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Supply<br />

Optimizer<br />

Redding<br />

Hobby<br />

Acting Director,<br />

<strong>Defense</strong> Logistics<br />

Agency Logistics<br />

Operations<br />

Directorate<br />

<strong>Defense</strong> Logistics Agency Issue<br />

The Publication of Record for the Military Logistics Community<br />

Exclusive Interview with:<br />

Energy Expertise O Cases and Containers O Building Partnerships<br />

Land & Maritime, Aviation, Troop Support O Maj. Gen. Ken Dowd<br />

<strong>Defense</strong> Logistics Agency<br />

Special pull-out<br />

Supplement<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com<br />

June 2012<br />

Volume 6, Issue 5<br />

Vice Adm. mArk d. HArnitcHek<br />

Director, <strong>Defense</strong> Logistics Agency


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Military <strong>logistics</strong> ForuM<br />

June 2012<br />

VoluMe 6 • <strong>issue</strong> 5<br />

Features coVer / Q&a<br />

6<br />

9<br />

12<br />

14<br />

26<br />

29<br />

1<br />

8<br />

10<br />

11<br />

DLA Land and Maritime<br />

Land and maritime supply chain develops synergies with industry partners<br />

to drive down costs and gain efficiencies.<br />

By Peter Buxbaum<br />

The Shipping News<br />

How packages, cases and shipping containers are evolving in today’s agile,<br />

energy-conscious military. From small cases to large containers, it all<br />

ensures the safe arrival of critical components.<br />

By Heather Baldwin<br />

Organizing for Success<br />

MLF talks with major General kenneth dowd, the incoming director of<br />

defense Logistics Agency Logistics Operations, about the success of the 1st<br />

Sustainment command (theater) and transition to dLA.<br />

Energy Expertise<br />

As a primary level field activity of the defense Logistics Agency, dLA energy<br />

is the <strong>agency</strong>’s fuel supplier, providing the equivalent of approximately 144<br />

million barrels of fuel, energy and power, worth about $20 billion in the last<br />

fiscal year.<br />

By Henry canaday<br />

deFenSe LOGiSticS AGency<br />

SPeciAL PULL-OUt SUPPLement<br />

exclusive interview with<br />

Vice Admiral Mark D. Harnitchek<br />

director<br />

defense Logistics Agency<br />

Building Partnerships Q&A with Amy Sajda<br />

DLA Top Contracts FY11<br />

DoD Procurement Technical Assistance Program<br />

Not Up in the Air<br />

dLA Aviation’s mission is to take the unknowns out of the aviation supply<br />

chain, while reducing costs and wait time.<br />

By christian Bourge<br />

For the Troops<br />

With nearly $15 billion in sales projected for this fiscal year, the defense<br />

Logistics Agency’s troop Support would rank in the top third of the Fortune<br />

500. However, it operates under conditions and constraints that similarly<br />

sized private companies don’t.<br />

By Hank Hogan<br />

19<br />

Mr. Redding Hobby<br />

Acting director<br />

defense Logistics Agency<br />

Logistics Operations directorate<br />

DepartMents<br />

2<br />

4<br />

16<br />

31<br />

Editor’s Perspective<br />

Log Ops/People<br />

Supply Chain<br />

Resource Center<br />

inDustry interView<br />

32<br />

Dan Keefe<br />

executive Vice President and <strong>Group</strong><br />

General manager<br />

mantech technical Services <strong>Group</strong>


Military <strong>logistics</strong><br />

ForuM<br />

Volume 6, Issue 5 • June 2012<br />

Publication of Record for the<br />

Military Logistics Community<br />

eDitorial<br />

Editor-In-Chief<br />

Jeff McKaughan jeffm@kmimediagroup.com<br />

Managing Editor<br />

Harrison Donnelly harrisond@kmimediagroup.com<br />

Online Editorial Manager<br />

Laura Davis laurad@kmimediagroup.com<br />

Copy Editor<br />

Laural Hobbes lauralh@kmimediagroup.com<br />

Correspondents<br />

Heather Baldwin • Peter Buxbaum<br />

Henry Canaday • Cheryl Gerber • Hank Hogan<br />

Leslie Shaver<br />

art & Design<br />

Art Director<br />

Jennifer Owers jennifero@kmimediagroup.com<br />

Senior Graphic Designer<br />

Jittima Saiwongnuan jittimas@kmimediagroup.com<br />

Graphic Designers<br />

Amanda Kirsch amandak@kmimediagroup.com<br />

Scott Morris scottm@kmimediagroup.com<br />

Kailey Waring kaileyw@kmimediagroup.com<br />

aDVertising<br />

Associate Publisher<br />

Jane Engel jane@kmimediagroup.com<br />

KMi MeDia group<br />

Publisher<br />

Kirk Brown kirkb@kmimediagroup.com<br />

Chief Executive Officer<br />

Jack Kerrigan jack@kmimediagroup.com<br />

Chief Financial Officer<br />

Constance Kerrigan connik@kmimediagroup.com<br />

Executive Vice President<br />

David Leaf davidl@kmimediagroup.com<br />

Editor-In-Chief<br />

Jeff McKaughan jeffm@kmimediagroup.com<br />

Controller<br />

Gigi Castro gcastro@kmimediagroup.com<br />

Administrative Assistant<br />

Casandra Jones casandraj@kmimediagroup.com<br />

Trade Show Coordinator<br />

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Data Specialists<br />

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Donisha Winston donishaw@kmimediagroup.com<br />

a prouD<br />

MeMber oF:<br />

subscription inForMation<br />

Military Logistics Forum<br />

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is published 10 times a year by<br />

<strong>KMI</strong> <strong>Media</strong> <strong>Group</strong>. All Rights Reserved.<br />

Reproduction without permission is strictly<br />

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EDITOR’S PERSPECTIVE<br />

All it had to do was be boosted into space on top of a rocket, circle the earth,<br />

come within 33 feet and sync up its orbit with the International Space Station,<br />

before being grabbed by a robotic arm and placed into a docking position. And so<br />

far, Dragon has performed as expected/hoped/prayed it would. Another huge step<br />

in the use of unmanned platforms for resupply has been demonstrated by SpaceX’s<br />

Dragon spacecraft.<br />

While certainly not the first use of unmanned space modules to resupply<br />

in-orbit platforms, it was the first by a commercial company in what is hoped will<br />

be the first steps toward a more commercially-based space operation, where the<br />

government is not bearing all the cost burden for some space missions where their<br />

overhead costs could make missions much more expensive, especially if the U.S.<br />

Jeffrey D. McKaughan<br />

Editor-iN-CHiEF<br />

has to rely on the space agencies of other countries. While much of the research and development was funded by<br />

NASA, along with the carrot of a $1.6 billion supply contract, SpaceX is counting on other customers in this brave<br />

new (commercial) space world.<br />

Unmanned supply missions are proving their worth in Afghanistan. Harsh terrain and a poor ground network<br />

make overland supply difficult, and constant threats at almost every point along those routes are road markers for<br />

alternative supply options. Aircraft—manned and unmanned—are taking up the slack and saving lives, especially<br />

when delivering routine necessities like water and fuel. While distance and other complexities are apparent between<br />

supplying the ISS and a mountaintop FOB, supplies are supplies and unmanned is unmanned.<br />

In essence, the SpaceX long-range supply mission is reflective of supply chains everywhere. When the number<br />

of routes and/or options are limited, the cost to maintain and operate that supply chain will be high. Case in point,<br />

the PAKGLOC. Routes into Afghanistan are either difficult or long, and in most cases, both! U.S. planners had been<br />

anticipating some form of supply chain interruption, so when Pakistan closed the route, other routes were available—albeit<br />

they take longer and cost more, but they are keeping the supply chain functioning.<br />

As an aside, if you look at the family of <strong>KMI</strong> <strong>Media</strong> <strong>Group</strong> magazine’s listed below, you will note a difference<br />

from the last <strong>issue</strong>—we have added a new magazine! Launching in June is <strong>KMI</strong>’s 11th title, Border & CBRNE<br />

<strong>Defense</strong>. It will cover the homeland security, border patrol and CBRNE<br />

communities across the military, federal, state and local governments. With the<br />

same style and depth of coverage as our other 10 titles, BCD is focused on the<br />

decision-makers and the operators out on the frontlines of homeland defense.<br />

Border Threat Prevention and CBRNE Response<br />

Border<br />

Protector<br />

Michael J.<br />

Fisher<br />

Chief<br />

U.S. Border Patrol<br />

U.S. Customs and<br />

Border Protection<br />

Military Logistics<br />

Forum<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com<br />

KMi MeDia group Magazines anD websites<br />

Border & CBRNE<br />

<strong>Defense</strong><br />

SPECIAL SECTION:<br />

Integrated<br />

Fixed Towers<br />

www.BCD-kmi.com<br />

June 2012<br />

Volume 1, Issue 1<br />

Leadership Insight:<br />

Robert S. Bray<br />

Assistant Administrator for Law<br />

Enforcement/Director of the Federal Air<br />

Marshal Service<br />

Wide Area Aerial Surveillance O Hazmat Disaster Response<br />

Tactical Communications O P-3 Program<br />

www.BCD-kmi.com<br />

Military Medical<br />

& Veterans<br />

Affairs Forum<br />

Health Care<br />

Collaborator<br />

Lt. Gen.<br />

Patricia D.<br />

Horoho<br />

Surgeon General<br />

U.S. Army<br />

Commanding General<br />

U.S. Army Medical<br />

Command<br />

Dedicated to the Military Medical & VA Community<br />

www.M2VA-kmi.com<br />

Ground<br />

Combat<br />

Technology<br />

www.GCT-kmi.com<br />

www.M2VA-kmi.com<br />

May 2012<br />

Volume 16, Issue 3<br />

Who’s Who<br />

NATIONAL GUARD BUREAU<br />

MAJ. GEN.<br />

DAVID L. HARRIS<br />

Director, J-3/7<br />

National Guard Bureau<br />

En Route Medical Evacuation O San Antonio Military Health System<br />

Veterans Affairs Police O AFMS Contracts<br />

Leadership<br />

Insight :<br />

NMLC<br />

Military Training<br />

Technology<br />

www.MT2-kmi.com<br />

Geospatial<br />

Intelligence<br />

Forum<br />

www.GIF-kmi.com<br />

Special<br />

Operations<br />

Technology<br />

www.SOTECH-kmi.com<br />

Military<br />

Advanced<br />

Education<br />

www.MAE-kmi.com<br />

Tactical ISR<br />

Technology<br />

www.TISR-kmi.com<br />

Military<br />

Information<br />

Technology<br />

www.MIT-kmi.com<br />

U.S. Coast Guard<br />

Forum<br />

www.USCGF-kmi.com


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LOG OPS<br />

DynCorp International, Force Protection<br />

Industries, Oshkosh <strong>Defense</strong> and McLane<br />

Advanced Technologies have announced a new<br />

joint venture—Mission Readiness—to serve the<br />

U.S. and coalition forces’ essential vehicle maintenance<br />

needs in austere combat environments.<br />

Mission Readiness is a standalone company<br />

exclusively dedicated to bringing its collective 170<br />

years of team experience in the manufacture and<br />

logistical support of land vehicles.<br />

“There is no job more important than<br />

keeping our troops safe and mission-ready,” said<br />

James Grazioplene, Mission Readiness chief executive<br />

officer. “Mission Readiness is 100 percent<br />

focused on ensuring that the warfighter will have<br />

the vehicles they need for the fight, every day.”<br />

Mission Readiness provides a best value,<br />

low risk, technically superior, global solution for<br />

TACOM LCMC, through its unique team, which<br />

blends the expertise, experience and commitment<br />

of its four large partners. Mission Readiness’ effectiveness<br />

and reliability are proven: collectively the<br />

team currently supports 94 percent of the MRAP<br />

PEOPLE<br />

Matthew Beebe has<br />

been assigned as deputy<br />

director, <strong>Defense</strong> Logistics<br />

Agency acquisition, <strong>Defense</strong><br />

Logistics Agency, Fort<br />

Belvoir, Va. Beebe previously<br />

served as executive<br />

director, operational<br />

contract support, Fort<br />

Belvoir, Va.<br />

Army Reserve Colonel<br />

Francisco A. Espaillat,<br />

has been nominated for<br />

appointment to the rank<br />

of brigadier general, and<br />

for assignment as mobilization<br />

assistant to the<br />

deputy director (individual<br />

mobilization augmentee),<br />

<strong>Defense</strong> Logistics Agency,<br />

Fort Belvoir, Va. Espaillat<br />

4 | MLF 6.5<br />

New Land Vehicle Support Venture<br />

is currently serving as<br />

project manager, combined<br />

arms tactical trainers<br />

(Army Guard Reserve),<br />

Program Executive Office-<br />

Simulation, Training<br />

and Instrumentation,<br />

Orlando, Fla.<br />

Edward Case has been<br />

assigned as vice director,<br />

<strong>Defense</strong> Logistics Agency,<br />

Fort Belvoir, Va. Case previously<br />

served as director,<br />

<strong>Defense</strong> Logistics Agency<br />

information operations,<br />

Fort Belvoir, Va.<br />

Brigadier General<br />

Susan A. Davidson,<br />

deputy commanding<br />

FOV in-theater defined as Afghanistan, Iraq and<br />

Kuwait, as well as CONUS, with a footprint of<br />

more than 17,000 personnel on the ground today.<br />

“In the past year, the Department of <strong>Defense</strong><br />

message from Dr. Ashton Carter to industry has<br />

been loud and clear: be leaner and more efficient,”<br />

said DynCorp International chairman<br />

and CEO Steve Gaffney. “Through this team we’ve<br />

answered that call for efficiency and enhanced<br />

the value to the government. We pulled together<br />

the absolute best providers of MRAP FOV support<br />

in an innovative, standalone company that keeps<br />

costs to the customer at a minimum while maximizing<br />

customer focus.”<br />

“Force Protection takes great pride in the<br />

vehicles we have built and in the lifesaving performance<br />

of the RCV and MRAP fleets in general,”<br />

said Michael Moody, president, Force Protection<br />

Industries. “We look forward to helping to sustain<br />

these vehicles as vital components of our Armed<br />

Forces for many years to come by helping to<br />

provide essential, best value total life cycle support<br />

services.”<br />

general/director of<br />

operations, Military<br />

Surface Deployment and<br />

Distribution Command,<br />

Scott Air Force Base,<br />

Ill., has been assigned<br />

to commander, <strong>Defense</strong><br />

Logistics Agency-<br />

Distribution, <strong>Defense</strong><br />

Logistics Agency, New<br />

Cumberland, Pa.<br />

Brigadier General David<br />

A. Harris, vice commander,<br />

Air Armament Center, Air<br />

Force Materiel Command,<br />

Eglin Air Force Base,<br />

Fla., has been assigned<br />

to commander, 96th Test<br />

Wing, Air Force Materiel<br />

Command, Eglin Air Force<br />

Base, Fla.<br />

Compiled by KMi <strong>Media</strong> <strong>Group</strong> staff<br />

“The Mission Readiness team will deliver superior<br />

MRAP design and production expertise and<br />

extensive in-theater sustainment experience to the<br />

warfighter,” said John Urias, president of Oshkosh<br />

<strong>Defense</strong>. “Together, we can offer new levels of<br />

MRAP performance to warfighters—supporting<br />

an expanding range of critical missions, and ultimately<br />

getting them home safely.”<br />

“Technology-driven solutions are essential<br />

for streamlining operations, saving money and<br />

sustaining a military prepared for the future,”<br />

said Drayton McLane, chief executive officer,<br />

McLane Advanced Technologies. “The industry<br />

knowledge and technology experience within<br />

the Mission Readiness team will manage fleet<br />

resources efficiently, keep costs under control, and<br />

enable military readiness.”<br />

The U.S. Army TACOM LCMC <strong>issue</strong>d a request<br />

for proposals on June 7, 2011, for contractor<br />

<strong>logistics</strong> sustainment and support for the<br />

MRAP FOV. The five-year contract is valued at a<br />

total of more than $3 billion, if all options are<br />

exercised.<br />

Colonel Michael T.<br />

Brewer, who has been<br />

selected for the rank<br />

of brigadier general,<br />

commander, Arnold<br />

Engineering Development<br />

Center, Air Force Materiel<br />

Command, Arnold Air<br />

Force Base, Tenn., has been<br />

assigned to commander,<br />

412th Test Wing, Air<br />

Force Materiel Command,<br />

Edwards Air Force Base,<br />

Calif.<br />

Colonel Cedric D. George,<br />

who has been selected<br />

for the rank of brigadier<br />

general, commander,<br />

76th Maintenance Wing,<br />

Oklahoma City Air Logistics<br />

Center, Air Force Materiel<br />

Compiled by KMi <strong>Media</strong> <strong>Group</strong> staff<br />

Command, Tinker Air<br />

Force Base, Okla., has been<br />

assigned to commander,<br />

Warner Robins Air Logistics<br />

Complex, Air Force Materiel<br />

Command, Robins Air<br />

Force Base, Ga.<br />

Colonel Allen J.<br />

Jamerson, who has been<br />

selected for the rank of<br />

brigadier general, chief<br />

of staff, Headquarters Air<br />

Force Materiel Command,<br />

Wright-Patterson Air<br />

Force Base, Ohio, has<br />

been assigned to director,<br />

security forces, deputy chief<br />

of staff, <strong>logistics</strong>, installations<br />

and mission support,<br />

Headquarters U.S. Air Force,<br />

Pentagon, Washington, D.C.<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com


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The <strong>Defense</strong> Logistics Agency has long sought to save money for<br />

the U.S. Department of <strong>Defense</strong> by aggregating the purchasing power<br />

of the military services and agencies on millions of items of parts and<br />

supplies. In an era of tight military budgets, and with drawdowns from<br />

theaters of operation further constricting spending, the DLA’s missions<br />

of savings and efficiencies have become all the more emphasized.<br />

The practices employed by DLA’s land and maritime supply chain<br />

group in Columbus, Ohio, are examples of how innovative acquisitions<br />

and contracting strategies can pay off for DoD as a whole. The fact that<br />

two supply chains, land and maritime, came to be managed together<br />

was coincidental, but it has yielded synergies which promote savings<br />

and efficiencies. The group has also developed synergies with industry<br />

partners, primarily in the form of long-term contracts and strategic<br />

alliances, to drive down costs and gain efficiencies. The vendor companies,<br />

for their part, work consistently to do the same.<br />

“The DLA land and maritime group’s overall mission is to support<br />

two supply chains for DoD,” said Ben Roberts, DLA’s deputy director,<br />

land supplier operations. “The land supply chain involves largely spare<br />

parts to repair or rebuild land-based systems like tanks, HMMWVs and<br />

MRAPs. On the maritime side, we also manage spare parts to support<br />

maritime system and there is also a heavy component of electronic<br />

parts that cross different types of weapons systems.”<br />

Management of the two supply chains coexisted in Columbus<br />

before they were organizationally aligned in 2005. “The workforce was<br />

already here,” said Roberts. “We do get some efficiencies managing the<br />

two supply chains together.”<br />

“There are OEMs, distributors and manufacturing representatives<br />

that we do business with that are common to both the land and<br />

6 | MLF 6.5<br />

Land and maritime suppLy chains innovate<br />

to generate efficiencies.<br />

By peter BuxBaum<br />

mLf correspondent<br />

maritime supply chains,” added Stephen<br />

Rodocker, director, DLA land<br />

and maritime strategic programs.<br />

Overall, the group manages some 2.4<br />

million items, as many as 67,000 of<br />

which generate significant activity.<br />

“DLA has the enormous task of<br />

providing the armed services and<br />

other agencies the full spectrum of<br />

<strong>logistics</strong> and technical services,” said<br />

John Bryant, vice president and gen-<br />

John Bryant<br />

eral manager of joint and marine<br />

programs at Oshkosh <strong>Defense</strong>. Oshkosh is one of the largest suppliers<br />

of wheeled tactical vehicles to the U.S. military.<br />

“DLA provides over 80 percent of the spare parts to keep equipment<br />

mission ready,” Bryant added. “DLA has long leveraged competitive<br />

contracts to keep costs down. But at a time of drawdowns and<br />

shrinking budgets, there is additional pressure to lower costs. All this<br />

is happening as the volume of equipment coming back and in need<br />

of repairs is increasing.”<br />

Oshkosh has had a strategic supplier alliance with DLA since 2008<br />

through which the company supports the <strong>agency</strong> with parts supplies<br />

and services. “We collaborate very closely with DLA,” said Bryant. “We<br />

incorporate lean strategies to lower costs and improve quality and we<br />

incorporate advanced demand planning and quality control to provide<br />

parts the customer needs at very affordable rates.”<br />

Besides providing advantageous pricing, Oshkosh’s alliance with<br />

DLA has reduced wait time for orders, more accurate demand<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com


forecasting, lower administrative costs and a streamlined negotiation<br />

process. “As a result, a comprehensive contract can last several years,”<br />

said Bryant, “as opposed to establishing large numbers of contracts<br />

with a sole-source vendor and pricing purchase orders one at a time.<br />

It’s much more efficient for the customer and it works well for us also.”<br />

Strategic alliances and long term contracts are among the cornerstones<br />

of DLA’s strategy to drive efficiencies to the land and maritime<br />

supply chains. “Long-term contracts with suppliers enable us to<br />

reduce the time is takes to put something on contract and allows us<br />

to reduce inventory and better support our customers,” said Rodocker.<br />

DLA has established these relationships with Navistar, Force Protection<br />

and AM General, as well as with Oshkosh and others.<br />

“These programs take a top-down approach and are very structured,”<br />

Rodocker added. “We establish a charter with each company to<br />

lay out goals to be achieved. We always focus on improving customer<br />

support and reducing the costs of the products.”<br />

The approach starts with creating joint teams among DLA and<br />

company representatives to manage certain products or classes of<br />

products. “We establish a battle rhythm with our suppliers and we<br />

meet with them regularly,” said Rodocker. “We establish joint steering<br />

groups to work on <strong>issue</strong>s and problems and to come up with<br />

resolutions and we track how they are doing. We have found that this<br />

approach results in a much improved working relationship with suppliers.”<br />

Around 65 percent of the dollars spent on land spare parts and<br />

30 percent in the maritime supply chain are now managed through<br />

long-term contracts, typically lasting three to five years. “It has had a<br />

huge impact,” said Roberts. “It reduces labor costs because you don’t<br />

have to spot buy every time there is a requirement. It also reduces<br />

inventory levels and provides better customer service.”<br />

There are a number of criteria that DLA looks for to place items<br />

on long-term contracts. “They should have stable technical characteristics,”<br />

said Rodocker. “Items with good spend histories and recurring<br />

demand are also key for long-term contracts. That is also what companies<br />

are looking for to provide us with a good business deal.”<br />

The DLA land and maritime group has an arrangement with AM<br />

General LLC, an HMMWV OEM, designed to reduce inventory levels<br />

while improving customer support. “AM General provides spare parts<br />

to HMMWV rebuild lines at the Red River and Letterkenny army<br />

depots,” explained Roberts. “They plan the requirements and leverage<br />

their commercial as well as DLA’s organic supply chains in order to<br />

deliver parts to production lines at the depots.”<br />

The DLA-AM General arrangement has succeeded in reducing<br />

inventory levels as well as line stoppers, situations necessitating a<br />

work stoppage because of the lack of parts, according to Roberts. The<br />

program has rebuilt over 43,000 HMMWVs since the inception of the<br />

program.<br />

Another example of such a strategic alliance revolves around the<br />

supply of water purification systems. DLA engaged Aqua-Chem Inc.<br />

through a competitive bidding process to perform demand forecasting<br />

for water purification equipment as well as stocking and supporting<br />

DLA customers directly with those systems.<br />

WHEN<br />

DLA, TACOM, LEAD, RRAD AND MMA WANTED A SURE-FIRE PARTS DELIVERY SYSTEM,<br />

WE HAD AN ANSWER.<br />

In fact, we helped drive the development of a Customer Pay program that mandates the only<br />

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www.MLF-kmi.com MLF 6.5 | 7


“The idea is to tap into industry capabilities and expertise to do a<br />

better job than we could do on a macro level,” said Rodocker. “In this<br />

way we are able to reduce costs, improve parts support and provide<br />

better troubleshooting for the customer.”<br />

Oshkosh <strong>Defense</strong> has several long-term contracts with DLA land<br />

and maritime, including the recently awarded hybrid long-term contract.<br />

“What we did was to identify this population of parts that had<br />

significant recurring demand to make them eligible candidates for<br />

long-term contract coverage,” said Lorinda Lewis, Oshkosh <strong>Defense</strong>’s<br />

director of DLA programs. “We did a lot of analysis to help DLA understand<br />

the buying patterns of the customer from us and from DLA and<br />

helped them to determine appropriate parts to add to the contract. We<br />

also estimated annual demands for the parts.”<br />

Hybrid covers a variety of products that are included on many platforms.<br />

“They are not unique to one specific vehicle,” said Lewis. “DLA<br />

is looking for coverage. If there is enough demand it can be added to a<br />

long-term contract. It saves DLA the administrative burden of issuing<br />

one-time contracts over and over.”<br />

Each contract has its own performance specifications, most of<br />

them surrounding on-times deliveries. When products are added to<br />

existing long-term contracts, the performance criteria applicable to<br />

that contract automatically prevail for those added parts. Many of the<br />

parts contracts have users, rather than DLA, ordering parts directly<br />

from the vendor.<br />

Demand planning is one of the cornerstones of streamlining supply<br />

chains. Both DLA and its vendors engage in this activity.<br />

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Deputy Chief of Naval<br />

Operations<br />

Heidi Shyu, SES,<br />

Acquisitions, Logistics and<br />

Technology, Assistant<br />

Secretary of the Army<br />

Major General Wendy<br />

M. Masiello, USAF,<br />

Deputy Assistant Secretary<br />

for Contracting, Assistant<br />

Secretary of the Air<br />

Force for Acquisition<br />

Redding Hobby, SES,<br />

Deputy Director of Logistics<br />

Operations, <strong>Defense</strong><br />

Logistics Agency<br />

Gail Jorgenson, SES,<br />

Director of Acquisitions,<br />

U.S. Transportation<br />

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E Wolfe, Director – Joint<br />

Reserve Force, <strong>Defense</strong><br />

Logistics Agency<br />

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8 | MLF 6.5<br />

In the early 2000s, DLA deployed a planning and forecasting<br />

module from Manugistics, a company which has since been absorbed<br />

by JDA, and integrated that with its SAP enterprise resource planning<br />

system. DLA started feeding Manugistics with data in 2003. In 2006,<br />

all items subject to demand forecasting—around 80,000 faster moving<br />

products with recurring demand—were in the system.<br />

Manugistics gathers historical demand data and applies those<br />

through algorithms to several different categories of items that DLA<br />

carries. Current programmatic intelligence, as well as seasonal and<br />

cyclical elements, can also be added to the forecasting mix.<br />

“The accuracy of the demand forecast depends on the item and on<br />

its design stability,” said Roberts. “Demand for new systems such as the<br />

MRAP, which was first fielded in Iraq, is more difficult for any statistical<br />

forecast to plan. The system can take into account current demand<br />

information supplied by customers.”<br />

“Oshkosh uses advanced demand planning allows us to provide<br />

very quick contract pricing and very quick product delivery,” said Bryant.<br />

“We are working with the DLA supply chains to constantly refine<br />

demand planning and refine prices to drive parts prices down over<br />

time and in order to provide just-in-time deliveries to customers. It<br />

allows us to provide a precisely quoted price and to complete delivery<br />

a short period of time after a request for quote is <strong>issue</strong>d.”<br />

One demand planning technique that Oshkosh <strong>Defense</strong> has refined<br />

is to analyze demand for products based by demand stream. In other<br />

words, demand for a part is analyzed separately depending on whether<br />

part was ordered on a long-term contract, short-term contract, or spot<br />

buy.<br />

“This gives us better visibility into patterns of demand and it has<br />

allowed us to refine the demand planning process,” said Lewis. “When<br />

we look at each demand stream individually we can see how demand<br />

is changing from the perspective of the customer base and it enables<br />

us respond to customers appropriately. It allows us to adjust on-hand<br />

quantities to better match demand patterns. Analyzing demand streams<br />

as a group produced a lot of noise and in variability of demand. We<br />

also use an application that allows us to see how accurate our demand<br />

planning is.”<br />

DLA’s strategy of combining long-term contracts with demand<br />

planning has reduced inventory levels and saved DLA and the taxpayers<br />

money. “Inventory levels would definitely be higher because we would<br />

have to make spot buys at higher material costs,” said Rodocker.<br />

From Oshkosh’s perspective, the process is all about reducing<br />

costs and improving deliveries and quality over time. “We are constantly<br />

re-examining and remapping the entire value chain in all of<br />

our commodity and service areas to make continuous improvements,”<br />

said Bryant. “We work hard to ferret out inefficiency from the earliest<br />

stage of the value stream and the lowest level supplier all the way to<br />

customer delivery.”<br />

“DLA is seeking cost reduction across its range of contracts,” said<br />

Lewis. “They are taking a hard-nosed approach to any price increases.<br />

If we have a cost increase, no matter how insignificant, they are looking<br />

for an explanation for why our costs and theirs went up. We work<br />

hard with our own supply base and challenge them. We can sometimes<br />

evaluate an opportunity to buy in larger quantities in order to reduce<br />

costs for the customer when we see that there is demand across multiple<br />

demand streams.”<br />

“We are not that different than big businesses in the private sector,”<br />

said Roberts. “They develop long-term contracts and good working<br />

relationships with key suppliers and so do we. Working with and<br />

building our industrial base is one of our key focuses.” O<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com


At first glance, the containers used to ship<br />

military equipment and supplies around the<br />

world appear not to have changed much over<br />

the past half-century. Walk into any shipyard<br />

and the same cranes seem to be moving the<br />

same containers they moved roughly 60 years<br />

ago when container sizes became standardized<br />

worldwide.<br />

A closer look, however, will reveal some<br />

significant evolutions in these containers as<br />

well as in the hard cases used to transport<br />

everything from weapons and electronics<br />

to medical supplies. Many of them have<br />

chemical agent resistant coatings on them.<br />

A growing number have electromagnetic<br />

interference (EMI)/radio frequency interference<br />

(RFI) protection to keep signals from<br />

emanating outside or coming into the container.<br />

Some have been cleverly engineered<br />

into energy-efficient shelters while others,<br />

through high-tech GPS tags, can be tracked<br />

and inventoried anywhere in the world.<br />

As of May 2012, the Department of<br />

<strong>Defense</strong> owned 333,486 registered containers,<br />

according to the Military Surface Deployment<br />

and Distribution Command’s (SDDC)<br />

Global Container Management (GCM)<br />

branch. Between 7,000 and 10,000 of that<br />

total were added in the last five years. Just<br />

under half the total inventory is comprised of<br />

the 20-foot container, by far the most common<br />

container in the system.<br />

“The 20-foot container is number one<br />

because of its ease of use,” said Thomas<br />

Catchings, programs, systems and training<br />

lead for SDDC’s GCM branch. “It can be<br />

moved by a large or small element. You can<br />

stack them, you can put them on a truck.<br />

When we ship equipment overseas, once the<br />

20-foot container gets there, it can be used<br />

for force protection, for storage and more.<br />

That kind of agility is what we’re looking for.”<br />

GCM is currently working with other<br />

military organizations to create a comprehensive,<br />

single-source solution for tracking<br />

how packages, cases and shipping<br />

containers are evoLving in today’s<br />

agiLe, energy-conscious<br />

miLitary.<br />

By heather BaLdwin<br />

mLf correspondent<br />

all containers in the DoD system throughout<br />

their life cycles, from procurement to<br />

disposal. “It will be a system for anyone in<br />

DoD to go into and have total visibility on<br />

a container—where it is, the maintenance<br />

cycle, the money owed on it,” said Catchings.<br />

“Today, we have different buckets for all that<br />

information with different people covering<br />

different lanes throughout the container life<br />

cycle.” Catchings expects funding for this<br />

program to begin flowing in fiscal year 2013.<br />

The complexities of creating such a system<br />

are apparent when one considers the<br />

overwhelming number of variables in today’s<br />

container designs. Sea Box Inc., for instance,<br />

currently offers hundreds of designs and is<br />

adding three or four new ones every week in<br />

response to customer requests, said Sea Box<br />

President Jim Brennan.<br />

While most of these designs are one-time<br />

custom builds, Brennan has observed several<br />

overarching trends, mostly related to the<br />

military’s efforts to go green. For instance,<br />

sandwich panel construction is increasingly<br />

popular. Unlike corrugated steel, sandwich<br />

paneling is built using multiple layers of<br />

foam, fiberglass and other insulating materials<br />

bonded together. “It’s equally as strong as<br />

corrugated, but it’s insulated,” said Brennan.<br />

“So you can get more insulation in the same<br />

amount of space [as corrugated], or you can<br />

get the same insulation in less space. You then<br />

use less energy and that’s the trend—moving<br />

toward more energy efficiency.”<br />

A similar shift is occurring in the area of<br />

insulating paint, which uses thermally reflective<br />

materials to reduce heat transfer through<br />

the coating, thereby reducing the energy<br />

needed to cool a container’s interior. Sea Box<br />

has offered this option for about five years but<br />

only recently has Brennan noticed an uptick<br />

in interest. “It’s been growing slowly because<br />

it’s expensive,” he said, “but people are starting<br />

to look more at their total energy life cycle<br />

costs and the reflective paint reduces those<br />

costs over the long term.”<br />

In response to the U.S. Army’s efforts<br />

to reduce energy usage housing soldiers in<br />

Afghanistan and elsewhere, Sea Box recently<br />

rolled out the Collapsible Re-deployable Shelter<br />

(CRS). The CRS is built from a shipping<br />

container with high-grade insulation in the<br />

walls and roof. It includes LED lighting and<br />

an electrical package, and it collapses to 2 feet<br />

in height for shipping. When four collapsed<br />

shelters are stacked, they are the same size<br />

and shape as a standard cargo container, making<br />

them easy to move via ship, truck and rail.<br />

The Army recently finished six months of<br />

testing the CRS and other similar solutions at<br />

Fort Devens, Mass. Brennan anticipates the<br />

written results of that testing to be delivered<br />

in June. In the meantime, a major defense<br />

contractor just ordered a CRS complex with<br />

EMI shielding. “EMI-shielded collapsible shelters<br />

are brand new,” said Brennan, adding that<br />

the shelter will be complete by August.<br />

“More customers are asking for EMI/<br />

RFI shielding and chem/bio features,” echoed<br />

Jason Raffaele, director of engineering at AAR<br />

Mobility Systems. “Our customers are putting<br />

more people and electronics in shelters<br />

deployed to austere environments, requiring<br />

ever-increasing cooling capacity and dehumidification.”<br />

AAR Mobility Systems traces its history of<br />

providing turn-key mobility and sustainment<br />

solutions to 1963 when it began manufacturing<br />

aluminum cargo pallets for the U.S.<br />

Air Force. Today, it continues to support the<br />

defense marketplace via the prototype, design,<br />

manufacture, integration and life cycle support<br />

of a wide variety of shelters, containers,<br />

CROPs and flat racks, pallets and palletized<br />

systems, and integrated platforms.<br />

Beyond the growing number of requests<br />

for EMI/RFI shielding, Raffaele said the military<br />

is placing increased emphasis on weight<br />

and energy efficiency. “Lighter systems mean<br />

more payload and less fuel,” explained Mark<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com MLF 6.5 | 9


Pickett, marketing director for AAR Mobility<br />

Systems. “We are always looking for lighter<br />

weight, lower cost materials that support mission<br />

requirements.” At the same time, AAR is<br />

working side by side with customers to address<br />

their growing desire for alternative energy and<br />

energy generation/storage in shelter systems.<br />

“We are collaborating with industry partners<br />

that complement our mobility platforms to<br />

leverage a strong integration experience” for<br />

green energy, Pickett said.<br />

The push towards lighter weight and<br />

increased durability is affecting containers<br />

of all sizes. In response to a call from special<br />

operations and others for lighter cases,<br />

Cases2Go, a distributor of top quality shipping<br />

cases, and partner Dynamic Innovations<br />

created Carbon Armor cases, a line they<br />

rolled out in mid-2011. The cases leverage<br />

the unique characteristics of carbon fiber<br />

reinforced plastics, an advanced composite<br />

using continuous fiber in a thermoplastic<br />

matrix. Carbon Armor is half the weight of<br />

aluminum with six times aluminum’s torsion,<br />

tensile and strength. It is twice the<br />

strength of steel.<br />

“When I look down the road, I don’t<br />

see anything replacing this technology,” said<br />

David Root, president of Cases2Go.<br />

In addition to the growing demand for<br />

lighter weight, Root said his customers, like<br />

the customers of shipping container manufacturers,<br />

are increasingly requesting EMI/<br />

RFI shielding on Cases2Go products. While it<br />

isn’t yet possible to integrate an effective EMI/<br />

RFI lining during the production of plastic<br />

or fiberglass, Cases2Go’s Carbon Armor cases<br />

offer an optional expanded metal mesh that is<br />

co-molded with the carbon fiber case wall to<br />

provide EMI/RFI shielding.<br />

“Case design is in a constant state of movement<br />

with the evolution of technology,” Root<br />

observed. Today, cases are lighter, stronger<br />

and more technologically advanced than ever<br />

before. At the same time, they are shrinking.<br />

“There’s a trend toward smaller,” said Root.<br />

“Everything is compressing in size.”<br />

Smaller size, unmatched durability and<br />

electronic equipment protection are the hallmarks<br />

of Pelican Products Inc.’s new Pelican<br />

HardBack Series, cases made to protect<br />

devices such as laptops, tablets, e-readers<br />

and other small electronics. “We are targeting<br />

digital survival with this series,” said Dan<br />

Klepacz, product manager, worldwide government<br />

market for Pelican, a leading manufacturer<br />

of reusable transport cases for all<br />

environments. “The HardBack Series is travel<br />

armor for computing devices.”<br />

10 | MLF 6.5<br />

Answering a call from customers<br />

for sleeker, more stylish<br />

products, Pelican worked<br />

in a design partnership with<br />

BMW DesignWorks to create<br />

the cases. They combine BMW’s<br />

design prowess with wellknown<br />

Pelican features such as<br />

crush resistance, a watertight<br />

seal and an automatic pressure<br />

equalization valve that prevents<br />

vacuum lock, making the cases<br />

easier to open at any altitude.<br />

They also include anti-scratch<br />

foam inserts to protect delicate<br />

electronics.<br />

As cases and containers get<br />

more technologically advanced<br />

and the equipment inside them<br />

becomes more advanced, the<br />

military is taking a harder<br />

look at how to keep track of<br />

everything. While many cases<br />

already include passive RFID<br />

tags, Klepacz said the past two years have seen<br />

growing demand for GPS and active RFID tags<br />

that can reveal case contents at a distance<br />

and/or enable a case owner to pinpoint the<br />

geographic location of his case.<br />

In response, Pelican “is looking into this<br />

capability more, trying to figure out how to<br />

integrate it, investing more money in it and<br />

working with outside companies to figure out<br />

the best solutions,” said Klepacz. The capabilities<br />

of these advanced tags go far beyond<br />

inventory and location. “If there’s a shelf life<br />

to a part, you could tag it and it would send<br />

out a signal when it’s coming to its end of life,”<br />

explained Klepacz. “Or if you have weapons in<br />

storage, the tag could signal when there’s too<br />

much humidity. Or if you are transporting<br />

medical gear that is temperature sensitive, the<br />

tag can send a signal when interior temperatures<br />

are nearing their limits.” Advanced tags<br />

also can measure shock, vibration and other<br />

motion for sensitive electronic equipment.<br />

In response to another military challenge,<br />

the problem of stacking cases of different<br />

sizes, Pelican last year launched its Inter-<br />

Stacking Pattern (ISP) Case. The system is<br />

compatible across six different case sizes, from<br />

4 to 25 cubic feet of storage. “Normally, case<br />

ribs prevent containers of unlike size from<br />

stacking. We came up with a pattern that,<br />

no matter what size case, it will stack,” said<br />

Klepacz. Undercuts also make the case useful<br />

once it is deployed. For instance, a printer<br />

shipped in one of Pelican’s ISP cases can be<br />

removed at its final destination and the case<br />

David Root<br />

Dan Klepacz<br />

transformed into a table for<br />

the printer. This multi-use<br />

functionality cuts down on<br />

shipping requirements, ultimately<br />

saving the military on<br />

inventory and shipping costs.<br />

“The business of military<br />

cases definitely has evolved<br />

with all the green initiatives,”<br />

said Klepacz. This year, Pelican<br />

will roll out 45 new cases<br />

and lighting products, a sharp<br />

increase from the dozen or so<br />

it typically averages.<br />

The military’s search for<br />

green shipping solutions goes<br />

all the way down to the packaging<br />

on the products it uses.<br />

Brian Koester, vice president<br />

of engineering for Advanced<br />

Military Packaging, a division<br />

of AD Inc., said last year he<br />

received a letter from TACOM<br />

that explained how the military<br />

was going green and asking suppliers like<br />

AMP to evaluate the packing materials they<br />

are using.<br />

“We can’t get entirely away from polymers,”<br />

said Koester, “but we are now trying to<br />

use more corrugated products.”<br />

Koester explained that polymers such as<br />

polyethylene and polystyrene provide the best<br />

cushioning but don’t break down in landfills.<br />

Corrugated products, though they break<br />

down in landfills and are effective in some<br />

cushioning applications, don’t rebound once<br />

compressed and so can’t entirely replace the<br />

environmentally-unfriendly polymers. Take<br />

an 80-pound hydraulic pump, for instance.<br />

“We have to put it in a vapor-proof bag, like a<br />

bag of potato chips,” he explained. “In the bag,<br />

we have to cushion the pump so it is protected<br />

from impact and at the same time won’t puncture<br />

the bag. We are trying to look for more<br />

corrugated solutions to accomplish this.”<br />

Currently, Koester is examining a new<br />

corrugated product similar to cardboard but<br />

with a thin wood facing. “It would add extra<br />

strength and would be disposable,” said Koester.<br />

If the material passes Koester’s evaluation,<br />

he will seek to get it TACOM approved, further<br />

boosting the command’s percent of green<br />

packing. O<br />

For more information, contact Editor-in-Chief<br />

Jeff McKaughan at jeffm@kmimediagroup.com<br />

or search our online archives for related stories<br />

at www.mlf-kmi.com.<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com


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Q: In terms of the equipment that came out of Iraq, how much is<br />

still in Kuwait?<br />

A: We started the big drawdown last year when the president [gave<br />

orders on] October 21, and we were done by December 18—about 58<br />

days. During that time, we’ve been clearing out all that gear. Our last<br />

vehicle left on March 25, was loaded on the ship out of Kuwait and<br />

headed back to the States. We just made a video news clip of it being<br />

offloaded at the Port of Beaumont, Texas, and then transported to its<br />

final destination—the 1st Cavalry Museum at Fort Hood.<br />

Of the total pieces, we moved well over 4,900 pieces of rolling<br />

stock, [which were] out of Kuwait in less than 100 days. We had<br />

some very great systems in line from the Army Materiel Command<br />

[AMC] and the <strong>Defense</strong> Logistics Agency [DLA], so we’re able to<br />

account for the items here in theater. Everything that came out of<br />

Iraq has been shipped to CONUS or incorporated into other stocks.<br />

12 | MLF 6.5<br />

The 1st Sustainment Command<br />

(Theater) was a focal point<br />

for the smooth retrograde of people<br />

and equipment from Iraq. That<br />

success and the lessons learned<br />

are being used as a model for planning<br />

the Afghanistan drawdown.<br />

In the October 2011 <strong>issue</strong> of Military<br />

Logistics Forum, we had the<br />

chance to sit down with Major General<br />

Kenneth Dowd and talk about<br />

the elements of the command that<br />

came together to get the job done.<br />

As Dowd prepares to leave 1TSC<br />

for his new job as the director of<br />

<strong>logistics</strong> operations for the <strong>Defense</strong><br />

Logistics Agency, we wanted to do<br />

an exit interview of sorts to see<br />

where the command will go from<br />

here and how his experiences have<br />

prepared him for DLA.<br />

Major General Kenneth S. Dowd is the commander<br />

of the 1st Sustainment Command (Theater).<br />

He was commissioned through the ROTC program<br />

upon graduation from Cumberland College,<br />

Williamsburg, Ky., in 1979. His military education<br />

includes the Quartermaster Basic and Advanced<br />

Course, Logistics Executive Development Course,<br />

U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Armed Forces Staff College<br />

and the U.S. Army War College. In addition, he holds a master’s degree<br />

in <strong>logistics</strong> management from the Florida Institute of Technology.<br />

Dowd has served in numerous command and staff positions throughout<br />

his career. His assignments include: commander, 299th Forward Support<br />

Battalion, Schweinfurt, Germany (with operational deployment to<br />

Bosnia); chief, Logistics Operation Center, and DA DCSLOG, Washington,<br />

D.C.; commander of the 1st Armored Division Support Command (with<br />

combat deployment in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom); assistant<br />

deputy chief of staff for <strong>logistics</strong>, U.S. Army Europe, and the executive<br />

officer to the Army G4; director of <strong>logistics</strong>, engineering and security assistance,<br />

U.S. Pacific Command, Camp Smith, Hawaii; director for <strong>logistics</strong>,<br />

U.S. Central Command, MacDill Air Force Base, Fla., where he directed all<br />

<strong>logistics</strong> and engineering planning and operations in support of Operations<br />

Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom. While there, he led the development<br />

and planning for the significant and historical <strong>logistics</strong> efforts that<br />

the 1st Sustainment Command (Theater).<br />

Dowd’s awards and decorations include the <strong>Defense</strong> Superior Service<br />

Medal, Legion of Merit with one Oak Leaf Cluster, <strong>Defense</strong> Meritorious<br />

Service Medal, Meritorious Service Medal with four Oak Leaf Clusters,<br />

Army Commendation Medal with Silver Oak Leaf Cluster, and the Army<br />

Achievement medal with two Oak Leaf Clusters.<br />

The job has been completed. As you know, during the first Gulf War, all<br />

that accounting was done back in CONUS, so pushing this capability<br />

forward allowed us greater efficiency and effectiveness in retrograding,<br />

redeploying or reposturing all U.S. property and equipment here.<br />

Q: Geography is the biggest obvious difference between retrograde<br />

from Afghanistan versus that in Iraq. That being said, how will the<br />

system processes that were so successful coming out of Iraq and<br />

Kuwait work in the Afghanistan scenario?<br />

A: We had a couple of ROC [rehearsal of concept] drills earlier this<br />

spring in which we highlighted the requirements for this drawdown<br />

effort and were able to take lessons learned and apply them<br />

to Afghanistan. As you know, Afghanistan is landlocked, and the<br />

PAKGLOC [Pakistan ground lines of communications] is closed right<br />

now.<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com


We used a lot of things we developed in Iraq, like the RPAT [redistribution<br />

property accountability team] yards, where units can bring<br />

gear and turn it in, and the retro-sort yards, where they can turn in<br />

any kind of excess equipment. In Afghanistan, we have three different<br />

sites that are working with that same process.<br />

We go through the sustainment brigades and inventory everything.<br />

If it’s serviceable, we put it back into the supply system. If it’s<br />

un-serviceable, we’ll go ahead and de-militarize it. Last month alone,<br />

at one of the turn-in sites they re-collected about $120 million worth<br />

of various items—and that was not equipment, but stuff that was<br />

turned in, tentage for example.<br />

Units are starting to clear the battlefield and we’re starting the<br />

same process as in Iraq. We’re accounting for containers early on<br />

right now, and making sure the vehicles are clean and ready to move.<br />

We’re using the air piece to move the gear out of Afghanistan to<br />

places like Jordan. Then, we will ship it home from there.<br />

Q: The basic processes that you put in place that work so well, up<br />

to the RPAT and up to the actual shipping of it—those systems are<br />

very similar to what was used in the Iraq scenario.<br />

A: You’re exactly right, and the same types of property accountability,<br />

synchronizing movement of resources out of theater, force protection<br />

measures, redistribution and transfer of excess equipment, and<br />

command partnerships. The only thing that’s a little harder is the<br />

process to move it because we have to use so much airlift capacity.<br />

Q: Was 1TSC involved in working on the plans for preparing for<br />

that surge recovery and general retrograde?<br />

A: Yes. We developed the plan in Iraq, but in Afghanistan, we had<br />

planners forward. Now we have part of my headquarters, the TSC<br />

Forward, pushed into Afghanistan. Its effort is to do that synchronization<br />

of <strong>logistics</strong> to make sure we can continue to sustain the fight.<br />

But as the fighting season goes on, you start to retrograde gear out<br />

that’s excess, battle damaged, or stuff that can get out.<br />

We moved part of my headquarters out of Kuwait into Afghanistan<br />

to help synchronize the logistic goal retrograde efforts. The<br />

commitment and engagement with senior leaders in that theater is<br />

essential to the drawdown process.<br />

Q: We last spoke toward the end of 2011. You made a point of talking<br />

about the jointness of the command, 1TSC, to include civilians<br />

as well. Can you address that now as you’re looking back on the<br />

whole process and how it came together?<br />

A: Yes. At any one time, we had about 18,000 folks within the command—that<br />

included active, Reserve, sister service and civilians. So<br />

I actually had airmen, two companies that were driving trucks from<br />

Kuwait into Iraq, doing our truck driving because I had the short fall<br />

amount of trucks as there was so much demand for transportation.<br />

I also used Navy customs teams to handle all of the agriculture<br />

inspections. I pushed about 24 of those experienced team members<br />

into Afghanistan, to get the customs clearance process started there.<br />

The civilian contractors and AMC with their civilians have helped<br />

us do the processes and management of equipment—it’s a total team<br />

effort, and I refer to it as a “LOG Nation.” I don’t care what patch<br />

you wear; everyone’s trying to work it from a logistical standpoint in<br />

order to make it better for the warfighter.<br />

The biggest takeaway is out of those 18,000 people, 66 percent<br />

were Reserve or National Guard. They were trained up in places<br />

like Camp Shelby and other places back in the States, and arrived<br />

here and became my transportation companies, my RPAT experts,<br />

customs teams, all those things—[they] just did an outstanding job.<br />

Q: Can you tell me what the footprint looks like of 1TSC, where<br />

it’s located, and what you think that footprint will look like a year<br />

from now?<br />

A: Right now, my headquarters is at Fort Bragg, and I have part of<br />

my command here in Kuwait. I have a smaller portion of my command<br />

in Afghanistan that’s starting to build as we start to work the<br />

retrograde and other events.<br />

In a year, I would look at just a little bigger footprint in Afghanistan<br />

as we get into the retrograde and bring in other units to help us.<br />

Those are called the CMRE [CENTCOM Materiel Retrograde Effort],<br />

[and will] help us do the retrograde. I’ll still have a small footprint<br />

here in Kuwait.<br />

At Fort Bragg, we’re going to take a hard look at developing<br />

some of our teams who helped train folks in CONUS, as units start<br />

to move back there on what logistic things we’ve worked through<br />

the war, just to keep our skills up. As you’ve seen, more units will<br />

probably be back in CONUS, and work those relationships with units<br />

and CONUS.<br />

Q: What experiences at 1TSC have helped prepare you for your new<br />

role coming up with DLA?<br />

A: I’ve been blessed as a solider: 33 years in the Army, the last five<br />

having been deployed—three years at CENTCOM and two years here<br />

at the 1st TSC. At CENTCOM, having to develop the plans for the<br />

surge into Iraq and the plus up in Afghanistan, and the withdrawal<br />

of forces out of Iraq and developing those plans and then coming into<br />

this command to execute those, has just been really outstanding. It’s<br />

allowed me to go to the DLA and work with those great Americans<br />

as we work the Afghanistan drawdown, be able to talk to those folks<br />

about the realities of what goes on over there and the fight, and how<br />

we can help from the DLA perspective to contribute to leverage our<br />

capabilities to support the warfighter.<br />

Q: Is there anything you’d like to add about the men and women of<br />

1TSC as you get ready to transition out?<br />

A: I’ve worked with all these great folks over the last 22 months. I<br />

would just say we’ve got a tremendous military with these young<br />

men and women of all services. I sometimes think we forget that<br />

the real heroes have families that are back in CONUS who allow<br />

these warriors to come forward, be on point and do all this great<br />

work. I want to make sure we thank the families, because they’re<br />

going through stresses and separations just as these young men<br />

and women in combat are going through. I often think we don’t say<br />

thank you enough to them, because they’re a part of this big team<br />

also. O<br />

For more information, contact Editor-in-Chief Jeff McKaughan<br />

at jeffm@kmimediagroup.com or search our online archives for related stories<br />

at www.mlf-kmi.com.<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com MLF 6.5 | 13


As a primary level field activity of the <strong>Defense</strong> Logistics Agency,<br />

DLA Energy is the <strong>agency</strong>’s fuel supplier, providing the Department of<br />

<strong>Defense</strong> and other government agencies with comprehensive energy<br />

solutions in the most effective and efficient manner possible. DLA<br />

Energy provides a host of ground, marine and aviation fuels as well<br />

as space and missile propellants, chemicals and gases, utility fuels and<br />

electricity. In addition, DLA Energy is the DoD’s center of expertise for<br />

alternative fuels and renewable energy and serves as the executive agent<br />

for DoD’s bulk petroleum supply chain.<br />

DLA Energy bought the equivalent of approximately 144 million<br />

barrels of fuel, energy and power, worth about $20 billion in the last<br />

fiscal year. That total included petroleum products for aircraft and<br />

ships; diesel fuel and gasoline for vehicles; heating oil, natural gas, coal<br />

and electricity for installations; aerospace fuels and products for the<br />

National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), DoD, and the<br />

commercial space launch programs; and small quantities of alternative<br />

fuels for the military services’ testing and certification programs.<br />

Although the military services are occasionally granted local purchase<br />

authority to buy fuels in unique circumstances, DLA Energy buys<br />

more than 99 percent of fuels used by the U.S. military. “By purchasing<br />

our customer’s requirements in aggregate we get buying power,”<br />

explained Director of Supplier Operations Mark Iden. “Rather than<br />

having each military service buy its own fuel requirements independently<br />

with its own acquisition office and service-specific contracting<br />

methods, we provide the overall DoD purchasing leverage, do it in a<br />

consistent manner, and generally <strong>issue</strong> solicitations for our recurring<br />

buys on set schedules that industry has grown accustomed to over the<br />

years.”<br />

Iden noted that “for the bulk petroleum products, we generally<br />

buy the products from the producers and manage the supply chain<br />

end to end.” DLA Energy does not own the assets that distribute<br />

these petroleum products throughout the supply chain. DLA Energy<br />

arranges transportation via U.S. Transportation Command activities,<br />

the Military Sealift Command and the Military Surface Deployment<br />

and Distribution Command. But DLA Energy is responsible for ensuring<br />

the on-time delivery of these products to their end-use customers.<br />

Iden also noted that DLA Energy owns the bulk fuel products generally<br />

up to the point of sale to their customer, which typically takes place at<br />

the wing of the aircraft or into the piece of equipment being refueled.<br />

14 | MLF 6.5<br />

fueL By the BiLLions of gaLLons.<br />

By henry canaday<br />

mLf correspondent<br />

Tied in with this fuel-ownership role is DLA Energy’s responsibility to<br />

fund the sustainment, restoration and modernization requirements for<br />

the military services’ fuel storage and distribution systems that contain<br />

this DLA-owned fuel.<br />

For bulk purchases of conventional fuels like JP8 aviation turbine<br />

fuel, JP5 naval aviation turbine fuel and F76 ship propulsion fuel, DLA<br />

Energy obtains requirements from their customers and then puts out<br />

a request for proposal, explained Research and Development Strategic<br />

Energy Analyst Jeanne Binder. “Our bulk petroleum business unit then<br />

receives the bids and evaluates them, seeking the lowest total cost to<br />

the government,” Binder said. Then an indefinite delivery/indefinite<br />

quantity award is made for a one-year delivery period, with an estimated<br />

quantity and a guaranteed lift of 75 percent of this volume. The initial<br />

price is adjusted weekly or even daily based on changes in commercial<br />

fuel indexes.<br />

Other purchases of conventional fuels, for example of the diesel fuel,<br />

gasoline or heating oil handled by DLA Energy’s Direct Delivery Fuels<br />

business unit, are conducted in a similar fashion, except that these<br />

can result in multi-year requirements contracts with up to five-year<br />

delivery periods. All RFPs are posted on the Federal Business Opportunities<br />

website. The vast majority of purchases, for both bulk petroleum<br />

products and for the direct delivery products, are competitive, and all<br />

acquisitions comply with both Federal Acquisition Regulations and<br />

<strong>Defense</strong> Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement, noted Iden.<br />

DLA Energy bulk fuel purchases are also subject to small business<br />

set-aside rules. DLA Energy is currently working with the Small Business<br />

Administration to consider an increase in the size definition of<br />

small refineries. “Over the years, the number of small refineries has<br />

diminished as these refineries have been bought out or have merged<br />

or consolidated with other firms, thereby losing their current small<br />

business status,” Iden explained. “A revised small refinery size determination<br />

could help us increase the number of potential small business<br />

participants in our key bulk petroleum acquisition programs.”<br />

DLA Energy is also actively engaged with the military services in<br />

support of their current efforts to test and certify a number of new<br />

alternative fuels. Binder said the major difference for purchases of the<br />

new brand of alternative fuels is that these are generally for a small<br />

quantity specifically requested by the military services for testing and<br />

certification purposes. The quantities requested range from a couple<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com


hundred to a couple hundred thousand gallons, compared with more<br />

than 4 billion gallons for the bulk fuel purchase programs. However,<br />

the one-time buys of alternative fuels are still competitively bid on by<br />

several alternative fuel suppliers.<br />

Iden said DLA Energy plans to stick with its basic fuel procurement<br />

processes as the alternative fuel program matures into larger acquisition<br />

volumes. “It is tried and true, industry is comfortable with it, and<br />

they know when the RFPs for our recurring acquisition programs<br />

will come out.” However, one possible change in DLA Energy’s bulk<br />

petroleum acquisition programs is a shift toward more commercialspecification<br />

type fuels. “Instead of military specification JP8, we may<br />

see a move to the Jet A commercial specification fuel used by the airlines,”<br />

Iden noted. “We are in the beginning phases of this conversion.<br />

It is not fully approved, but we are beginning the necessary steps in that<br />

direction. Using a commercial specification fuel may make it easier for<br />

refiners to supply us and may broaden our potential supplier base.”<br />

All alternative fuels approved as a replacement for military specification<br />

fuel for military use will be drop-ins, and will be blended with<br />

conventional fuels, thus having the same performance characteristics<br />

as the straight conventional fuels. So far, the Air Force has an updated<br />

military specification for JP8 blended with coal, natural gas or biomass<br />

converted to liquid by the Fischer–Tropsch (FT) process, Binder noted.<br />

Original prices for purchases of the FT product ranged from $4 to $7<br />

per gallon.<br />

The Navy and Army are working on their FT certification, and the<br />

services are also testing hydrotreated renewable fuels, with completion<br />

expected next year. “They are also starting on sugar to hydrocarbons,”<br />

Binder noted. For operational buys, in contrast to testing and certification,<br />

the price of alternative fuels will also be important. “Prices are<br />

going down,” Binder observed. For the latest purchase of 350,000 gallons<br />

of biofuel l for the Navy, the price was $26 per gallon.<br />

“When we started purchasing biofuels three years ago, the price was<br />

in the mid-$60 per gallon range,” Iden said. “Recently, we have seen the<br />

price drop by a factor of two or three for our more recent contracts.”<br />

The next step in gaining economy of scale for alternative fuels will<br />

come with larger purchases in the range of millions of gallons. “It’s a<br />

chicken-and-egg thing,” Iden said. “You must have volumes to lower<br />

cost. But to ramp up to the larger volumes, it will take time for the<br />

costs to come down.”<br />

DLA Energy’s purchases of alternative fuels will be set by customer<br />

requirements. The Navy has set a goal of 50 percent of its fuel coming<br />

from blends of alternative fuels by 2020, and the Air Force wants the<br />

same portion for its domestic fuels by 2016. DLA Energy has calculated<br />

that these goals translate into 387 million gallons of alternatives<br />

blended into JP8 and 336 million gallons blended into JP5 and F76.<br />

Iden emphasized that these are still just goals and objectives. “The<br />

assumption is alternatives will be competitive in price with conventional<br />

fuels by time we buy them for operational requirements.”<br />

Private companies play a very important role in getting fuel to DLA<br />

Energy and to the field where these fuels are needed. For example,<br />

the Supreme <strong>Group</strong> supplies primarily jet fuel to DLA, according to<br />

John Segleski, managing director for fuels. Volumes vary month by<br />

month, but are typically between 4 to 10 million gallons each month.<br />

Segleski said Supreme delivers this fuel to a range of locations across<br />

Afghanistan.<br />

“Supreme has been operating in challenging environments for<br />

more than 50 years, and has been providing services in Afghanistan<br />

for over 10 years,” Segleski stressed. “Supreme made a commercial<br />

decision to establish regional distribution centers to facilitate<br />

improvements in supply chain performance and has developed excellent<br />

infrastructure and storage facilities close to point of consumption<br />

on military bases, thereby reducing risk and enhancing service to the<br />

warfighter.” The company operates a robust supply chain, with multiple<br />

sources, multiple suppliers, multiple entry points and multiple local<br />

partners. “Supreme has the capability to move large volumes in what is<br />

a long, 90-day, supply chain.”<br />

Solazyme is working with DLA Energy and the U.S. Navy in fuel<br />

certification for the scale-up in renewable oil technology, said Bob<br />

Ames, vice president of Fuels Commercialization.<br />

To date, Solazyme has delivered what it believes to be the largest<br />

quantities of microbially-derived advanced biofuels in history, including<br />

over 600,000 liters of in-specification jet fuel and marine diesel to the<br />

Navy. “Since 2008, we have had several contracts with DLA Energy to<br />

deliver to the Navy increasingly larger quantities of algae-derived fuels,”<br />

Ames said.<br />

In 2009, Solazyme contracted with DLA Energy to provide over<br />

80,000 liters of algae-derived renewable F76 marine diesel fuel to<br />

the Navy. A second 2009 contract was for production of algae-derived<br />

renewable JP5 naval jet fuel. In 2010, Solazyme entered into a third<br />

contract to produce up to 566,000 liters of renewable F76 fuel. The<br />

Navy funded the contract option for purchase of 283,000 liters, which<br />

the company anticipates producing through the second half of 2012.<br />

“We believe that our performance of this third contract progresses the<br />

completion of the technical testing and certification program for our<br />

algae-derived fuel,” Ames said.<br />

Solazyme’s algae-derived fuels have been successfully tested in<br />

multiple Navy vessels. Its algae-derived jet fuel was tested successfully<br />

in May 2011 in a MH-60S Seahawk helicopter test flight using the fuel<br />

in a 50 percent blend with petroleum-derived jet fuel. This Seahawk<br />

flight was the first-ever military aircraft to fly on an algae-based jet fuel.<br />

The Navy also tested Solazyme’s marine distillate fuel in a destroyer<br />

over a 20-hour voyage up the California coastline. A biofuel speed record<br />

was set by the Navy when testing Solazyme fuel in a landing craft utility<br />

vehicle. The Navy has also supplied Solazyme’s algae-derived diesel<br />

to Maersk Shipping Line, which tested the fuel in a 300-meter Maersk<br />

Kalmar container vessel over a one-month, 6,500-nautical mile voyage.<br />

Solazyme fuel was also successfully tested in a Navy frigate, USS Ford.<br />

Solazyme agreed in December 2011 to supply 10 percent of the<br />

total feedstock required under a Navy contract for 100,000 gallons of<br />

renewable jet fuel and 350,000 gallons of renewable marine diesel.<br />

This new contract will be fulfilled by Solazyme in conjunction with<br />

Dynamic Fuels and represents the single largest purchase of biofuel in<br />

government history. The fuel will be used as part of the Navy’s efforts to<br />

develop a Green Strike <strong>Group</strong> composed of vessels and ships powered<br />

by advanced biofuel.<br />

The company is now taking steps toward supplying commercial<br />

quantities of tactical fuels, renewable JP5 and F76 to DLA and the Navy<br />

for operational use.<br />

Ames said fuels refined from Solazyme’s oil offer superior environmental<br />

benefits when compared to a majority of other biofuels.<br />

Life cycle greenhouse-gas emissions are reduced by a minimum of 66<br />

percent when used for road transportation, as determined by Life Cycle<br />

Associates, an independent carbon intensity measurement firm. O<br />

For more information, contact Editor-in-Chief Jeff McKaughan<br />

at jeffm@kmimediagroup.com or search our online archives for related stories<br />

at www.mlf-kmi.com.<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com MLF 6.5 | 15


SUPPLY CHAIN<br />

ATK has received orders totaling more<br />

than $266 million for small caliber ammunition<br />

under an indefinite delivery/indefinite<br />

quantity (IDIQ) contract with the U.S.<br />

Army Contracting Command, Rock Island.<br />

This order includes a mix of 5.56 mm,<br />

7.62 mm and .50-caliber military ammunition<br />

to be produced at the Lake City Army<br />

Ammunition Plant in Independence, Mo.<br />

ATK has operated the Lake City plant since<br />

April 2000.<br />

“ATK is honored to be the Army’s<br />

industrial partner at the Lake City Army<br />

Ammunition Plant, collaborating in the<br />

operation and maintenance of the nation’s<br />

largest ammunition production facility,”<br />

Body Armor<br />

Point Blank Enterprises Inc., a<br />

leader in the production of soft body<br />

armor and related protective solutions,<br />

announced that it has been awarded<br />

a firm-fixed-price contract from the<br />

<strong>Defense</strong> Logistics Agency (DLA) to<br />

provide improved outer tactical vest<br />

and outer tactical vest components<br />

to support U.S. Army and U.S. Air<br />

Force personnel. This contract has a<br />

maximum value of $119.9 million and<br />

the company expects the first year’s<br />

value to be approximately $50 million<br />

with three one-year option awards<br />

thereafter.<br />

Commenting on this latest award,<br />

Jim Henderson, chief executive officer,<br />

stated, “We continue to receive large<br />

volume orders from the U.S. military<br />

and government given our past proven<br />

performance, our ability to produce<br />

high volume quality products on time,<br />

and for our never-ending commitment<br />

to innovation and safety. We are proud<br />

to be a chosen supplier to the U.S.<br />

government and it’s with great pride<br />

that we continue to produce life-saving<br />

products for America’s servicemen and<br />

women.”<br />

16 | MLF 6.5<br />

Ammunition Deliveries<br />

said ATK Small Caliber Systems Vice President<br />

and General Manager Kent Holiday. “Since<br />

2000, we have delivered more than 11<br />

billion rounds of ammunition in support of<br />

our nation’s warfighters while modernizing<br />

the facility, increasing capacity, improving<br />

productivity and efficiency, and doing so in<br />

a safe and responsible manner.”<br />

The Army and ATK are nearing completion<br />

of a $276 million modernization project<br />

at the Lake City facility. This includes the<br />

capacity to increase production of the new<br />

5.56 mm Enhanced Performance Round.<br />

ATK has delivered approximately 250<br />

million of these rounds since transitioning<br />

to production in 2010.<br />

Lockheed Martin<br />

completed delivery of the<br />

79th and final C-5 Galaxy<br />

aircraft of the current<br />

Avionics Modernization<br />

Program at a ceremony at<br />

Travis Air Force Base, Calif.,<br />

on April 27.<br />

“We are very proud of<br />

our AMP team,” said Greg<br />

Ulmer, vice president of the<br />

C-5 program. “This delivery<br />

continues the ever-growing<br />

legacy of the C-5 Galaxy and<br />

the critical role it plays in<br />

Last C-5 AMP Delivered<br />

supporting the warfighter<br />

across the globe for many<br />

years to come.”<br />

Aircraft 70-448 will be<br />

assigned to the Air Force<br />

Reserve 433rd Airlift Wing at<br />

Lackland AFB in San Antonio.<br />

The AMP program is<br />

the first part of a two-step<br />

modernization process. AMP<br />

began in 1998 and incorporates<br />

a mission computer,<br />

a glass cockpit with digital<br />

avionics, autopilot capabilities<br />

and state-of-the-art<br />

communications, navigation<br />

and surveillance components<br />

for air traffic management.<br />

The second phase of the<br />

C-5 modernization effort is<br />

the Reliability Enhancement<br />

and Re-Engining Program.<br />

Of the 79 C-5s that received<br />

the AMP modifications, 52<br />

will be upgraded with newer,<br />

quieter CF-6 engines and<br />

more than 70 additional<br />

improvements as part of the<br />

transition to becoming a<br />

C-5M Super Galaxy.<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com


SUPPLY CHAIN<br />

General Dynamics NASSCO has delivered<br />

USNS Medgar Evers (T-AKE 13) to the U.S.<br />

Navy. The ship is named in honor of the<br />

slain African-American civil rights leader from<br />

Mississippi who served as the state’s first-ever<br />

field secretary for the National Association for<br />

the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).<br />

Construction of the USNS Medgar Evers<br />

began in April 2010. NASSCO has incorporated<br />

international marine technologies and<br />

commercial ship-design features into T-AKEclass<br />

ships, including an integrated electricdrive<br />

propulsion system, to minimize operating<br />

costs during each ship’s projected 40-year<br />

service life. During the course of the decadelong<br />

T-AKE Program, NASSCO has implemented<br />

more than 20,000 ideas to drive down costs and<br />

improve quality and more than 1.5 million<br />

hours have been invested in employee training<br />

USNS Medgar Evers<br />

Desktop Alert Inc., a provider of<br />

IP-based mass notification to the U.S.<br />

Army worldwide, recently announced that<br />

the U.S. Army stationed in Afghanistan<br />

has procured the Desktop Alert Emergency<br />

Mass Notification System (EMNS).<br />

The selection furthers the company’s<br />

position within the U.S. Army as the<br />

predominant IP-based mass notification<br />

platform postured to support the warfighters<br />

in CONUS and OCONUS locations.<br />

U.S. Army locations seeking to implement<br />

an EMNS solution similar to the<br />

mass notification system deployed by the<br />

U.S. Army in Afghanistan, Fort Huachuca<br />

since 2006. With a cargo capacity of more than<br />

10,000 tons, the primary mission of T-AKE ships<br />

is to deliver food, ammunition, fuel and other<br />

provisions from shore stations to combat ships<br />

at sea.<br />

“As demonstrated on our successful sea<br />

trials three weeks ago, the Medgar Evers is<br />

ready for immediate service,” said Fred Harris,<br />

president of General Dynamics NASSCO. “The<br />

12 deployed T-AKE ships are performing and<br />

proving their ability to serve the fleet in their<br />

primary missions and in a variety of other<br />

roles.”<br />

Including the Medgar Evers, NASSCO has<br />

delivered the first 13 ships of the T-AKE (Lewis<br />

and Clark) class to the Navy. The 14th ship and<br />

final ship of the class, USNS Cesar Chavez, was<br />

christened and launched on May 5, before its<br />

delivery in fourth quarter 2012.<br />

Be Alert<br />

and Fort Hood can contact Desktop Alert<br />

for a briefing and system demonstration.<br />

The Desktop Alert EMNS provides<br />

bi-directional extensibility and integration<br />

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Compiled by KMi <strong>Media</strong> <strong>Group</strong> staff<br />

Engine Filtration<br />

Protection<br />

Donaldson Aerospace & <strong>Defense</strong>,<br />

a division of Donaldson Company,<br />

Inc., has delivered the first complete<br />

shipset of CH-53K engine air particle<br />

protection system (EAPPS) units to<br />

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delivery supports Sikorsky’s System<br />

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Program. The advanced engine protection<br />

units featuring Donaldson’s<br />

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be installed on the CH-53K Ground Test<br />

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inlet supplied by Meggitt and installed<br />

by Donaldson.<br />

“Donaldson is proud that our<br />

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Peyraud added that qualification<br />

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far “the results exceed all specifications<br />

and requirements.”<br />

In 2007, Donaldson was awarded<br />

the contract to design, develop and<br />

qualify an inlet filtration system that<br />

would protect each of the CH-53K<br />

helicopter engines. Using Donaldson’s<br />

patented Strata Tube technology, the<br />

company has developed a lightweight,<br />

high efficiency filtration system that<br />

requires minimal maintenance. The<br />

United States Marine Corps will operate<br />

the CH-53K, a brand new aircraft<br />

maintaining the same physical configuration<br />

and footprint of the legacy<br />

CH-53A/D/E/G heavy lift helicopters.<br />

It is designed to operate in harsh,<br />

mountainous and desert environments<br />

while providing a substantial increase<br />

in lift capability. The CH-53K aircraft<br />

is scheduled to achieve its initial operating<br />

capability in fiscal year 2019 and<br />

is planned to replace the current inventory<br />

of CH-53Es.<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com MLF 6.5 | 17


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Q&A<br />

Maintaining a Globally Responsive Supply Chain<br />

Supply Optimizer<br />

Redding Hobby<br />

Acting Director<br />

<strong>Defense</strong> Logistics Agency<br />

Logistics Operations Directorate<br />

Redding Hobby, a member of the Senior Executive Service, is<br />

the acting director of <strong>Defense</strong> Logistics Agency Logistics Operations.<br />

DLA Logistics Operations (J3) is responsible for the end-toend<br />

supply chain management of the <strong>Defense</strong> Logistics Agency’s<br />

eight supply chains, providing <strong>logistics</strong> and material process<br />

management policy, guidance, oversight and monitoring of supply<br />

chain performance. J3 is the principal strategic, operational<br />

and tactical planner for DLA business operations, championing<br />

best business practices, Enterprise Business Systems and<br />

value-added <strong>logistics</strong> solutions for the warfighter. J3 oversees the<br />

daily operation of the DLA Logistics field activities and engages<br />

customers around the world to maximize readiness and <strong>logistics</strong><br />

combat power by leveraging an enterprise solution.<br />

Hobby has served in a wide range of military and civilian<br />

positions during his tenure with the federal government. Most<br />

recently, he was the executive director of the Strategic Programs<br />

and Initiatives Directorate, where he oversaw responsibility for<br />

managing strategic plans, programs, concepts and initiatives for<br />

the current to near future in order to inform and influence decisions<br />

on policy, strategy and the development of capabilities to<br />

enhance anticipated <strong>logistics</strong> support to warfighters. Part of this<br />

mission included overseeing implementation of the Base Realignment<br />

and Closure 2005 Supply and Storage recommendations<br />

that focus on <strong>Defense</strong> Department <strong>logistics</strong> supply chain integration.<br />

While on active duty as an Army officer, he commanded at<br />

platoon, company, battalion and brigade levels. He saw extensive<br />

service in tactical-level organizations in Europe, Korea and the<br />

United States. He became a logistician in 1984. Hobby’s military<br />

service culminated in 2002, when he retired as a colonel of<br />

ordnance and transitioned to civil service. He served as an environmental<br />

physical scientist, <strong>logistics</strong> specialist and Army Senior<br />

Executive Service member. He was appointed to the Air Force<br />

Senior Executive Service in 2008.<br />

Hobby graduated from the U.S. Military Academy, West Point,<br />

N.Y., in 1973, receiving a Bachelor of Science degree in engineering.<br />

He is a graduate of the Army Command and General Staff<br />

College, Fort Leavenworth, Kan., and the Army War College,<br />

Carlisle, Pa.<br />

His personal awards include the Bronze Star, the Legion of<br />

Merit with three oak leaf clusters, the Meritorious Service Medal<br />

with oak leaf cluster, the Joint Meritorious Civilian Service Award,<br />

two Meritorious Civilian Service Awards and the Achievement<br />

Medal for Civilian Service. He is a senior parachutist and an Army<br />

Ranger.<br />

Redding Hobby was interviewed by <strong>KMI</strong> <strong>Media</strong> <strong>Group</strong> Editorin-Chief<br />

Jeff McKaughan<br />

Q: What are the budget implications for DLA and how is that<br />

driving <strong>agency</strong> efficiencies from where you sit?<br />

A: The <strong>Defense</strong> Logistics Agency is a defense working capital fund<br />

organization. That means we provide sustainment support to the<br />

military services on a reimbursable basis. If a unit needs a repair<br />

part, for example, DLA’s Land and Maritime organization or our<br />

DLA Aviation organization or perhaps DLA’s Troop Support organization<br />

procures that part and we provide it to the service. Their<br />

Title 10 responsibility then, in a manner of speaking, reimburses<br />

us for that.<br />

In austere budget times, DLA sells less, so we adjust our business<br />

models to accommodate the needs of the services. We will<br />

focus on the demand signals we get from the military services and<br />

adjust our acquisition strategies appropriately. We never want to<br />

over or under buy, so we focus on hitting it just right and buying<br />

what the services need in a timely manner. In that way, we synchronize<br />

with our primary supported units and customers—the<br />

military services.<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com MLF 6.5 | 19


Q: Buying—what will that mean for staffing at DLA?<br />

A: It will probably mean an increase in our contracting corps. As<br />

we work hard to get the demand signals right, which is one of our<br />

biggest challenges, our acquisition professionals are focused on<br />

procuring those demands.<br />

Since we use the working capital fund, we don’t work with a table<br />

of organization equipment or a table of distribution and allowances<br />

like our military service partners. Instead, we work on a need basis<br />

and manage our workforce to the requirement. If we need more<br />

acquisition folks because of the rigor that goes into planning and<br />

purchasing, we may have to increase that workforce.<br />

On the other side of the coin, the distribution and storage<br />

requirement will probably decrease. If so, our manning and support<br />

to those kinds of functions will shrink. Overall, I would say the<br />

budget impact on the structure and the face of DLA from an organizational<br />

point of view probably won’t make us change very much.<br />

We won’t face significant personnel cuts like the military services<br />

are facing. Instead, we face a challenge to ensure we have the right<br />

skill set appropriate to meet the largest challenges. This gives us<br />

huge opportunities for efficiencies. It’s much like the private sector—the<br />

better you can provide the material to your customer, the<br />

more likely they are to buy. The more accurate you are in meeting<br />

their demand, the more likely they are to have what they need<br />

when they need it. It’s about hitting the sweet spot between focusing<br />

on the supplier side or the distribution side … about focusing<br />

on the acquisition side or the supply and storage side. Those are the<br />

metrics we look at when we right size and right-skill our workforce.<br />

Fortunately, DLA has more than 50 years of experience to draw<br />

upon. We consider past practices and past challenges and come<br />

up with some pretty accurate staffing models that give us what<br />

we need to come real close to what right looks like to support the<br />

services effectively and efficiently.<br />

Q: Are there any initiatives that highlight what DLA is doing to<br />

shoulder their share of the burden of generating efficiencies and<br />

meeting goals?<br />

A: That’s the perfect question.<br />

It may sound like it’s just business as usual for DLA … that<br />

we simply shift resources around but nothing else would change.<br />

Nothing could be further from the truth.<br />

Our director has challenged us to be effective and efficient—<br />

we’ve coined it the 10 in 5 plan, $10 billion in five years. He’s challenged<br />

us to take $10 billion out of DLA over the next five years.<br />

Last year, DLA was about a $46 billion enterprise. About $4.5<br />

billion goes to running the business at DLA; the other $40 billion<br />

is tied to sales. Given those two numbers—$40 billion and $4.5<br />

billion—which number should we focus on? Our director’s challenge<br />

is to go after the big number—to take $10 billion out of<br />

sales, while dramatically improving performance. In no way does<br />

this mean we’re going to change readiness rates and not provide<br />

sustainment. The biggest single initiative is looking at ways we can<br />

be more effective over the next five years to achieve that $10 billion<br />

dollar reduction.<br />

So how do we actually make it happen?<br />

There are several programs that are going to help.<br />

Strategic network optimization [SNO] is the first. It’s an effort<br />

to get our distribution arcs—how we deliver the supplies to our<br />

20 | MLF 6.5<br />

supported units, how we provide material to our customer and how<br />

we position that material around the world—as efficient as they can<br />

be. As background, we have 10 years of experience from two wars in<br />

two theaters, while supporting the continental U.S. and the other<br />

geographic COCOMS. The demand patterns that we’ve used over<br />

the last 10 years give us some dramatic demand history for looking<br />

forward—who needed what when, what <strong>issue</strong> priority it was<br />

supplied against, and how many pounds or items went to these<br />

different locations.<br />

Using some modeling processes, we looked at where the material<br />

flowed from, which distribution depot to which customer,<br />

etc. We’ve asked that model be optimized based on cost, time and<br />

weight. Using those models, we look at where the efficiencies lie.<br />

Was this cost driven? Supply driven? Could we have purchased it<br />

instead of moved it? Or was it cheaper to have moved it instead of<br />

purchasing it? Taking that information, we then apply the operational<br />

impact on these models.<br />

In the initial phase, when we optimized only the process, we<br />

came up with a little over $700 million of savings just by a distribution<br />

optimization. In phase two, we’ll look at how to optimize<br />

inventory by looking at what we buy, when we buy and where it’s<br />

positioned.<br />

So if it’s something that’s going to be delivered to the central<br />

U.S.—Fort Hood, Texas, for example—we’ll position that material<br />

at a distribution site that’s as close to Fort Hood as possible and<br />

then buy the supplies that Fort Hood needs and store them close<br />

by. We may have material now in our pipeline or in our warehouses<br />

at another location, and it may be cheaper to ship that<br />

material from that known location today to that distant location<br />

where that customer is, but it would be bought back to the closer<br />

location. Doing it this way means we don’t waste material and<br />

we don’t mistakenly position material. It’s all about making our<br />

process more effective.<br />

We borrowed Willie Sutton’s idea of following the money, so we<br />

focus on where the money is. Now that we have the distribution<br />

process optimized, we position the material in those optimized<br />

locations to get a double payback for our investment. We get not<br />

only the distribution dividend, but the inventory dividend as well.<br />

Finally, the third leg of the SNO stool is the infrastructure.<br />

As we better position material, certainly there’s going to be warehousing<br />

space that will be freed up. Not all at one time, as it’s a<br />

slow process, but over the next five years as those facilities are<br />

freed up, we’ll be able to take those locations out of the inventory<br />

or pass them back to the services. We’re also working with another<br />

department and the Secretary of <strong>Defense</strong> to see if we can get demolition<br />

money to assist the services in demolishing excess locations.<br />

We could avoid a double touch for that excess warehouse by centralizing<br />

the demilitarization and demolition if that was what the<br />

service was planning on doing anyway. Unused facilities tend to fill<br />

up because there’s always a natural tendency to store things. SNO<br />

will discourage bad behavior and reduce unnecessary costs.<br />

Q: You mentioned not only having the supplies but getting them<br />

into the distribution channels—the PAKGLOC for example. You<br />

all don’t handle or transport materials yourselves. How do you<br />

adjust for circumstances that will impact the delivery of supplies?<br />

A: On November 26, 2010, the PAKGLOC closed. We’d been dependent<br />

on it for almost 10 years, moving material with our partners<br />

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in USTRANSCOM through Karachi and then upward through two<br />

main ground routes through Pakistan into Afghanistan.<br />

As a logistician, I’ve watched that movement from several different<br />

jobs that I’ve held over the last five or six years. If you had<br />

asked me prior to November 2011, what do you think about that,<br />

I would have said well, that’s the way we do things. It’s almost an<br />

assumption that we’ll move on the ground because of the access<br />

and the distance in a landlocked country and all the operational<br />

impact. When it closed, there was a little bit of a concern on the<br />

part of DLA about how we would provide sustainment inside a<br />

landlocked country, knowing that we’d been heavily dependent on<br />

that Pakistan ground line of communication.<br />

Fortunately, in about 2008, USTRANSCOM and Central Command<br />

decided they needed another entrance, and the northern<br />

distribution network was established. Frankly speaking, our dependence<br />

on the PAKGLOC was really on my mind. As it turned out,<br />

we were not as dependent as I had thought we were. The northern<br />

distribution network and the effective partnership between DLA<br />

and USTRANSCOM proved a successful workaround, based on the<br />

dedicated effort, focus and outstanding support by the rank and file<br />

members of both organizations—USTRANSCOM and their ground<br />

component is the Surface Deployment and Distribution Command—as<br />

well as other partners. Quite frankly, since the early part<br />

of 2012 we’ve even grown our theater sustainment support.<br />

Q: Staying with Afghanistan, looking at how you did things in Iraq<br />

versus how you’re going to have to do things in Afghanistan, what<br />

does DLA’s forward deployment structure look like in Afghanistan<br />

in comparison to Iraq? Is the structure you have now an evolving<br />

structure or are you where you want to be?<br />

A: I’ll tell you like all the operators will tell you, Afghanistan is not<br />

Iraq—but our structure is very similar. We have a DLA support team<br />

headed up by a military 06 who manages the various commodities,<br />

supply chains we support, and the distribution processes we have<br />

in place. If you look at the reverse <strong>logistics</strong>, the disposition requirements,<br />

the defense reutilization and marketing office—there are<br />

three sites today in Afghanistan. That structure is very similar to<br />

what we used in Iraq. We had the same reutilization and marketing<br />

office sites, where the military members could turn in equipment<br />

that was no longer needed or was unserviceable. In Iraq, as it came<br />

time for the repositioning out, units were able to move some serviceable<br />

material to us and let DLA provide the disposition services.<br />

There were several categories of that reutilization that we were<br />

able to use to help us identify exactly how to do that right. First of<br />

all, we would try to redistribute it to needs that the services had. If<br />

that didn’t work, then we would try to market it and sell it as scrap<br />

or as unserviceable military gear. If that didn’t work, then we would<br />

take the responsibility for demilitarizing it or destroying it and then<br />

additionally selling that demilitarized material as scrap to eligible<br />

consumers.<br />

I’d be remiss if I didn’t say that the theme there is the deployable<br />

agility of the DLA workforce. Some of that work I described is inherently<br />

governmental, so we need DLA employees to step up to the<br />

responsibility of deploying, and we’ve had incredible success with<br />

our employees stepping up to those responsibilities.<br />

Q: You’ve explained the structure that DLA has in Afghanistan.<br />

Can you go a little deeper into what DLA will do to manage the<br />

22 | MLF 6.5<br />

flow of equipment and avoid mountains or iron or tremendous<br />

backlogs?<br />

A: The role that DLA plays and its support to the mission will be<br />

very similar to that in Iraq: to provide a single touchpoint for the<br />

combatant commander and his component commands inside the<br />

AOR to turn to for disposition services and capabilities. In Iraq,<br />

we established a place to unburden the services of excess and no<br />

longer serviceable equipment, and ensured what went back was<br />

exactly what had to go back. The end goal is identical in Afghanistan.<br />

However, techniques, tactics and procedures for doing this<br />

will be different, because we don’t have an outlet. There is no<br />

mature government infrastructure to do business with, from a<br />

marketing and resell environment, so our practice and our technique<br />

of managing that will be somewhat different. We’ll have<br />

to work carefully on how we plan to do the demilitarization, for<br />

instance.<br />

Let me give you an example. Today, in Iraq, we are able to<br />

successfully market to the Iraqis. A businessman in Iraq could<br />

purchase over 600,000 pounds of scrap from our DRMO site. We<br />

don’t have that same enterprise opportunity in Afghanistan, but<br />

we in DLA still have the requirement to demilitarize that material<br />

and move it into a categorization called scrap. What we’re going<br />

to do with that and how we actually dispose of it in that country is<br />

something we’re working on. We don’t have any perfect answers.<br />

Moving it out of that country, paying to ship it, is not an alternative.<br />

It’s too expensive; we don’t get any return on that investment<br />

for our taxpayer. So we’ll have to come up with an innovative<br />

approach to actually dispose of that material. I’ve talked about the<br />

reutilization and the resale and the actual disposal of it. How we<br />

move that out of Afghanistan, off their terrain, is something we’re<br />

working real hard.<br />

Q: Does DLA have a seat at the table in deciding what happens to<br />

a piece of equipment? What’s DLA’s role in that decision?<br />

A: That’s another great question. Almost all the military equipment<br />

over there belongs to the military services. There’s very little<br />

actual material, actual supplies, that belong to DLA. Some of our<br />

sustainment repair parts, for example, belong to DLA until we have<br />

a requirement for them from the service, a point of sale if you will,<br />

and we then transfer it to the military service that needs it. But<br />

by and large, the things you’re talking about—military weapons<br />

systems, trucks, communications systems, infrastructure like the<br />

re-locatable buildings and tents—all belong to the services.<br />

Despite that, we absolutely have a seat at the table. I would<br />

say we’re a partner with the services on that. We’re not an equal<br />

partner—it’s their supplies, it’s their material, it’s their weapons<br />

systems and fighting platforms—but we absolutely sit at the table<br />

with them and provide our expertise with regard to the tactical<br />

questions: How can I move it to you? What condition does it need<br />

to be in? What are the processes I need to go through to take it off<br />

my records so the supply record-keeping is accurate? Those sort of<br />

administrative functions that make sure the property is properly<br />

documented and taken care of are accomplished in partnership<br />

with the units. DLA plays a key role in that.<br />

With regards to physically transferring property, those three<br />

sites that I talked about occupy approximately 40 acres in theater<br />

and we’re about to double that over the next few months as we<br />

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www.MLF-kmi.com MLF 6.5 | 23


prepare to reposition forces out. There’s a physical space operation<br />

in addition to the academic aspect of keeping records and the<br />

integrity of our supply system; all are critical to know what we<br />

equipment we have and whose books it’s on. DLA acts as a partner<br />

to provide disposition instructions: what goes on with that gear,<br />

how it gets handed off to DLA, and where we put it so we can then<br />

do the proper thing to accommodate the last portion of disposition.<br />

I mentioned two important parts. One is record-keeping and<br />

the other is the actual handling and transfer of equipment that the<br />

unit no longer needs. DLA partners with the units to help them<br />

unburden themselves of the unnecessary gear so they can transfer<br />

important things back to the states. That has a huge impact on that<br />

reverse <strong>logistics</strong> pipeline. By taking out excess, we take out items<br />

that aren’t authorized or aren’t needed back at home station when<br />

that unit redeploys. So I think we play a key role. Just to reiterate,<br />

we absolutely do that from a seat at the table, in concert with the<br />

units that are redeploying.<br />

Q: Let’s talk about inventory: Excess inventory is excess cost, both<br />

in storage and in the acquisition of it. Can you go into detail about<br />

demand planning and forecasting?<br />

A: We have three major supply centers: our DLA Land and Maritime<br />

Organization in Columbus, the DLA Aviation Organization in Richmond,<br />

and our DLA Troop Support Organization in Philadelphia.<br />

Those are our three supply centers and they face the customer.<br />

Clearly, that’s the interface to answer the challenging question<br />

of what is your demand, what is your requirement. Those organizations,<br />

as a part of BRAC 2005, put DLA employees inside the planning<br />

processes within the services. Prior to 2005, some of those<br />

people belonged to the services. They were Army, Navy, Air Force<br />

and Marine Corps employees. As we extended DLA into the retail<br />

world, those employees became DLA employees. Some of this has<br />

only occurred in the last five or 10 years, but it gives us a huge ability<br />

to understand service requirements. So those planners, buyers if<br />

you will, are forward positioned with the services.<br />

Let’s use the example of a depot maintenance activity in the<br />

Army: DLA planners are embedded in that depot activity. When the<br />

depot gets its annual workload funded by the services’ maintenance<br />

budgets, those depot maintenance dollars are planned and programmed<br />

against a requirement to produce a planned number of<br />

vehicles or items of equipment through that depot process. What<br />

a great place for our interface to take place. As the service plans<br />

their maintenance and production workload, DLA is planning the<br />

sustainment with them. Our supply centers have the customer facing<br />

responsibility to get the requirement just right, and then, once<br />

they have it right, put those items on acquisition and requisition<br />

processing.<br />

Let’s say a weapons system is being repaired at one of the<br />

Army maintenance depots. As that depot’s plan for the fiscal year<br />

is produced, we put those requisitions into process simultaneously.<br />

So when that material appears in the depot line for repair, the<br />

sustainment repair parts are right there with it. I could describe<br />

a similar process for the Navy shipyards: As a ship comes in for a<br />

repair cycle, the repair cycle might be longer—perhaps three years<br />

for a ship—but our process is the same. As that ship is identified,<br />

the planning begins immediately for arguably about 50 percent of<br />

what that ship’s going to need. As the time draws closer and the<br />

programming becomes available, that 50 percent goes to more like<br />

24 | MLF 6.5<br />

80 or 90 percent. So by the time the ship goes into dry dock, the<br />

material is in place in the depot system. It may be one of our major<br />

distribution depots, or it may be forward positioned actually inside<br />

the Navy shipyard.<br />

There’s an effectiveness criteria and an algorithm we use for<br />

whether we forward position it right there or if we have the delivery<br />

capability based on our historical demand to be able to hold it and<br />

not do the point of sale until it’s actually needed. That gives the<br />

services great flexibility with their working capital, to let the defense<br />

working capital hold that material until we get that point of sale.<br />

Great efficiency and flexibility for the services, and quite frankly, it’s<br />

efficient. If the service bought the material, there would always be a<br />

tendency to buy an insurance level, to have it just in case. This takes<br />

away the “just in case I need it, or might need it, or potentially could<br />

need it,” and lets DLA assume responsibility. When the demand<br />

hits, we’ve got an obligation for customer support to provide that<br />

material on time, so that nothing in the production cycle gets interrupted.<br />

We do that on DLA’s dime.<br />

Q: Planning for major military operations always include the<br />

<strong>logistics</strong> arm, but what of DLA’s role in unplanned events—for<br />

example, the Japanese tsunami, Katrina, the earthquake in Haiti.<br />

What’s DLA’s role in meeting the <strong>logistics</strong> obligations when the<br />

military responds to those things?<br />

A: You know, in military parlance, we call what you describe the<br />

range of military activities from major combat operations to the<br />

humanitarian assistance or the disaster relief that you describe.<br />

Honestly, that humanitarian assistance and disaster relief is far<br />

more likely to occur. The last three or four years has proven it. DLA<br />

has to be prepared for that. We leverage DLA’s data and data analysis<br />

to position certain items forward—blankets, cots, some food and<br />

bottled water—in anticipation of that most likely scenario, particularly<br />

in the overseas environment.<br />

Should the <strong>Defense</strong> Department be called upon, DLA’s role is<br />

much like it would be in major combat. We would have a sustainment<br />

role, providing the food and the bottled water that are critical<br />

to life support. If you take it to the next level, victims would require<br />

shelter. DLA would be there to provide tents and cots and blankets.<br />

This does not mean DLA provides all of the food. If the <strong>Defense</strong><br />

Department does not have the lead, the World Food Program and<br />

other non-governmental organizations are the first responders.<br />

However, when we have crisis situations like Tomadochi, or as<br />

you mentioned Katrina, where we have rapidly deteriorating or<br />

destroyed infrastructure, non-governmental organizations may not<br />

have the capability to do the distribution process. That’s a situation<br />

where the <strong>Defense</strong> Department can be effective. One of the services<br />

would probably go in with the military gear and the troop strength,<br />

and DLA would provide support through one of our field activities.<br />

While DLA is unlikely to provide direct support to one of the<br />

non-governmental organizations, it has provided support to FEMA.<br />

If the infrastructure and the distribution processes allowed us to<br />

position material, FEMA or another DHS organization might do<br />

the last tactical mile, if you will, and put the supplies in the hands<br />

of those that need it the most.<br />

Q: What is DLA’s customer service mantra? How do you measure<br />

and improve on customer service, and how do you measure your<br />

status?<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com


A: Our mantra is “Warfighter Support.” We have three major pillars<br />

that we base our core competencies on: warfighter support,<br />

stewardship excellence and workforce development. Number one<br />

among those is support to the warfighter customer; whether in<br />

Afghanistan or at Schofield Barracks, Hawaii, it is our primary<br />

concern.<br />

I mentioned how we face the depots and accomplish demand<br />

planning with our supply centers. From a DLA perspective though,<br />

there’s another facet of that, and that is the direct interface. DLA<br />

is a global <strong>agency</strong> with four regional organizations positioned to<br />

liaison with our combatant commands at the geographic combatant<br />

commands—PACOM, Europe and Africa Command, Central<br />

Command, North and South Command, so we’re attuned to the<br />

big picture the geographic combatant commander has.<br />

Let’s look at PACOM and focus one level down. The Pacific<br />

Command is headquartered in Hawaii, but the Army, Navy and Air<br />

Force components are also there, so we positioned a DLA regional<br />

commander there [at the 06 level] who has the responsibility<br />

to touch all those organizations, through that combatant commander.<br />

This way we maintain that customer focus. It’s not just looking<br />

at what the maintenance production requirement is inside of<br />

the service’s industrial site at a depot or a Navy shipyard or air<br />

<strong>logistics</strong> center; it’s also being attuned to the requirements of a<br />

combatant commander as they prepare for their operational plans,<br />

or for humanitarian assistance or disaster relief.<br />

Q: Is there anything you’d like to add about your customer outreach<br />

programs, or the formalized or informal things you do to<br />

keep in touch with customers?<br />

A: DLA does many important things. We provide $40 billion<br />

annually in supplies to the services. It’s important we get that<br />

right and know what ‘right’ looks like in our planning, purchasing<br />

and acquisition lead times when we’re getting those<br />

supplies.<br />

But I think DLA does something even more important. We<br />

build trust and confidence with our warfighter customer. That<br />

warfighter support is the first leg of our core competency. Stewardship<br />

excellence and workforce development will follow if we<br />

get the warfighter support right. I really just want to emphasize<br />

that DLA is America’s combat <strong>logistics</strong> support <strong>agency</strong>. We’re<br />

more than a supplier; we serve the total life cycle of an item of<br />

equipment, beginning with the customer-facing element of our<br />

supply centers, through storage and distribution support, to<br />

ultimate disposition services. Today, units are turning in items<br />

to a disposition yard in Kandahar, Afghanistan, so they can be<br />

released from their mission and go back to home station or<br />

prepare for the next contingency. The planning for that has to be<br />

done now—not only from the preparedness and readiness point<br />

of view, but how to do this most effectively. In this austere budget<br />

time, we must get our warfighter customer’s requirement<br />

exactly right. O<br />

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www.MLF-kmi.com MLF 6.5 | 25


dLa aviation’s mission is to take the unknowns out of the aviation suppLy chain,<br />

whiLe reducing costs and wait time.<br />

Logistics procurement management<br />

is a key component of DLA Aviation’s<br />

mission, aimed at keeping U.S. military<br />

aircraft operational and in the air instead<br />

of in depots awaiting repairs. Data management<br />

technologies and efficiency planning<br />

efforts central to this not only reduce<br />

downtime by ensuring parts get to where<br />

they need to be as fast as possible, they<br />

also reduce costs.<br />

“That is really the focus of what we<br />

do—buying components for our service<br />

customers to make sure they can keep our<br />

aviators mission ready,” Brigadier General<br />

Scott W. Jansson, commander of DLA Aviation,<br />

told Military Logistics Forum. “It’s<br />

a quite extensive procurement mission.”<br />

He said that while ensuring the effective<br />

management of both the supply<br />

and demand spare parts chains—which<br />

include storage and distribution operations<br />

that support aviation needs across<br />

the U.S. armed forces through various<br />

outposts nationwide—the Richmond, Va.based<br />

<strong>agency</strong> deals with around 9,000<br />

26 | MLF 6.5<br />

different suppliers. At times, the <strong>agency</strong><br />

aggregates the individual needs of each of<br />

the services in order to increase buying<br />

power.<br />

With depot procurement and storage/<br />

distribution operations located from Naval<br />

Air Station, Jacksonville, Fla., to Utah’s<br />

Hill Air Force Base, the mission supports<br />

over 1,300 major weapons systems in<br />

total, with more than 440,000 aviation<br />

parts of the 1.3 million repair and supply<br />

items for which the <strong>agency</strong> serves as the<br />

primary U.S. military supplier.<br />

Jansson explained that that in terms of<br />

current fiscal year priorities, DLA Aviation<br />

is looking to improve industrial customer<br />

support by further improving their services<br />

for aerospace repair depots, which<br />

remain its main clients, as well as improve<br />

support to operations customers across<br />

the services.<br />

“Our first priority is to improve those<br />

services to the customer,” said Jansson.<br />

“One of the things we are trying to do<br />

is execute more timely and affordable<br />

By christian Bourge<br />

mLf correspondent<br />

acquisitions, making sure we understand<br />

our customer requirements, and reduce<br />

the time of getting parts to them. The<br />

more agile we are in the supply chain, the<br />

more quickly we can turn items around.”<br />

One way that DLA plans to do this<br />

is by further reducing already truncated<br />

lead times for part replacements, an area<br />

in which they have seen great improvement<br />

in recent years through a number<br />

of means. One of those management<br />

techniques is simply working closely with<br />

suppliers.<br />

Jansson said he meets twice a year<br />

with key staffers from strategic suppliers,<br />

typically large integrators who are original<br />

equipment manufacturers, including<br />

firms like Boeing, Pratt & Whitney and<br />

Northrop Grumman. He added that at<br />

lower pay grades, staff meets with management<br />

personnel from key firms quarterly<br />

to as often as weekly.<br />

Brenda Mitchell, director of military<br />

support and services at Pratt & Whitney’s<br />

East Hartford, Conn., facility, said the<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com


company primarily works with DLA to provide<br />

parts for the Air Force’s F100 engine,<br />

which powers the F-15 and F-16 fighter.<br />

“We have a long-term strategic contract<br />

with DLA that enables us to more effectively<br />

and efficiently meet customer requirements<br />

in the shortest time possible,” said Mitchell.<br />

She noted that having the contract in place<br />

has helped reduce lead times from 120 to 45<br />

days or less.<br />

“The long-term contract really enables<br />

DLA to get more parts on order because<br />

they include, typically, long multi-year<br />

prices,” Mitchell told MLF. “Long-term strategic<br />

contracts are a key initiative for DLA<br />

[and are] really an improvement for us as<br />

well. [They] really have helped save time but<br />

speed up the supply process as well.”<br />

Jansson said that reducing lead times<br />

from partner providers has been a combination<br />

of efforts by both his <strong>agency</strong> and the<br />

provider, including allowing suppliers to<br />

develop qualified product lines. As a result<br />

of such efforts, he said, Honeywell increased<br />

reliability from 67 percent to 80 percent<br />

last year.<br />

For DLA Aviation, this has meant expediting<br />

processing times to ensure items<br />

meet compliance specs and allowing suppliers<br />

to better manage their deliverables<br />

by anticipating requirements based on historical<br />

need, including buying raw materials<br />

in advance. This remains particularly<br />

important with parts for which production<br />

involves long material lead times.<br />

But such effort amounts to much more<br />

than shorter wait times for delivery. Jansson<br />

pointed to several efforts that have accomplished<br />

this along with saving taxpayer<br />

dollars. “One of our top priorities is to have<br />

more affordable acquisitions,” he said.<br />

For instance, he noted that DLA is introducing<br />

more competition into the process<br />

for some parts by allowing for reverse engineering<br />

of existing sourced parts from new<br />

sources, as well as other means of implementing<br />

competition for contract sourcing.<br />

At times, the firm is also reaching out<br />

directly to the manufacturer of parts that<br />

were previously supplied from major integrators.<br />

This comes after years of limited<br />

competition for these parts by sole-sourcing<br />

components from major suppliers.<br />

“We will work with some other small<br />

business contractors to reverse engineer<br />

components,” explained Jansson, noting<br />

that collected data for some products allows<br />

for the introduction of new manufacturers,<br />

leading to greater efficiencies. “We have<br />

been successful in reducing prices.”<br />

In one recent case, he said, competition<br />

surrounding FA-18 rewiring provided<br />

an approximately 20 percent reduction in<br />

prices from newly contracted alternative<br />

sources.<br />

“We have saved $26 million for items put<br />

on long-term contracts, reducing lead times,<br />

and by increased competition,” he said.<br />

Even with the move toward more<br />

competition for part supplying, DLA Aviation<br />

appears to remain committed to the<br />

major traditional sole source parts provider.<br />

Recently, the <strong>agency</strong> awarded contracts<br />

to several prime suppliers for structural<br />

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components by whittling down those seeking<br />

contracts to four prime military contractors<br />

under a competition to provide<br />

around 2,000 parts for primarily Air Force<br />

use. One portion of that effort allows for<br />

several suppliers to provide landing gear<br />

collectively, providing $37 million in savings<br />

over the previous sole-sourced vendor<br />

contract.<br />

But military part procurement contracting<br />

is not the sole purview of major manufacturers<br />

or smaller firms who can replicate<br />

parts in their place. Memphis, Tenn.-based<br />

Inventory Locator Service LLC was founded<br />

in 1979 with the aim of matching buyers<br />

and sellers of aviation parts and ground support<br />

equipment.<br />

John Angelbeck, senior manager,<br />

defense solutions for the firm, said that<br />

their proprietary searchable database allows<br />

people to input commercial part numbers<br />

or a keyword to find all the supplies listed in<br />

their database. The database provides information<br />

including the number of parts available<br />

from an individual supplier, whether it<br />

is new or overhauled, and the plane from<br />

which it was removed. The database also<br />

shows whether the potential supplier is government<br />

certified so it can easily do business<br />

and meet DLA shipping specifications.<br />

Also listed is government cross reference<br />

information to allow for more sourcing<br />

options when parts are used in more than<br />

one type of military aircraft.<br />

Represented in about 115 countries<br />

worldwide, Angelbeck said the company<br />

“works heavily” with DLA Aviation,<br />

Inventory Locator Service, ® LLC<br />

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MLF_April2012.indd 1 3/19/2012 3:10:28 PM<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com MLF 6.5 | 27


providing over 75 million lines of inventory<br />

in their database with 14,000 parts<br />

searched for on a daily basis. For government<br />

use specifically, the firm lists about<br />

13 million items of both active and historical<br />

use.<br />

“ILS assists DLA in providing them a<br />

global asset view of available parts,” said<br />

Angelbeck. “We deal with a lot of MICAP<br />

(mission impaired capability awaiting<br />

parts) situations, incapable aircraft that<br />

they need a part for to get it back into service.<br />

We assist them with identifying the<br />

parts so they can get it in house and help<br />

the warfighter.”<br />

He added that the company sees even<br />

greater opportunities with DLA in light<br />

of the recent update to the 2012 Director’s<br />

Guidance, which he said places an<br />

“emphasis on shifting industry capabilities”<br />

in light of the tightening DoD budget<br />

situation, coming Afghanistan drawdown<br />

and other factors.<br />

“One of the things at the top of their<br />

list is viewing information as the most<br />

cost-effective means to overcome the perceived<br />

cost shortfall,” said Angelbeck.<br />

data advancing efficiency<br />

With procurement cost and delivery<br />

timing a central focus of DLA Aviation’s<br />

operations, data management and other<br />

technological advances are a key component<br />

to ensuring both. Pratt & Whitney’s<br />

Mitchell noted that in support of the contract,<br />

the company has developed a sophisticated<br />

forecast modeling tool and process<br />

that the Air Force has cited as a best practices<br />

effort. She said these “value stream”<br />

enhancements are being worked as part<br />

of a collaborative forecasting process for<br />

aviation supply deliverables, adding that<br />

the company is currently working with<br />

DLA Aviation and Air Force Global Logistics<br />

Support Center and industry peers on<br />

further improvements in this area.<br />

“That’s really one of the most significant<br />

initiatives we as industry are working<br />

on with the DLA, to come up with a better<br />

forecasting process that will produce a<br />

more accurate and stable demand signal<br />

that we can reliably execute, resulting in<br />

100 percent on-time delivery to customer<br />

need,” said Mitchell.<br />

According to ILS’s Angelbeck, his firm<br />

not only connects DLA with needed parts,<br />

but also forecasts future demand for a particular<br />

part based on historical data and<br />

28 | MLF 6.5<br />

historic pricing information, which helps<br />

any purchaser with the bottom line.<br />

ILS’s market intelligence group develops<br />

12-month predictions for the expected<br />

supply and demand on a particular part,<br />

data that is linked to the broader availability<br />

data, providing government contractor<br />

information that includes pricing history<br />

for negotiation purposes.<br />

“They have a base line to go out and<br />

procure that part,” Angelbeck said.<br />

Outside of suppliers to the <strong>agency</strong><br />

and those who connect the two, another<br />

component of the DLA supply chain is<br />

the firms that do repair work on military<br />

aircraft.<br />

Dan Gonzales, vice president of business<br />

development for government and<br />

military sector at Tempe, Ariz.-based StandardAero,<br />

said that while the aviation<br />

overhaul firm has other arrangements in<br />

place should it not be able to get materials<br />

through the <strong>agency</strong>, it relies on DLA to<br />

provide parts for many of its operations.<br />

“One of the benefits of working with<br />

DLA is that they are a very steady supplier<br />

of parts,” said Gonzales.<br />

StandardAero does depot work for the<br />

Air Force, Navy and Coast Guard, which<br />

totals 30-35 percent of their $1.5 billion<br />

in annual revenue, said Gonzales. Their<br />

largest workload portion is managing the<br />

overhaul of the C-130 supply plane’s T56<br />

turboprop engines, which they have been<br />

doing at the former Kelley Air Force base<br />

since 1999.<br />

Randal Herrington, director of materials<br />

for the StandardAero’s T56 operations,<br />

said DLA is good at ensuring the operation’s<br />

steady part demands are met using<br />

their forecast data.<br />

“That is certainly how we work best<br />

with the DLA,” said Herrington.<br />

Gonzales said that one of the ways<br />

they ensure this is effective is to collect<br />

real time data, evaluated and calculated<br />

nightly to feed their forward supply projections.<br />

He added that they’ve also come<br />

to count on regularly scheduled meetings<br />

with DLA as part of their work with the<br />

<strong>agency</strong> to ensure efficiency.<br />

Advances in procurement modeling<br />

are also leading to further potential<br />

<strong>logistics</strong> advancement. Gonzales said that<br />

StandardAero is developing a model that<br />

would anticipate when engine part failures<br />

will occur in the field in anticipation of<br />

demand patterns for the DLA to reduce<br />

down times for broken engines.<br />

Pratt & Whitney’s Mitchell also<br />

pointed to discussions about the use of<br />

performance-based <strong>logistics</strong> contracts as<br />

a possible means of improving <strong>logistics</strong><br />

outcomes, although she said that these<br />

types of contracts are typically led by the<br />

Air Force, as they own system level performance<br />

and DLA is not responsible for metrics<br />

at the operational level. This points to<br />

DLA’s integral but in some ways limited<br />

role in the overall military procurement<br />

process.<br />

“I think there is still some confusion<br />

about role of DLA in PBLs,” she said,<br />

adding that industry and government are<br />

trying to figure out what DLA’s actual<br />

responsibility would be under such a contract.<br />

Even as DLA Aviation and its partners<br />

take advantage of the latest datadriven<br />

technology and analysis, the <strong>agency</strong><br />

continues to look forward to other ways<br />

in which it can improve the aviation supply<br />

procurement process for the armed<br />

services, its industry partners and the<br />

taxpayer.<br />

ILS’s Angelbeck said that a major topic<br />

within the aviation supply industry currently<br />

is counterfeit parts and how to<br />

ensure they don’t get onto planes. One<br />

of the ways ILS seeks to address the <strong>issue</strong><br />

is traceability of part history within its<br />

database.<br />

“One of the things that is important<br />

to DLA and industry is traceability,” said<br />

Angelbeck. “They want to have the routing<br />

going back to the manufacturer. One of<br />

the things we are working on with the DLA<br />

is traceability within our database. We<br />

hope, in the near future, to supply traceability<br />

and at the least, tag the particular<br />

supplier.”<br />

DLA’s Jansson said that the <strong>agency</strong> is<br />

looking to take traceability even further,<br />

utilizing the latest in individual part tracking<br />

technology.<br />

“DLA, overall, is working on new technology<br />

to try and help mitigate the risk of<br />

counterfeit parts using biological DNA to<br />

stamp electronic components for example,<br />

to ensure as counterfeit parts aren’t entering<br />

the supply chain.” O<br />

For more information, contact Editor-in-Chief<br />

Jeff McKaughan at jeffm@kmimediagroup.com<br />

or search our online archives for related stories<br />

at www.mlf-kmi.com.<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com


With nearly $15 billion in sales projected<br />

for this fiscal year, the <strong>Defense</strong> Logistics<br />

Agency’s Troop Support would rank in the<br />

top third of the Fortune 500. However, it<br />

operates under conditions and constraints<br />

that similarly sized private companies don’t.<br />

For one thing, some of its customers work<br />

in war zones. For another, certain products<br />

it buys have to be made wholly within the<br />

United States.<br />

Nonetheless, this Philadelphia-based arm<br />

of the DLA has applied commercial techniques<br />

and technology, including local sourcing<br />

and just-in-time delivery, to save tens of<br />

millions of dollars annually. The goal is to<br />

save an additional $252 million over the next<br />

five years. This is being done while improving<br />

the quality of foodstuffs, medical supplies,<br />

construction equipment and clothing, as a<br />

look at each of these areas shows.<br />

meaLs, ready-to-eat<br />

and otherwise<br />

A recent example of such an improvement<br />

comes from DLA Troop Support’s<br />

Subsistence Directorate, which in March<br />

established a second Afghanistan distribution<br />

center in Helmand province. This reduced<br />

perishable food transportation time by two to<br />

four days for each shipment, which average<br />

3,750 a month.<br />

“What we try to do is purchase as much<br />

locally to cut down on the transportation<br />

costs,” said Rich Faso, director of subsistence<br />

customer operations. “For instance, we’ve got<br />

two very good sources of bottled water right<br />

in Afghanistan that we purchase from.”<br />

Having local sources helps overcome<br />

supply chain problems, such as those that<br />

have arisen due to the closing of land routes<br />

through Pakistan. In addition to saving<br />

money and time, this approach injects funds<br />

into the local economy.<br />

The local sources are inspected and<br />

approved by U.S. Army Public Health Command.<br />

Quality controls are also written into<br />

vendor contracts.<br />

The Supreme <strong>Group</strong> USA of Reston, Va.,<br />

is the prime food services vendor in Afghanistan.<br />

Supreme financed, designed, built and<br />

manages the Helmand regional distribution<br />

site, said Mick Schuster, the company’s<br />

managing director for <strong>logistics</strong>. Self-contained,<br />

the plant has warehouses and bulk<br />

fuel installations, as well as its own security<br />

arrangements, water purification and sewage<br />

treatment plant. It represents an investment<br />

of $110 million.<br />

“Supreme made a commercial decision<br />

to establish ‘regional distribution centers’ to<br />

facilitate improvements in supply chain performance<br />

with product stored closer to point<br />

of consumption on military bases, thereby<br />

reducing risk and enhancing service to the<br />

warfighter,” Schuster said.<br />

It helps that the company has been operating<br />

in challenging environments for more<br />

than 50 years. However, each theater of operation<br />

is unique. For instance, in Afghanistan,<br />

there’s a lack of transportation infrastructure,<br />

severe weather conditions, mountains and<br />

deserts, as well as security threats. Supreme<br />

has to provide tailored solutions and be flexible,<br />

Schuster noted.<br />

In addition to frozen, dried and other<br />

commercially standard foodstuffs, DLA’s Faso<br />

noted that the Subsistence Directorate also<br />

procures some warfighter-specific items, like<br />

MREs. Meals-ready-to-eat have a long shelf<br />

life, are fully cooked and ready to serve.<br />

No matter what the foodstuff, DLA Troop<br />

Support must deal with a long supply line<br />

and overcome possible disruptions. Hence, it<br />

maintains a 60-day inventory along the supply<br />

chain. That’s a substantial amount of material,<br />

considering that some 40 shipping containers<br />

are needed a day just to feed those serving in<br />

For the Troops<br />

at dLa troop support, cots techniques save money.<br />

By hank hogan<br />

mLf correspondent<br />

Afghanistan. This inventory approach is not<br />

used within CONUS, as the commercial infrastructure<br />

and supply chain in the continental<br />

U.S. can handle disruptions.<br />

As for the future, one possibility being<br />

investigated is for DLA Troop Support to go<br />

a step beyond food delivery and move into<br />

its preparation. Today, that is handled by the<br />

military services themselves, Faso said. “To<br />

take over that responsibility, we’ll have to<br />

show a good cost savings, not only for them<br />

but the government as a whole.”<br />

suppLying pharmaceuticaLs<br />

and more<br />

DLA Troop Support’s Medical Directorate<br />

purchases drugs, medical supplies and equipment,<br />

with the last including such high-dollar<br />

items as MRI imagers, CT scanners and the IT<br />

that manages the images produced. For the<br />

most part, this is done with only about a 20th<br />

of the inventory stored in depots, said Don<br />

Buchwald, director of customer operations<br />

for the Medical Directorate.<br />

The reliance on commercial vendors and<br />

the use of just-in-time delivery has to be<br />

adjusted a bit, due to the need to be ready for<br />

the unexpected. For example, there may be a<br />

sudden surge in demand due to a disaster or<br />

the outbreak of hostilities, but that possibility<br />

has been planned for.<br />

“At the cost of $24 million a year, we’re<br />

able to get guaranteed access to $778 million<br />

worth of material,” Buchwald said.<br />

Areas with a robust supply chain and<br />

good transportation infrastructure typically<br />

operate on an ‘order today, get it tomorrow’<br />

schedule. One challenge is the sheer number<br />

of items and the fact that some require<br />

special handling, such as refrigeration or<br />

the avoidance of heat en route. The latter<br />

is handled through the use of temperature<br />

monitors and other technology.<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com MLF 6.5 | 29


Some items, like flu vaccines, have a limited<br />

shelf life and must reach every base and<br />

ship annually within a strict time window.<br />

Others, such as CT scanners, need to go into<br />

buildings before all the walls are in place, as<br />

these may prevent installation.<br />

One cost-saving strategy being pursued<br />

involves lining up supplies of generic drugs as<br />

replacements to name brands as soon as this<br />

becomes possible, Buchwald said. Another is<br />

the development of an integrated operating<br />

room, which is intended to save both time<br />

and money in setting up such facilities.<br />

Larry Stepp is vice president of national<br />

accounts for the government division of<br />

Chesterbrook, Pa.-based AmerisourceBergen,<br />

a prime pharmacy vendor for DLA Troop<br />

Support. The company offers a 24-hour turnaround<br />

on any product that it carries, with<br />

the contract measuring performance by delivery<br />

against what’s ordered over a specified<br />

period. Those service levels are 98 percent<br />

or higher, leading to greater supply chain<br />

efficiency, Stepp said.<br />

One of the changes that he sees on the<br />

horizon is the greater use of electronic ordering.<br />

Another involves track-and-trace bar<br />

code initiatives that will support supply chain<br />

data and integrity. Pharmaceuticals and medical<br />

supplies also have pedigree requirements,<br />

mandating that additional information be in<br />

the bar code.<br />

“That’s all the way down to lot numbers<br />

and things like that. That’s what I think the<br />

future is. The manufacturers will begin to<br />

provide more of that data in their bar codes<br />

on the actual products,” Stepp said.<br />

more than construction<br />

equipment<br />

DLA Troop Support’s Construction and<br />

Equipment Directorate handles perhaps the<br />

largest and most diverse array of goods of any<br />

of the directorates. The list includes lighting,<br />

metals, lumber, firefighting equipment,<br />

materials handling and special operations<br />

equipment.<br />

“We do some lighting type items. We<br />

do heavy equipment,” summarized Tony<br />

D’Ambrosio, deputy director of construction<br />

and equipment at DLA Troop Support. “We<br />

have a full range of items. They range from<br />

light bulbs to bulldozers.”<br />

Commodity items are handled via a justin-time<br />

delivery system. For others, a category<br />

that includes heavy equipment, that’s<br />

not really possible. In all cases, procurement<br />

is handled via contracts that have been set up,<br />

30 | MLF 6.5<br />

with customers ordering items against those<br />

contracts.<br />

SAIC of McLean, Va., is one vendor<br />

responding to those customer orders. It does<br />

so under an integrated prime vendor program,<br />

as well as a maintenance, repair and<br />

operations tailored <strong>logistics</strong> support program.<br />

John Ptakowski is division manager for<br />

SAIC’s prime vendor program, which he said<br />

handles over 36,000 unique stock numbers.<br />

These are used to fill over 99,000 bins at three<br />

fleet readiness centers, where technicians<br />

repair and refurbish helicopters and other<br />

assets.<br />

“The requirement that we have as a contractor<br />

is to keep those bins filled so that the<br />

mechanics do not stop their job for a lack of<br />

supply parts,” he said.<br />

The bin fill rate is currently over 99 percent,<br />

several points higher than called for in<br />

the contract.<br />

As for the tailored <strong>logistics</strong> support program,<br />

some 250,000 individual line items<br />

go through it a year, said Christian Frye,<br />

prime vendor maintenance repair and operations<br />

division manager. SAIC can handle this<br />

thanks to its procurement professionals, an<br />

IT backend that can handle the load, a nimble<br />

response to what can be a rapidly changing<br />

situation, and enhanced customer facing<br />

technology.<br />

“We provide a web interface to the individual<br />

customer so they can come to use<br />

with their individual requirements as they<br />

are needed. Some things are planned because<br />

they’re going to do some expansion. Many<br />

things are not planned; that’s where things<br />

can break down without the right level of<br />

support,” Frye said.<br />

Another equipment supplier is ADS of<br />

Virginia Beach, Va. Jack Pellicci, DLA sales<br />

manager, said the company leverages its buying<br />

power and implements commercial practices<br />

to generate savings. These are then<br />

passed along to the government, something<br />

that Pellicci is happy to see.<br />

“We’re very, very proud to provide these<br />

services and cost savings to the government<br />

to ensure that our warfighters are getting<br />

the latest and greatest equipment that they<br />

need,” he said.<br />

the cLothes on their Back<br />

The final DLA Troop Support supply<br />

chain involves clothing and textiles. This covers<br />

everything from utility uniforms, helmets,<br />

body armor and boots to dress uniforms,<br />

backpacks, tents and sleeping bags, said Gary<br />

Colello, director of customer operations for<br />

the Clothing and Textiles Directorate.<br />

Unlike the other supply chains, this one<br />

cannot use just-in-time delivery system and<br />

must stockpile items in depots, in part due<br />

to the Berry Amendment. That requires that<br />

all of the clothing and textiles products be<br />

domestically sourced. At the same time, they<br />

have to be made to detailed and restrictive<br />

military specifications. As a result, there is<br />

a small industrial base to support the warfighter,<br />

with only one wool manufacturer in<br />

the U.S., for instance. There are only four<br />

companies that produce the fabric used in<br />

camouflage uniforms.<br />

Dealing with this situation mandates that<br />

the demand be closely monitored, which<br />

is done by tracking the number of incoming<br />

recruits. There’s also an online ordering<br />

system that picks up the demand signal from<br />

those already in the military.<br />

This information then is constantly communicated<br />

to the vendors, who may have only<br />

one customer for the products, Colello said.<br />

“They need to plan in advance. You can work<br />

your way all the way back through the supply<br />

chain to ensure there’s enough coming<br />

through but not too much.”<br />

Some clothing and textile items change<br />

very slowly. Others have been undergoing<br />

a rapid evolution, with such being the case<br />

for body armor. One supplier of such gear is<br />

BAE Systems, which in March was awarded<br />

a four-year contract to produce tactical vests<br />

equipped with soft body armor. These are produced<br />

at the company’s Jessup, Pa., facility.<br />

In discussing future directions in this<br />

type of technology, Eric Gavelda, program<br />

director for warfighter protection at BAE<br />

Systems, noted that there is an open solicitation<br />

out for an advanced combat helmet. The<br />

spec includes a weight reduction, with the<br />

aim of shaving as much as 10 percent weight<br />

off when compared to past helmets. That<br />

sort of advance is now typical of what DLA<br />

Troop Support attempts to do in modernizing<br />

through sustainment.<br />

As Gavelda said, “It almost always focuses<br />

on those two items: weight reduction or<br />

increased capability.” O<br />

For more information, contact Editor-in-Chief<br />

Jeff McKaughan at jeffm@kmimediagroup.com<br />

or search our online archives for related stories<br />

at www.mlf-kmi.com.<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com


The advertisers index is provided as a service to our readers. <strong>KMI</strong> cannot be held responsible for discrepancies due to last-minute changes or alterations.<br />

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NEXTISSUE<br />

Cover and In-Depth<br />

Interview with:<br />

Lt. Gen. Dennis L. Via<br />

Deputy Commander<br />

U.S. Army Materiel Command<br />

Special Section<br />

global Logistics transformation<br />

As world conflicts and response evolve, so too does the mobility response.<br />

Features<br />

Public-Private Partnership<br />

The relationship between private industry and the military will evolve more<br />

than ever under these stressful budget times.<br />

Materiel integration<br />

Managing the inventory of existing systems while bringing innovation is a<br />

challenge throughout the supply chain.<br />

the complete supply chain<br />

The professional logistician can never look at the individual pieces of the supply<br />

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June 25-27, 2012<br />

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Vol. 6, Issue 6<br />

SPECIAL<br />

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A special pullout supplement featuring interviews with senior AMC<br />

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www.MLF-kmi.com MLF 6.5 | 31


Dan Keefe is executive vice president<br />

and group general manager for Man-<br />

Tech’s Technical Services <strong>Group</strong>. Keefe is a<br />

retired U.S. Army brigadier general whose<br />

career highlights included service as commanding<br />

general of U.S. forces in Kosovo<br />

and V Corps chief of staff during Operation<br />

Iraqi Freedom.<br />

Q: Let’s start with some background on<br />

ManTech. What does ManTech do and how<br />

does the company contribute to the DoD<br />

<strong>logistics</strong> mission?<br />

A: ManTech provides innovative technologies<br />

and solutions for mission-critical<br />

national security programs. Founded in<br />

1968, ManTech has almost 10,000 employees,<br />

with 2011 revenues of $3 billion. In<br />

addition to the Department of <strong>Defense</strong>, our<br />

customers include the intelligence community;<br />

departments of State, Homeland<br />

Security and Justice; the space community;<br />

and other U.S. federal government<br />

customers. Logistics and global supply<br />

chain management are at the core of many<br />

of our offerings.<br />

We also provide C4ISR life cycle support,<br />

cyber, IT modernization and sustainment,<br />

intelligence, counterintelligence<br />

support, systems engineering, and test and<br />

evaluation services. We support our government<br />

in major missions, such as military<br />

readiness, terrorist threat detection,<br />

information security and border protection.<br />

For example, we support technology<br />

modernization and network operations for<br />

the State Department at all U.S. embassies.<br />

We also support NATO worldwide, particularly<br />

in-theater.<br />

ManTech goes where our customers<br />

go. We help them meet their missions<br />

anytime, anywhere, with about 2,000 staff<br />

members overseas supporting our customers’<br />

vital missions. In fact, most of<br />

ManTech’s overseas staff works side-by-side<br />

with U.S. forces in Afghanistan and Kuwait<br />

on <strong>logistics</strong>, supply chain management and<br />

systems readiness programs.<br />

Q: As a major player in the military <strong>logistics</strong><br />

arena, how is ManTech helping DoD<br />

meet current key <strong>logistics</strong> objectives?<br />

32 | MLF 6.5<br />

INDUSTRY INTERVIEW Military Logistics Forum<br />

Dan Keefe<br />

Executive Vice President and <strong>Group</strong> General Manager<br />

ManTech Technical Services <strong>Group</strong><br />

A: For more than 20 years, ManTech has<br />

provided core <strong>logistics</strong> services worldwide.<br />

Among these are warehousing, <strong>logistics</strong><br />

management, property management, shipping<br />

and receiving, repair and maintenance,<br />

unique system training and fielding support,<br />

resource management, and inventory<br />

tracking for customer systems in deployed,<br />

isolated and remote locations. We maintain<br />

life-sustaining operational readiness for<br />

counter-improvised explosive device vehicles<br />

and systems, including mine resistant<br />

ambush protected vehicles, MRAP all-terrain<br />

vehicles and route-clearance vehicles,<br />

predominantly in Afghanistan. We began<br />

our support for the MRAP family of vehicles<br />

in 2003 and have expanded our services over<br />

the years to meet operational requirements.<br />

We’ve supported the U.S. Army TACOM and<br />

its unique customers with sustainment and<br />

maintenance; through our supply chain<br />

effectiveness efforts, we’re providing people<br />

and parts so we can meet our customers’<br />

stringent readiness needs.<br />

One of our teams is responsible for<br />

maintaining the Army’s array of elevated<br />

sensors in Afghanistan at the highest operational<br />

availability rate possible. Recently,<br />

the team achieved an operational availability<br />

rate of 99 percent, the highest ever<br />

achieved over the life of the program. The<br />

team accomplished this while lowering program<br />

costs 40 percent and at the same time<br />

having the quantity of supported systems<br />

grow over 70 percent. We realized this level<br />

of efficiency by optimizing the <strong>logistics</strong><br />

labor force, aligning technicians and spares<br />

with transportation lines, adjusting authorized<br />

stock levels based on historical experience,<br />

leveraging the gamut of shipping<br />

vendors, and streamlining routine logistical<br />

and supply processes.<br />

Because we work side-by-side with<br />

military personnel on these programs, we<br />

get an up-close view of the support our<br />

customer needs from us. We see each day<br />

that the work we do is an essential part of<br />

the military’s effort to reduce casualties<br />

and improve personnel survivability.<br />

Q: What are some of the main challenges<br />

you are facing in meeting the needs of the<br />

21st-century warfighter?<br />

A: We see the need for a fuller range of<br />

services support in a more efficient delivery<br />

model. With our in-theater support<br />

of <strong>logistics</strong> and materiel readiness, we<br />

also provide services in cybersecurity and<br />

C4ISR, particularly around border management,<br />

real-time visualization of the<br />

environment and sensors.<br />

Our approach significantly increased<br />

readiness while driving efficiencies and<br />

lowering the cost to the customer. These<br />

are the systems our warfighters depend<br />

on, so it’s essential that they get comprehensive<br />

and consistent support. We also<br />

see a high demand for modernization to<br />

enhance the efficiencies of IT investments<br />

and extend the life of IT systems—another<br />

way to not only improve the usefulness of<br />

the system, but to reduce the cost of capital<br />

for the military.<br />

Program execution is essential—we<br />

have to support the warfighter and the<br />

mission—but so is efficiency. Our customers<br />

are facing pressure to do more with<br />

less, and we continually help them meet<br />

those demands. Efficiency is about managing<br />

the business in its entirety while<br />

ensuring mission integrity. We know how<br />

to keep costs down by hiring the right<br />

people, training them and empowering<br />

them to be effective in the work they do for<br />

our customers. The best qualified worker<br />

also is often the most cost-effective, and<br />

that’s why cross training is a smart investment.<br />

The one person, one job approach<br />

gives some immediate efficiency, but for<br />

us, it makes more sense to have people<br />

who can fit smartly into a broad range of<br />

mission-critical <strong>logistics</strong> and supply chain<br />

processes. It keeps vital missions running<br />

effectively for our customer and has the<br />

added benefit of providing career development<br />

and advancement opportunities for<br />

our people. O<br />

www.MLF-kmi.com


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