A Woman Owned Service Disabled Veteran Owned Small Business
With service offerings in personal protective equipment, logistics, and petroleum products.
Maureen M. Loren is a native of Columbia, Pennsylvania and a graduate of Shippensburg University, Shippensburg, PA with a Bachelor of Science degree in Elementary Education. She was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the United States Marine Corps that same year. Following completion of the 38th Woman Officer Basic Course at Quantico, VA, she subsequently served in the Marine Corps for over 21 years as a manpower and administrative process professional, retiring as a Lieutenant Colonel. While on active duty, Maureen served at various stations throughout the United States and overseas to include duty with the 4th Battalion, 11th Marines, Twentynine Palms, CA; the 12th Marine Aircraft Group, Iwakuni, Japan; the 4th Marine Aircraft Wing, New Orleans, LA; the Military Entrance Processing Station, Los Angeles, CA; and the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro, CA. She served on the Commandant's personal staff in the Office of the Commandant, Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps, Washington, DC; as the Executive Officer, 4th Recruit Training Battalion, Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, SC; and as Division Assistant Chief of Staff for Personnel (G-1) for the 3rd Marine Division in Okinawa, Japan. Her final active duty assignment was as the Force Assistant Chief of Staff for Personnel (G-1) on the Commanding General, U.S. Marine Corps Forces, Atlantic staff in Norfolk, VA. Maureen attended the U.S. Marine Corps Command and Staff College, Quantico, VA, where she earned a Master of Science Degree in Military Science.
Maureen holds a Masters Degree in Human Relations from the University of Oklahoma as well as certification as a Human Resources Management Professional from the Society of Human Resources Management.
Maureen's personal awards received while on active duty include the Legion of Merit Medal, the Meritorious Service Medal, the Joint Service Commendation Medal, the Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal with two gold stars, the Joint Service Achievement Medal, and the Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal with gold star. She has also been awarded the Department of the Navy Superior Public Service Medal.
Donald P. Loren most recently served until January 19, 2021 as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Plans & Posture Policy, supporting the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy and the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Strategy, Plans, and Capabilities by developing strategies, creating policies, and conducting oversight on U.S. global defense posture, contingency plans, and global force management.
He was appointed to serve as the Department of Veterans Affairs' Assistant Secretary for Operations, Security, and Preparedness and served until September 1, 2018. He had responsibility for the Department’s national security, emergency management response and recovery, personnel security and suitability, and security and law enforcement activities, across a 1700 facility and 375,000 employee enterprise including oversight of the 4800-member VA Police Force. He served as the Department's Continuity Coordinator, Emergency Coordinator, and Federal Senior Intelligence Coordinator, and oversaw policy across VA’s administrations and staff offices for emergency preparedness, continuity, intelligence, counterintelligence, insider threat, special security, national security/emergency preparedness communications, infrastructure protection, personal security and law enforcement programs Additionally, he represented the VA on the National Security Council, Domestic Resilience Group (DRG) and the National Security Policy Coordinating Committee and directed the VA's 24/7 Integrated Operations Center, Continuity of Operations (COOP) sites, the Law Enforcement Training Center, and the Security and Investigations Center.
Before his appointment, he was the President and CEO of Old Dominion Strategies, an international and homeland security and program management consulting company, where he advised the Department of Defense Threat Reduction Agency and the Department of Homeland Security on international and national security matters. He also advised the American Petroleum Institute and the organization "Veterans for Energy" on the relationships between energy policy and national security. Prior to joining the private sector, Don was appointed as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Homeland Security Integration, where he was responsible for strategic planning and policy development, capability and resource assessment, domestic and international partnership Defense Support of Civil Authority integration, congressional activities, strategic communications, and education issues related to homeland defense and homeland security. Additionally, in this capacity he represented the Department of Defense on the Homeland Security Council DRG.
Don retired from the U.S. Navy as a Rear Admiral, completing a 31-year naval career, which included command of a guided missile frigate and a Destroyer Squadron, as well as duty in the office of the Chief of Naval Operations; the Staff of the Commander U.S. Naval Forces, Europe; the Joint Staff; and the Office of the Secretary of Defense. His final assignment in uniform was as Deputy Director, Strategic Plans and Policy for Politco-Military Affairs on the Joint Staff. There he oversaw all Politco-Military relationships for the U.S. Military with NATO, Europe, Russia, and Africa. Subsequent to his naval career, Don served as a Senior National Intelligence Service Executive in the Office of the Director, National Intelligence, where he was assigned as the first Deputy for Operations Support at the then newly created National Counterterrorism Center. His responsibilities included coordinating counterterrorism efforts among the 16 intelligence agencies, as well as with the U.S. major international allies.
A 1974 graduate of the United States Naval Academy, his post-graduate education includes Old Dominion University, Harvard University Center for International Affairs, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Center for National Security, the Syracuse University Maxwell School of Government, the NATO Defense College, the University of Maryland School of Public Policy, the Northwestern University Kellogg School of Management, the Department of State Foreign Service Institute, the National Defense University, and the Center for Creative Leadership "Leadership at the Peak" program. Don is a member of the National Association of Corporate Directors and has achieved the designation as a Board Governance Fellow. Don has served as an adjunct lecturer for the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California, the Syracuse University Maxwell School of Citizenship in Syracuse, New York, the George C. Marshall Center in Garmisch, Germany, the Canadian Forces College, and the George Washington University in Washington, D.C. and has held the position of Professor of Military Science at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, VA. Additionally, he served as a Senior Fellow at the Joint Forces Staff College in Norfolk, VA and as a member of the Intelligence and National Security Alliance Homeland Security Intelligence Council, where he coauthored the Alliance’s monographs, "The Evolving Terrorist Threat and the Importance of Intelligence to Protect the Homeland" and "Protecting the Homeland: Intelligence Integration 15 Years After 9/11." He has also served as senior defense strategic advisor to the Homeland Security and Defense Business Council, a group of Fortune 500 companies with significant homeland security business interests. Additionally, he was formerly a member of numerous small company advisory boards and councils, and served as a trustee of the United States Navy Memorial in Washington, D.C. He has frequently appeared as conference moderator, panelist, and keynote speaker at various national security venues.
Don served on the Virginia Military Advisory Council, where he and the council served the governor in maintaining a cooperative and constructive relationship between the Commonwealth and the leadership of the Armed Forces of the United States on issues affecting preparedness, public safety, and security. He also served as Co-Chairman of the Board of Directors of the National Association for Uniformed Services, and as a member of the Executive Committee and Board of Directors of the Northern Virginia Chamber of Commerce, where he chaired the Veterans and Military Business Council.
He served on the nonprofit boards of directors of the America's Adopt a Soldier Foundation, the Hope for the Warrior Foundation, the Rear Admiral James Carey Foundation, and the Mission Readiness Foundation, as well as the advisory boards for Perridot Solutions, LLC and The Binary Group, LLC.
Don has been awarded the Secretary of Defense Medal for Outstanding Public Service, Secretary of Defense Medal for Exceptional Public Service, Department of Veterans Affairs Meritorious Service Medal, Department of Health and Human Service Pinnacle Gold Medal, Defense Superior Service Medal, Legion of Merit, Bronze Star Medal, and various personal, unit, and campaign awards. Additionally, he has received the Order of Merit of the Republic of Italy from the Italian Government, has been awarded the New York State Conspicuous Service Cross and Conspicuous Service Star, and was awarded the 2007 Old Dominion University Distinguished Alumnus Award. Don is a Naval Institute Press book author, has also published numerous professional journal articles and papers, and is a frequent op-ed and media contributor.