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Overview of the Defense Acquisition system

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Title: Overview of the Defense Acquisition system


1
Overview of the Defense Acquisition system
  • 16 March 2008
  • Dr. Phil Smiley
  • Special Assistant for Safety in Acquisition
  • to
  • Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Safety)
  • philip.smiley_at_navy.mil

2
RECAPITALIZING DoD WEAPONS SYSTEMSEstimated 60
to 70 Billion/year for 10 yearsACAT I MAJOR
PLATFORM ACQUISITIONS
NAVY-MARINE CORPS
ARMY COMANCHE Light Helicopter FMTV Medium
Tactical Vehicles BLACKHAWK Utility Helicopter
DDG1000 21st Century Destroyer Program LCS
Littoral Combat Ship EFV Expeditionary Fighting
Vehicle (previously AAAV Advanced Amphibious
Assault Vehicle) F/A-18 E/F HORNET Naval Strike
Fighter SSN 774 Virginia Class Submarine Ohio
Class Conversion V-22 OSPREY Joint Advanced
Vertical Lift Aircraft CVN 68 NIMITZ Class
Nuclear Powered Aircraft Carriers CVN21 New
Class of Nuclear Powered Aircraft Carriers E-2C
HAWKEYE Carrier-Based Early Warning
Aircraft AV-8B Short Takeoff Landing Close Air
Spt. Aircraft DDG51 Guided Missile
Destroyer STRATEGIC SEALIFT Naval Transport
Ship LPD 17 Transport Vessel T-45TS
Undergraduate Jet Pilot Training System LHD 1
Amphibious Assault Ship Ship programs
AIR FORCE EELV Expendable Launch Vehicle JPATS
Joint Primary Aircraft Training
System F-22 Advanced Tactical Fighter B-2A Spirit
Stealth Bomber C-130J Hercules Cargo Plane C-17A
Globemaster III Advanced Cargo
Aircraft
DoD JSF Joint Strike Fighter (F35) MRAP Mine
Resistant Ambush Protected Vehicle
NOTE This omits ACAT I programs that are not
major platforms. It also omits upgrade projects.
3
Acquisition SafetyNeeds and Status
70 of costs committed in preliminary designs
This can be the disposal end
10 RD
20-30 Procurement
60-70 Operations, Maintenance Disposal
Typical life cycle costs in acquisition
4
Defense Acquisition Management Framework
  • DoD 5000 Acquisition Regulation Perspective

Key Milestone Decision Points ?
(Program
C
B
A
FOC
IOC
Initiation)
Concept Refinement
System Development Demonstration
Production Deployment
Operations Support
Technology Development
Design Readiness Review
FRP Decision Review
Concept Decision
LRIP/IOTE
Sustainment
Systems Acquisition
Pre-Systems Acquisition
5
The Acquisition Community
Program Execution
Certification
Acquisition
Warfighting Requirements
SECDEF Joint Chiefs
REQUIREMENTS
EXECUTION
CNO
ASN(RDA)
Test Eval.
OPNAV
CINCs
PEOs
SYSCOMS
OPTEV FOR
N45
N125
SPAWAR
NAVAIR
NAVSEA
N8
N09F
INSURV
Field Activities
Research Laboratories
N80 Integration
N84 Anti-Sub
N85 Expeditionary
N86 Surface
N87 Submarine
N88 Air
Warfighting Capability
6
The Decision Support System
JCIDS
PPBE
Acquisition
JCIDS Joint Capabilities Integration and
Development System PPBE Program Planning and
Budgeting Execution
All parts of the system must perform their
functions and interact to attain successful
outcomes
7
Acquisition and Safety
  • Cost, schedule, and performance are capstones of
    successful programs that are adept in balancing
    them
  • The Acquisition Process acquires the materiel
    solution that will meet capability needs and
    perform according to their measurable, testable
    Key Performance Parameter requirements within
    allocated budget, schedule
  • Milestone and internal reviews are established to
    demonstrate progress towards providing systems
    that satisfy the needed capabilities

Implication Where is my requirement is the
first and immediate response from programs when
asked to include anything in their systems if
it is not in a requirements document (or come
with funding), programs will have difficulty in
executing
8
Systems Engineering and Safety
  • Systems engineering is a comprehensive, iterative
    technical management process that includes
    translating operational requirements into
    configured systems, integrating the technical
    inputs of the entire design team, managing
    interfaces, characterizing and managing technical
    risk, transitioning technology from the
    technology base into program specific efforts,
    and verifying that designs meet operational needs
    DSMC
  • It is a life cycle activity that demands a
    concurrent approach to both product and process
    development DSMC
  • Systems Engineering is an integral part of the
    Acquisition Process

Implication As part of JCIDS requirements
documents, safety will be part included in
operational requirements that are translated into
configured systems via the systems engineering
process It is important to assure that
well-articulated safety requirements are included
in JCIDS requirements documents
9
Acquisition and Systems Engineering in
Requirement Execution
  • Acquisition Programs execute requirements using
    the rigor of acquisition and systems engineering
    reviews
  • Formal Acquisition Milestone and Decision Reviews
    (Ship Initiation, A, B, )
  • Best Practice Systems Engineering Technical
    Reviews (SRR, PDR, CDR, TRR, )
  • Leveraging these reviews is a potential means of
    getting visibility to the progress programs are
    making in implementing requirements
  • Safety
  • HSI
  • Information Assurance
  • other Technical Disciplines

10
DoD Acquisition and Sustainment Organizational
Concept
Systems Cmd (Navy) Material Cmd (Army/Air Force)
Tech Authority (Power trains)
Tech Authority (corrosion control)
11
DoD Acquisition and Sustainment Process
Provided for conceptual information only
12
Navy Organizational Structure
http//www.navy.mil/navydata/organization/org-over
.asp
13
The Navy Shore Establishment
http//www.navy.mil/navydata/organization/org-shor
.asp
14
Naval Systems Commands
15
DLA Strategy Linking Supply Demand
Organized Around the Warfighters
PEOs Suppliers
Moving capability to point of use
EXPEDITIONARY
INSTALLATIONS
Shipyard
Depot
Depot
Service Materiel Commands
USTRANSCOM
Naval Depot
Air Log Center
  • Passengers
  • Deployments
  • Freight
  • Production
  • Management
  • Maintenance
  • Operations
  • Readiness

Supply, Storage, Distribution DLR Procurement
DLA
SUPPLY, STORAGE DISTRIBUTION
  • Prime Vendor(s)
  • Fuel
  • DRMS
  • Central Issue
  • Distribution Points

Weapon Systems Focus!
16
The Joint Logistics Environment - Scope
  • 112B Worth of Transactions Annually
  • 1.1M Active, Reserve, Civilian Personnel
  • 100,000 active suppliers
  • 30,000 DOD customers
  • 20 Maintenance Depots
  • 26 Distribution Depots
  • 14 Inventory Control Points
  • 2 Strategic Distribution Centers
  • 17 military sea/11 military aerial ports (CONUS)
  • 27 military sea/32 military aerial ports (OCONUS)

17
Acquisition Policy Considerations
  • As part of the National Defense Authorization Act
    for FY 2004, Congress amended the 1990 DAWIA
    legislation with new language, known as DAWIA II
    thus providing for
  • Greater Management Flexibility
  • Flexibility to establish different experience,
    educational, and tenure requirements for
    acquisition positions
  • Establish a single acquisition corps
  • Streamline obsolete and outdated DAWIA provisions
    (next slide)

USD (ATL) Sets Policy
18
Acquisition Policy Considerations Streamlined
DAWIA II Regulations
1990
2005
Old Policy
New Policy
5000.52
Directive
5000.52M
Instruction
DoDD 5000.52 (Revised) (Jan 2005)
Eliminated
5000.58
DoDI 5000.66 (Dec 2005)
5000.58R
Desk Guide (Jan 2006)
5000.58G
Policy Memos
Guidance
5 Documents
3 Documents
http//www.dau.mil/workforce/
19
DoD 5000.2 Enclosure 7Human Systems
integrationRequires human-system interface
(includes safety and ergonomic elements) and
system safety program
High level policy guidance
  • Require system safety
  • in acquisition (Mil Std 882)
  • Service Safety Chiefs Commitment to System Safety
    Revitalization

Donald Rumsfelds Challenge Memorandum from
Secretary of Defense dtd 19 May 2003 75
reduction in preventable mishaps
Requirements for Programmatic Environmental
Health and Safety Evaluation (PESHE)
Design-related mishaps should be considered
preventable!
20
DoDI 5000.2 Operation of the Defense Acquisition
System (May 12, 2003)
  • Enclosure 7 Human Systems Integration
  • Comprehensive plan
  • DoD 5000 does NOT require/mandate an HSI plan
    as a program deliverable
  • Check Service and SYSCOM/Material Command
    policy
  • Summarized in Acq Strategy
  • Human Factors
  • Take steps Contract deliverables
  • HFE/Cognitive Engineering employed over life of
    program
  • Personnel
  • Human performance characteristics of user
    population
  • Should include ergonomics (word implicit but
    not used)

21
Summary
  • DoD Acquisition Process is Complex
  • Need to understand the basics to influence the
    outcome
  • Acquisition is based on fleet input and
    requirements/ resources generated by Chief of
    Naval Operations
  • Fleet input needed safety and health
    professionals can help educate the customers
  • DoD Supply System/Process is Huge, Complex,
    Proven
  • Joint Logistics saves time, money, and resources
  • Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) provides support
    to all services
  • Improving Safety in Design and Acquisition in
    Federal Agencies
  • Need to provide feedback to the right/
    responsible authorities
  • Focus on high risk process and organizations
  • Need convincing educational materials and
    stakeholder support
  • ATL Policy Directives support this effort

22
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