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Policy shift: DoD is pushing major program management back to the military

December 21, 2017 By Andrew Smith

The Pentagon has steadily been pushing milestone authority for major defense programs to the individual military services, but shifting personnel down from the Office of the Secretary of Defense will take longer.

At a Dec. 7 hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Ellen Lord, undersecretary of defense for acquisition, logistics and technology, or AT&L, said her intention is to continue to hand off the day-to-day running of programs to the services, preferring her office serve as a kind of high-level group providing overall guidance.

“AT&L needs to be the strategic body with focus across the board, driving affordability and accountability, reducing timelines, and equipping the Services to execute their programs,” Lord said in prepared testimony, adding that the Defense Department awards an average of 1,800 new contracts a day and 36,000 delivery/task orders a day.

Keep reading this article at: https://www.federaltimes.com/pentagon/2017/12/11/policy-shift-dod-is-pushing-major-program-management-back-to-the-military/

Filed Under: Contracting News Tagged With: acquisition reform, AT&L, DoD, innovation, Pentagon, procurement reform, restructuring

The ‘P’ in procurement isn’t just for price, it’s for people too

November 20, 2015 By Andrew Smith

Is the federal government moving away from lowest price, technically acceptable (LPTA) procurements? Contractors that are in the people business can only hope so.

When I say “people” business, I mean providing the government with people who exceed expectations in delivering operations, technology and facilities management services. In LPTA procurements, competitions in which the government selects the lowest-priced proposal that meets a minimum set of technical requirements, contractors are not rewarded, or even encouraged, for exceeding these minimum standards. This approach is not compatible with a corporate philosophy that stresses excellence in service delivery by people who are best qualified to do the job.

Kendall LPTA Memo
To see the full text of Frank Kendall’s memo on LPTA, click on the image above.

On March 4, 2015, Frank Kendall, undersecretary of Defense for acquisition, technology, and logistics, issued a memorandum detailing the role that LPTA procurements should play in the Defense Department’s acquisition process. According to the Kendall memorandum, use of LPTA is appropriate “only when there are well-defined requirements, the risk of unsuccessful contract performance is minimal, price is a significant factor in the source selection, and there is neither value, need, nor willingness to pay for higher performance.”

Keep reading this article at: http://www.govexec.com/excellence/promising-practices/2015/11/p-procurement-isnt-just-price-its-people-too/123593

Filed Under: Contracting Tips Tagged With: AT&L, DoD, DPAP, lowest price technically acceptable, LPTA

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