WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Apr 16, 2025--
Avyance, a leading provider of IT transformation services, supported the successful implementation of the Oracle Cloud Financial Management System (FMS) at the National Gallery of Art. Established in 1937 as a unique public-private institution, the National Gallery of Art is a center of visual art, education, and culture attracting nearly four million people each year. The project marks a significant milestone as the National Gallery becomes the first institution to adopt Oracle’s Cloud Federal Financials. This cutting-edge SaaS ERP sets a new standard for efficient, streamlined financial management and transparency in government. From this platform, the National Gallery can access a single integrated financial management solution that meets federal budgetary accounting, reporting and security requirements while simultaneously satisfying its private, not-for-profit financial reporting needs. “This is an important turning point for the National Gallery as we modernize our financial management system. Avyance was a critical partner in helping us achieve a successful launch of this first ever federal deployment,” said Mark E. Walther, Senior Advisor and Operation Fusion Project Lead.
This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250416938390/en/
“Avyance is honored to partner with the Gallery on this modernization project,” said Andrea Kiernan, Avyance Vice President. “The Oracle system enables greater productivity, better analytics for decision-making, and improved security. Avyance IT transformation experts revamped processes and training for the museum’s users, minimizing down time, reducing the risk of errors, and realizing system benefits from day one.”
The National Gallery’s new financial management system became operational on March 17, 2025.
About the National Gallery of Art
The National Gallery of Art welcomes all people to explore art, creativity, and our shared humanity. Nearly four million people come through its doors each year—with millions more online—making it one of the most visited art museums in the world. The National Gallery's renowned collection includes over 160,000 works of art, from the ancient world to today. Admission to the West and East Buildings, Sculpture Garden, special exhibitions, and public programs is always free.
About Avyance
Avyance is an SBA certified 8(a) small business with 50+ dedicated experts who bring technology and transformation solutions to their clients. Avyance is trusted by public and private organizations to drive efficiency, implement innovative solutions, and deliver lasting impact. To learn more, visit www.avyance.com.
The National Gallery of Art
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — As National Guard members roll into New Orleans to help with safety measures ahead of New Year's celebrations, city officials are still seeking permanent security solutions nearly a year after a truck attack on Bourbon Street left 14 dead.
The rampage, in which a man drove around a police blockade in the early hours of Jan. 1, revealed security vulnerabilities surrounding a famous street filled with boisterous bars, brass bands playing on cobblestone corners and a steady stream of partygoers carrying cocktails.
While Louisiana officials say the tourist site is safe as they implement additional measures to crackdown on potential threats ahead of the attack anniversary, families of deceased victims say not enough has been done to ensure similar tragedies won't happen again.
The attack happened when Shamsud-Din Jabbar drove a pickup truck down Bourbon Street, plowing into crowds celebrating New Year’s Day, killing 14 people and injuring dozens of others. Police shot and killed Jabbar, a U.S. citizen and Army veteran who had proclaimed his support for the Islamic State militant group on social media.
In the wake of the rampage, city officials, state agencies and law firms representing victims’ families launched investigations into whether the attack could have been prevented. The investigations focused on the street's bollard system of steel columns designed to block cars from entering the thoroughfare. The bollards were being replaced at the time.
Among the victims were Nikyra Dedeaux, an 18-year-old about to start college who was on Bourbon Street with friends. Her mother, Melissa Dedeaux, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that while many will ring in 2026 with fireworks and merriment, she will be grieving. She has been haunted by her daughter's final moments, captured in graphic video that circulated on social media.
“I’m a parent that had to wake up, log on my Facebook account and see my daughter's last days — my daughter's last time. I didn’t get to see her on Bourbon the night it happened. I saw her on a video,” she told the AP.
“I saw no safety,” Dedeaux said. “I saw that my daughter could still be here.”
Questions still swirl around the street's barricade system, which is a patchwork of bollards, strategically parked police vehicles and 32 large steel barriers that officers push into place every night to form pedestrian zones.
“They are not meant to be utilized in the fashion they are,” Samuel Palumbo, the 8th District New Orleans Police Department Captain, said of the barriers that can withstand only low-speed collisions. He stressed to the New Orleans Governmental Affairs Committee this month that the system is a “temporary solution to a permanent problem.”
“We need to learn from what happened,” Morris Bart, whose law firm is representing victims and their families, told reporters Tuesday. “It’s kind of ridiculous ... that a year after this tragedy nothing has been done to resolve this situation.”
Palumbo urged the city to install permanent security gates that can withstand crashes up to 50 miles per hour (80 kilometers per hour). The committee opted to hold off on a vote until incoming Mayor Helena Moreno enters office in January.
A consulting firm, hired by the city to conduct a security assessment, made another suggestion: Make Bourbon Street a pedestrian only area.
While much of the street is limited to pedestrians at night, the recommendation — which victims' families have supported — was largely ignored after French Quarter residents and business owners raised concerns about accessing their homes and businesses.
As the city prepares for round-the-clock revelry, President Donald Trump authorized the deployment of 350 National Guard members, who were arriving Tuesday to provide enhanced security for the French Quarter.
Troops will stay through Carnival season, when tourists descend on the Big Easy to partake in costumed celebrations and parades that snake through city streets before ending with Mardi Gras in mid-February.
Republicans and Democrats have supported the additional resources. Mayor-elect Moreno said she appreciates the troops' presence and that it increases the “visibility of security assets during major events.”
Longtime French Quarter worker Miguel Thornton said he's happy to see armed troops a year after the attack.
“A lot of the service industry professionals that were out here were affected — they saw the carnage, they had to step over bodies — and so people were definitely changed,” Thornton said. “As far as the National Guard, they’ve been here before. Honestly, they’re welcome.”
Louisiana has a famous Cajun French phrase, “Laissez les bon temps rouler,” or “Let the good times roll.” In New Orleans, a city that heavily relies on tourism, the show always goes on in the entertainment district — even in the face of tragedy.
After the Bourbon Street attack, the strip was closed down as emergency crews tended to the injured, bodies were removed and blood was washed from the streets. By the next day, before all the victims had even been identified by the coroner, the street was reopened. Within a few months, handwritten tributes at the site of the attack had been painted over.
As the anniversary nears, tourists again flock to Bourbon Street for New Year's celebrations. This time, suspended above them are hundreds of handcrafted flags honoring the victims.
Buck Harley, who manages a Bourbon Street cigar shop, said he has had to explain the memorial to patrons.
“We seem to as a society forget. And I don’t think it’s because of a lack of empathy but because there’s another big story taking its place,” Harley said. “I have to tell the tourists what the flags are up there for, because it’s forgotten already.”
FILE - Emergency personnel work at the scene on Bourbon Street after a vehicle drove into a crowd on New Orleans' Canal and Bourbon Street, Wednesday Jan. 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File)
Buck Harley, a cigar shop manager, stands outside of his store Monday, Dec. 29, 2025, on Bourbon Street in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Jack Brook)
Miguel Thornton stands under memorial flags for the victims of a Jan. 1, 2025, vehicle ramming attack, outside of the Bourbon Street bar, where he works, on Monday, Dec. 29, 2025, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Jack Brook)
An opened gate is seen at the Bourbon Street corner in New Orleans on Monday, Dec. 29, 2025, the site of a Jan. 1, 2025, fatal vehicle ramming attack which led the city to bolster its safety measures in the area. (AP Photo/Jack Brook)