UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED

CRADA Pathway — ATLAS as a Fusion / Decision-Support Layer

Cooperative Research and Development Agreement under 15 U.S.C. § 3710a. FAR-free. No funds requested. 6-8 week target to executed agreement.

Why this exists

ATLAS is a fielded civil-emergency and DSCA decision-support layer at TRL 5-6. The fastest path from where we are to a Program of Record is documented and well-trodden: a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement with a federal laboratory, evaluated at a lab-instrumented exercise, producing a Joint Test Report that becomes contracting currency for a Prototype OTA, an SBIR Phase III sole-source action, or a Commercial Solutions Opening award.

This page hosts (1) the four target labs we are pursuing, (2) the Joint Work Statement template scoped narrow enough to sign in 6-8 weeks, and (3) a draft first-contact email body for each lab.

FAR-freeNo funds requestedFOIA-protected (15 U.S.C. § 3710a(c)(7)(B))SDVOSB-pendingNo FedRAMP / IL-5 / FIPS / ATO

Tier 1 — best fit

AFRL Information Directorate (AFRL/RI), Rome, NY

C2 / ISR fusion / decision-support is literally their charter. Software-only CRADAs are routine. Best DoD-side fit for ATLAS as a fusion layer.

NIST Public Safety Communications Research (PSCR), Boulder, CO

Owns the federal R&D program for FirstNet, NG911, and the IPAWS profile work the ATLAS CAP module already implements against. NIST CRADAs are unusually founder-friendly because tech transfer IS the agency mission.

Tier 2 — strong second-stage targets

USTRANSCOM Technology Transfer (T2), Scott AFB, IL

Joint-mobility C2 at the unclassified level. Their public T2 office actively recruits non-traditional software partners. ATLAS's ESF logistics + RRF + DSCA bridge maps to JECC movement-planning workflows.

DHS Science & Technology (FRG / Operations)

ATLAS's civil-emergency leg is exactly DHS S&T First Responders' lane — IPAWS, HSIN, ESF, fire fusion, CISA Lifelines. CRADAs are signed less frequently than at DoD labs but the path is open. SAFETY Act and SBIR are parallel paths, not substitutes.

USNORTHCOM (DSCA bridge)

Right path is to use the AFRL/RI or NIST PSCR CRADA first, then ask the lab partner to sponsor ATLAS into a NORTHCOM exercise (Falcon Peak, Vigilant Shield) as part of the lab's existing participation. CRADA → exercise → demo data → follow-on award is the documented pipeline.

Joint Work Statement template (signable in 6-8 weeks)

Scoped narrow on purpose: 24-month period of performance, one lab exercise, no funds transfer, no live IPAWS / HSIN / WebEOC / WFDSS submission, Unclassified only. Industry IP retained; Government gets a use-only license on joint inventions; prototype performance data FOIA-protected up to 5 years.

Show JWS template inline (read-only)
Loading template...

Draft first-contact email body (edit before sending)

Replace the lab-specific paragraph; everything else is reusable.

What ATLAS will NOT do during a CRADA (give this to the lab's counsel)

These boundaries are features. They are why a CRADA can be signed in 6-8 weeks instead of 6-8 quarters, and they are why the IP terms (background IP retained, government use-only license on joint IP, FOIA protection on prototype data for up to 5 years per 15 U.S.C. § 3710a(c)(7)(B)) actually mean what they say.
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