2) HASTAC’s
recommendation to VA that the prize
installments be paid, and (3) VA’s
independent determination that
acceptable quarterly financial and
progress reports have been submitted.
c. VA may elect to pay prize money
directly to the winner instead of making
payments through HASTAC. If VA
elects to pay prize money directly, the
winner will provide VA with sufficient
information to support payment
transactions in accordance with VA
fiscal policy and the issuance of Internal
Revenue Service 1099s.
Dated: February 16, 2012.
John R. Gingrich,
Chief of Staff.
[FR Doc. 2012–4314 Filed 2–23–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 37 (Friday, February 24, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 11195-11197]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-4314]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
Announcement of Competition Under the America COMPETES
Reauthorization Act of 2011: Badges for Veterans Contest
AGENCY: Department of Veterans Affairs.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: To encourage creation of systems which help good jobs find
Veterans and Veterans find good jobs, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs
(VA) announces a prize contest under Section 105 of the America
COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2011, Public Law 111-358 (2011) (the
``Act'').
DATES: Entries will be accepted until 5 p.m., Eastern Standard Time,
February 27, 2012. Winners will be announced on or about March 1, 2012.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: James M. Speros, Special Assistant to
Chief Technology Officer, Office of the Secretary, Department of
Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20420; (202)
461-7214. (This is not a toll-free number.) Also, see Section 6.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Veterans rejoin the civilian community with
up-to-date, cutting edge job skills developed during training and work
experience in their military service. These job skills are highly
valued and desired by civilian employers. Veterans report challenges in
``translating'' military job skills to their civilian counterparts and
in obtaining civilian credit for military training. The easier task is
drawing direct linkages between skills acquired in the military and the
duties performed in civilian jobs. More challenging is obtaining
civilian recognition of military training when formal education or
other credential is a prerequisite for employment, self employment, or
licensure leading to employment.
Through the Badges for Vets Contest (``Vets Contest''), VA and its
collaborators, the U.S. Departments of Education, Labor, and Energy,
seek an easily understandable means to translate military training and
experience into their civilian equivalents. The badges created under
this system will be marketable credentials enabling employers to
quickly identify Veterans as among the best qualified in any job
applicant pool, or which identify Veterans as qualified to perform
services if self-employed.
Because a Veteran employed or self-employed in a civilian
occupation can far more readily re-enter non-military society, Veteran
employment is an objective of several programs administered by VA and
its Government collaborators. The Badges for Vets Contest will advance
the mission of VA by encouraging the development of systems which help
good jobs find Veterans and Veterans find good jobs.
The Vets Contest will be conducted in cooperation with the ``Badges
for Lifelong Learning Competition'' (``Competition'') administered by
the Humanities, Arts, Science, and Technology Advanced Collaboratory
(HASTAC) Initiative with the support of the Mozilla Foundation and the
McArthur Foundation, https://www.dmlcompetition.net/Competition/4/badges-competition-cfp.php. The goal of the Competition is support for
the creation of digital tools to identify, recognize, measure, and
account for skills, competencies, knowledge, and achievements acquired
during the course of lifelong learning. The Mozilla Open Badge
Infrastructure, https://openbadges.org, has been selected to enable
interoperability and seamless collection of badges. The Vets Contest is
described generally at https://www.dmlcompetition.net/Competition/4/badges-projects.php?id=2667.
VA does not anticipate that it will issue badges or, except as an
employer, actively participate in the resulting badges program.
Instead, VA believes it can serve Veterans and employers by acting as a
catalyst for the development of meaningful badge systems for use by
Veterans and employers.
Contest Requirements and Rules
1. Subject of the Contest. The goal of the Vets Contest is to
support the development of systems that deliver real, substantial and
sustainable benefits to employers and to Veterans by enabling employers
to quickly identify Veterans who have military education and skills
that meet requirements for civilian jobs, or which help Veterans who
want to start their own business demonstrate their qualifications to
their customers.
2. Amount of the prize. VA will award up to $25,000 to as many as
three entrants. VA may elect to award two additional prizes of up to
$25,000 each.
3. Participation in the Contest will be through the Badges for
Lifelong Learning Competition.
a. The Vets Contest will be administered by VA according to the
rules and requirements posted on the Competition Web site, https://www.dmlcompetition.net/Competition/4/badges-competition-cfp.php,
including those on the ``Terms and Conditions'' page, https://www.dmlcompetition.net/Competition/4/badges-terms-and-conditions.php#IP.
b. The rules in this Notice supplement the rules on the Competition
Web site. If there is any conflict between any requirement stated on
the Competition Web site and the provisions of this Notice, the
provisions of this Notice will govern.
c. Important: Entries must be made through the Competition Web
site: https://fastapps.dmlcompetition.net/user/login?url=application%2Fsubmit%2Fdmlc-4v. Before submitting an entry,
an entrant must register for a FastApps account at https://fastapps.dmlcompetition.net/user/register. Registration for a FastApps
account constitutes ``registration to participate in the competition''
required by Section 105(g)(1) of the Act.
[[Page 11196]]
d. Entries must comply with form, content and length requirements
set forth on the Competition Web site, including https://www.dmlcompetition.net/Competition/4/badges-stage-2.php.
4. Basis on which a winner will be selected:
a. An entrant must demonstrate to the satisfaction of the judges
that the entrant's proposed badge system will deliver real,
substantial, and sustainable benefit to both employers and Veterans by
achieving two separate but interrelated goals. First, an entrant must
demonstrate that a significant number of employers will accept the
badge as a credential demonstrating occupational qualifications
actually desired in a specific occupational area. Second, an entrant
must demonstrate to the judges that Veterans will have clear and
achievable pathways to acquire badges which are desired by employers.
Entries which the judges determine do not meet these criteria will not
be awarded a prize.
b. Badges must address one of the following priority occupational
areas:
Supply Administration and Logistics, which may include
specialties such as a supply chain procurement, automated logistics
management, and lean Six Sigma.
Law Enforcement, which may include specialties such as
criminal investigation and analysis.
Medical Care and Treatment, with specific focus on
Physicians' Assistants.
Motor Vehicle Operators, with specific focus on
occupations requiring a Commercial Driver's License.
Automotive Service and Repair, with specific focus on
emerging technologies such as electric-drive vehicles and alternative
fuels.
Information Technology, including all phases of software
development and IT project management.
Included in these priority areas are those with the largest number
of Military Occupational Specialty (MOS) Codes earned by recently
discharged Veterans for specific training and experience during
military service, as identified by Department of Defense.
c. Badges must incorporate the Mozilla Open Badge Infrastructure,
https://openbadges.org.
d. When determining whether an entry meets the criteria to be
awarded a prize and when rating and ranking multiple entries, judges
may consider any factor mentioned on the Competition Web site and in
addition may consider the following:
i. Pathways to badges. In some of the priority occupational areas,
Veterans may be able to earn digital badges designating specific
civilian-marketable skills based solely on military training and
experience (MTE). In these cases, judges may consider whether a
proposed badge system can deliver value to employers and Veterans by:
Identifying specific skills and competencies desired by
employers;
Verifying that Veterans can demonstrate those skills based
on relevant MTE; or
Awarding and validating digital badges that employers will
recognize and Veterans can use to demonstrate job qualifications.
Judges may also consider whether badge systems provide pathways by
which Veterans can:
Acquire formal civilian education or other credit based on
their MTE;
Acquire civilian licensure or other credential based on
MTE; or
A combination of the two.
When state licensure or occupational certification is required to
be marketable in a priority occupational area, judges may consider
whether a badge system supports pathways by which Veterans supplement
MTE with specific required education.
ii. Effectiveness and Sustainability. Judges may consider whether
the proposed badge system is likely to be effective and sustainable and
may assess the following:
1. Whether proposed badge systems are built on partnerships with
organizations that:
Are widely representative of employers who have a
recurring need to employ individuals with skill sets in the priority
occupational areas;
Have--or demonstrate that they can develop--programs and
processes that deliver validated credentials or accomplishments in the
priority areas; and
Can demonstrate they have or can develop:
[cir] Programs to validly assess prior learning acquired from
education, training or experience and particularly MTE;
[cir] Articulation agreements with accredited institutions that
support formal recognition of MTE through the granting of academic
credit or satisfaction of prerequisites;
[cir] Programs that identify additional training or experience
required to meet essential prerequisites for occupational certification
or licensure;
[cir] Programs to assist Veterans to obtain financing for
additional training or experience necessary to earn a specific badge,
license or professional certification; or
[cir] Programs that assure a Veteran who chooses to acquire
additional training or experience is prepared for success when seeking
formal occupational certification or licensure.
2. How a program will define its success if implemented. Measures
of success may include the number of issued badges or other
credentials. Judges may determine that more meaningful metrics include:
Dropout and success rates for Veterans who seek additional
training.
Market share of employers that accept the badge as meeting
qualification requirements.
The number of Veterans who are actually hired into
positions for which a badge shows they qualify.
Six-month retention and one-year promotion rates.
Employer and Veteran satisfaction.
5. Eligibility. To be eligible to participate in the Vets Contest
and win a prize, an entrant:
a. Must create an account on the Challenge.gov Web site by
supplying their name and email address. Creating an account will
constitute ``registration to participate in the competition'' as
provided in the Act.
b. If an individual, must be a citizen of or permanent resident of
the United States; and if an entity, must be incorporated in and
maintain a primary place of business in the United States.
c. May not be a Federal entity or Federal employee acting in the
scope of the employee's employment.
d. Must agree to assume any and all risks and waive any claims
against the Federal Government and its related entities (except in the
case of willful misconduct) for any injury, death, damage, or loss of
property, revenue or profits, whether direct, indirect, or
consequential, arising from their participation in the Vets Contest,
whether the injury, death, damage, or loss arises through negligence of
otherwise. Provided, however, that participants will not be required to
waive claims against VA arising out of the unauthorized use or
disclosure by the agency of the intellectual property, trade secrets,
or confidential information of the entrant.
e. Shall be responsible for obtaining insurance to cover claims by
any third party for death, bodily injury, or property damage or loss
resulting from an activity carried out in connection with or
participation in the Vets Contest.
f. Must have complied with all requirements of this Notice and all
requirements established by the Act.
6. Procedures for obtaining additional information.
a. During the period of the Vets Contest, VA will operate and
maintain a moderated discussion board at
[[Page 11197]]
https://challenge.gov/VAi2/262-badges-for-vets to which potential
participants or entrants may submit questions to VA.
b. VA may choose not to respond to any question or comment or to
delete questions or comments which it determines are not relevant to
the competition. VA's responses to questions on the discussion board
are not official guidance.
c. VA will also maintain a blog on the https://challenge.gov/VAi2/262-badges-for-vets, Web site on which it may post official guidance
related to the Vets Contest. All entrants are bound by official
guidance on the blog which is posted prior to submission of a
participant's entry.
7. Intellectual Property.
a. VA does not accept any responsibility for a registered entrant's
lack of compliance with Intellectual Property or other Federal law.
Entrants are subject to the Competition's Intellectual Property
(``IP'') policies set forth on https://www.dmlcompetition.net/Competition/4/badges-terms-and-conditions.php#IP.
b. The winner of the Vets Contest will, in consideration of the
prize to be awarded, grant to VA a perpetual non-exclusive royalty-free
license to use any and all intellectual property pertaining to the
winning entry for any governmental purpose, including the right to
permit such use by any other agency or agencies of the Federal
Government.
c. VA may, in its sole and exclusive discretion, choose to
negotiate with any registered entrant to acquire a license to use any
intellectual property developed in connection with the Vets Contest.
8. Judges and Judging Procedures.
a. Subject to the requirements of Public Law 111-358, Sec 24(k),
the Director, VA Innovations Initiative, acting on behalf and with the
authority of the Secretary of VA, will appoint one or more qualified
individuals to act as judges of the Vets contest, and may appoint
himself as a judge. Judges may include individuals from outside VA,
including from the private sector and individuals nominated by the
Competition. Judges will operate in a transparent manner.
b. A judge may not have a personal or financial interest in, or be
an employee, officer, director, or agent of any entity that is a
registered entrant in the Vets Contest, and may not have a familial or
financial relationship with an individual who is a registered entrant.
c. Specific tasks related to the judging process may be delegated
to VA employees or employees of a collaborating Federal agency.
d. Judges shall have the authority to disregard any minor error in
any entry that does not create any substantial benefit or detriment to
any entrant.
e. Decisions of the judges are final.
9. Payment of Prizes, use of Prize Money and Post-Award
Performance.
a. Prize money will be paid in quarterly installments starting on
or about April 1, 2012, and must be used specifically for the awarded
project according to the budget proposed by the winning entrant.
b. Post-award performance will be monitored by HASTAC in accordance
with Competition rules and procedures, and payment of installments is
contingent on (1) receipt by HASTAC's of acceptable quarterly financial
and progress reports, (2) HASTAC's recommendation to VA that the prize
installments be paid, and (3) VA's independent determination that
acceptable quarterly financial and progress reports have been
submitted.
c. VA may elect to pay prize money directly to the winner instead
of making payments through HASTAC. If VA elects to pay prize money
directly, the winner will provide VA with sufficient information to
support payment transactions in accordance with VA fiscal policy and
the issuance of Internal Revenue Service 1099s.
Dated: February 16, 2012.
John R. Gingrich,
Chief of Staff.
[FR Doc. 2012-4314 Filed 2-23-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320-01-P