Defense Acquisition Reform Panel Submits Recommended Fixes

Friday, 12 March 2010 00:00 administrator
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On March 4, 2010, after a year of “holding 12 hearings and numerous briefings covering a broad range of issues in defense acquisition,” the House Armed Services Committee (HASC) Panel on Defense Acquisition Reform (PDAR, DAR, or DARP) issued its interim report.  The interim report covered many topics, and is summarized below—

The Panel found that while the nature of defense acquisition has substantially changed, the defense acquisition system has not kept pace. The system remains structured primarily for the acquisition of weapon systems at a time when services represent a much larger share of the Department’s acquisitions. As a result, the Department’s formal acquisition policy has limited application to the majority of the Department’s acquisitions. Furthermore, while the Department is currently working to modernize in the ‘information age, the acquisition system is particularly poorly designed for the acquisition of information technology. Even in the acquisition of weapon systems, the Department’s historical strength, the system continues to generate development timeframes for major systems measured in decades, an approach which has resulted in unacceptable cost growth, negative effects on industry, and in too many cases, a failure to meet warfighter needs.

The DARP interim report looked at the entire defense acquisition/program management system and also focused on a few select areas.  Following are some selected quotes from the report.

The Panel made a number of recommendations to address the problems reported above (as well as others in the interim report).  Among the recommendations that our readers are likely to find to be of interest are the following—

  1. Congress should expand the role of the Office of Performance Assessment and Root Cause Analysis (PARCA) to operate as an auditable performance management function for the entire defense acquisition system.
  2. PARCA and all Program Executive Offices (PEOs) and buying activities should negotiate specific measurable goals for each PEO/buying activity relating, at a minimum, to cost, quality, delivery, acquisition workforce quality (including program manager tenure where relevant), quality of market research, small business utilization, and utilization of acquisition best practices. In cases where they are unable to negotiate a set of goals by consensus, PARCA’s recommendation would take precedence with the possibility of review by the USD AT&L.
  3. The Department and Congress should review and clarify the Goldwater-Nichols Act’s separation between acquisition and the military service chiefs to allow detailed coordination and interaction between the requirements and acquisition processes and to encourage for enhanced military service chief participation in contract quality assurance.
  4. The Department should work the Department of Commerce, Small Business Administration, General Services Administration, and the private sector to proactively notify relevant firms, especially small businesses, of contract solicitations rather than only relying on firms to find those notifications on FedBizOpps.
  5. Congress should repeal the 3% contract payment withholding requirement.
  6. The Department should identify potential contractors and grantees with serious tax delinquencies and include that information in databases relating to past performance and contractor integrity.
  7. The Department should consider shifting the responsibility for certification of contractor business systems to independent teams within or outside of DCAA and DCAA should allocate its audit resources on the basis of risk.

The entire interim report can be found here.

We are pleased by some of the recommendations, notably numbers 5 and 7 above.  We hope the rest of Congress is listening and decides to take appropriate action.  Our optimism is tempered, however, by the knowledge that literally hundreds of panels and commissions have made literally thousands of similar recommendations over the past four decades, without noticeably improving the Defense acquisition system and/or its program management framework.