The Contracting Education Academy

Contracting Academy Logo
  • Home
  • Training & Education
  • Services
  • Contact Us
You are here: Home / Archives for State Dept.

September 2, 2011 By AMK

Pentagon contracting policy faulted in two reports

Defense Department contractors in war zones wasted more than $30 billion during the past decade through poor planning and management, the chairs of the Commission on Wartime Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan said on Monday in an op-ed previewing a report due out this week.

During those same 10 years, the value of Pentagon contracts awarded without competitive bidding tripled, from $50 billion in 2001 to more than $140 billion in 2010, according to a report the nonprofit Center for Public Integrity released Monday.

In a critique titled “Reducing Waste in War Contracts” published in The Washington Post, former Rep. Christopher Shays, R-Conn., and Mark Thibault, former deputy director of the Defense Contract Audit Agency, wrote that all eight members of the wartime commission “agree that major changes in law and policy are needed to avoid confusion and waste in the next contingency, whether it involves armed struggle overseas or response to disasters at home.”

The panel chairmen said taxpayer dollars have been “wasted through poor planning, vague and shifting requirements, inadequate competition, substandard contract management and oversight, lax accountability, weak interagency coordination, and subpar performance or outright misconduct by some contractors and federal employees.”

As solutions, they recommended:

  • Designating a dual-hatted official to coordinate contracting at the Office of Management and Budget who would participate in meetings of the National Security Council;
  • Using risk analysis more in deciding whether a function not inherently governmental should be outsourced;
  • Reviewing current and pending projects for evidence of unsustainability, with an eye toward canceling those that don’t appear promising;
  • Creating a permanent inspector general for operations during contingencies.

Meanwhile, the Center for Public Integrity’s research findings, which it will unfold daily this week in a series called “Windfalls of War,” include an analysis of federal data concluding that “the Pentagon’s competed contracts, based on dollar figures, fell to 55 percent in the first two quarters of 2011, a number lower than any point in the last 10 years since the terrorist attacks of 9/11.” The center noted that the issue of noncompetitive contracting practices has been examined many times by the Government Accountability Office, the Defense Department’s inspector general and the Commission on Wartime Contracting.

President Obama weighed in on the problem both as a candidate in 2008 and in a presidential memo in 2009. The center also cited a memo promising efforts at greater use of “multisource, continuously competitively bid” contracts issued in 2010 by Defense Undersecretary Ashton B. Carter, the Pentagon’s senior procurement chief.

But “campaign pledges and memos have made little headway in combating the problem,” wrote analyst Sharon Weinberger, whose team studied a dozen government reports and investigations and interviewed eight former government officials and experts.

Coming installments in the series will examine no-bid contracting at the Energy, Homeland Security and State departments, as well as the Federal Emergency Management Agency, all of which, the center says, have better records on the issue than does the Pentagon.

The final report of the wartime commission, chartered by Congress in 2008, is scheduled for release on Wednesday.

 — by Charles S. Clark – Government Executive – August 29, 2011 at http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=48650&dcn=e_tma 

Filed Under: Government Contracting News Tagged With: acquisition strategy, DCAA, DHS, DoD, Energy Dept., FEMA, GAO, State Dept.

June 14, 2011 By AMK

Report: Contractor waste in war zones could grow

As President Obama nears his decision on reducing U.S. troop presence in Afghanistan, a new report warns of prospects for massive new waste in contractor projects in both Iraq and Afghanistan.

Newly built power plants that sit idle, water treatment plants that produce nonpotable water and facilities constructed for security forces that could potentially exceed $11 billion in costs are some examples given in the report released June 3 by the federal Commission on Wartime Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Titled “Sustainability: Hidden Costs Risk New Waste,” the fifth special report from the congressionally chartered panel set up in 2008 says many of the programs and projects carried out under federal contracts in the war zones “lack plans for staffing, technical support and funding for the long term” in such projects as health clinics and road building. As a result, said commission co-chairman Michael Thibault, billions could be wasted if projects are turned “over to a host government that can’t supply trained people to run it, pay for supplies, or perform essential maintenance.”

“A paradigm example stands in Kabul,” the report said. “American taxpayers’ dollars paid for building the $300 million Tarakhil Power Plant, also known as the Kabul Power Plant. The plant is completed. But it is little used, and the cost to operate and maintain it is too great for the Afghan government to sustain from its own resources.”

The report asks the Pentagon, State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development to examine the projects, make a detailed assessment of the host nations’ ability to complete the projects, cancel or redesign projects as warranted, and report results to Congress by the end of 2011.

On Monday, Undersecretary of State for Management Patrick Kennedy told a hearing of the Wartime Contracting Commission that the State Department will be ready to take over responsibilities in Iraq from the Defense Department on Oct. 1, as scheduled. “As the military draws down, and the [State] department’s plans are implemented to increase the civilian presence in Iraq, the department is relying on the use of contractors for certain functions which are not inherently governmental,” Kennedy said in prepared testimony. “We use contractors in contingency operations when it makes sense and is cost-efficient, as opposed to building up permanent, U.S. direct-hire staff.”

–by Charles S. Clark – Government Executive – June 6, 2011 – http://www.govexec.com/story_page_pf.cfm?articleid=47948&printerfriendlyvers=1 

Filed Under: Government Contracting News Tagged With: State Dept., sustainability, USAID

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6

Popular Topics

abuse acquisition reform acquisition strategy acquisition training acquisition workforce Air Force Army AT&L bid protest budget budget cuts competition cybersecurity DAU DFARS DHS DoD DOJ FAR fraud GAO Georgia Tech GSA GSA Schedule GSA Schedules IG industrial base information technology innovation IT Justice Dept. Navy NDAA OFPP OMB OTA Pentagon procurement reform protest SBA sequestration small business spending technology VA
Contracting Academy Logo
75 Fifth Street, NW, Suite 300
Atlanta, GA 30308
info@ContractingAcademy.gatech.edu
Phone: 404-894-6109
Fax: 404-410-6885

RSS Twitter

Search this Website

Copyright © 2023 · Georgia Tech - Enterprise Innovation Institute