Thursday, August 26, 2010

QA/QC Manager - NAVFAC Road + Infrastructure - PE Req'd - Fayetteville, NC

Great company and nice, multi-year project... $40M to start on road, wet - dry utilities, storm, water and other related inftrastructure. Will relocate - $100K - $115K base plus bonus and great benefits.

Ideeal candidate

a. Professional Engineer - Civil Engineer Degree
b. USACE QC/QA Qualified
c. Military road and base construction experience
d. Design - Build or GC Self Performing experience

Immediate Need. Pls contact me directly for screen.
Erik Plesset
919-781-0400 / eplesset@mriraleigh.com

What is a Clearance Worth?

From the Washington Post

What's a clearance worth?

According to Clearancejobs.com, which specializes in helping job seekers find work that requires U.S. government clearances and matches them with contractors, quite a lot, in some cases. Recruiters say it can boost a salary 10 percent to 25 percent, depending on the person's skills, type of job, experience and level of clearance.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Thought For The Day

"Getting ahead in a difficult profession requires avid faith in yourself. You must be able to sustain yourself against staggering blows. There is no code of conduct to help beginners. That is why some people with mediocre talent, but with great inner drive, go much further than people with vastly superior talent."

Sophia Loren, Actress

Friday, August 13, 2010

Will Iraq Fall Victim to the Oil Curse?

Will Iraq Fall Victim to the Oil Curse?
by Judith Miller
The Wall Street Journal
August 9, 2010

BAGHDAD — Since America toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003, Iraq has had three free-wheeling, relatively fraud-free national elections. Its military has been reconstituted, its soldiers and some of its police retrained. The infrastructure has been partially rebuilt. Iraq, with its 30 million people and the world's third-largest oil reserves, could one day be fabulously rich.

Go to the link above in title for the full article.

Have a nice weekend.

Erik Plesset

Friday, August 6, 2010

Managerial Accountant / Financial Analyst: G8 ARCENT Oversight

My client, a Tier 1 US Gov't contractor, is looking for a qualified Managerial Accountant to work at Camp Arifjan Kuwait and other areas within the CENTCOM AOR, in support of USARCENT G8. Please contact me directly or email you resume for further discussion. Immediate need, pay in the $150's with all uplifts. Full benefits for family. Great company..

Principle Duties and Responsibilities:
Heavy analysis and query of data for review
Create and review current metrics for process improvement

Ad Hoc Queries of STANFINS, RMT, ODS, etc so understanding the flow of data into specific funds and controls is important.

Probably worked at a MAJCOM OR DFAS organization supporting US Army into high 7 or 8 figure programs.

Strong experience with Month End Close process for US Government preferred

Strong Excel spreadsheet knowledge including linking spreadsheets, creating accounting formulas, exporting & importing data from other programs

Strong Word and PowerPoint skills to communicate findings from queries and make recommendations to Contracting Officer Representative (Client)

Army Finance Command School OR Army Finance Command Experience or other government finance experience.

2 years of accounting classes and credits from any college preferred

5 - 10 years minimum finance experience

Additional Requirements:

• Ability to successfully complete the Company Background Investigation to include; 50 State Criminal, Education and Employment; Additionally, your ability to successfully complete a Credit and/or Driving Records Checks may be conducted if required by the contract for continued employment.
• Possession of a SECRET security clearance is required to begin employment; Ability to maintain a SECRET security clearance is required for continued employment; US Citizenship is required.
• Ability to successfully pass a drug screening test prior to hiring and continue to pass random drug screening tests annually.

Economy: Get Ready For A Sluggish Second Half

Nice article from a group of industry experts....

Get Ready For A Sluggish Second Half
Christian Menegatti, Rachel Ziemba, Prajakta Bhide and Nouriel Roubini ,
08.05.10, 06:00 AM EDT

The recovery will be rocky, the risk of policy gridlock is high and exit strategies will remain uncoordinated.

After predicting that 2010 would be a "Year of Two Halves,” we'd like to say we've been pleasantly surprised by recent data. Instead, a string of releases in the past two weeks has made it clear that the sluggish second half is here.

Since the end of 2009 we have been emphasizing that the recovery would be multispeed--or at least two-speed--with much of the advanced world displaying a below-trend, anemic growth pace and the emerging world showing a more V-shaped recovery. Now, the global macroeconomic deterioration that we still see emerging in the second half of 2010 increasingly is becoming the consensus view. In much of the advanced world this low growth will feel like a recession even if these economies technically avoid a double dip. Meanwhile, emerging markets are showing that even their more robust recoveries are not insulated from the slowdowns and structural adjustments in advanced economies. We have never been subscribers to the decoupling thesis and believe that emerging markets also will have to partially adjust to a "New Normal."

Read the entire article at the link above.

Have a Great Day!

Erik Plesset