Full-Time
Posted on 12/26/2025
Government IT modernization and digital solutions
$128k - $170k/yr
Washington, DC, USA
In Person
MetroStar provides technology solutions to federal and other government agencies, focusing on IT modernization, digital tools, and training platforms. They tailor end-to-end offerings—consulting, software development, system integration, and cloud or data capabilities—to meet each agency’s needs, with examples like the CFAP 2 Eligible Commodities Finder and government learning management systems. Their public-sector specialization and track record across agencies create measurable impact, including cost savings and thousands of trained personnel. Their goal is to help government agencies accelerate missions, improve efficiency, and modernize public services through practical, deployable digital solutions.
Company Size
201-500
Company Stage
N/A
Total Funding
$4.4M
Headquarters
Reston, Virginia
Founded
1999
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Paid Vacation
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Wellness Program
George Mason launches partnership with MetroStar, company launched by three former students out of their dorm. * emily seymour * dec 29, 2025. George Mason University has launched a partnership with MetroStar, an artificial intelligence-focused defense company, to recruit and develop technology leaders. Reston-based MetroStar got its start at George Mason over two decades ago when three students launched the company from their dorm room. The students' idea was rooted in the belief that "technology would drive change in the federal government," according to a news release from MetroStar. 'Master class of emotions:' Prince William father-son duo to star in Jan. 5 episode of NBC's 'The Wall' Through the multi-year strategic partnership with George Mason, MetroStar will support students and programming across the university. It will become a Costello Corporate Partner in the Donald G. Costello College of Business and an Industry Partner in the College of Engineering and Computing. Through the collaboration, MetroStar will launch a scholarship for undergraduate and graduate students with preference for those minoring in government contracting or management information systems. MetroStar will also launch a Clearance Ready Scholarship for students interested in obtaining a national security clearance. "MetroStar's investment in the Costello College of Business's Corporate Partners program aligns closely with our strategic priorities - particularly in fostering innovative business collaboration and advancing career readiness," said Ajay Vinzé, the former dean of the College of Business and current interim provost and executive vice president of the university. "Their support will expand access to education in government contracting for our students and strengthen the academic offerings of the Greg and Camille Baroni Center for Government Contracting - the first university-based center in the nation focused on the business, policy, and regulatory dimensions of this vital sector," Vinzé said. MetroStar will also support the Dean's Excellence Funds in the College of Engineering and Computing and in the Costello College of Business, in furtherance of strategic academic initiatives. "We are extremely grateful for this gift from MetroStar, which will support the education and training of our students who are interested in serving our nation as federal employees or as employees of our government contractors," said Ken Ball, the dean of the college for engineering and computing. Ali Reza Manouchehri, MetroStar's CEO and co-founder, earned a bachelor of arts in philosophy from George Mason in 1999. He recently served as the 2025 Winter Commencement speaker for the university. "This is more than a corporate partnership. It's a personal return," Manouchehri said. "George Mason is where we built the foundation for MetroStar. We're investing in students who will one day shape the digital future of government just like we dreamed about doing back then." The three-year partnership will create a "new model of agile collaboration between academia and the public sector, bridging the fast-paced world of government innovation with the grounded mission of education," the release said. Earlier this year, George Mason released its plan for advancing a "responsible approach to harnessing artificial intelligence and driving societal impact," officials said. The partnership will also fuel the Mason Innovation Exchange, an incubator for student-driven ideas and power events such as PatriotHacks, the university's hackathon that challenges students to solve real-world problems with coding. "Our partnership isn't about one-off contributions but investing in people and the future of civil servants who will protect and guide the nation," Manouchehri said. "We're creating deliberate pathways from campus to cleared service, from idea to implementation, and from classroom projects to real-world impact."
New AI and video tech is taking the danger and guesswork out of this punishing Air Force job that hasn't changed in 50 years. Chris panella new follow authors and never miss a story! * New technology is changing the decades-old maintenance work on Air Force refueling aircraft. * Companies MetroStar and ActionStreamer worked with Air Force technicians to develop IRIS. * IRIS includes AI-enabled workflow and a live-feed video and audio setup, and it's already speeding up work. Inside some of the Air Force's oldest refueling aircraft, technicians are crawling through tight, dirty spaces, painstakingly cleaning sealant on fuel tanks and tightening loose rivets. They climb into the dark, cramped tanks with little more than a flashlight, some tools, and shaky comms. It can be hard to breathe, the air smells like jet fuel, the fixes aren't always clear, and the punishing work can be dangerous if done wrong. It's a job that hasn't changed much in over 50 years, but new gear, including a live-feed video headset and artificial intelligence-enabled technology, is finally bringing it into the 21st century. The Integrated Respirator Information System, known as IRIS and developed by MetroStar and ActionStreamer, is speeding up the maintenance process, company officials and Air Force technicians say, and making it safer and more efficient. Tankers are important logistics assets, what the Air Force calls "silent enablers," that support missions by helping keep fighters and bombers airborne for longer than the onboard fuel tanks can sustain alone. For instance, Operation Midnight Hammer, which saw US stealth bombers strike Iran's nuclear site this year, involved dozens of refueling tankers supporting the strike package. The cutting edge of warfare, military strategy, and defense tech - delivered weekly. Although fighter aircraft like the F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter or bombers like the B-2 Spirit get the most attention, tankers like the KC-135 Stratotanker are critical to US and allied airpower. For them to be useful, though, they have to be well-maintained. IRIS began as an idea from two maintainers who noticed the broader potential of ActionStreamer's live-streaming tech - gear originally built for athletes to capture first-person views during games. The Air Force technicians pursued the concept for years, even as they rotated through new assignments and bases. The Air Force had long believed that tools like this could be a major boost for maintainers. There were early forays into video tech in the 2000s, but the "technology wasn't quite there," Master Sgt. Troy French, a former 100th Maintenance Squadron member, told Business Insider. "An initial phase of this was kind of set up and abandoned because cameras weren't small enough." Now, though, Air Force maintainers based at Royal Air Force Mildenhall, a central refueling base for the US missions in Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, have been testing out IRIS. "They were, to be honest with you, a little apprehensive to start with," ActionStreamer CEO Bob Lento said, noting it was the first significant change to how technicians have done their jobs in years. But by the end of the first week, attitudes had flipped. "We were taking the cart out of the hangar into a safe area to do some software punch-ups, and they were like, 'Wait a minute, where are you going with that? We need to use that now.'" A hard, multi-step, high-risk job. On a tanker aircraft like the KC-135, there's a hole just big enough for a person to fit through under the wing. It's the access point for the fuel tanks. "You crawl up there and you contort your body to be able to lie down flat and then put your feet in," French said. Inside, it is a tight space with lots of bumps and edges. The workers wear heavy protective suits to guard against fuel exposure and keep sweat out of the tanks. They carry a flashlight and breathe through respirators that feed fresh air in from a hose running outside the aircraft. Outside the aircraft, a support team stands by. One person runs tools to the person inside the tank while another monitors for any hazards or issues. "If you need something, sometimes you just have to peel the respirator back, like, 'Hey, I need this extra wrench that I forgot,'" French said. The runner will grab it and bring it to the entry point, screaming into the tank or pulling on the respirator hose to get the technician's attention. "If you're really deep in the tank, then you have to crawl back to get it from them, and you have to wait there for them to bring it, reducing the amount of time you're actually working." Before a worker enters the aircraft, they'll know what issues they're looking for. A broken rivet, for instance, along with regular fuel tanker maintenance to keep the aircraft operating. But sometimes they adjust a different part in the wrong area of the refueling aircraft or leave a tool inside the tanker. There's a lot of double-checking the work. Steps like removing sealant, cleaning, and putting adhesion in the tank require approval from other team members. It's inherently an hourslong job made even longer by wait times and communication lags. And that's if it all runs smoothly. Sometimes, technicians make mistakes, extending the time. "A simple sealant job can turn from a couple of hours of scraping and then eventually reapplying to another day because it turned out that you applied it to the wrong spot," Tech Sgt. Chris Anderson, with the 100th Air Refueling Wing, said. "The way that we did things left a lot of room for error." A logical fix, Frank said, was something wearable: "a camera with two-way audio would be awesome, and if it had lights, that'd be a second bonus." A new way of doing an old job. The IRIS technology sits on top of the face mask tanker maintenance workers wear. It features a high-definition video camera, a two-way comms system that goes inside the mask, and a hands-free light. IRIS shows everything the technician is looking at to those outside the fuel tank and allows them to communicate with their team. It connects to a mobile workstation outside the aircraft. On the cart, which can host up to four IRIS units simultaneously, the support team can see what the technician sees, talk them through the work, and record the footage. Video records help verify what each shift completed and resolve disputes quickly. For instance, Anderson said that the day shift had cleared a fuel puddle, but the next shift found one and questioned the work. IRIS showed that the first team had done the job, revealing, as French said, " another problem, something's leaking." That prevented unnecessary rework and let them fix the issue. In the past, a tricky aircraft issue could halt work while the right Air Force experts traveled in to assess it. Now, IRIS can send video to them instantly or launch a group call so everyone can see exactly what the technician sees. Developers also see AI playing a growing role in streamlining the job. As a technician uses IRIS, an AI agent compiles images and data to make requests, anticipate needed work, and handle forms. That frees technicians from what retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Cedric George called "shallow work," so when their shift ends, "all he or she has to do is button up, clean up, go home." IRIS is currently in use only at Mildenhall, but early results are promising, as the Air Force considers expanding it to other bases. Technicians using the system haven't had any safety incidents, and inspections are running 60% faster in test environments, according to pilot evaluations and internal logs. Based on KC-135 maintenance baselines, MetroStar estimates IRIS could save 35,000 maintainer hours and add more than 7,000 aircraft availability days. George attributed the success of IRIS to the technicians who wanted to revamp the decades-old process to make it better for future workers. "This is not for the faint of heart, it's dirty work," he said, saying current technicians who worked on IRIS believe future maintainers "have to have something better than what we have now." Read next. Business Insider tells the innovative stories you want to know.
Computerworld names metorstar to 2026 list of Best Places to Work in IT for people-first AI innovation. RESTON, VA - Tues. Dec. 9. 2025 - Foundry's Computerworld announces MetroStar as a 2026 Best Place to Work in IT, marking the company's fifteenth win. This award recognizes the top organizations that challenge their IT staff while providing great benefits, engagement and training opportunities. "MetroStar's enduring strength is rooted in the incredible people who shape our culture and propel our work," said Debbie Peterson, MetroStar's SVP of People & Culture. "We bring that same dedication to our customers empowering our teams to lead with heart, innovate boldly, and deliver meaningful mission outcomes." Headquartered in Reston, Virginia, MetroStar has spent nearly three decades accelerating mission outcomes across Defense and National Security. The company combines deep domain expertise with advanced AI-enabled solutions that deliver time-to-value at mission speed, helping agencies deploy technology faster, make smarter decisions, and achieve impact sooner. The company's expertise has earned a first place title in IT growth by Computerworld for small organizations (1,000 employees or less). MetroStar's recent launch of Mira, an AI-powered Digital Labor solution built on Microsoft Azure AI, exemplifies the company's people-first approach to innovation. Designed to enhance - not replace - the human experience, Mira supports recruitment by providing mission-aligned, personalized interactions for candidates while freeing internal recruitment teams to focus on strategic, high-value work. The Best Places to Work in IT list by Computerworld honors top organizations for technology professionals, recognizing excellence in benefits, career development, culture, modernization, and employee engagement. Rankings are determined through a comprehensive review process and vetted by industry experts. "It's clear that AI is having a disruptive impact on IT operations and IT talent," says Barbara Call, Global Director of Content Strategy at Foundry. "This year's honorees demonstrated how organizations are proactively evolving their talent strategies to fill much-needed skills gaps and reskill existing staff to be more resilient and responsive to changing needs." About MetroStar MetroStar is a trusted provider of AI-enabled solutions for U.S. government agencies, advancing the nation's most critical missions through speed, innovation, and purpose. With a focus on AI, digital transformation, and secure enterprise modernization, MetroStar delivers technology that translates mission needs into capability at record pace, empowering defense and national security leaders to outpace emerging threats and accelerate mission success. For more information, visit www.metrostar.com. About Computerworld Computerworld is the leading technology media brand empowering enterprise users and their managers, helping them create business advantage by skillfully exploiting today's abundantly powerful web, mobile, and desktop applications. Computerworld also offers guidance to IT managers tasked with optimizing client systems - and helps businesses revolutionize the customer and employee experience with new collaboration platforms. Computerworld's award-winning website (www.computerworld.com), strategic marketing solutions and research forms the hub of the world's largest global IT media network and provides opportunities for IT vendors to engage this audience. Computerworld is published by Foundry. Company information is available at www.foundryco.com. you might like these too. Management | awards | feature | MetroStar culture. Career growth | management | feature. Career growth | awards | MetroStar culture.
Veritas Capital to acquire digital solutions firm MetroStar Systems. Veritas Capital on Wednesday said it has agreed to acquire the digital transformation solutions firm MetroStar Systems, which serves the defense and intelligence communities. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. The transaction is subject to regulatory approvals and is expected to close before the end of the year. MetroStar, which is based in Reston, Va., has capabilities in artificial intelligence, digital design, enterprise information technology and application modernization. The company said the partnership with Veritas "will allow us to... Subscriber-only content. Please log in below. Not a subscriber or registered user yet? Please contact us at [email protected] or call us at 888-707-5814 (Monday - Thursday 9:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. and Friday 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. ET.), to start a free trial, get pricing information, order a reprint, or post an article link on your website.
Veritas Capital's Vantage Fund has agreed to acquire MetroStar Systems, a company specializing in AI-enabled digital transformation for the U.S. defense and national security sectors. Based in Reston, Virginia, MetroStar has been supporting defense and intelligence missions for nearly 30 years with AI solutions that enhance technology deployment, decision-making, and mission impact.