Title: SEAPORT ENHANCED
1SEAPORT ENHANCED
Naval Sea Systems Command Warfare Centers
Engineering, Technical and Programmatic Support
Services
- Lawson Hynson
- Head of Contracts, NSWC-PC
2Availability of Presentation
- Presentation will be available at our public web
site http//www.ncsc.navy.mil
- Will be available within the next 5 business
days
- Website Guidance
- Click on at top of home page
- Click on
- Click on
- Click on
- Presentation will located on that page as
SeaPort Enhanced Presentation 4-8-04
3Presentation Agenda
- Background
- Acquisition strategy
- Contract characteristics
- Competitive results
- CONOPS
- Savings metrics
- General Information
4Background
- SeaPower 21
- CNOs 2004 implementing guidance
- Business process efficiencies challenge
- COMNAVSEA initiative to add efficiencies to
NAVSEA business processes
5View From The Fourth Floor
- Billions being spent under service contracts
annually
- Many individual contracts being awarded to the
same contractors for similar services
- No consistent corporate acquisition strategy
- Significant duplication in administrative
procurement cost
- Limited strategic relationships
- Little economy of scale benefits
- Business data available limited
6Solution An Enhanced Seaport
- Award a series of nation-wide multiple award
ID/IQ contracts (MACs) for the warfare centers
- While protecting local vendor base and business
relationships
- Enhancing small business opportunities
- And use a variant of the e-business tool
(Aquilent) adapted for seaport
7Expected Benefits of Approach
- Consolidated contracts provide a frame- work for
consistent application of sound acquisition
strategy, business rules and policy.
- Provides NAVSEA the ability to develop better
strategic business relationships with contractors
- Allows NAVSEA to leverage its buying power on a
nation-wide basis
- Web-based portal tool provides a dependable means
for information gathering
8Acquisition Strategy
- Issue one solicitation covering the U.S. for all
NAVSEA warfare centers service requirements
- Solicit and award MACs by zones
- Offerors may be awarded contracts providing them
the ability to compete for task orders in a
single or multiple zones
- Tasks are solicited and placed by the NAVSEA
activity that has the requirement for the
service
9Contract Characteristics
10Contract Fundamentals
- Five year base with two five year award-term
options
- 1. The limitation of Section 843 will be
come effective for solicitations issued on or
after the date the DFARS interim rule is
published in the Federal Register - from 18 February DoD/ATL DDPA
memo
- 2. The rule was published on 23 March 2004
- Emphasis of limits on pass throughs, max fees,
guaranteed saving, and annual escalation.
11Contract Fundamentals
- Rolling Admissions the Government reserves the
right to review the SEAPORTe Program annually to
determine whether it would be appropriate to add
new contract holders - If so, will involve a similar solicitation
process
- Cost Type and Fixed price Task Orders permitted
- Time Material and Labor Hour Task Orders not
permitted
- Emphasis on Performance Based Orders
- Preference for Fixed Price Orders
12SEAPORTe Zones
- Zone One Northeast
- NUWC Newport
- NSWC Philadelphia
- Zone Two National Capital
- NSWC Carderock
- NSWC Dahlgren
- NSWC Indian Head
- Zone Three Mid-Atlantic
- NSWC Dam Neck
- Zone Four Gulf Coast
- NSWC Panama City
- Zone Five Midwest
- NSWC Crane
- Zone Six Southwest
- NSWC Port Hueneme
- NSWC Corona
- Zone Seven - Northwest
- NUWC Keyport
13Geographical Zones
14Why A Zone Approach
- Preserve local vendor base
- Encourages small business participation
- Reduces the need for complex teaming
arrangements
- Allows for easier contract organization and
administration e.g., SCA, rolling admissions,
small business goals, local site provision
15Small Business Issues
- RFP issued on an unrestricted basis established
- 33 to small business primes (measured in )
- 20 () requirement for large business to small
business subcontractors
- Cascading set-aside authority to the Ordering
Officers with prior notice
- Small Business Size Standard
- NAICS Code 541330
- 23M average annual sales over the prior three
years
- Set-Aside Programs such as 8(a), HUB Zones, etc.
are excluded
16Acquisition Cycle Milestones
- Started Planning August 2003
- Initial Planned Award Date 5 April 2004
- Draft Solicitation Posted November 2003
- Solicitation Issued December 2003
- Proposals Received January 2004
- Evaluation Completed February 2004
- Clearance Approved March 2004
- Awards Announced 5 April 2004
17Technical Disciplines Supported
- Information Systems Development
- Information Assurance Support
- Ship Inactivation and Disposal Support
- Interoperability Issues Support Measurement
Facilities, Range and Instrumentation Support
- Acquisition Logistics Support
- Supply and Provisioning Support
- Tests and Test Trials Support
- Training Support
- In-Service Engineering Support
- Fleet Introduction, Installation and Checkout
Support
- Program Management Office Support
- Administrative Support
- RD Support
- TE Support
- Product Engineering, Systems Engineering and
Process Engineering Support
- MSS Support
- Program Analysis Support
- Prototyping, Pre-production, Model-Making and
Fabrication Support
- System Design Documentation Support
- Technical Data Support
- S/W Engineering, Development, Programming and
Network Support
- RMA Support
- Human Factors Engineering Support
- System Safety Engineering Support
- CM/ILS Support
- QA Support
18Competitive Results
19Competition Results
- Over 800 Questions and Comments submitted in
response to 17 November 03 draft solicitation
- Over 61,000 downloads for the Dahlgren
Laboratorys website between 21 Nov 03 and 22 Jan
04
- Received 152 proposals
- 103 from small businesses
- 48 from large business
- 1 from a not for profit institution
20Evaluation Factors
- Offerors Evaluated on
- Factor 1 Technical Capability Depth and
Breadth of Experience
- Factor 2 - Management Approach
- Factor 3 Past Performance
- Factor 4 Cost/Price
- Factor 1 was significantly more important than
Factors 2, 3 and 4 which were of roughly equal
importance
21Evaluation Results
- Overall scores ranged from 99.25 (Outstanding) to
65 (Satisfactory)
- 96.7 of offerors scored in the Good or
Outstanding
- Some Numbers
- 3.73 Average Annual Guaranteed Savings
Commitment
- 3.38 Average Maximum Pass-Through Rate
- 3.75 Average Annual Escalation Rate
- 7.70 Average Maximum Fee
22Presence Criteria
- Solicitation Offeror must have held or currently
hold a prime contract, a subcontract or currently
have a local office in the zone(s) in which the
offeror wishes to be considered. The prime
contract or subcontract must be with a NAVSEA
activity. - Several offerors did not satisfy this go/no
criteria in certain zones
23Competition Results
24Geographical Zones Proposed
25Concept of Operations
26Use of SEAPORTe
- SEAPORT-e will be used by the NAVSEA warfare
centers to the maximum extent possible.
- Even though SEAPORT is a non-mandatory
procurement option, I will expect that we will
use this vehicle to the maximum extent
practicable. - From 23 October 2003 e-mail from the
NAVSEA warfare centers business executive
27Ombudsman
- One appointed for each NAVSEA warfare centers
activities (not zone)
- Role will be to receive and review complaints /
concerns from SEAPORTe contractors relative to
the program. He will
- work communication with both contractors and
government elements
- strive to address and resolve issues raised
- work to ensure that all contractors are fairly
considered consistent will TC of contracts
- Is not a marketing coordinator or sales
representative for contractors.
28List of Ombudsmen
29Achieving Small Business Goals
- In concert with each activitys Deputy for Small
Business, the NAVSEA Director for Small and
Disadvantaged Business Utilization, will monitor
SEAPORTe contract actions placed/planned against
the SDB goals - both primes subcontracting. - Each activitys Deputy for Small Business and the
relevant Zone Coordinator are collectively
responsible to ensure that small business
participation is maximized.
30Zone Coordinator
- Serves as the zone point-of-contact.
- Serves as a member of the SEAPORTe Council.
- Serves a liaison with vendor community including
formation of a Zone Business Council to
facilitate feedback among the parties.
- Charged with being the principal for
communication of Zone contractors inputs on
rolling admissions recommendations, etc.
- Tracks small business participation and assists
the Deputy for Small Business in ensuring fair
consideration of small/disadvantages in the
Program.
31SEAPORTe Council
- The SEAPORTe Council (SC) is the group
responsible for programmatic decisions relative
to the program and shall meet at least
semi-annually. - The SC is also responsible for the Rolling
Admissions function
- Membership consists of
- Each Zone Coordinator
- SEAPORTe Procuring Contracting Officer
- A NAVSEA SEA 02 designated representative
- The NAVSEA Director for Small and Disadvantage
Business Utilization (advisor)
32Rolling Admissions
- Annually, the SEAPORTe Council shall convene to
review the performance of the SEAPORTe Program
in accordance with the Rolling Admissions clause.
Inputs will be received from the Zone
Administrators. - The Rolling Admissions criteria are
- Quality of performance by each MAC holder.
- The number, value and complexity of work being
awarded to each MAC holder.
- Amount of competition received.
- Internal transaction cost for issuing each task
order.
- The amount of small business participation.
- Evolving needs of the warfare centers, the SOW
and ceiling amount issues.
33Rolling Admissions
Annually, the SEAPORTe Council shall convene
to review the performance of the SEAPORTe
Program in accordance with the Rolling
Admissions clause. Inputs will be received from
Zone Coordinators. The Rolling Admissions crite
ria are quality of performance by each IDIQ hol
der the number, value and complexity of work ass
igned to each holder amount of competition achi
eved internal transaction cost for issuing each
task order the amount of small business particip
ation revise scope of the Statement of Work and
the ceiling amount
34Task Order Managers
- Similar to a Contracting Officers
Representative.
- A Task Order Manager (TOM) under SEAPORTe will
be considered a COR and identified as such in the
portal.
- TOMs must be formally appointed and must complete
the training required to be a COR.
- TOMs authority is limited by the delegation
issued by the Ordering Officer.
- In no case should the TOM be viewed as possessing
the authority to authorize contractor variation
from the SOW, the Schedule, the cost / price or
reduce or eliminate any inspection / acceptance
requirements in the task order.
35Notification Of Problems
- The Zone Coordinator shall be the primary
collection point for the identification of
desired modifications or problems with the Portal
or MAC contracts. - Zone 4 Coordinator is T. L. Hynson
- Address Contracting Officer
- Naval Surface Warfare Center
- 110 Vernon Avenue (Code XPS) Panama City,
FL 32407-7001
- Comms theodore.hynson_at_navy.mil (email)
- 850/234-4862 (tele)
36SEAPORT Portal
- The existing SEAPORT portal will be used to
solicit, receive proposals and place task orders
- Some minor modifications to the
e-commerce tool are being planned to better
facilitate warfare center use
37Task Order Requirements
The award of Task Orders should only be placed
for known requirements. Task Orders may not b
e awarded for requirements that are not
defined Task Orders may not be used as larger u
mbrella vehicles for work to be defined later.
Therefore, task orders may not be issued as
BPAs, BOAs, or ID/IQs. Technical Instructions
may only be issued to provide further guidance
on a defined scope of work and may not be used
to direct or add work.
38Subcontracting Teaming
- Authority to consent to use a subcontractor that
is part of the primes team as specified in the
basic contract is the responsibility of the task
Ordering Officer. - Authority to approve requests to add new
subcontractors to an existing team is the
responsible of the PCO
39Exceptions To FASA
- Within a zone, the contracting officer shall give
every SeaPort-e MAC holder a fair opportunity to
be considered for a task-order exceeding 2,500
unless a statutory exception applies (see below).
All task orders shall be competed unless
extraordinary circumstances exist. The SeaPort
Portal requires Contracting Officers to provide
rationale for such acquisitions. This rationale
must be as thorough as possible and identify
methods by which any alternative sources were
sought. If an Activity uses the logical
follow-on exception, the rationale shall describe
why the relationship between the initial order
and the follow-on is logical (e.g., in terms of
scope, period of performance, or value). - Â
- Exceptions to the fair opportunity process are
detailed below
- (i) The agency need for the supplies or services
is so urgent that providing a fair opportunity
- would result in unacceptable delays,
- (ii) Only one awardee is capable of providing the
supplies or services required at the level of
- quality required because the supplies or
services ordered are unique or highly
specialized,
- (iii) The order must be issued on a sole-source
basis in the interest of economy and efficiency
because it is a logical follow-on to an order
already issued under the contract, provided that
all awardees were given a fair opportunity to be
considered for the original order. - (iv) It is necessary to place an order to
satisfy a minimum guarantee.
- All rationales must be coordinated with the
Zones Ombudsman and approved in accordance with
NAVSEA Justification and Approval thresholds.
For those rationales, where the approval
threshold is NAVSEA HQ, the rationale shall be
prepared using the format of a formal
Justification and Approval in accordance with the
NAVSEA Contract Handbook. SEA02/02B is the
highest approval necessary.
40Undefinitized Orders
- Undefinitized orders are not permitted!
41Task Order Solicitations
- Task orders will be solicited from the contract
holders that are in the zone where the principal
part of the work is to be performed.
- The zones solicited will not be based on the
location of the warfare center activity
contracting for the work.
- Principal part of the work effort will be
determined by the Ordering Officer in the
planning stage by analysis. The analysis will
identify which zone is most likely to be where
the primary part of the labor costs will be
incurred.
42Performance Based SOWs
- DoD Requires performance-based SOWs to be used to
the maximum extent possible
- Under SEAPORTe Performance-based SOW are to be
used
- Any non-performance-based orders require a waiver
be approved prior to order placement
43Small Business Review
- The activitys Deputy for Small Business
responsible for placement of the order is the
cognizant SADU for the individual action.
- A pre-solicitation review is required for each
action.
- Based upon that review the requirement may be
set-aside for small business.
- Actions that the SADBU can not determine with
confidence initially that sufficient small
business primes capable of the work are available
will be solicited without regard to business
size. - A statement citing the cascading set aside
provision will be included in the solicitation.
- Subsequent to receipt of proposals, the SADBU may
then set-aside the requirement based upon
responses received.
- Actions not initially set-aside or specifically
reserved by the SADBU for post proposal review
will be considered unrestricted solicitations.
44Past Performance
- The SEAPORTe PCO will be responsible for
submission of Contractor Performance Assessment
Reports (CPARS)
- To support this action individual Task Order
Performance Evaluation (TOPE) reports will be
required for each individual task order.
- Activity Ordering Officers will be responsible
for ensuring that the TOPEs are completed.
- The CPARS will be submitted to the Past
Performance Information Retrieval System
(PPIRS).
45Saving Metrics
46Potential Savings Metrics
- Savings from redirected GSA or similar service
contract providers user fees
- Conversion of LoE orders to performance-based
orders
- Task order competition savings
- Operation of Guaranteed saving provisions in
the contracts
- Volume discounts
- Conversion of cost-plus task orders to fixed
priced orders ??
- Others?
47General Information
48Large Business Primes
49Small Business Primes
50Small Business Primes
51Small Business Primes
52Not For Profit Prime
53Questions?