WALTHAM, Mass. — The Cadmus Group, Inc. (Cadmus) announced today that Obsidian, A Cadmus Company, has been awarded a three-year prime contract with the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s National Exercise Division (FEMA NED). The contract is to provide exercise design, conduct, and evaluation support to the National Exercise Program, one of the country’s most important national preparedness initiatives.
Through this blanket purchase agreement, Obsidian and Cadmus will provide comprehensive exercise and analytical support services to NED, including full lifecycle support to the design, development, conduct, and evaluation of homeland security exercises across the United States and at all levels of government, nongovernmental organizations, and the private sector. This award will also support the analysis, synthesis, and reporting of findings and trends from these exercises.
Obsidian has supported FEMA NED on a broad range of projects across multiple contracts since the company’s inception in 2010, and this new contract broadens that support to cover the full spectrum of NED’s requirements. By rigorously assessing exercise, training, and education needs, Obsidian’s training and education programs focus resources on building the most relevant and mission-critical knowledge and skills. Learn more about Cadmus’ extensive exercise, training, and education offerings.
Cadmus acquired fast-growing homeland security and resilience consulting firm Obsidian Analysis, Inc., in February 2016. Learn more about this exciting partnership in our press release.
About The Cadmus Group, Inc.
Cadmus provides professional consulting services that help clients achieve their goals and create social and economic value today and for future generations. By applying exceptional technical expertise and a highly collaborative approach, we deliver customized solutions that address complex challenges facing the realms of natural and built environments, energy, public health, climate, homeland security, and international development. Cadmus’ more than 500 consultants serve government, commercial, and nongovernmental organizations in the United States and abroad.