ID=30187331Industry and the public at large now have access to data on the One Acquisition Solution for Integrated Services (OASIS) GWAC, the General Services Administration's contract vehicle for professional services.

The new OASIS dashboard breaks down the $215 million currently obligated through the vehicle by agency and company, sales and task orders and whether the services were purchased off the main contract or the small business set-aside vehicle.

More: GSA's OASIS contract draws $200 million in spending

The new dashboard is similar to ones GSA created for other contract programs, like Alliant and VETS.

Jim Ghiloni, professional services program management executive and OASIS program director, said he hopes the data will help the entire federal contracting community make better decisions about how they use the contract vehicle.

"Users can interact with the data, filter it in multiple ways and receive immediate results," Ghiloni wrote in a blog post introducing the new dashboard. "They can drill down the data from agency to the bureau level, as well as look at which industry partners have been awarded task orders by number and dollars."

GSA OASIS: Now Open for Business

Ghiloni also pointed to the data feed function, which lets users choose specific data elements and export the resulting data in a spreadsheet.

The data can be broken down based on award date, functional area, modification number, completion date and 18 other independent metrics.

According to the data, the Air Force, Army and Navy are the three biggest customers on OASIS, with a combined total of $174 million obligated to-date. The Defense Department came in fourth at $30 million, with a handful of civilian agencies following at $2.5 million and under.

Assurance Technology Corporation has had the most sales on the contract, with Booz Allen Hamilton and Zel Technologies following close behind.

More: OASIS analysis

Aaron Boyd is an awarding-winning journalist currently serving as editor of Federal Times — a Washington, D.C. institution covering federal workforce and contracting for more than 50 years — and Fifth Domain — a news and information hub focused on cybersecurity and cyberwar from a civilian, military and international perspective.

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