DOD SARs Paint Bleak Picture of Problematic Program Management

Monday, 05 April 2010 00:00 administrator
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On April 2, 2010 the Department of Defense released its annual Selected Acquisition Reports (SARs).  As the DOD release noted

SARs summarize the latest estimates of cost, schedule, and performance status. These reports are prepared annually in conjunction with submission of the President's Budget. Subsequent quarterly exception reports are required only for those programs experiencing unit cost increases of at least 15 percent or schedule delays of at least six months. Quarterly SARs are also submitted for initial reports, final reports, and for programs that are rebaselined at major milestone decisions.

In summary, the December 2009 SARs reported an aggregate increase in program estimates at completion (EACs) of $107,241 million, which is an increase of 7.2 percent over the prior quarter’s SARs.  DOD reported that—

The cost increase is due primarily to a net increase in planned quantities (+$44,851.5 million), higher program cost estimates (+$51,338.8 million), an increase in support requirements (+$25,434.6 million), and a net stretchout of development and procurement schedules (+$8,973.4 million). These increases are partially offset by the application of lower escalation rates (-$23,980.3 million).

The DOD announcement also included a listing of those programs that have breached their Nunn-McCurdy limits.  (We previously reported on two of those programs here.)  There are two types of Nunn-McCurdy breaches.  “Critical” breaches are those programs that have experienced unit cost increases of at least 25 percent when compared to the current Acquisition Program Baseline (APB) or at least 50 percent when compared to the program’s original APB.  “Significant” breaches are those programs that have experienced unit cost increases of between 15 and 25 percent of the current APB, or that have experienced unit cost increases of between 30 and 50 percent of the original APB.

DOD notes that—

Pursuant to 10 U.S.C. § 2433, for those programs with significant breaches, Congressional notifications are required, as well as detailed unit cost breach information in the SAR. For those programs with critical breaches, notifications and unit cost breach information are also required. In addition a certification determination by the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology & Logistics must be made no later than June 1, 2010.

For this reporting period there are six programs with “critical” breaches and one program with a “significant” breach.  In our previous article (link above) we discussed breaches associated with the ATIRCM/CMWS program and WGS satellite program.  In addition, DOD announced breaches associated with the following programs:

DOD also reported that 35 other programs (some of which have been discussed here before) experienced “program cost changes” that did not give rise to Nunn-McCurdy breaches, or that actually had decreases in estimated program costs.  You can find the entire list by clicking on the link at the beginning of this article.  In addition, DOD published a summary document that can be found here.

As can be seen from the foregoing, some Nunn-McCurdy breaches are caused by factors beyond the program team’s control—such as decreases in the number of units to be acquired or the addition of work beyond the scope of the original program baseline.  Some breaches, however, appear to be caused by factors that were within the control of the program team.  We might suggest that those programs consider upgrading their management effectiveness, lest they repeat the fate of the Armed Reconnaissance Helicopter and Future Combat Systems—to name just two of several programs recently terminated or severely curtailed.