Too Many DoD Contracts; Too Few Workers

Too Many DoD Contracts; Too Few Workers

The head of Pentagon acquisition, John Young, has said over and over again that hiring greater numbers of people and more experienced people is one of the keys to improving how the military manages the buying of weapons.

A hearing by the Senate Appropriations Committee made very clear just how deep is the personnel crisis faced by the Pentagon’s acquisition corps, especially in the Army. Unable to adequately manage the enormous quantity of contracts ($71 billion worth issued through nearly 98,000 contracts) generated in Iraq, the Army Materiel Command has requested five new general officer slots for acquisition and 1,500 new bodies to manage what Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England admitted has been a deluge of contracts that “was not anticipated.” The AMC is responsible for managing most of those contracts, including the infamous botched electrical wiring jobs.

The drawdown of acquisition workers after the Cold War was mentioned and England admitted “it will take some time to rebuild our acquisition workforce,” telling Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W. Va.), chairman of the Appropriations Committee, that it is “difficult” to find qualified personnel and “it takes time to train” them.

However, Loren Thomspon, one of the cannier watchers of Pentagon acquisition, said there is no need for more people in the acquisition force. The workforce is “grossly overmanned” he said. “Adding more people to the acquisition system won’t make much difference,” he said. And Thompson does not think better training would make much difference since he “does not trust” the Pentagon to do it effectively.

Still, not all has been mismanaged or misappropriated. In his testimony, England noted that the Defense Contract Audit Agency has performed 2,500 contract audits, “taking exception to $12 billion as either not acceptable or not supported.” That has saved or led to restitution of more than $1.3 billion, he said.

This website uses IntenseDebate comments, but they are not currently loaded because either your browser doesn't support JavaScript, or they didn't load fast enough.

Join the Conversation

More contract officers are a no-brainer. They more then enough pay for themselves through being more efficient. Now with that being said how can we, (Pentagon) operate more streamlined and efficient? We need to constantly reevaluate our own personal habits and think “how can I do more with less”,

Its difficult to find them because the Governmetn pays less than most major contractors. If they want to find and retain acquisition professionals who can do the job, it’s not going to be cheap.

In reply to LC note. I have worked for AMC for almost 20 years as a civil servant and in that time I have seen things go full circle with civil service as with the Army. In the last couple of years we have gone from 9 contractors to well over 200 contractors. about 90% of the contract workers I have spoken with would love to get into civil service, because the pay would be just about equal, if not more. The benefit package and retirement would be better. the contractors, not the workers doing the job, are the ones making the big money.

RayC, are you referring to A&AS contractors? If so, I’d agree but when it comes to those working for NG, Boeing, ITT, Raytheon, etc. they are generally making far more money than the Government pays.

The Defense Aquisition Corps is certainly well staffed and trained, but the autonomy of PCO decision-making is administratively limited. Workforce mismanagement is another endemic issue effecting the poor quality of service. ( Former PCO — 20 years )

*required

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree

NOTE: Comments are limited to 2500 characters and spaces.

By commenting on this topic you agree to the terms and conditions of our User Agreement