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The EyeOpener- Sentient World Simulation: Meet Your DoD Clone

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BFP VideoThe NSA’s illegal warrantless wiretapping programming. The building of the massive NSA data center in Utah to permanently store copies of all digital communication sent around the world. The UK government’s “Communications Data Bill” to monitor emails, instant messages and other personal information. What was dismissed as crazy conspiracy theory just over a decade ago has become, in this post-9/11 era, the all-too-familiar stuff of newspaper headlines and talking head reportage.

The Sentient World Simulation’s aim, according to its creator, is to be a “continuously running, continually updated mirror model of the real world that can be used to predict and evaluate future events and courses of action.” In practical terms that equates to a computer simulation of the planet complete with billions of “nodes” representing every person on the earth.

In this episode of our EyeOpener Report James Corbett presents the Sentient World Simulation and a significant peek behind the curtain at what those who are really running our society want: complete control over every facet of our lives achieved.

Watch the Preview Here:

Watch the Full Video Report Here:


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BFP Exclusive Report- Open Source: A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities, July 2013

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DOD Spent at Least $16,000,324,569.00 on 238 Distinct Contracts during July 2013

The Pentagon issues a list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Each list, a jumble of technical terms, is organized according to the purchases made by each military branch (e.g. Army, Navy, and Air Force) and institution (e.g. DARPA, Missile Defense Agency, and Defense Information Systems Agency). This project provides a distilled presentation of these contracts in an accessible form.

The Department of Defense spent at least $16,000,324,569.00 on 238 distinct contracts during July 2013. These funds went to many areas (e.g. Foreign Military Sales, operations in Afghanistan, Salient Contracts, and unmanned aerial systems). The following is a valuable resource for academics and concerned citizens alike.

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES

Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to nations and international organizations. During the month of July 2013, the Pentagon issued the following twenty-three FMS contracts, which involved twenty-eight countries. Saudi Arabia received eight contracts, which was more than any other country. Boeing was patronized more than any other corporation, having received five distinct contracts. The FMS breakdown for July 2013 follows:

Advanced Technology Systems received $26,666,806 for procuring tetra trunked radio communication systems for the Lebanese Armed Forces.

AECOM Technical Services, CH2M Hill International Services, HDR Engineering and URS Group receive a maximum $9,000,000 for administrative and general management consulting services. This contract involved the following countries: Australia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Maldives, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Mongolia, New Zealand, Palau and Papua.

Airborne Systems North American of CA received a maximum $12,945,226 for the procurement and inspection of MC-4 personnel parachutes. This contract involved only the Republic of Korea.

BAE received $9,222,314 for engineering services in support of the MK 41 vertical launching system. Parties to this contract were: the U.S. Navy (96.02 percent); South Korea (3.49 percent = $321,859); Netherlands (.38 percent = $35,045); and Canada (.11 percent = $10,145).

Boeing received $109,461,580 for services in support of the Royal Saudi Land Force Aviation Command. Boeing received $15,425,233 for procuring Apache Block III aircraft for Saudi Arabia. Boeing received $17,028,790 for the procurement of CH-47 cargo aircraft for Australia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Boeing received $75,598,874 for providing courseware development and training during the Royal Saudi Air Force’s transition from F-15 variants to the F-15SA weapon system. Boeing received a maximum $7,745,923 for providing the Netherlands with sustainment services in support of the Apache AH-64D.

Booz Allen Hamilton received $21,743,595 for providing training, education, engineering, financial management, C4I, EW, personnel management, technical support and logistics. This contract only involved the Royal Saudi Naval Force.

DRS Radar Systems received a maximum of $8,105,505 for the procurement of a border surveillance system for Egypt.

Exelis Inc. received a maximum of $7,553,934 for the procurement of night-vision devices and related equipment for Canada.

General Dynamics received $67,456,648 for the procurement of hydra rockets, warheads and related parts in support of the U.S. Army, Navy, Air Force and Saudi Arabia.

HELLFIRE Systems received $7,582,999 to “convert HELLFIRE II Romeo Air-to-Ground Missiles to AGM-114R2 and AGM-114R9E.” The parties of this contract are: Australia, Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

Kay and Associates received $36,698,404 for providing Kuwait with F/A-18 contractor maintenance support services.

Lockheed Martin received $12,980,000 for “the advanced procurement of one Israel C-130J-30 aircraft and for providing Israel with “field services representatives.” Lockheed Martin received $308,321,789 for the procurement of tactical missiles and launcher modification kits for Kuwait. Lockheed Martin received $37,375,568 to provide the UAE with services “in support of the enhanced launcher electronic station cost reduction initiatives.”

Northrop Grumman received $45,987,322 for the “production of proof of manufacturing/first articles, functional item replacement level components of the MK 54 mod 0 array kits, engineering service and support. The parties to this contract were the U.S. Navy (52 percent); Australia (41 percent = $18,854,802); and India (7 percent = $3,219,113). Northrop Grumman received $10,397,099 for services in support of critical components for U.S. and Coalition Partners in Afghanistan.

QinetiQ North America received $7,772,646 for procurement of Talon IV EOD vehicles, spares and training. This FMS contract went to Pakistan.

Raytheon received $19,070,236 for Standard Missile engineering and technical services. Parties to this contract were: Japan (28 percent = $5,339,666); Australia (24 percent = $4,576,857); Korea (21.5 percent = $4,100,101); Germany (8.3 percent = $1,582,830); Netherlands (8.3 percent = $1,582,830); Taiwan (7 percent = $1,334,917); Canada (1.7 percent = $324,194); Spain (1.2 percent = $228,843). Raytheon received $83,785,417 to provide UAE with technical services for AN/TPY-2 radars, which are “being delivered as part of a whole FMS case as an element of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system.”

Rockwell Collins Simulation & Training Solutions received a maximum of $22,240,000 to provide Saudi Arabia with transportable Black Hawk operations simulator devices.

Seiler Instrument and Manufacturing received a maximum $20,727,996 for the procurement of M2A2 Aiming Circle instruments. This contract involved the following countries: Afghanistan, Thailand, Saudi Arabia and Iraq.

SALIENT CONTRACTS – ALARMING PENTAGON FOCI

From these contracts we learn DARPA, the Pentagon’s most advanced research arm, is tinkering with social media in an effort to sway public opinion. Other alarming foci are present below. If these contracts are any indication, the U.S. tax-dollar is being spent on questionable aims:

A-T Solutions received a maximum $16,834,335 for services “in support of the Asymmetric Warfare Group’s mission observe, train and advise how to defeat asymmetric and hybrid threats.”

BAE received $29,023,781 in order to support DARPA’s Insight program, which is developing an adaptable, integrated human-machine exploitation and resource management system.

Utah State University Research Foundation received a maximum $12,000,000 for R&D services in support of the Precision Lightweight Weapon and Sensor Mount program. [Editor’s note: This is another example of the Pentagon using academia to further its own narrow military goals. One might contend that lucrative Pentagon funding can corrupt university research while diverting finite academic resources towards the purposes of war.]

IBM received $7,788,423 for the development of a scalable graph analytic and statistical learning methods to detect abnormal behavior from large, dynamic and heterogeneous media.

Berry Aviation received $10,725,000 for Trans-Sahara short take-off and landing (STOL) services. The Trans-Sahara STOL contract provides for casualty evacuation, personnel airlift, cargo airlift, and air drop services. Work will be performed throughout Algeria, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Kenya, Libya, Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sudan, South Sudan, Tunisia, and Uganda. The estimated date of completion is 27 June 2017. Some of this funding comes from Joint Special Operations Air Detachment 3400 Operations and Maintenance funds. [Editor’s note: We learn from this contract that USAFRICOM will be operating in all of the aforementioned countries through 2017. Where is the democratic debate within the U.S. about committing military assets to these nations?]

CGI Federal received $45,581,891 for services in support of the Human Terrain System requirement. [Editor’s note: The Pentagon’s Human Terrain program uses anthropologists to further military goals within warzones. Most anthropologists loathe the militarization/weaponization of their field.]

Systems & Technology Research received $7,477,220 for working on DARPA’s social media in strategic communication program.

Raytheon Oakley Systems received $7,932,976 for the research and development services in support of the detection of insider threats by identifying behaviors.

Kellogg Brown & Root Services received a maximum $134,151,953 for the development and construction of a land-based missile defense system in Deveselu, Romania.

AFGHANISTAN CONTRACTS

In July 2013, the Pentagon issued twelve distinct contracts to corporations receiving money to work in Afghanistan. These contracts contradict assertions that the U.S. military will significantly reduce its forces in Afghanistan during 2014. These contracts illustrate the Pentagon’s clear intent to remain in Afghanistan for an indefinite timeframe:

DRS Technical Services received $25,511,888 for the “development, deployment and maintenance of tactical and management information technology systems and products.” Work will be performed in Afghanistan.

General Dynamics received $12,002,200 for “total integrated ground equipment readiness contractor logistics support.” 57 percent ($6,841,254) of this work will be performed in Camp Leatherneck, Afghanistan. Work is expected to be completed by September 2014.

Inglett & Stubbs International received a maximum of $11,391,894 for inspection and repair services in Afghanistan.

Jorge Scientific received $11,810,908 to provide counterinsurgency advisory and assistance team services throughout Afghanistan.

Leonie Industries received $48,852,000 for media and marketing services in support of the Information Operations Task Force-Afghanistan. [Editor’s note: Based on this description, this is essentially a contract wherein tax-dollars are used to market an unpopular war to a defiant people.]

Lockheed Martin received $14,623,204 for field service representatives in support of the vehicle optic surveillance system program, program manager, Marine Air Ground Task Force command, control and communications. 80 percent ($11,698,563) of the work will be performed in Afghanistan.

Logos Technologies received $9,286,625 for 19 donut hole kits to support the U.S. Army persistent ground surveillance systems Kestrel systems. 90 percent ($8,357,963) of the work will be performed in Afghanistan.

Navmar Applied Sciences received $11,207,449 in support of the persistent surveillance unmanned aerial system (PSUAS) for the U.S. Army. This contract includes the procurement of 15 additional Tiger Shark PSUAS air vehicles and 15 i200 turrets, which will be integrated into the PSUAS. 28 percent ($3,138,086) of the work will occur within the sovereign nation of Afghanistan.

Northrop Grumman received $38,353,781 for services in support of the vehicle and dismount exploitation radar system. Work will be performed in Afghanistan. 

PKL Services received $16,300,156 for maintenance in support of Marine Corps AH-1W, UH-1N, CH-53D/E, and CH-46E platforms. 22 percent ($3,586,034) of the work will be performed in Iraq/Afghanistan. Work expected to be completed in February 2014. 

SAIC received $30,000,000 for operations and maintenance of the Angel Fire Spiral 2/Blue Devil Block I sensor/ISR suites. Work will be performed in Afghanistan. 

Trace Systems received $6,953,728 to procure information technology support services in Afghanistan.

DRONES – A DIVERSE PORTFOLIO

These contracts are for a variety of unmanned aerial systems (UAS), which are commonly known as drones. Only one of the companies, General Atomics, is associated with the most prominent drones on the market, namely the Predator and the Reaper. The range of companies associated with drone technology, as evident below, is a testament to the breadth and lucrative nature of the UAS market:

Bosh Global Services received a maximum $60,000,000 for small unmanned aircraft systems training, logistics support and technical management services.

CAE USA received $19,806,624 for MQ-1/9 contract aircrew training and courseware development training. Work will be performed at Creech Air Force Base, Holloman Air Force Base, March Air Reserve Base, Hancock Field and “other locations that may be required in the future in accordance with the performance work statement.”

General Atomics received $23,951,449 for systems tasks, upgrades and service on the “MQ-9 Hunter and Killer System Development and Demonstration (SDD) bridge effort.”

Insitu Inc. received $8,528,000 to “address hardware obsolescence issues and align two previously delivered early operational capability RQ-21A small tactical unmanned aircraft systems to the current system configuration.”

URS Technical Services received $14,219,315 for supporting ACC’s Unmanned Aircraft System Operations Center, including MQ-1 Predator and MQ-9 Reaper platforms. Work will be performed at Creech Air Force Base, Ellsworth Air Force Base, Holloman Air Force Base and Whiteman Air Force Base. Eight percent ($1,137,545) of the effort supports foreign military sales for the United Kingdom. 

AMBIGUITY AND IMPRECISION

Many U.S. citizens, entrenched in the duopoly paradigm of Red-Blue politics, believe the Obama Administration has embraced transparency. The following contracts highlight precisely how opaque Obama’s Pentagon is:

Advanced Mission Systems received $8,437,960 for training and instruction services. EADS received $21,767,416 for continued contractor logistical support services. CGI Federal received $48,295,193 for “operational and environment core function services to provide the common framework in which war-fighting programs and strategies are conceived, defined and executed.” Lockheed Martin received $138,476,929 for communications technical support services for the U.S. Air Force Central Command. Jacobs Technology received a maximum $45,000,000 for the procurement of global logistics and support services. SAP Government Support and Services received a maximum $7,148,785 for services in support of enterprise resource planning.

None of these contracts tell the U.S. taxpayers, who fund the U.S. Department of Defense, a single detail about the final destination of their tax-dollars.

POLLUTION AND ENVIRONMENTAL CLEAN-UP

The Pentagon leaves behind a toxic footprint at old weapons ranges and sundry bases. In July 2013, the Pentagon issued ten distinct contracts involving some form of environmental clean-up:

AECOM, Tidewater, EA Engineering, SAIC, ARCADIS U.S. and Jacobs Engineering Group received a maximum $125,000,000 for the removal and clean-up efforts of hazardous, toxic and radioactive waste and military munitions. Tetra Tech, GMI-AECOM and CH2M Hill received a maximum $75,000,000 to “accomplish natural resource services and compliance and related environmental planning services in support of the U.S. Navy.” ECC Remediation Services received a maximum $40,000,000 for various services in support of the Military Munitions Response Program.

Weeks Marine received a maximum $14,295,950 for services in support of the Maryland Beach e-nourishment Project. URS Federal Services received $19,550,631 for hazardous materials management services. Bay West, Engineering Remediation Resources Group, RMC South Earth, HydroGeologic, EA Engineering, Science and Technology, North Wind, Earth Resources Technology, Bhate Environmental Associates, PIKA/Arcadis and Zapata Inc. received a maximum $250,000,000 for the environmental remediation services in support of the Military Munitions Response Program.

GPC received a maximum $250,000,000 for services to manage, maintain and operate the emergency ship salvage material system (ESSM) and support the Navy’s oil and hazardous substances spill response program. Brady G2, Enviro Compliance Solutions, Accord Engineering, RORE-ITSI Joint Venture and Environmental Cost Management received $15,000,000 for “environmental consulting services” in support of various government programs. This contract includes support for guiding and managing environmental projects and environmental reporting and document preparation.

TriEco/Tetra Tech received a maximum $7,500,000 for “hazardous material and waste management services in Texas, Mississippi, and Louisiana.” FPM Remediations received $13,267,405 for environmental remediation activities at Joint Base Charleston, SC and Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, NC.

NO COMPETITION – HOW DOD PROCURES NUMEROUS CONTRACTS

The Pentagon often exploits various rules and bylaws in order to expedite contract production or to avoid subjecting contracts to a competitive bidding process. At least the Pentagon is honest in this respect; it included clauses stating “this contract was not competitively procured” in eight contracts during July 2013:

General Electric received $15,691,247 for the procurement of “time critical parts for incorporation into the T-408-GE-400 gas turbine engine in support of the CH-53K helicopter program” This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-2-1(a)(1). 

SAIC received $6,976,110 for training and support for U.S. Fleet Forces Command, associated fleet commands and activities conducting fleet training. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with FAR 8.405-6(a)(1)(i)(A), “Unusual and Compelling Urgency.” 

Andromeda Systems received $7,700,000 for delivering software tools in support of maintenance planning, scheduling, and execution (MPS&E) and for integrating this software across the Naval Aviation Enterprise. These software tools originated with the E-6B aircraft and will now be developed for Naval Aviation Enterprise-wide usage. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). 

Data Link Solutions received $33,368,569 to develop, design and implement four nets of concurrent multi-netting with concurrent contention receive (CMN-4) on the multifunctional information distribution system joint tactical radio system (MIDS JTRS) terminal configuration. This delivery order was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). 

Lockheed Martin received $39,427,558 to provide flight test, technical, management, and process support services in support of the MH-60R/S and SH-60B aircraft. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 USC 2304(c)(1). 

Harris Corp. received $22,117,791 for Harris radios and associated components which will be utilized within the CBRNE Response enterprise that interfaces with first responders, National Guard teams, military tactical components, law enforcement, and other Department of Defense (DOD) entities.  This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). 

Lockheed Martin received $12,878,468 for the repair coverage of 25 items for the common cockpit of the H-60R/S helicopters. The contract was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). 

Northrop Grumman received $24,859,823 for providing repair parts to the Navy. The contract was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). 

U.S. NAVY

Eleven companies furnished fifteen contracts pertaining to the U.S. Navy. These contracts totaled $326,849,904 and cost between $7,526,038 and $110,781,296. BAE took home five distinct contracts within this group. The remaining contracts went to: 3 Phoenix, AMTEK SCP, BAE, CACI, Computer Sciences Corporation, EDO Professional Services, General Dynamics, Oceaneering International, Raytheon, Rite Solutions, and SEACON Phoenix.

CONSTRUCTION & MAINTENANCE

Forty-six companies (including some joint ventures) serviced thirty-five distinct contracts pertaining to DOD Construction & Maintenance. These contracts totaled $2,786,063,446 and cost between $6,633,675 and $712,000,000. (The latter amount was paid to three companies for construction and services “in support of the Air Force medical service healthcare facilities modernization program”).

These projects included, but were not limited to: design services for energy efficient projects and services; renovation of existing aircraft maintenance facilities; construction of a dental clinic facility at Fort Leonard Wood, MO; construction of a new cadet barracks at the U.S. Military Academy; construction of airfield security upgrades at Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort; construction services in support of the Defense Logistics Agency; construction services in support of the Kansas Army National Guard; maintenance, repair and operations for South Central Zone 2 Region, North Central Region and South Central Zone 1 Region; renovation of Scott Barracks at the U.S. Military Academy; upgrades in facilities at Naval Base Guam; construction at the Nolan Building parking garage at Fort Belvoir, VA; and the purchase of various metals.

The companies include: Anthony and Gordon Construction; B & K Construction Company; Barnhill Contracting; BCI Construction USA; BME & Sons; CCI Solutions; CH2M Hill/Clark Nexsen Energy Partners Joint Venture; Dutra Dredging; Federal Contracting Inc. (doing business as Bryan Construction); FSA + JKC Joint Venture One; Gilbane Federal; J E Dunn Construction; United Excel Corporation; Graybar Electric Company; Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Company; Greenway Enterprises; Hensel Phelps Construction; HITT Contracting; Innovative Technical Solutions; Barlovento; Bhatel Brasfield & Gorrie;

CH2M HILL; Jacobs & Architects Hawaii Joint Venture; Johnson Controls Federal Systems; Smith & Wesson Security Solutions; Zachry Federal Construction; Kiewit Infrastructure South; LBL Contracting;

Lifecycle Construction Services; PentaCon; Anthony & Gordon Construction; Luhr Bros; MACNAK & Korte Joint Venture; Massman Construction; Nan Inc.; Necaise Brothers Construction; Norfolk Dredging; Phylway Construction; SAIC; Senne & Company; SourceAmerica; SupplyCore; SURVICE Engineering Company; Turner Strategic Technologies; TW Metals; and Walsh Construction Company II.

SUPPORT, EQUIPMENT, PARTS AND TRAINING

Although this category encompasses a wide variety of products and services, all of the contracts pertain to supporting, equipping, or training the soldier, sailor, airman and Marine:

Accenture received $50,137,716 for services in support of the General Fund Enterprise Business System. AQUATE Corp. received $15,313,067 for products and services to joint program offices and other federal agency customers dependent on CBRN and high yield explosives equipment in support of their missions. Armorsource received a maximum $92,681,250 for procurement of lightweight, advanced combat helmets.

Carter Enterprises received $58,111,772 for the procurement of soldier plate carrier systems and related items and services. Carter Industries received a maximum $9,244,800 for improved combat vehicle crewmen universal camouflage pattern coveralls. Center Industries received a maximum $44,270,394 for the procurement of improved magazines for the M4/M4A1 carbine.

Champion Energy Services received $729,167 for retail electric service. Critigen-Clark Nexsen Joint Venture received a maximum $35,000,000 for geographic information systems, professional surveying and mapping services. First Support Services received $6,960,811 for continuation of ground support equipment maintenance services.

General Dynamics received $8,534,065 for the procurement of 20mm MK244-0 armor piercing discarding Sabot cartridges. GPS Source received a maximum $16,613,430 for the procurement of defense advanced global positioning system receiver distributed devices. HDT Tactical Systems and Design West Technologies received a maximum $10,967,588 for the procurement of M98 gas filters and M98 gas-particulate filter sets.

ICx Technologies Inc. (doing business as Agentase Inc.) received $21,768,549 for services in support of the Joint Program Manager for Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Contamination Avoidance program.

Iris Technology received $6,622,350 for the procurement of 1,325 solar power adaptors (SPA II) in support of the Product Manager Expeditionary Power Systems, Program Manager Combat Service Support. Isometrics received a maximum $48,480,975 for the procurement of modular fuel system — tank rack modules and associated services.

Lockheed Martin received $101,604,039 for the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program. Lockheed Martin received $11,796,483 to fabricate, test, and deliver a spectral beam combined fiber laser subsystem. Lockheed Martin received $35,604,779 for the development of the M270A1 fire control system.

Manufacturing Techniques received $16,196,816 for lowest replaceable units and upgrade kits for ground based operational surveillance system (GBOSS) to be used by the U.S. Marine Corps. GBOSS systems provide “24-hour persistent, ground-based surveillance capability.” McRae Industries received a maximum $13,996,006 for Army hot weather combat boots.

Northrop Grumman received $12,915,678 to provide exercise and training support to command staff, battle staff, and Theater Special Operations Commands. Northrop Grumman received $59,568,528 for operation and maintenance services for the combined tactical training ranges. Northrop Grumman received $6,786,896 for the improvement of the joint tactical ground station system. Northrop Grumman received $7,586,449 for planning, programming and budgeting services. Northrop Grumman received $8,070,540 for the operation and maintenance of the Department of the Navy, NCIS law enforcement information exchange system and DOD law enforcement information system. Northrop Grumman received a maximum $17,225,000 for the procurement of repair and calibration of secondary items in support of the integrated family of test equipment.

NuStar Terminals Operations Partnership received maximum $23,347,060 for a fuel storage terminal and services to receive, store, and ship government owned petroleum products. Parker Hannifin received a maximum $181,700,000 for wheel equipment, parts and assemblies. QinetiQ North America received $20,359,579 for procurement of man transportable robotic system (MTRS) MK 2 post-production support for joint service explosive ordnance disposal.

Raytheon received $9,618,024 for the repair of the H-60 multi-spectral targeting system forward looking infrared turrets. Raytheon received a maximum $83,500,000 for spare parts, components and repairs for various radar systems.

SRCTec Inc. received a maximum $221,800,000 for the procurement of lightweight counter mortar radars and related parts and services. Systems, Planning, and Analysis received $7,046,611 for support to the Office of International Technology Security in planning and executing the Military Critical Technology Program. Technical and Project Engineering received a maximum $10,751,221 for services in support of the Army training models.

Tecmotiv received a maximum $11,025,485 for depot-level engine repairs in support of the M88A2 Heavy Recovery Vehicle. URS Federal Services received $11,844,224 for material distribution services including receipt, storage, and issue.

MISSILES AND MISSILE DEFENSE

BAE received $534,873,321 to provide engineering, support and training for the Minuteman III. Engineering Research and Consulting received $32,438,092 for research in propulsion sciences. Exelis Systems received $26,656,675 for Launch and Test Range System support functions to the Eastern and Western Range: range sustainment, and external user support, projects and engineering services. General Dynamics received $32,679,084 work on Aegis gun and guided-missile directors (MK82 Mod 0), Aegis director controllers (MK 200 Mod 0) and for associated material and engineering services and for six Aegis Weapon System ship sets. Gray Research received $21,886,024 (from $222,609,913 to $244,495,937) for providing data management services for the Missile Defense Data Center Program.

Lockheed Martin received $11,996,522 to support NORAD operations. In a separate contract, Lockheed Martin received $20,794,692 to support NORAD operations. Lockheed Martin received $295,017,067 (increasing the total contract value from $1,439,566,895 to $1,734,583,962) for servicing and developing the Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense Baseline. Lockheed Martin received $9,552,979 to provide security hardware, associated software, equipment installation, system test, accreditation, certification and delivery of nuclear weapon security system equipment at U.S. Navy Installations.

Raytheon lost $24,969,580 for reducing the quantity of Standard Missile-3 Block IB missiles manufactured from 24 to 20 and for resolving technical and production transition issues. Raytheon received $16,676,423 for the depot-level diagnostics and repair of the Patriot missile system. Raytheon received $402,880,000 for software maintenance; models and simulations; engineering support and Ballistic Missile Defense System test planning; and execution and analysis for X-Band radars. Raytheon received $57,234,211 (increasing the total contract value from $1,536,747,151 to $1,593,981,362) for Standard Missile-3 Block IIA future upgrades and engineering support.

AIRCRAFT PRODUCTION AND MAINTENANCE

Bell Helicopter (Textron) received $17,907,086 for systems engineering and program management services in support of the H-1 upgrade program. BGI received $36,795,547 for EC-130H & A-10 contract aircrew training and courseware development training programs.

Boeing received $17,001,833 for work on next generation jammer (NGJ) pod hardware integration in support of the EA-18G aircraft. Boeing received $2,042,060,385 for the procurement of 13 P-8A multi-mission maritime Lot IV aircraft and 13 ancillary mission equipment kits in support of the LRIP Lot IV aircraft and associated parts. Boeing received $8,110,882 for the procurement of 84 engineering change proposal 6282 AYC 1439 A1 retrofit kits in support of the F/A-18 E/F aircraft. Boeing received a maximum $39,619,052 for logistics support and fielding and training services for units receiving the CH-47F.

Defense Support Services received $46,097,112 for maintaining aircraft in support of the Naval Test Wing Pacific at Point Mugu and China Lake Naval Air Stations, CA. DynCorp received $99,939,297 for maintenance and logistics support for all aircraft and support equipment for which the Naval Test Wing Atlantic has maintenance responsibility.

EADS received $12,921,227 for contractor logistics support for the Army’s aviation assets. General Atomics received $7,297,342 for the procurement of base support, aircraft material and demobilization services.

General Electric received $87,034,442 for the procurement of 22 Lot 17 full rate production F414-GE-400 install engines for the F/A-18E/F aircraft. General Electric received a maximum $6,896,800 for combustion chamber liners.

IKBI Inc. received a maximum $7,692,387 for the procurement of an HC-130J Simulator Facility at Moody Air Force Base, GA. L-3 Communications received $33,174,360 for procuring 12 tactical operational flight trainer (TOFT) HD visual system kits; for purchase and delivery of HD projectors and mirrors for the six TOFTs at Air Station Miramar; delivery of four TOFT HD visual systems to NAS Whidbey Island; purchase and delivery of uninterrupted power sources for four TOFTs to support the HD visual systems at NAS Oceana; and purchase and delivery of spares kit(s). This order also provides for the procurement of HD visual systems for two Australian F/A-18E/F Super Hornets TOFTs for the Royal Australian Air Force (20 percent = $6,819,941).

Lockheed Martin received $53,600,000 for six B-2 line replaceable units, data, material lay-in, and overhaul management. Lockheed Martin received $70,358,000 to provide parts, material and components required for the delivery of seven Conventional Take Off and Landing F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter aircraft and one Short Take-Off Vertical Landing F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter aircraft for the government of Italy

Machining Technologies received a maximum $79,900,000 for the procurement of 120mm M31 tail fins. Moog Inc. received a maximum $7,674,650 for V-22 aircraft swashplate actuators.

Northrop Grumman received $617,058,000 for the production of five Full Rate Production Lot 1 E-2D Advanced Hawkeye aircraft. Work will be performed in St. Augustine, FL; Syracuse, NY; Bethpage, NY; El Segundo, CA; Indianapolis, Indiana; Menlo Park, CA; Rolling Meadows, IL; and approximately 200 various locations within the United States — none over five percent (32.10 percent). Northrop Grumman received $9,293,000 to procure materials and related support for the full rate production of five E-2D Advanced Hawkeye Lot 2 aircraft. Northrop Grumman received a maximum $40,278,672 for procurement of outer wing panels.

Raytheon received $279,400,000 in support of the Technology Development (TD) Phase of the Next Generation Jammer (NGJ) Program, which will replace the aging ALQ-99 tactical jamming system for integration on the EA-18G tactical aircraft.

Rockwell Collins received $13,569,781 for 19 low rate initial production modification kits for the KC-135 CNS/ATM Block 45 upgrade. Rolls Royce Corp. received $22,439,403 for additional power-by-the-hour in support of the KC-130J aircraft propulsion system.

Scientific Research Corp. received $8,974,067 for the procurement of 200 Multi-Function Color Display (MFCD) units and associated technical data to support forced retrofit of MFCD units into T-45 aircraft.

TRI-COR Industries received $73,903,803 for applications, infrastructure and systems support, Increment 2 (AISS II) services in support of the Mobility Air Force Command and control and in-transit visibility/business systems.

United Technologies Corp. received $133,979,288 for sustainment, site activation and depot activation efforts in support of the Joint Strike Fighter Propulsion System Low Rate Initial Production Lot VI governments of the UK ($2,889,881; 2.1 percent); Italy ($2,743,250; 2 percent); Turkey ($2,094,260; 1.6 percent); Australia ($2,094,260; 1.6 percent); the Netherlands ($1,779,956; 1.3 percent); Canada ($1,361,104; 1 percent); Norway ($1,005,376; .8 percent); and Denmark ($627,949; .4 percent).

Woodward HRT received a maximum $24,662,559 for supply spare parts to support numerous aircraft platforms.

CYBER, ISR, COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY AND COMMUNICATIONS

Bluewater Communications Group; Globecomm Systems; and TVC Communications received a maximum $45,000,000 to provide Cisco satellite decoders and HD encryption systems for the Defense Media Activity.

Booz Allen Hamilton; CACI; Computer Sciences Corporation; General Dynamics One Source; Honeywell Technology Solutions; Engility; Lockheed Martin; SAIC; Scientific Research Corporation; Secure Mission Solutions; STG; Systems Research and Applications Corporation; and URS Federal Services received $179,908,600 for ISR, cyber, and space capabilities work. Options would bring the cumulative value to $899,543,400.

BOSH Global Services; Imagine One StraCon Venture; ISHPI Information Technologies; Sentek Global

CENTECH Group received $14,015,472 for operation and maintenance of the base network.

Dell; IBM; Unicom Government; CDW Government; Iron Bow Technologies; and World Wide Technology received $494,000,000 for the hardware, software and related integration services in support of the Information Technology Enterprise Solution-2.

Deloitte Consulting received a maximum $23,000,000 for requirements analysis, design, development, testing, fielding, sustainment, and Tier 3 (developmental and operational) support for a library of web services to support the AF/A1 human resources information technology portfolio.

Design West Technologies received $20,878,535 for the production, assembly, testing, and packaging of Communication Transponder Family of Systems communication assemblies composed of printed circuit boards, electronic components, and external enclosures. Exelis received $7,866,232 for replenishment spare parts for core memory units.

Galois Inc. received $8,147,278 for advanced multi-integration sensor engineering reports, and to research and develop automated techniques by which mission planners can design and build robust cyber warfare plans using intuitive graphical interfaces, and develop tools that automatically synthesize such plans into fully detailed, executable missions. Gichner Shelter Systems received $25,519,650 for the procurement of up to 400 mobile facility production units and technical data items.

Lockheed Martin received $35,670,673 for the procurement of information technology services for the Pentagon & National Capital Region. Lockheed Martin received $8,791,515 for Interim Contractor Sustainment FY12-15 Additional Scope for the Advance Extremely High Frequency (AEHF) System Development and Demonstration Program (SDD).

Lockheed Martin; TYBRIN; Harris IT Services; SRA International; Raytheon; and L-3 National Security Solutions received $960,000,000 for Network-Centric Solutions-2 (NETCENTS-2) Application Services.

Progeny Systems received $10,989,287 for Small Business Innovative Research (SBIR) Phase III engineering and technical support services in support of SBIR Topic No.N03-049, “Automation and Work Flow Advances Using Technology Infusions for Manning Reduction” – a Navy-wide implementation of portal technology for internal and external information sharing requirements.

Raytheon received $33,989,127 for developing and testing various command post terminals with presidential and national voice conferencing for the family of advanced beyond line-of-sight terminals. SAIC received $10,196,609 for services supporting Military Sealift Command’s (MSC) information technology (IT) ashore operations. Siemens Medical Solutions received a maximum $28,173,642 for digital imaging network-picture archive communication systems.

Skylla Engineering; and Chugach Federal Solution received $19,752,906 for equipment and services associated with C5S, ISR, information operations, enterprise information services and space capabilities. Software AG Government Solutions received $10,274,000 for software AG Flex Perpetual licenses and maintenance support.

Sotera Defense Systems received a maximum $97,850,000 for design, construction, testing and delivery services in support of the electronic warfare planning and management tool. SRI International received $230,000,000 for hardware, software, prototype systems, spiral software enhancements and installation training support for the Digital Video Laboratory III. Systems Engineering Support Company received $15,189,906 for Communication Transponder Family of Systems communication assemblies composed of printed circuit boards, electronic components, and external enclosures.

TeleCommunication Systems received $6,865,586 for the design, development, delivery, and evaluation of a prototype Intelligent Tutoring System capability and associated content for the Navy’s information technology rating “A” School at the Center for Information Dominance in Pensacola, FL.

Telecommunications Systems; By Light Professional IT Services; Cytech Communications; iGov Technologies; Sierra Nevada; and D & S Consultants received a maximum $48,000,000 for various command, control, communications and computer support services for users located at Fort Bragg, NC.

TT Government Solutions received $13,099,606 for OMEGA, which “provides for the development of technologies to construct mission plans and automatically synthesize plans to an executable mission script and to develop technologies to formally verify plans and quantify the expected effects and outcomes.” Mission construction involves the “development of cyber warfare domain specific languages, program synthesis and automated program construction from high-level specifications.”

Verizon received $11,935,014 for the procurement of managed network services.

ViaSat received $19,487,844 to develop and implement four nets of concurrent multi-netting with concurrent contention receive (CMN-4) on the multifunctional information distribution system joint tactical radio system (MIDS JTRS) terminal configuration. MIDS JTRS aims to transform the MIDS low volume terminal into a four-channel, software communications product, which will comply with joint tactical radio system terminals while maintaining current Link-16 and tactical air navigation capability.

FOOD SERVICES

Food Service Inc. received a maximum $660,000,000 for full line food distribution in support of customers located in Okinawa, Japan. Sysco Eastern Maryland (maximum $20,050,000); Sysco Foodservice Alabama (maximum $18,145,958); Sysco Hampton Roads (maximum $32,300,000); and US Foods ($37,120,746) were given contracts for prime vendor food and beverage support.

HEALTHCARE AND SANITATION

Fresenius Kabi received a maximum $67,798,372 for various pharmaceutical products. HamHed; Budget Services & Supplies; TATCO Services; and Radcorp Solutions received a maximum $20,000,000 for janitorial services. Marlex Pharmaceuticals Inc. received a maximum $56,598,301 for various pharmaceuticals. MedTrust received $20,381,274 for the extension of registered nursing services of various specialties. Novartis Vaccines and Diagnostics received a maximum $14,097,291 for flu vaccines. Pacific Consolidated Industries received a maximum $21,000,000 for non-developmental electronic catalog system for electronic documents portable oxygen distribution system and accessories. Sanofi Pasteur received a maximum $14,216,201 for flu vaccines. TQM Inc. received a maximum $26,250,000 for medical equipment.

# # # #

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.

*Any clerical errors are the author’s alone. In mid-September, Boiling Frogs Post will feature a similar distillation of August 2013’s DOD Contracts.


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BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for August 2013

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The Department of Defense Spent at Least $30,291,741,372.37 on 330 Individual Contracts during August 2013

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $30,291,741,372.37 on 330 individual contracts during August 2013. When extrapolated, this number would indicate an annual war budget of roughly $360 billion. Official government documents place the annual war budget around $614 billion. The discrepancy arises when one considers the fluctuating nature of monthly budget allocations, which are often ad hoc and can vary by tens of billions of dollars. Furthermore, a plurality of DOD contracts in August 2013 were “modifications,” which simply are payments made on top of earlier, often exorbitant, contractual arrangements.

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES

Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations. During the month of August 2013, the Pentagon issued the following twenty-nine FMS contracts, which involved twenty-two countries:

FMS – Eastern Mediterranean and the Gulf

Oxford Construction of Pennsylvania received $25,950,105 for constructing a 6000 square meter basement “in an existing building” in Israel. 6,000 square meters is roughly 1.48 acres.

Raytheon received $9,936,361 to research and develop Border Tunnel Activity Detection Systems for Egypt. With this assistance from Raytheon, the Egyptian military destroys tunnels to Gaza.

General Electric received $13,661,657 for 18 Egyptian Air Force F110 Service Life Extension kits.

Rockwell Collins received a maximum $29,601,551 for testing and delivering Multi-Lingual Vehicular MicroDAGR systems and related services to Saudi Arabia.

General Dynamics received $11,714,490 for disposing of thousands of rounds of Improved Conventional Munitions and Cluster Bomb Units. Nine days earlier, Textron received $640,786,442 to provide 1,300 cluster bomb units to Saudi Arabia.

The Royal Jordanian Air Academy received contracts of $27,391,334 and $12,789,935 for English language and technical training to Iraqi Air Force students. Training will be held at the Royal Jordanian Air Academy.

General Dynamics received $56,481,809 for providing contractor logistics and base life support services in Iraq. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition. Lockheed Martin received $43,961,259 for contractor logistics support “post normalization” for six Iraqi aircraft. Work will be performed at New al-Muthana Air Base in Baghdad. Hawker Beechcraft received $18,637,181 for basic life support and security in Iraq. SOS International received $84,030,376 to provide the government of Iraq with base operating support, base logistics support and security for Balad Air Base. These contracts indicate a substantial mercenary presence remains inside Iraq, despite a “drawdown” of uniformed personnel.

Hellfire Systems received $8,230,000 (cumulative maximum value of $886,265,635) for providing Hellfire II to the UAE.

FMS – Containment of China

Boeing received $92,278,416 to procure Block III AH-64D helicopters and associated support for Taiwan.

Lockheed Martin received a maximum $223,310,000 for procuring Modernized-Target Acquisition Designations Sight pilot night vision sensors and related services for South Korea.

General Electric received a maximum $57,498,658 for producing seventy-two T700-701D engines and four spares for South Korea.

Boeing received a maximum $904,418,647 for producing thirty-six new Block III Apache Helicopters (AH-64E) for South Korea. Logistical support, spare parts, and training platforms are included in this contract.

Maritime Helicopter Support Co. received $170,449,998 for working on the Through Life Support Phase II project for the Royal Australian Navy’s MH-60 Romeo aircraft. Work will be performed in Yerriyong, Australia (73 percent); Owego, NY (15 percent); and Stratford, CT (12 percent).

ATK received $57,816,031 for producing the XM1156 Precision Guidance kit for Australia. All work will be performed in Rocket Center, West Virginia.

FMS – Latin America

Textron received a maximum $31,619,963 for procuring COMMANDO Advanced Armored Personnel Carriers and related services for Colombia. In order to continue selling weaponry to the Colombian government, which has an appalling human rights record, the U.S. State Department simply certifies that Colombia is meeting minimum standards with respect to human rights.

FMS – Miscellaneous

Raytheon received $200,504,841 for the procurement of 354 AIM-9X Block II All Up Round Tactical Low Rate Initial Production Lot 13 Missiles and Block II Active Optical Target Detectors for the U.S. Navy (92), U.S. Air Force (92) Morocco (20), Malaysia (20), Kuwait (80); and Oman (50). This contract also provides for 178 Block II Captive Air Training Missiles for the U.S. Navy (58), U.S. Air Force (58), Morocco (10), Malaysia (8), Kuwait (20), and Oman (24); nine Special Air Training Missiles for the U.S. Navy (7) and Saudi Arabia (2); 147 All Up Round Containers for the U.S. Navy (43), U.S. Air Force (39), Saudi Arabia (1), Morocco (9), Malaysia (8), Kuwait (28), and Oman (19); 19 Guidance Unit Containers for Malaysia (6), Kuwait (6) and Oman (7); three Spare Propulsion Steering Sections for the U.S. Navy (1), U.S. Air Force (1) and Morocco (1); one Spare Missile Tube Assembly for Morocco; three Spare Advanced Optical Target Detectors for the U.S. Navy (1) and U.S. Air Force (2); 20 Spare Tactical Guidance Units for the U.S. Navy (4), U.S. Air Force (4), Morocco (2), Malaysia (2), Kuwait (2) and Oman (6); one Spare Inertial Measuring Unit for Switzerland; and 26 Spare Captive Air Training Missile Guidance Units for the U.S. Navy (4), U.S. Air Force (8), Morocco (4), Malaysia (4), Kuwait (2) and Oman (4). Work will be performed in eleven states, Ontario, Germany, Italy, and “various locations inside and outside the United States.” This contract’s purchases are broken down as follows: U.S. Navy ($54,663,344; 27.27 percent); the U.S. Air Force ($52,449,131; 26.16 percent); and the governments of Kuwait ($40,190,268; 20.04 percent); Oman ($28,813,594; 14.37 percent); Morocco ($11,978,889; 5.97 percent); Malaysia ($11,453,192; 5.71 percent); Saudi Arabia ($880,023; .44 percent); and Switzerland ($76,400; .04 percent).

BAE Systems received $8,539,660 for the procurement and repair of Common IFF Digital Transponder hardware for the U.S. Army ($4,656,256; 54.5 percent), U.S. Navy ($2,308,244; 27 percent), Taiwan ($747,096; 8.8 percent), South Korea ($501,974; 5.9 percent), the UAE ($319,803; 3.7 percent); and Canada ($6,287; 0.1 percent).

Raytheon received $11,458,989 for working on the F-15 Aircraft Reliability & Maintainability Engineering Services program. These services are necessary to sustain F-15 radar and avionics. This contract relates to classified and unclassified FMS (3% of contract) in support of the following countries: Israel, Saudi Arabia, Korea, Japan, and Singapore.

Lockheed Martin received $37,316,742 for the production and service of MK48 Mod 7 Common Broadband Advanced Sonar System (CBASS) functional item replacement (FIR) kits. This contract combines purchases for the U.S. Navy (77 percent) the Netherlands (13 percent) and Canada (10 percent).

BAE Systems received a maximum $94,312,136 for advanced radar warning receiver ship sets and line replaceable units. Locations of performance are New Jersey, New York, and potentially Korea, Australia, Egypt, Norway, Poland, and Canada.

Northrop Grumman received $34,558,999 for the delivery, installation, and testing of four French E-2C IFF Mode 5/Mode S interrogator and transponder units (three aircraft install units and one spare install unit) for the government of France.

Lockheed Martin received $47,816,399 for C-130J Joint Country Cooperative Effort (JCCE) Block 7.0 embodiment. The contract modification provides for the requirements of 35 C-130J Block Upgrade 7.0 embodiment/retrofit kits as well as selected hardware necessary for four kits for Norway and associated spares (25 per cent of requirement) for Italy, Australia, Norway and Denmark.

Camber Corp.; Deloitte Consulting; General Dynamics; Mission Essential Personnel; and Vose Technical Systems General received $84,140,446 for technical and administrative services and professional support for the Center for Civil Military Relations. This announcement also identifies potential FMS efforts for training of foreign troops or education of officials. Potential countries where performance may occur are Egypt, Indonesia, Singapore, and Saudi Arabia, and combined would equate to less than two percent of the total effort. 

AFGHANISTAN CONTRACTS

Ultra Electronics received a maximum $22,790,011 for the installation, maintenance and operation services in support of communications intercept systems in Afghanistan.

Hanjin Intermodal America received a maximum $10,000,000 for ground transportation of locally procured cargo from Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan into Afghanistan for DLA.

Berger Cummins JV received a maximum $7,976,129 to provide 30 megawatts of temporary power at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan.

Logos Technologies received $8,000,994 for field service representatives, operators, and analysts supporting Persistent Ground Surveillance Systems Kestrel systems in Afghanistan.

Government Secure Solutions CGI received $27,019,494 for upgrading the intelligence enterprise for use in Afghanistan and world-wide. The U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM) is the contracting activity.

Oshkosh received a maximum $14,480,000 for the procurement of M-ATV capability set A-kits.

SRCTec Inc. received $59,300,000 for procurement of spare parts for the Duke System, which counters radio control IED.

UNMANNED AERIAL SYSTEMS

A&D GC received $9,077,608 for renovations at Naval Base Ventura County, Point Mugu. The work provides for renovation of the west wing of PM50 into a maintenance training facility for the Triton Unmanned Aircraft Systems. The facility will provide training classrooms, high bay aircraft trainers, instructors work area, and administrative space.

AAI received $11,798,626 (cumulative maximum value of $1,530,786,418) for purchase of six Shadow UAVs and auxiliary equipment.

AM Pierce and Associates; BAE Systems Technology Solutions and Services; Booz Allen Hamilton; Coherent Technical Services; Engility Corp.; and Sierra Nevada Corp. received a cumulative maximum $243,105,875 for procuring systems engineering support for the NAWCAD, Aircraft Control Systems Division. These services will provide engineering support to developmental programs such as the Joint Precision Approach and Landing Systems, the Navy Unmanned Combat Aerial Systems, the Unmanned Carrier-Launched Airborne Surveillance and Strike, Broad Area Maritime Surveillance, War Fighter Networking, Unmanned Aircraft System/Ground Based Sense and Avoid and Automated Aerial Refueling Support.

Boeing, General Atomics, Northrop Grumman, and Lockheed Martin each received $15,000,000 for preliminary design review assessments for the UCLASS Air Vehicle. “The objective of the UCLASS system is to enhance aircraft carrier/air wing operations by providing a responsive, world-wide presence via an organic, sea-based Unmanned Aerial System, with persistent ISR and targeting, and strike capabilities.” The Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman contracts were not competitively procured pursuant to the FAR 6.302-1(a)(2).

General Atomics received a maximum $30,481,905 for setting up a MQ-1C Gray Eagle Composite Maintenance System Trainer (CMST) at Ft. Huachuca, AZ. General Atomics also received $11,423,474.37 for general work on the MQ-1C Gray Eagle unmanned aircraft systems program.

General Atomics received $26,222,034 to provide Extended Range capabilities for the Block 1 MQ-9 aircraft. General Atomics also received $39,455,726 for the MQ-9 Technology Insertion Technical Solution. This contract modifies MQ-9 Block 5, GCS Block 30 and Block 50 “as required to enable integration and testing of the Tech Insertion capability.” 

Longbow received $6,778,000 for services in support of Radar Electronics Unit production and Unmanned Aerial System Tactical Common Data Link Assembly. Northrop Grumman received $27,599,424 for additional operations and maintenance services in support of the Broad Area Maritime Surveillance – Demonstrator Unmanned Aircraft System. 

SALIENT CONTRACTS

Exelis Systems received $463,192,596 for the Kuwait Base Operations and security support services.

G4S and Parsons Pacific received $64,986,821 for Base Operations Support Services at Diego Garcia.

General Dynamics received a maximum $562,210,980 for delivering multiple GMV 1.1 for Special Operations Command.

Invertix received $32,107,200 for “services support of identification and integration of emerging technologies and improving analytic and visualization capabilities for integration into intelligence enterprise systems.” Work will be performed at INSCOM. L3 received $23,934,919 for services and support to INSCOM’s Futures Directorate integration environment and for enhancements to the intelligence enterprise. MHM Innovations received a maximum $8,187,447 for systems engineering and technical assistance support services at INSCOM.

Invincea Labs received $15,970,085 “to develop mobile security technologies that mitigate threat model.”

Kongsberg Defence and Aerospace AS received $37,872,000 and $51,094,647 for depot support and work on the CROWS.

Northrop Grumman received $10,118,368 to work on Under the Terahertz Electronics (THz) program. The performer shall develop device and integration technologies necessary to realize compact, high-performance electronic circuits that operate at a center frequency of 1.03 THz. DARPA is the contracting activity.

Raytheon received $15,032,316 for Cooperative Engagement Capabilities (CEC) production. “CEC improves battle force effectiveness by improving overall situational awareness and by enabling longer range, cooperative, multiple, or layered engagement strategies.” 

SAIC and SIG received a maximum $16,168,000 for “object physics for exploitation and recognition (OPERA) to obtain the capability to isolate and model physical mechanisms responsible for exploitation performance earlier in the exploitation development process.” 

World Wide Language Resources received $257,223,248 for linguist and translation services in support of Special Operations Command.

COMPLICIT ACADEMIA

U.S. academe boasts a history of cooperation and collusion with the Pentagon in order to further militant aims. The contracts from August 2013 exemplify this relationship:

Georgia Tech Applied Research Corp. received $49,836,788 for rapid sensor technology analysis, development, and testing of sensor technologies relative to operational requirements.

Georgia Technical Research Institute received $50,000,000 to support Defense Procurement and Acquisition Policy for policy development and legislative requirements.

Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University received $6,767,759 for working on the research and development needs of Naval Surface Warfare Center, Dahlgren Division. Specific tasks will range from applied research, and or exploratory development through technology assessments and engineering studies in support of surface combat systems development. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with FAR 6.302-3(a)(2)(ii).

Universal Technology Corp. received $33,931,514 “to enable collaborative research partnerships between the Air Force Research Laboratory and Academia and Industry in areas including, but not limited to, Materials and Manufacturing and Aerospace Sensors that engage a diverse pool of domestic businesses that employ scientists and engineers in technical areas required to develop critical war-fighting technologies for the nation’s air, space and cyberspace forces through specific AFRL Core Technical Competencies.”

Central Texas College received $7,689,190 to support the Navy’s Center for Personal and Professional Development Navy College Program for Afloat College Education instructor led services.

MISSILES, ROCKETS AND BOMBS

Advanced Systems Development received $6,671,773 for information systems operations support service at White Sands Missile Range, NM.

Computer Sciences Corp. received $81,671,340 for supporting the launch processing mission of the 45th Space Wing and its launch customers at Cape Canaveral Air Station. 

Ellwood National Forge received $54,563,908 for the procurement of Bomb Live Unit-109 (BLU-109) empty case assemblies and container pallets.

General Dynamics received $15,388,280 to make “definitive the not-to-exceed pricing matrix for unit pricing for fiscal 2013 M264 rockets.” 

Harris Corp. received $27,274,943 for Counter Communication Systems Block 10 Increment 2. This modification retrofits the Space Control Depot Support Facility, System 1, and Trainer to a Block 10 Increment 2 baseline. 

Intermat received $7,127,246 for R&D directed toward the “fabrication of carbon-carbon shape stable nosetip materials; development and fabrication of advanced reentry materials including antenna windows, control surfaces, leading edges and heat shields; and support of engineering studies in direct support of Submarine Launched Ballistic Missile reentry systems.” This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to the authority of 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(1), as implemented by FAR 6.302-1(a)(2).

Lockheed Martin received $15,351,753 for fiscal 2013 Aegis weapon system modernization upgrade requirements. This supports the modernization of DDG 51, DDG 57, and DDG 69 and also provides for integration testing at the Backfit Production Test Facility. Lockheed Martin received $37,266,985 and $9,506,459 to incrementally fund the Aegis platform systems engineering agent activities and Aegis modernization advanced capability build engineering. Lockheed Martin received $18,175,946 for cruiser and destroyer modernization testing efforts associated with the Aegis Combat System.

Lockheed Martin received $127,257,133 for design, procurement, and service on the PATRIOT Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3), including its Missile Segment Enhancement and Missile Support Center. Some work will occur in Texas, Florida, Minnesota and Aguadilla, Puerto Rico.

Northrop Grumman received $152,826,531 for work on the National Polar Orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System (NPOESS). This modification will ensure that the overall contract value and the actual scope of work are represented more accurately. “This, in turn, will ensure that both parties receive fair and equitable treatment during the termination settlement process [of the original contract]. Formally incorporating these changes will also ensure that the contractor is reimbursed for all cost and fee associated with these changes.” 

Raytheon received $218,530,196 and $48,944,077 to manufacture up to 33 All Up Rounds SM-3 Block IB missiles.

Raytheon received $7,447,316 to procure additional Lot 13 AIM-9X missiles for the U.S. Air Force. This effort includes 14 special air training missiles; five all up round containers; two captive test missiles; two guidance unit containers, and three sub-assemblies. Work will be performed in Tucson, AZ (43.74 percent); Andover, MA (10.08 percent); Valencia, CA (6.10 percent); Midland, Ontario (5.54 percent); Rocket Center, WV (5.49 percent); Vancouver, WA (5.07 percent); Goleta, CA (2.86 percent); Cheshire, CT (2.05 percent); Heilbronn, Germany (1.88 percent); Simsbury, CT (1.61 percent); Cincinnati, OH (1.22 percent); San Jose, CA (1.48 percent); Anniston, AL (1.31 percent); Maniago, Italy (1.21 percent); Chatsworth, CA (1.11 percent); San Diego, CA (1.04 percent); Montgomery, AL (.60 percent); Orlando, FL (.55 percent); Valencia, CA (.53 percent); Newbury Park, CA (.50 percent); El Segundo, CA (.50 percent); Claremont, CA (.43 percent); Joplin, MO (.39 percent); Lombard, IL (.28 percent); El Cajon, CA (.15 percent); and various locations inside and outside the United States (4.28 percent). This contract illustrates how deep the military-industrial-congressional complex runs. Some congressional representatives assert the necessity of building the weapons in over twenty different locations “because of jobs.” In reality, spending equal amounts on education or healthcare creates more jobs.

United Paradyne received $8,355,754 for aerospace support services which provides an integrated management entity, the Aerospace Maintenance Operations Center, a single point of contact that interfaces, controls, schedules, coordinates, operates, maintains, and provides support to the 30th Space Wing community.

AIRCRAFT

Aerospace Testing Alliance, (JV of Jacobs Sverdup, Inc., Computer Sciences Corp., and General Physics Corp.) received $218,590,871 for operation, maintenance, and support of Arnold Engineering Development Complex (AEDC).

Bell Boeing Joint Project Office works on the V-22 Osprey. During August, they received $8,906,715 for ten V-22 Block A-to-B 50-69 series upgrade kits and for installing ten V-22 Block A- to-B 50-69 series. They received $9,363,229 for the procurement of one MV-22 Containerized Flight Training Device for the U.S. Marine Corps. They also received a maximum $42,995,069 for prop rotor gearboxes.

Boeing received $22,706,288 for development and demonstration of the AH-64 Apache Block III system in Mesa. AZ. Boeing received maximum $24,085,000 for rotary wing blades. Boeing received a maximum $9,283,339 for Electro-ME actuators.

Compass Systems received $9,978,215 for R&D of an airborne system in support of the Electro-Optical (EO) and Special Mission Sensors Division of the Avionics Department. This contract includes research of emerging technologies (including radar, EO, fusion engines, automatic target recognition and other related intelligence gathering sensors) related to the targeting of enemy positions for improved weapons delivery. 

Delaware Resource Group of Oklahoma received $10,861,139 for F-15C/E, F-16 and F-22A contract aircrew training and courseware development.

DRS-Sustainment Systems received $6,047,366 for vehicle depot overhaul of Tunner 60K Loaders. 

Evergreen Helicopters received $6,765,700 to provide ship-based and shore-based vertical replenishment and other rotary-wing logistic services. Evergreen Helicopters will provide helicopters, personnel, support and equipment for flight operations in the 5th Fleet and 7th FleetAORs.

 LIR Systems received $136,600,358 for BRITE Star Block II Systems, BRITE Star I upgrades, cables, depot repair actions, data, BRITE Star II class I engineering change proposal, provision item order and engineering services. BRITE Star Block II Systems will be used by Naval Air Systems Command’s UH-1 program and the Vertical Takeoff Unmanned Aerial Vehicle program. These systems provide ISR, detection, identification and targeting capability in day/night operations for both manned and unmanned platforms.

General Atomics received $11,352,795 purchase Initial Block 5 spares and support equipment in support of two Block 5 aircraft proposed as part of the fiscal 2011 aircraft procurement to support testing.

General Electric received $25,085,841 for the Low-Rate Initial Production of up to 190 AV-8B Radar Display Computers, 15 spare card sets, six engineering development units and non-recurring engineering support. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). General Electric received $12,420,832 for the procurement of 4,812 Generator Converter Unit, Hybrid Silicon Controlled Rectifiers for the F/A-18 aircraft. General Electric received a maximum $24,505,862 for work on engine lines. 

Goodrich Corp. received a maximum $208,502,000 for the procurement of Army/Navy Piloted Aircraft/Visual and Visible Light/Receiving, Passive Detecting (AN/AVR-2B) Laser Detecting Sets (LDS) and associated parts and services.

Honeywell International Incorporated received a maximum $29,375,653 for the procurement of T-55 engines for the CH-47 Chinook.

Interconnect Wiring; Ion Corp.; and Richard Manufacturing received $7,500,000 for F-16 Wiring Harnesses and Kit Assemblies for Air Force F-16 blocks. L-3 received $18,510,814 for M6.2+ Operational Flight Program for the F-16 Mission Training Center. 

Kollsman, Inc. received $44,800,000 to repair nine Weapon Repairable Assemblies on the Night Targeting System in support of the AH-1W Helicopter.

Lockheed Martin received $33,996,000 for AN/AAQ-30 Target Sight Systems (TSS), which will be integrated into the AH-1Z Cobra Attack Helicopter. Lockheed Martin received $7,013,937 for upgrade of the Visual and Joint Precision Airdrop systems on the C-130J maintenance and aircrew training system devices. Lockheed Martin received a maximum $6,897,684 for smart multi-functional displays.

Lockheed Martin received $852,298,021 for procuring tools and test equipment “critical to preserving the current F-35 delivery schedules and meeting future production rates.” Lockheed Martin received $34,500,000 to work on the F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter.

Nordam Group received a maximum $21,282,861 for brakes.

Northrop Grumman received $15,506,798 to study the advanced high gain ultra-high frequency electronically scanned array in support of the E-2D Advanced Hawkeye Program. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1. Northrop Grumman received $31,354,312 for “non-recurring engineering for the Full Rate Production Lot 1 E-2D Advanced Hawkeye Program.”

Northrup Grumman received a maximum $12,002,118 for the engineering and manufacturing development and the low rate initial production of Spider Increment 1A.

Phantom Eagle received $13,803,202 for Air Operations Center weapons system test, experimentation, & technical services for Air Combat Command (ACC) at Langley AFB.

Physical Optics received $14,452,568 for the upgrade of 49 aircraft data transfer systems to advanced data transfer systems for the MH-60 and V-22 aircraft.

Prototype Engineering received a maximum $10,059,040 for the maintenance and overhaul of Cylinder Assembly Actuators for the UH-60 A/L helicopter.

Rock Collins received a maximum $10,372,228 for the procurement of between 160 and 1152 display units for the Blackhawk weapon system. Vision Systems International received $10,028,149 for replenishment spare parts in support of the A/24A-56 joint helmet mounted cueing system.

Rolls-Royce Corp. received $10,778,997 to complete repairs on AE1107 turbo shaft engines for the MV-22 aircraft and for two months of mission care site support for HMX-1s in Quantico, VA. Rolls-Royce also received $9,344,620 for supporting the operation and maintenance of the AV-8B and E-2C/D Power Plant F-402 and T56 Series Engine to include A-427 Engine, sub-systems, and equipment. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

Sikorsky Aircraft received $25,582,725 to overhaul 250 UH-60 Blackhawk main rotor blades. Sikorsky Aircraft also received $6,964,704 to install Star Safire II FLIR (B kits) on 12 Army HH-60 aircraft.

Soldream Inc. received a maximum $7,657,298 for turbine nozzle segments. 

Techno-Sciences received $9,000,000 for integration, verification and maintenance of contractor software into the existing system and engineering architecture of the Personal Locator Beacon program.

Textron (Bell Helicopter) received $61,056,000 for procurement of 12 new metal scout (OH-58D) helicopter cabins, 12 supplemental parts kits “and associated over and above effort demands.” Textron (Bell Helicopter) received a maximum $21,150,000 for rotary wing blades. Textron received a maximum $7,738,885 for materials in support of the LRIP of A-Kits for the Kiowa OH-58F model.

United Technologies (Pratt & Whitney Military Engines division) received $69,604,842 for parts and materials associated with LRIP Lot VIII of 19 F135 Conventional Take Off and Landing (CTOL) propulsion systems for the Air Force; six Short Take-off and Vertical Landing (STOVL) propulsion systems for the Marine Corps; and four Carrier Variant propulsion systems for the Navy. This contract also provides for long lead components, parts and materials associated with LRIP Lot VII of four F135 CTOL propulsion systems for Italy; four STOVL propulsion systems for the UK; and two CTOL propulsions systems for Norway. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). This contract combines purchases for the Air Force ($39,200,000; 56 percent); the Navy/Marine Corps ($7,809,842; 11 percent); the UK ($10,026,000; 14 percent); Italy ($8,087,000; 12 percent); and Norway ($4,482,000; 7 percent). 

COMMUNICATIONS AND IT

Alutiiq 3SG received $13,560,933 to provide electronic security systems support to the National Guard Bureau and “other governmental agencies.” This requirement “will support the upgrade of electronic security systems (ESS) support services at Army National Guard facilities and Armed Forces Reserve Center, and DHS by providing threat, vulnerability and risk assessments, site surveys, design and engineering, procurement, installation, integration, testing, training and documentation, ESS follow-on/certification training, ESS follow-on technical and maintenance support, and, ESS program management and administrative support services.”

Assured Space Access Technologies ($51,842,563); Koam Engineering Systems ($47,107,457); and Tactical Engineering & Analysis ($52,886,922) will provide analysis and test engineering, prototype development, and evaluation supports services for the Multifunctional Information Distribution System, Joint Tactical Information Distribution System, Joint Tactical Radio System waveform, Airborne Early Warning Ground Integration Segment systems, Ship Self Defense System, advanced Combat Direction Systems, network communications equipment, and U.S. and Coalition/Allied military tactical data links.

Booz Allen Hamilton received $12,099,998 to provide continued management and business operations support services at the current levels.

Computer Sciences Corp. received $28,897,021 for IT services to support the Technology Services Organization’s (TSO) requirements and its role as an enterprise business systems integrator for the Marine Corps.

ViaSat Inc. received $21,665,911 for Multifunctional Information Distribution System-Low Volume Terminals (MIDS-LVTs). Parties to this contract are: USA (47 percent), Australia (22 percent), Oman (16 percent) and Thailand (15 percent). Data Link Solutions received $11,405,804 for MIDS-LVTs. Parties include: U.S. (71 percent), Poland (8 percent), Japan (8 percent), Australia (5 percent), UAE (5 percent) and Saudi Arabia (3 percent).

Dell Marketing received $24,900,000 for up to 100,000 Hypervisor software licenses with first year software maintenance included.

Delta Resources received a maximum $6,794,404 for technical, program management, research, administrative and analytical services to support the mission of the assistant secretary of the Army Installation Environment and Energy, deputy assistant secretary of the Army for Environment, Safety and Occupational Health Technology Directorate and the Defense Environment Information Technology Management Program.

Digital Management received $7,924,196 to provide infrastructure support services at the Mark Center.

DLT Solutions received $12,375,152 for the procurement of maintenance for Symantec software licenses.

Engility Corp. received a maximum $13,145,630 for procurement of internal appointment modules and workstations.

General Dynamics received a maximum $16,107,936 for the procurement of information technology and information management services.

Honeywell International received a maximum $6,593,760 for system analyzer test sets. Honeywell Technology received $97,502,286 for prepositioning and Marine Corps logistics support services for Blount Island Command. 

Immix Technology; M2 Technology; Blue Tech; Unicom Government, Inc.; Global Technology Resources; Micro Tech; Red River Computer Co.; and Integration Technologies Group received a maximum $6,900,000,000 for Network Centric Solutions-2 (NETCENTS-2) Netcentric Products.

InDyne received $250,323,919 for Eglin Test & Training Complex (ETTC) range operations and maintenance services at Eglin AFB, FL.

ITSI Gilbane received $7,669,742 for hot spot delineation and excavation remedial action Parcel E-2 at Hunters Point Naval Shipyard.

Jacobs Technology Incorporated received a maximum $63,473,851 for test support services.

KEYW Corp.; SAIC; Raytheon; and BAE Systems received $24,375,000 (shared ceiling for five contracts) for R&D for the Compact Automatic Target Recognition (ATR) and Sustainable Environment (CASE) program.

Lockheed Martin received $14,385,682 for working on an integrated space situational awareness prototype developer (IPD) for (NETCENTS) in Colorado Springs, CO.

Lockheed Martin; BAE; General Dynamics; Northrop Grumman; Raytheon; Boeing; and Honeywell Defense and Space Electronic Systems received a maximum $1,344,000,000 for Advanced Technology Support Program III (ATSP3) contracts. This modification raises the ceiling on the current ATSP3 contracts from $4,703,000,000 to $6,047,000,000. ATSP3 contracts are designed to resolve problems with obsolete, unreliable, unmaintainable, underperforming, or incapable electronics hardware and software through development of advanced technology insertions and applications.

McKesson Technologies received a maximum $29,903,345 for digital imaging network-picture archive communication system.

Milburn Academy received $7,309,332 to provide foreign language training and related training support services. This includes providing instructional personnel, curriculum development and assessment.

SAIC received $10,000,000 for the manufacture and delivery of various test sets and related weapons control support equipment components, including AN/AWM-101A, AN/AWM-102A, AN/AWM-103, AN/AWM-42, AN/USM-715 and all supporting cables/adapters; A/E37T-35 CRALTS, AN/AWM-102 supporting cables/adapters; AN/ALQ-99 pod interface unit and supporting cables/adapters; launcher test stand and supporting cables/adapters; ON-529/USQ-131 interconnecting group and supporting cables/adapters, and AAE adapter. This contract supports the Pentagon and various FMS customers, whose names were not given in the contract. 

Savi Technology received $6,997,888 for the procurement of the active radio frequency identification tags in support of Marine Corps Total Force Information Technology Services.

Softchoice Corp. received $11,184,542 and $13,830,755 to procure Microsoft brand name software licenses and support.

Sonalysts received $17,149,698 for Standard Space Trainer (SST) GPS Next Generation Operation Control System Mission Specfic Vendor Plug-In and for development of a training system to operate within the SST training environment. 

SSB Inc. received a maximum $8,192,670 for technical support services in the areas of database and web development and maintenance for command and control applications.

Tetra Tech EC received $13,601,767 for performing remedial action and radiological remediation assessment at the former Naval Air Station Brunswick, ME.

TRAX International received $25,353,142 for non-personal test support services in support of the U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground, AZ.

Vykin Corp. received $12,290,416 to provide on-site information technology (IT) support services for the Defense Media Activity (Ft. Meade).

GEAR AND EQUIPMENT

Aegis Technologies Group received $8,900,000 for the fielding and sustainment of integrated moving target simulators. ATK received a maximum $84,800,000 for equipment (Proximity Sensor and Sensor Dummy).

Avon Protection Systems received a maximum $6,721,243 for the development and modification of M53 Masks. Bruker Detection Corp. received a maximum $37,940,000 for the procurement of Improved Chemical Point Detection Systems and on-board kits.

BAE Systems Land and Armaments received a maximum $149,882,446 for forty-nine M88A2 HERCULES and three sets of spare parts. Coordinated Defense Supply Systems received a maximum $6,785,518 to provide 6,211 cover kits for medium tactical vehicles. Oshkosh received $21,956,376 and $76,824,064 for procuring many Medium Tactical Vehicles.

Donovan Commercial Industries received $19,147,158 for four sizes of low hazard linear shaped charges. The low hazard flexible linear shaped charges are used to produce a linear cutting action in various applications where remote, fast and reliable cutting of obstacles and other targets is required.

DRS Tactical Systems received a maximum $61,568,105 for support of Force Battle Command Brigade and Below (FBCB2) program.

Gentex Corp. received a maximum $86,800,000 for procurement of lightweight, advanced combat helmets. Golden Manufacturing received a maximum $36,523,456 for various types of Permethrin ACU coats. Puerto Rico Apparel Manufacturing Corp., Mayaguez, Puerto Rico., received a maximum $15,992,977 for various types of Permethrin ACU coats.

Kollmorgen Corp. received $9,799,832 for engineering and logistics services, refurbishment, overhaul and upgrade in support of the MK 46 Optical Sight System and the MK 20 Electro Optical Sensor components and sub components. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) – only one responsible source and no other supplies or services will satisfy agency requirements (FAR 6.302-1). 

L3 received $11,406,057 (cumulative maximum $37,817,822) for production hardware of 118 each Level 2 Manned-Unmanned (L2 MUM) Product Improvement Plan B-Kits and 16 each Transit cases #1 and 16 each Transit Cases #2.

Northrup Grumman received $22,876,078 (cumulative maximum value of $157,432,543) to provide continuing supplies, services and maintenance for the Counter Rocket Artillery Mortar (CRAM) Command and Control System.

Olin Winchester received $11,676,796 (maximum value of $136,598,412) to procure: 10,380,720 each A059 (5.56mm M855 cartridges in 10-round clips), 2,337,600 each A062 (5.56mm M855 cartridges linked), 3,200 each A064 (5.56mm M855 and M 856 cartridges and tracers linked 4 to 1) and 3,186,200 each A55 (Caliber .50 M17 cartridges linked).

Parmelee Industries (doing business as U.S. Safety) received a maximum $12,009,699 for procurement of optical frames and accessories.

Raytheon received $54,050,042 to conduct Excalibur 155mm Increment Ib production and procure a total of 765 projectiles.

NAVY CONTRACTS

Aeroflex Wichita received a maximum $9,015,000 for providing the U.S. Navy with radio test sets.

BAE received $12,820,427 for repairs to the USS Chafee (DDG 90). BAE Systems received $6,995,080 to provide USS Vicksburg (CG 69) with ship repairs, hull, machinery, electrical, electronics, ship alterations and piping.

BergerABAM received a maximum $30,000,000 for marine/waterfront projects at the NAVFAC Northwest AOR.

Booz Allen Hamilton ($15,939,976); Engility Corp. ($12,602,253); Gemini Industries ($15,697,139); ManTech International ($16,179,488); Serco Inc. ($12,367,548); Whitney, Bradley & Brown ($15,331,792) are to provide management support services in support of Deputy Chief of Naval Operations, Communications Networks’ (DCNO N6) Warfighting, Manpower and Business Transformation Initiatives.

Electric Boat Corp. received $11,992,933 for continued procurement and manufacture of onboard repair parts to be loaded onto Virginia-class submarines. ERAPSCO received $7,229,916 for the procurement of 9,400 AN/SSQ-53F Sonobuoys for the U.S. Navy

General Atomics received $12,490,000 for lithium-ion batteries and associated accessories to be utilized by the dry combat submersible program for the U.S. Special Operations Command. “This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with the statutory authority of 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) as implemented by FAR 6.302-1; only one responsible source and no other supplies or services will satisfy agency requirements.”

General Dynamics -NASSCO Earl Industries received $82,481,992 for the USS Eisenhower dry-docking planned incremental availability. General Dynamics also received $9,011,625 to provide material and labor in support of the post-shakedown availability for USS Independence.

Lockheed Martin received $10,095,043 to procure one AN/BVY-1 Integrated Submarine Imaging System (ISIS) and associated spares. The ISIS provides mission critical, all-weather, visual, and electronic search, digital image management, indication, warning, and platform architecture interface capabilities.

Management Consulting received $7,534,848 to obtain materials, supplies, and logistical services for NAVSUP Fleet Logistics Center, Norfolk, Supply Management Division Midwest, Crane Indiana. Manufacturing Techniques received $32,669,822 for working on the battle management systems, dragon spear and Littoral Combat Ship programs. Northrop Grumman received $25,272,171 to provide three mission modules, support containers and engineering and production planning services for mission packages that will deploy from and integrate with the littoral combat ship. ATK received $45,000,000 for 30mm automatic weapons, spare parts, equipment and engineering support used to aboard U.S. Navy littoral combat ships and amphibious transport dock ships and some USAF MC-130 aircraft.

Metson Marine Service received $6,872,460 to provide maintenance, equipment operation, repair, vessel modification, dock master services, asset inventory management, and oil spill response capability for Port Operations at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, HI. National Steel and Shipbuilding received $13,066,809 for maintenance on the USS Peleliu (LHA 5).

Progeny Systems received $7,050,538 for continued work on the multi-tube weapon simulator and common weapon launcher in support of the AN/BYG-1 combat control system. U.S. Navy (74.6 percent) and Australia (25.4 percent) are both included in this contract. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(5), authorized or required by statute 15 U.S.C. 638(r) Aid to Small Business. Is the Pentagon using small businesses to avoid an open bidding process on its contracts?

Raytheon received $27,992,210 for the production of 150 MK54 Mod 0 lightweight torpedo kits and related engineering and repair services. Snowbird Environmental Systems received a maximum $9,500,000 for the Landing Craft Air Cushion air conditioner.

CONSTRUCTION AND DREDGING

PAT USA received a maximum $11,392,577 for consolidating construction projects at Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar.

J&S Construction received a maximum $11,491,270 for construction of a UAV maintenance complex at Ft. Hood, TX.

Guam MACC Builders received $20,249,617 for the construction of an aircraft rinse facility and taxiways at Andersen AFB, Guam.

Whitesell-Green received $15,949,000 for construction of a Broad Area Maritime Surveillance (BAMS) Mission Control Complex at NAS Jacksonville. This contract provides for a new freestanding two-story structure with two Electromagnetic Interference Shielded Mission Control Systems, a Tactical Operations Center with SCIF spaces, and numerous roof-top mounted antennas.

3E Consultants received a maximum $7,500,000 for hazardous material and waste management services in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina, and the Caribbean. Archer Western Contractors received $25,899,929 for design and construction of a Marine Corp Security Force Regiment Headquarters and Regimental Aid Station Facility and bachelor enlisted quarters at Naval Weapons Station, Yorktown. Blinderman Construction received $14,864,000 for construction of the Navy Drug Screening Laboratory at Naval Station Great Lakes.

Chavis’ Inc.; Dunbar Mechanical Contractors; Group III Mgmt Inc.; and Haire Plumbing & Mechanical Company received a maximum $49,000,000 for “utility monitoric control systems.” Environment Systems received a $14,068,512 for the procurement of Environmental Control Units in support of all Maintenance Mobile Facility Equipment. The contract was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). General Dynamics received $212,000,000 for the design and construction of a deckhouse, hangar, and an aft peripheral vertical launching system for DDG 1002.

Hoist Liftruck Manufacturing received a maximum $925,000,000 for commercial-type material handling equipment. John C. Grimberg Company received $12,495,000 for construction of the AEGIS Cruiser/Destroyer Upgrade Training Facility at Naval Support Activity Dahlgren. NEU Security Services received $14,080,000 for construction of a Digital Multi-Purpose Training Range at Ft. Carson, CO.

Safeco Insurance received $17,500,000 for construction services at Hickam AFB, HI.

SAIC received a maximum $82,213,823 for maintenance, repair, and operations prime vendor contract for the Northeast Region. SAIC also received a maximum $99,556,130 for prime vendor maintenance, repair, and operations contract for supplies and support for the Northwest Region. Tiffin Metal Products and American Posts received $78,966,627 for acquiring drive-type spade less fence posts for use in providing framework and support for erecting military barbed wire entanglements and fencing. Westland Technologies received a maximum $14,206,284 for rubber tiles. Woolpert received a maximum $9,485,996 for the development of a camera co-collection system.

Abat Lerew Construction; Accel and Pacific JV; Adv Sol’s Inc.; Ainsworth-Benning; AMEC; American Contracting; B&M GH Phipps; Bairco Construction; Brady-Fluor; Brahma Group; Brigadier Construction Services; Brunow Contracting; Burr-MZT Joint Venture; Bush Building & Construction; Caddell Construction; Carothers Construction; Carter’s Contracting Services; Cashman Dredging & Marine Contracting; Caspers Construction; Cerebral Infotech; Coburn Contractors; Don Jones Construction; Drace Anderson; E-Corp; EM Wells Group; Equa Solutions; Faith Enterprises; Garcia & Associates; GFP-Yates; Gravel Company; Great Lakes Dredge & Dock; Group III Management; Growling Bear Company; Haas Construction Company; Halbert Construction; Hasco; Hausmann Construction; HCR Construction; HDR Engineering, Inc. HDR Environmental, Operations and Construction; HHI LLC; HK Consulting; Ho-Chunk Builders; Hourigan Construction; ICF Jones & Stokes; Inland Dredging; Iron Mike Construction; JE Hurley Construction; JV; Kira Inc.; Kadell Industries; Kingery Construction; Kinsley Grunley; Komado; Lacy Construction; Leebcor Services; Manson Construction; Maron Construction; Merrill Inc.; Mountain West Construction Group; Newstrom-Davis; Nezhoni Construction; NGC Group; Norb Olind Construction; Norfolk Dredging; North Star Design-Build; Northern Construction; Northwind Engineering; Nova Group; Odyssey International; Old Veteran Construction; Omega Construction; Pacific NICC JV; Patriot Construction; Pave-Tech; Performance Systems; Pine Bluff Sand; Raass Brothers; Reams Enterprises; Recco, Inc.; RECON; RGC Constructors; Richard Brady & Associates; Ritch Electric; Rore Inc.; RWT; Sky Blue Builders; South Mountain Builders; SRB-RBI JV; Sumo-Nan JV II; Synergy Construction; TCI Architects Engineers; TCW Construction; Tetra Tech; Thalle Construction; Tierra Data; Timus-Nasco JV; TKL Constructing; TMG Services; Trinity of Utah; TSS-GARCO JV; US Workforce; Venus Unlimited; Veterans NW Construction; Vista Management; VSGI; Webb Construction; Weeks Marine; White Construction Group; Willis-McKenneys; WINN Construction; and WRS Compass received a collective $1,434,641,691.00 for construction at Joint Base Lewis McChord; Herbert Hoover Dike Culverts; Ft. Sheridan (Army Reserve Center Phase I); Letterkenny Army Depot; the National Guard at Salt Lake City, Draper, West Jordan and St. George, UT; Ft. McCoy, WI (dining facility); Ft. Jackson (two basic training barracks); Hurlburt Field (fuel storage facility); Marine Corps Air Station, Yuma (repairing aircraft parking apron and taxiway E); Joint Base Charleston Base (SABER construction and maintenance); Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam (Quality Assurance Laboratory); construction around Mississippi River and its tributaries; construction projects located primarily within the NAVFAC Southeast AOR; Ft. Leonard Wood, MO (Basic Training Complex Barracks & operations facilities); Nebraska Army and Air National Guard; Wyoming National Guard; Buckley AFB (Runway 14/32); Otis Air National Guard Base, MA; transportation facility, supply warehouse and armory at Naval Weapons Station, Yorktown; for the preparation of plans and specifications for civil projects within the NAVFAC Pacific AOR; for construction projects (e.g. administrative & industrial facilities, housing facilities, child care centers, recreational/fitness centers, retail complexes, warehouses, community centers, medical facilities, airfield facilities, armories, fire stations, auditoriums, religious facilities) located primarily within the NAVFAC Northwest AOR; for surveying and mapping services in the Naval Facilities Engineering Command (NAVFAC) Southwest; repairing DOD Army medical facilities in the south eastern United States; DoD Army medical facilities in the Southeastern United States; for natural resource services at various locations within the NAVFAC Southwest AOR; for the Dredged Material Placement Facility (DMPF) 3-D; for dredging the Delaware River, the East Rockaway Inlet at Jamaica Bay, West Baton Rouge Parish, West Feliciana Parish, St. Martin Parish, and St. Mary Parish, LA; for dredging in the Neches River Channel in Jefferson and Orange Counties, TX, the Galveston Entrance Channel, TX, Portland Harbor, ME, and U.S. Naval Station Kings Bay; for placing $3,900,000 million cubic yards of sand to restore the Long Branch reach of the Sea Bright to Manasquan Project to its initial fill profile; and for maintenance, repair, remodeling and minor new construction in support of Ft. Benning, Camp Merrill, Ft. Carson, and Camp Rudder public works departments.

FOOD SERVICES

Federal Express received $49,778,917 for packing and transporting perishable subsistence. This contract provides for cold-chain packing, logistics and international air transportation of primarily fresh fruits and vegetables from the U.S. West Coast to various Pacific locations in support of the Defense Commissary Agency and DLA. Work will be performed in Japan, Korea, Guam and Alaska. DOD has decided to purchase from U.S. businesses and spend a millions shipping produce across the Pacific, instead of purchasing from local businesses (e.g. Japanese, Korean), which could improve strained relations between the U.S. military and the local communities they occupy.

Employment Source Incorporated; Georgia Vocational Rehabilitation Agency; Muir Copper Canyon Farms; Texas Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services; US Foods; and Washington State Services for the Blind received a collective $172,547,751.00 for dining facility attendant services, food services, fresh fruits & vegetables, and food and beverage support at Joint Base Lewis-Mchord, Ft. Bragg, Ft. Gordon,JBSA Lackland, and to customers in Kansas, Missouri and elsewhere.

FUEL AND ENERGY PRODUCTS

Brad Hall & Associates; Darden Putman Energy & Logistics; Great Lakes Petroleum; JD Logic; Mansfield Oil; Merlin Petroleum; Petroleum Traders; RKA Petroleum Companies; Team BWT; and Troy Co. received $354,224,930.00 for fuel.

Heil Trailer International received $18,315,525 for 138 flatrack refueling capability (FRC) units. Georgia Power Company received $16,063,059 for electrical services at Ft. Gordon. Graybar Electric received $270,509,725 for maintenance and repair in the Alaska and Northeast Regions. Firetrace Aerospace received a maximum $22,309,400 for fuel tank fire suppression kits for heavy tactical vehicles. Walsh-Butt JV received a maximum $12,598,778 for replacing boilers located at Wright Patterson AFB.

Acciona Energy North America; Apex Wind Energy Holdings; Borrego Solar; Cobra Industrial Services; Dominion Energy; Element Power; Emerald Infrastructure; Enel Green Power North America; Energy Matters; Gehrlicher Solar America Corporation; Johnson Controls Government Systems; Lend Lease; LTC Federal; New Generation Power; NRG Energy; Photon Finance; Siemens Government Technologies; Silverado Power; Solar Power Ventures; Standard Solar; Sunpower Corporation; and Washington Gas Energy Systems received a maximum $7,000,000,000 for use in competing and awarding Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) task orders. These PPA will provide for the purchase of energy from renewable and alternative energy production facilities that are designed, financed, constructed, operated and maintained by private sector entities on private land or on installations under jurisdiction of the Department of Defense. These contracts are for the use of solar technology.

HEALTH AND SANITATION

BioFire Diagnostics received a maximum $26,154,906 for procuring reagents, extraction and inhibition kits. CACI received $8,742,643 for supporting AFMSA mission in areas of program management, materiel management, which encompass receipt, storage, and distribution of material in all Air Force medical treatment facilities worldwide and in support of wartime contingency operations.

Bergstrom received a maximum $16,867,670 for servicing the heating and air conditioning system installed in M997A3 ambulances. G4S Government Solutions received $8,960,604 for fuel, fire protection, emergency management and emergency medical services at Patrick AFB.

Metalcraft received a maximum $8,893,932 for fire extinguishers and brackets. Certified Stainless Service (doing business as West-Mark) received a maximum $382,500,000 for procurement of commercial fire-fighting equipment.

Aseptico received a maximum $28,189,665 for dental operating system and accessories. Bausch & Lomb; Dentsply International; Johnson & Johnson; Medline Industries; North American Rescue; Ortho Clinical Diagnostics; Phoenix Textile Corp.; and Thomas Scientific received $240,712,671 for various medical products. Boeing received $8,729,859 for services in support of the Cargo Platform Health Environment for Non-recurring Engineering. Choctaw Contracting Services received $12,929,114 for physician and health care services.

Cadence Pharmaceuticals received a maximum $6,643,914 for acetaminophen injections. Catapult Health Technology Group received $53,834,146 for IT support services at multiple locations of the Army Research Laboratory. Donald L. Mooney Enterprises received $11,028,106 for nursing services at San Antonio Military Medical Center.

NeuroLogica Corp. received a maximum $12,000,000 for radiology systems, subsystems, components.

IAP World Services received $11,500,000 for providing facility, refuse collection, swimming pools, wastewater, water and environmental maintenance services at NAS Patuxent River; Webster Outlying Field; and Solomons Recreation Center. Kokosing Construction Company received $8,675,935 to provide 24/7 Confined Disposal Facility operations at the Indiana Harbor & Canal Confined Disposal Facility. The City of Aberdeen, MD received $16,764,000 to provide water and wastewater capital improvement for the Aberdeen Proving Ground Installation.

Philips Healthcare received maximum $46,250,000 for maintenance services and $17,082,500 to conduct biomedical equipment maintenance at various military treatment facilities. Stryker Orthopaedics received a maximum $85,469,865 for orthopedic hip and knee procedural packages. TCMP Staffing Services; Chesapeake Educational Services; CasePro; Magnificus Corp; Professional Performance Development Group; Kuhana-Spectrum Joint Venture; and Absolute Arora JV received a combined $40,000,000 for nursing services in support of the Naval Medical Center, Portsmouth, VA.

BUISNESS AND BUREAUCRACY

ASM Research received $20,168,768 for the operation and maintenance of the Army Training Requirements and Resources System. CACI received $14,210,271 for worldwide logistics services supporting Military Sealift Command’s Logistics directorate. 

IBM received $11,861,333 for the AF-IPPS Program to integrate the Air Force military personnel and pay processes into one system. EDC Consulting received a maximum $8,588,035 to design, develop, integrate, test, implement and field the Army’s IFPPS Increment I.

Dynamic Technology Systems received $11,626,692 for electronic publishing and automating of Army forms-based business processes. Federal Express, Polar Air Cargo and UPS have each been awarded $171,000,000 for Worldwide Express 5 (WWX-5) small package delivery services. Xerox received a maximum $94,000,000 for acquisition, installation, supplies, technical services, parts, and training of multifunctional devices.

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*Final note: In recent months, DOD has branded several contracts with the following stamps: Small Business, Small Disadvantaged Business, Woman Owned Small Business, and Small Disadvantaged Woman Owned Business.

**Any clerical errors are the author’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.


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BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for September 2013

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The Pentagon Spent $63,147,201,984.00 Before the Government Shutdown

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $63,147,201,984.00 on 630 individual contracts during September 2013. For comparison, DOD spent $16,000,324,569.00 on 238 contracts in July and $30,291,741,372.37 on 330 contracts in August. Here is how September’s contracts break down:

FMS – The “Middle East”

Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations.

General Dynamics received $187,528,930 for converting 84 M1A1/M1A2 tanks to the M1A2S configuration for Saudi Arabia. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid received. 

Northrop Grumman received $219,147,421 for Joint Threat Emitter (JTE) follow-on production. This contract provides initial production, associated drawings, technical orders, retrofit kits, provisioning, and software. This contract involves FMS to Saudi Arabia

Raytheon received $19,050,973 for providing 41 improved thermal sight systems for LAV-25 to Saudi Arabia. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition.

Tower Industries received $14,524,248 for providing 6,482 practice bombs to Saudi Arabia.

Raytheon received $44,854,006 to upgrade the Patriot weapon system for the U.S. and Kuwait. This contract was a con-competitive acquisition with one bid received.

Lockheed Martin received $3,920,739,507 for production of U.S. government, THAAD Interceptors, and associated equipment to UAE. This includes manufacturing and delivery of 110 USG Interceptors, 192 THAAD Interceptors, 16 Single Missile Round Containers, and 16 THAAD Active Leak Sensor Systems.

KIG Technical Services received $16,068,275 to provide 12 Light Observation Aircraft to Yemen. This contract also provides Yemen with Electro-Optical/Infrared sensor payloads, training, spare parts and field service representatives. Work will be performed in Sterling, VA (80 percent) and Yemen (20 percent).

Hawker Beechcraft received $15,907,028 for 12 months of contractor support for the Iraq King Air 350 program.

Javelin JV received a $67,664,020 to procure 260 Block 1 rounds and command launch unit (CLU) retrofit pricing in support of FMS to Jordan, Oman, and Indonesia.

FMS – Afghanistan

Cessna Aircraft received $8,400,000 for “Over & Above repair efforts” (re-winging, repair, and re-certification) to five hail damaged C-208B aircraft. Work will be performed at Kandahar Air Base.

Navistar Defense received $10,234,891 for 75 refrigerator food supply trucks, one lot contractor spare parts and one Dari operator manual compact disk. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid solicited and with one bid received.

Northrop Grumman received $9,222,563 for work on the “intercept install capability” at FOB 101 in Afghanistan.

Northrop Grumman received $13,675,190 to procure and integrate RAM Warning Equipment to partially replace Sense and Warn assets in Afghanistan.

FMS – Europe

Alliant Techsystems Operations received $102,426,881 for production of the advanced anti-radiation guided missile (AARGRM), to include conversion of 112 AGM-88B HARMs to AGM-88E all-up-rounds and captive air training missiles (CATMs) for the U.S. Navy (97) and Italy (15), to include related supplies and services. This contract also provides conversions of eight AGM-88B HARM missiles to AGM-88E AARGM CATMs for Australia, including related supplies and services. Purchases: U.S. Navy ($80,255,871; 78 percent), Italy ($12,826,473; 13 percent), and Australia ($9,344,537; 9 percent). This contract was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1.

General Atomics received $14,179,227 for Italy’s Contractor Logistics Support Phase IV program. Work will be performed in Poway, CA. This award is the result of a sole-source acquisition.

General Atomics received $49,813,377 for France’s MQ-9 Reaper urgent request program.

General Dynamics received $8,620,188 to produce Hydra Rockets “All Up Rounds” for the Netherlands.

Lockheed Martin received $67,290,982 for mission avionics, cockpit adjustments, engineering, and other efforts to produce and deliver production and delivery of nine MH-60R aircraft to Denmark.

Insitu received $7,264,250 for repairs and modifications to previously procured ScanEagle UAS for Poland.

Lockheed Martin received $12,226,992 to provide Belgium with five sniper advanced targeting pods (ATPs). Lockheed Martin will also supply eight 1K forward looking infrareds, four two-way data links, one 1K TV, two pylons, one depot lay-in, 12 retrofit power supplies, and three retrofit 1K TVs along with integration, training, support and program management.

FMS – Australia

Marvin Engineering received $15,724,071 for procuring 355 F/A-18 BRU-32 B/A Ejector Bomb Racks for the U.S. Navy (255) and Australia (100). This contract provides eight F/A-18 BRU-32 periodic production samples for the U.S. Navy (6) and Australia (2). Purchases: USN ($11,305,737; 72 percent) and Australia ($4,418,334; 28 percent).

Boeing received $24,575,433 to procure B kits, bulk data cartridge units and mass storage units in support of F/A-18 E/F Distributed Targeting System engineering change proposal. FMS to Australia ($6,825,054, 28 percent).

Lockheed Martin received a maximum $7,382.694 to provide radar data processors to Australia.

Boeing received $9,244,672 for one F/A-18E/F and EA-18G AN/APG-79 Facility Configuration top Assembly Radar Bench System, including on-site set-up, integration and test support for software compatibility to aircrafts systems for the U.S. Navy ($1,994,673; 22 percent) and Australia ($7,249,999; 78 percent). This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

FMS – Miscellaneous

Federal Prisons Industries received $246,699,217 to procure Interceptor Body Armor Outer Tactical Vests for various FMS customers to be determined. The prison-industrial complex and the military-industrial-congressional complex intersect to produce this contract.

Orbital Sciences Corp. received $29,862,025 for Full Rate Production 7 of eight GQM-163A Coyote Supersonic Sea Skimming Target base vehicles, including associated hardware, kits and production support, for the U.S. Navy (5), and Australia (2) and Japan (1). Purchases: U.S. Navy ($19,470,590; 65 percent), Australia ($7,057,199; 24 percent), and Japan ($3,334,236; 11 percent). This contract was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1.

Goodrich Pump & Engine Control Systems received $38,459,400 to produce Hydro mechanical assembly fuel controller (for the T55-GA-714A engine program) for Australia, UAE and Turkey. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid received.

Northrop Grumman received $12,081,052 to design, develop, procure, test, install, and integrate the Australian Mission Processor Phase 3 (AMP 3) system, which will be capable of processing both Defense Support Program and Space Based Infrared Systems geosynchronous satellite infrared data. FMS to Australia.

Longbow LLC received $51,055,000 to acquire six Longbow fire control radar systems (including parts and support) for South Korea.

Raytheon received $9,727,092 to repair Patriot missile parts for Israel, Kuwait, Taiwan, Japan, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, the Netherlands and UAE.

Rolls-Royce received a maximum $406,000,000 for providing T-56 engine support to the USA, Poland, Jordan and the Philippines.

Hellfire Systems received $248,664,297 to provide 3,318 Hellfire II missiles to Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Kuwait, the Netherlands and Australia. This was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid solicited and one received.

Lockheed Martin received $10,157,112 to develop, maintain and upgrade the VISTA computer-based trainers in support of the Center for Surface Combat Systems. Purchases: U.S. Navy (25 percent), Japan (20 percent), Pakistan (20 percent), Spain (20 percent) and Norway (15 percent). This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with FAR 6.302-1(a)(2)(iii).

Raytheon received $136,248,637 for MK15 Phalanx CIWS upgrades, conversions, and overhauls. Purchases: U.S. Navy (80 percent), Japan (15 percent), the U.S. Army (4 percent) and Pakistan (1 percent). Work will be performed in eleven states. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with FAR 6.302-1(a)(2)(iii).

Precision Aerospace (doing business as Pacific Propeller) received $6,647,054 to work on Phase II of the C-130 propeller repair shop for Indonesia. Work will be performed at Bandung Air Base, Indonesia.

MITRE Corp. received $1,724,333,098 for systems engineering and integration support for Air Force Ceiling Programs and Air Force Non-Ceiling Programs. “This contract will assist in shaping and executing the Air Force core functions of DoD enterprise system engineering, architecture development, technical strategy, program strategy and program execution by providing systems engineering and deep technical expertise in acquisitions and systems analysis, electronic systems and technologies, information technologies, computing technologies and information security.” This contract involves unspecified FMS to Saudi Arabia, France, South Korea, Pakistan, Jordan, Taiwan, Columbia, Turkey, Australia, Kyrgyzstan, Sweden, Poland, Germany, Hungary, Greece, Singapore, UAE, Morocco, Finland, UK and Japan.

Raytheon received $38,634,619 to produce and sustain the miniaturized airborne GPS receiver. This contract involves unspecified FMS to NATO and other allied countries.

Seneca Telecommunications received $7,696,215 for Security Cooperation Enterprise Solution (SCES) Program Management & Advisory Services. Performance locations are Arlington, VA and Salamanca, NY. The original solicitation was issued as an other than full and open competitive action pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(5). This contract involves unspecified FMS.

BAE Systems received $7,569,034 for Instrumentation Radar Support program (IRSP) that provides engineering, logistics, and maintenance support for various radars belonging to approximately 26 ranges (foreign and domestic) to “maximize operational availability and realize economies through collective management of similar equipment,” owned by agencies with compatible missions. Work will be performed at White Sands Missile Range; DOD, Australia; Patrick AFB; Vandenberg AFB; Ft. Walton Beach, Wallops IS; Portland, OR; NTTR, NV; Edwards AFB; China Lake; the UK; Tonopah; Yuma, AZ; Nellis AFB; Andros Island; Patuxent River, MD; Vidsel, Sweden; South Korea; Hill AFB, Utah; San Nicolas Island, CA; Point Mugu, CA; Shemya; Pacific Missile Range Facility, HI; Germany; and Cobra Dane. This contract involves FMS to the UK, Germany, Taiwan, Australia, Sweden, Norway and South Korea.

SALIENT CONTRACTS

Al Salam Aircraft Corp. (of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia) received $33,062,405 for contractor development, facility work, schedule development, and performance reporting on the F-15SA installation program. This program converts 70 F-15S aircraft to 70 F15SA aircraft. Two aircraft will undergo conversion at the Boeing plant in St. Louis, MO, with the remaining 68 undergoing conversion in Riyadh.

Boston Dynamics received a maximum $9,983,844 to work on the Legged Squad Support System (LS3) for DARPA.

Rockwell Collins received a maximum $8,476,061 for DARPA’s DISARMER research effort. This contract provides for development of “a quantizer that realizes the full potential of a low-jitter photonic sample and holds (pS&H) in a direct conversion digital receiver based on a photonics-enabled, analog-to-digital converter (pADC) with a 4GHz IBW and greater than 10 effective number of bits (ENOB) for an undersampled 12 GHz signal.”

Trex Enterprises Corp. received $23,550,321 for military imaging surveillance technology-long range (MIST-LR) technical area 1. This program researches computational imaging techniques in support of beyond-the-diffraction-limit imaging in order to identify targets at extended ranges supporting operations in denied environments.

Bukkehave received $15,075,272 for providing Burkina Faso with twenty Mercedes-Benz Atego trucks. This contract includes an option to sell more trucks to other USAFRICOM FMS customers: Burundi, Uganda, Niger, Libya and Chad. Kellogg, Brown & Root received $14,242,049 for base operation support services at Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti and Manda Bay, Kenya. The work to be performed provides for security operations, emergency management, fire/emergency services, air operations, ordnance, supply operations, laundry services, MRW, food services, housing, janitorial services, grounds maintenance, pest control, refuse collection, roadwork, electrical generation, wastewater treatment, water operations, vehicles management, and environmental services.

General Dynamics received $49,000,000 for the Directed Energy Bio-effects Research program, which conducts research on directed energy and kinetic energy systems in order to “develop novel bio-effects applications and assist in transitioning DOD technologies.” Research includes: directed energy weapon effectiveness and safety, directed energy bio-mechanisms, radio frequency bio-effects modeling and simulation, and human effectiveness analysis and integration.

GSD&M received $41,000,000 for U.S. Air Force national advertising and marketing services. The Pentagon is spending millions of tax-payer dollars to attract youth.

Honeywell Technology Solutions received $13,480,175 to support the MEU Augmentation program in Kuwait. Contrack International received $49,412,740 to work at Army Prepositioned Stocks Facilities at Camp Arifjan. Technology and Supply Management received $29,429,017 to provide energy efficient shelters to Camp Buehring, Kuwait.

IAP Worldwide Services received $100,000,000 to provide emergency support function public works and engineering tasks during incidents of national significance serving FEMA Regions IV through VIII. The Louis Berger Group received $50,000,000 to provide emergency support function public works and engineering tasks during incidents of national significance.

Maersk Line received $12,524,245 to charter the LTC JOHN U.D. PAGE in support of the U.S. Army’s ammunition prepositioning program at Diego Garcia. Sealift Inc. received $8,799,785 to charter the M/V MAJ BERNARD F. FISHER in support of the U.S. Air Force’s at-sea prepositioning program at Diego Garcia.

Maintenance Engineers received $9,000,000 for labor and maintenance to “maintain healthy grass, trees, shrubs, and plants and present a clean, neat, and professional appearance at Hill AFB and Little Mountain, Utah.” Once upon a time, lower enlisted ranks provided this service. Now the grass is mowed by professionals whose corporate bosses make millions.

PAR Government Systems received $85,000,000 in support of operations. This award has been approved on an other than full and open competition basis pursuant to the authority of 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(6), National Security. This clause states: “the disclosure of the agency’s needs would compromise the national security unless the agency is permitted to limit the number of sources from which it solicits bids or proposals.” The U.S. government is admitting it is non-transparent in the name of national security.

Raytheon received $19,351,087 to research advanced imaging techniques in support of “beyond-the-diffraction-limit imaging” for the MIST-LR Technical Area 2 project at DARPA.

Resolution Consultants (an AECOM-ENSAFE JV) received $6,926,817 for the Regional Groundwater Investigation at Naval Weapons Industrial Reserve Plant, Bethpage. The New York state government claims “there is no evidence that the health of people living and working in Bethpage is being adversely affected by site-related contaminants.” However, the EPA states “trichloroethylene, tetrachlorethylene, dichloroethylene and vinyl chloride, and chromium contamination at the Northrop Grumman facility entered the groundwater through various source areas. These include recharge basins, sumps, dry wells, spill areas and former hazardous waste storage areas.” This investigative report is quite education.

Scitor Corp. received $27,000,000 to provide human identification research and technology assessments. This is a R&D effort, which includes biometric technology development, assessment, demonstration and prototyping.

Sikorsky Aircraft received $84,000,000 for support services and incidental material to provide FMS and “other government agency” customers the H-60 Black Hawk.

URS Federal Services received $10,628,212 for maintenance and support of State Department and Office of Security Cooperation-Iraq “Green” equipment.

ACADEMIC COMPLICITY

The University of Edinburgh recently divested from Ultra Electronics, which makes navigation equipment for U.S. drones. Meanwhile, U.S. academe boasts a history of cooperation and collusion with the Pentagon. The contracts from September 2013 exemplify this relationship:

Draper Laboratory received $15,582,635 for studies, analyses, engineering, component development, prototyping, test integration, demonstrations and R&D of hardware and software “in order to maintain various Navy systems over their planned life cycle.” This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with the statutory authority of 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) as implemented by FAR 6.302-1.

The Corporation of Mercer University received $12,380,083 for work on the TH-1H, UH1N, and HH-60G Aircraft Structural Integrity Program and Mechanical Equipment and Subsystem Integrity Program. The contract includes engineering research and technical support services to analyze potential structural/mechanical deficiencies related to the Air Force rotary-wing weapons systems.

Microelectronics Advanced Research Corp. (MARCO) received $15,549,979 for work on the Semiconductor Technology Advanced Research Network (STARnet) for DARPA. STARnet is a nationwide network of multi-university research centers that strive to keep DOD “at the forefront of the global microelectronics revolution.”

The MITRE Corp. received $626,200,000 for work at the National Security Engineering Center This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid received.

Johns Hopkins University Applied Research Laboratory (JHU/APL) received $9,000,000 to provide technologies for the interdiction of CBRNE material. “This effort will support the nation’s weapons of mass destruction-related counterforce, consequence assessment, defeat, and arms control objectives.” JHU/APL received $6,765,425 to “design, develop, test and demonstrate advanced net-centric, multi-INT exploitation and fusion capabilities that are capable of exploiting real-time operational SIGINT and IMINT to improve situational awareness and enable event recognition.”

Georgia Tech Applied Research Corporation (GTARC) received $14,980,979 for “AATTC sensor, EW, tactics, integration, engineering and training. The delivery order will focus on generation of threat system modeling and simulation roadmaps, engineering studies to identify investment alternatives; generation of system roadmaps with investment strategies; technology insertion including hardware and software design, prototyping, debugging, integration and qualification; modeling and simulation analysis; and flight test engineering to include test strategies.” GTARC received $8,989,312 for AATC sensor, modernization and EWCTF integration engineering and test.

GTARC received $24,973,043 for the SENSIAC program executive office (PEO) for command, control, communications, computers and intelligence (C4I), sensors development and integration engineering functions. The contract will explore, through analysis and experimentation, innovative sensor concepts and emerging technologies that will enable improved joint force commander situational awareness and C2 capability.

GTARC received $7,956,371 to analyze the response of Army systems to advanced jamming and develop methods against this jamming.  GTARC received $10,120,376 for NAVAIR PMA213 to improve approach and landing systems for aircraft including JSF and UAS through sensor data fusion of navigational sensing systems with air traffic control. GTARC received $8,359,715 for sensor development, analysis, and evaluation. GTARC received $25,000,000 for development and support of Multi-spectral Missile Warning System Systems Integration Lab. GTARC received $24,999,999 for PMA209 systems engineering, design and development (e.g. sensor suite integration, sensor fusion algorithm development, situational awareness enhancements) for a variety of fixed wing and rotary aircraft. GTARC received $19,182,573 for joint electronic advanced technology engineering (JEAT), specifically offensive and defensive capabilities throughout the electromagnetic spectrum.

AFGHANISTAN CONTRACTS

Inglett and Stubbs International received $8,198,147 for operation and maintenance of the 56 Megawatt turbine/diesel generator power plant at Bagram Airfield.

Mects Services JV received $47,974,289 for logistical services and spare parts for the Persistent Ground Surveillance System in Afghanistan. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(5). 

NCI Information Systems received $53,018,129 for logistics services in support of Program Executive Office Soldier and its subordinate project managers. Performance locations will be Afghanistan and Ft. Belvoir, VA.

SAIC received $179,585,058 for working on the Saturn Arch (counter-IED) program. Work will be performed in Djibouti, USA and Afghanistan. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid solicited and with one bid received.

SENTEL Corporation received $9,609,809 for integrated logistics support and related services. Performance location will be in Afghanistan with incremental funding from fiscal 2013 Operations and Maintenance Army funds.

Serco, Inc. received $6,854,741 for the full spectrum of support services for the Logistics Civil Augmentation program. Performance location will be Afghanistan and Kuwait.

SRI International received $62,337,287 for work on the Desert Owl program in the USA and Afghanistan. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid solicited and with one bid received.

Sterlingwear of Boston received a maximum $9,005,933 for field jackets for the Afghanistan National Police.

TCOM L.P. received $14,926,978 for 22M aerostat parts and spares in support of the Army’s Persistent Ground Surveillance System Program.

UNMANNED SYSTEMS

Aerovironment received $6,621,959 and $29,049,837 for switchblade agile munitions systems and associated hardware and support services. The latter contract was non-competitive.

Battelle Memorial Institute received $16,649,854 for the procurement of Man Transportable Robotic System MK 2 battery boxes. 

General Atomics received $12,844,738 for MQ-9 stationary targeting improvements, specifically the development/delivery of improved Lynx synthetic aperture radar (SAR) on the MQ-9 “to allow for a more streamlined approach to targeting and quicker decision making by the crew.” Raytheon received $13,185,564 for additional quantities MTS-B High-Definition Infrared (HD-IR) turrets for the MQ-9 Reaper. This contract provides for the purchase of an additional 24 MTS-B HD-IR turrets.

General Atomics received $70,163,380 to conduct MQ-1C (Gray Eagle) 4.3.2 software development and depot repair. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition. General Atomics received $173,113,088 for work on Gray Eagle logistics in support of “Block 1 program of record and quick reaction capability.”

Hydroid Inc. received $36,323,734 for the procurement of unmanned underwater vehicles. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) as implemented by FAR 6.302-1.

Insitu Inc. received $300,000,000 for hardware, operations and maintenance on the ScanEagle operated by USSOCOM. Services include: replacement air vehicles, spare and consumable parts, and in-theatre field service representatives to supplement naval special warfare operators. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

Northrop Grumman received $17,481,180 for engineering and software sustainment services, including Littoral Combat Ship suitability follow-on testing, in support of the Fire Scout (MQ-8B) UAV.

Northrop Grumman received $40,402,500 and $169,851,218 for logistics support for the RQ-4 Global Hawk, which includes fielded air vehicles, engines, payloads, ground segments, and support segments. Northrop Grumman received $114,217,221 for Global Hawk LRIP Lot 11 advance procurement. Northrop Grumman received $7,902,648 for Global Hawk ground segment communications spares.

Northrop Grumman received $9,981,663 for operations and maintenance services on the Global Hawk Maritime – Demonstrator. Services include: manpower to increase operational tempo from nine maritime ISR missions per month to a sustained level of 15 missions per month.

GEAR, EQUIPMENT AND TRAINING

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $14,952,780 and $24,985,092 for tactical airlift materials, manufacturing and testing engineering system design and development program for DOD ground vehicles.

AMTEC Corporation received $25,000,000 for 40mm grenade ammunition integration, fabrication and testing support. Federal Cartridge received $17,104,003 for .40-caliber ball and jacketed hollow point ammunition in support of the U.S. Coast Guard and NCIS. The .40-caliber ball and jacketed hollow point ammunition will be used for training as well as law enforcement missions. General Dynamics received a maximum $8,000,000 for medium caliber aircraft guns and ammunition handling systems.

Armor Express received $38,247,272 for three years for the supply of protective under garments. Burlington Apparel Fabrics (division of Burlington Industries) received a maximum $9,552,000 for poly/wool serge cloth. Carter Enterprises received $38,090,595 for the supply of protective under garments. Short Bark Industries received $34,102,670 for the supply of protective under garments. McRae Industries received a maximum $6,810,007 for hot weather combat boots. Rayco Supply received a maximum $9,900,000 for flight deck trousers. SNC Manufacturing (Orocovis, Puerto Rico) received a maximum $98,147,085 for Army combat uniform coats. Travis Association for the Blind received $13,717,043 for organizational clothing and individual equipment warehousing and repair. This contract is an Ability One set-aside for National Industries for the Blind.

BAE received a maximum $65,972,500 for procurement of lightweight, advanced combat helmets. Ceradyne Inc. received $151,200,000 for enhanced small arm protective inserts.

BAE Systems received $15,361,368 for the procurement of 1,573 Marine Corps transparent armor gun shields (MCTAGS), 3,346 battery-powered motorized traversing units (BPMTU), 4,009 turret soft covers, and technical manual updates. This contract was not competitively procured under 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) as implemented by FAR 6.302-1. BAE received $30,745,188 for engineering, design, logistics, test and evaluation support of the Bradley engineering change proposal effort for acceleration of Bradley engineering change proposal technologies. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid solicited and with one bid received.

Camel Manufacturing received a maximum $7,482,250 for frame type expandable tents. North American Manufacturing received a maximum $19,061,250 for the procurement of military cots. North Coast Outfitters received a maximum $148,566,000 for entire line of transfer and deployment, canisters, carts, litter platforms and adaptable accessories. Propper International (Mayaguez, Puerto Rico) received a maximum $137,828,391 for modular lightweight load carrying equipment.

Chemring Ordnance received $16,100,832 for the Anti-Personnel Obstacle Breaching System (APOBS) MK 7 MOD 2, National Stock Number 1375-01-508-4975. APOBS is an explosive live charge system that allows safe breaching through complex antipersonnel obstacles, particularly land mines.

Cubic Defense Applications received $12,575,953 for the procurement of weapon instrumentation that will integrate into the Instrumented – Tactical Engagement Simulation System, Increment II (I-TESS II) baseline capabilities. The I-TESS II system is used in military operations in urban terrain facilities and non-live fire maneuver ranges located at various Marine Corps bases and installations.

DynCorp received $19,374,170 for logistics support services at Fort Campbell, KY.

General Dynamics received $255,486,000 to support the program manager, crew served weapons, which has a requirement to satisfy the M2A1 quick change barrel (QCB) kit requirement for the Army and other services. This contracting effort procures the additional M2A1 QCB kits for the continued fielding of the M2A1 weapon, and to replace already fielded M2s with the new M2A1 configuration. General Dynamics received $48,759,323 for modernizing U.S. Marine Corps Range Training Systems (RTSs).

GeoNorth received $9,833,832 for support in conducting pre-deployment training exercise events at the Marine Air Ground Task Force Training Center. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with the Small Business Administration 8(a) program.

Hardigg Industries received a maximum $10,607,100 for plastic trunk lockers.

HDT EP, Inc. received a maximum $9,000,000 for compressor with retro fit kits.

IBIS TEK received $7,493,288 for long-term armor solution B-kits for the family of medium tactical vehicles.

Kongsberg Defence and Aerospace received $8,953,530 for depot support and system spares for the M153, CROWS. Applied Resources and Choctaw Manufacturing Defense Contractors received $42,000,000 for Platform Integration Kits to be used to interface between the platform and CROWS components.

L-3 received $31,391,055 for FUM-153 A/B Point Detonating/Delay fuses.

Manufacturing Engineering Systems received $7,615,671 to provide education support services required by Army Continuing Education System (ACES) in education offices within (CONUS) and OCONUS. NCI Information Systems Inc. received $16,326,175 for supporting the Army National Guard Training Division and their Distributed Learning Program.

MAS Zengrange received $9,387,200 for transmitters, receivers and expendable XrX receivers for the mini-demolition remote firing device. The mini-demolition remote firing device is an ultra-high frequency digital radio controlled initiation system designed for the remote initiation of munitions and explosives. Work will be performed in Wellington, New Zealand.

Nammo Talley received $40,000,000 for the purchase of scalable offensive hand grenades in support of USSOCOM. Work will be performed in Vihtavuori, Finland.

Oshkosh received $12,335,766 for contractor logistics support (CLS) for the Medium Tactical Vehicle Replacement Vehicle (MTVR). CLS includes program, field service representatives, data (technical manuals and interactive electronic technical manual), and repair support for the MTVR. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with FAR 6.302-1. Oshkosh received $7,748,882 for the installation of Medium Tactical Vehicle Replacement (MTVR) Armor System upgrades on 430 MTVR’s in support of Marine Corps units located on Okinawa. This contract was not competitively procured under 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) as implemented by FAR 6.302-1. Oshkosh received $22,349,647 for the procurement of 479 M1240A1 rocket propelled grenade net kits, NSN 5180-01-613-2865, for use on the MRAP and Marine ATVs. This action will also procure integrated logistics support to develop, validate and verify installation instructions and engineering support.

Roco Rescue Inc. received $12,000,000 for technical recovery kits and associated training. This procurement will supply specialized commercial equipment contained in four technical rescue kits (confined space, structural collapse, heavy rapid extrication deployment system, and light rapid extrication deployment system). Additionally, the contractor will supply product improvement reviews, formal operator and maintenance training courses, kit replacement parts, and contractor logistics support.

S.E.R.E. Solutions received $8,043,817 for survival, evasion, resistance, and escape instruction services at Fairchild AFB and Lackland AFB.

MISSILES, ROCKETS AND BOMBS

BAE received $39,058,362 for acquiring and working on the AN/AAR-57(V) Common Missile Warning System (CMWS), and for associated spare parts and systems engineering, technical, and logistics support services for OT-255/ALQ-212(V) Advanced Threat Infrared Countermeasures. This is a non-competitive acquisition.

General Dynamics received $18,716,689 to reduce hardware unit price for Hydra rockets, motors and practice warheads in accordance with contract terms and conditions in support of DOD and FMS customers. General Dynamics received $26,897,122 for supporting the Mission Payload Module Non-Lethal Weapon System (MPM-NLWS), product manager non-lethal systems, program manager, infantry weapon systems. Contractor will develop, test, produce, and prepare all pertinent documentation, and deliver the MPM-NLWS to respond with a non-lethal system mounted onto the Marine Corps transparent gun shield on the HMMWV (or its replacement). The MPM-NLWS will deliver an enhanced pyrotechnic (thermobaric effect) munition from a tube-launch system. MPM-NLWS munitions will be designed to suppress personnel, deal with crowd control, access or area denial, convoy operations, or engaging a threat.

General Dynamics received $15,093,132 to produce and deliver up to 80 Ku-Band terminals, Ka-Band conversion kits and X-Band conversion kits for the NAWCAD Special Communications Requirements Division (SCRD). The SCRD shall install, test and evaluate satellite communications on the move technologies in support of DOD advanced liaison response vehicle.

Jacobs Technology received $11,711,449 for research operations support services. The contract modification provides operations support of the Experimental Liquid Rocket program within the scope of the basic contract.

L-3 received $15,200,000 for E-LRALT additional common qualification testing; updates to the Mission Assurance Plan and Parts, Materials, and Processes Mission Assurance Plan; re-planning activities; and launch services. L-3 received $9,100,000 for Short Range Air Launch Target Assembly, Integration, and Test, to include additional common qualification testing; updates to the Mission Assurance Plan and Parts, Materials, and Processes Mission Assurance Plan; re-planning activities; and launch services.

Lockheed Martin received $20,000,000 to identify technology for introduction into present and future Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense Baselines and upgrades. Lockheed Martin received $18,254,540 to exercise and incrementally fund Aegis weapon system engineering and technical services. Lockheed Martin received $48,817,610 for engineering, configuration management, associated equipment/supplies, quality assurance, information assurance, and other operation efforts required for the Aegis development and test sites.

Longbow received $7,457,989 for engineering services in support of the Laser Hellfire Missile program.

Manu Kai received $72,850,583 for range operations support and base operations support services at the Pacific Missile Range Facility. Work will be performed in Kauai, HI.

Northrop Grumman received $11,964,262 to work on intercontinental ballistic missile reentry field support equipment.

Quantitech received $9,899,983 to provide systems engineering and test and evaluation support for the Program Directorate for Counter-Rocket, Artillery and Mortar (C-RAM). This was a non-competitive contract.

Raytheon received $10,300,806 for Block II Engineering Analysis for the U.S. Army and Air Force AIM-9X Block II Missile System, including program protection implementation plans and technical studies and services.

Raytheon received $243,478,659 to procure 89 Standard Missile-6 Block I All Up Rounds, spares, containers, and round design agent services. Work will be performed in eight U.S. states (85.4 percent) and the UK (14.6 percent).

Raytheon received $33,399,925 for contractor logistic support, installation, and sustainment of Minuteman MEECN program and Minuteman MEECN program upgrade. Northrop Grumman received $9,933,000 for integration support of the Minuteman III under the intercontinental ballistic missile prime integrated contract.

Raytheon received $7,992,000 to procure TOW Missiles for the USMC. This was a non-competitive acquisition.

Schafer Corp. received $8,449,974 for particle analysis services related to nuclear test ban treaty verification for the Air Force Technical Applications Center (AFTAC). McCrone Associates received $8,000,000 to process and analyze particle samples for the purpose of nuclear test ban treaty verification for AFTAC.

Trex Enterprises Corp. received a maximum $6,799,694 for thermally insensitive telescope mirrors. The contractor will design, model, prototype, and test chemical vapor composite silicon carbide mirrors for the SM-3 seeker telescope.

CYBER, COMMS AND IT

BAE received $62,267,353 for the acquisition of trade studies, design, development and testing to achieve a demonstration level of competency of Counter-IED multi-cycle vehicle-mounted system technology in support of JIEDDO. NIITEK received $10,639,710 for six Husky Mounted Detection System ground penetrating radar test units and a test support package including spare parts, technical data, an interface control document, logistics data, and test support services. SAIC received $49,412,941 for future radiographic systems (FRS), which is a portable system that provides real-time downrange imaging capability, assisting EOD technicians in analyzing and determining the condition of a device or munitions. This contract was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Boeing received $24,000,000 for engineering and technical services for Reconfigurable Transportable Consolidated Automated Support System (RTCASS) Station software and hardware, RTCASS Next Generation Operational Management System, Direct Test software, and migration of Operational Test Program Sets (OTPSs) on the RTCASS and contractor developed OTPS. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

CA, Inc. received $8,640,639 for software maintenance on 764,710 licenses at Ft. Belvoir. Cardinal Health 200 received a maximum $7,089,834 to establishment a license agreement for use of various software applications. Conscious Security received $8,903,818 for procuring Axway brand name software licenses and maintenance through 2018. ViaSat, Inc. received $9,625,096 for KS-252 follow-on production and sustainment. This contract provides for production, software/firmware/hardware modification, repair, and technical support.

Calibre Systems received $9,686,131 for Operating and Support Management Information System Service. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid received.

Data Solutions & Technology received $7,405,772 to provide support services to the Combat Incident Analysis Division Anti-Armor Analysis program. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid received.

DRS-TSI received $31,838,194 for supporting rapid response solutions for command, control, communications and computer capabilities managed by Product Director Defense Wide Transmission Systems, through the Rock Island Network Operations Service Center. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition.

EOIR Technologies received $11,461,706 for reverse engineering, limited prototyping for exploitation, test and evaluation, as well as validation on targets of interest. The contractor shall provide program management, engineering, and technical support related to a wide range of technologies managed in the Intelligence and Information Warfare Directorate, Technical Characterization and Exploitation Branch and Cyber Offensive Operations Division.

Exelis Systems Inc. received $20,688,985 for work on the Upgraded Solid State Module project. This contract delivers four USSM types: Array Module, Antenna Group Driver, Sidclobe Canceller/Blanker, and Subarray Group Driver. Exelis Systems Inc. received $9,984,977 for work on the GEODSS Hardware Version Release project. Exelis Systems received $55,109,387 for product line management, system engineering, system repairs, acquisition, repair and qualification of spare parts; PMis, radome maintenance, supply management, plans, roadmaps & sustainability assessments, PMRs, reports, vendor maintenance agreements/software licenses, LSR brochures; requirements definition, analysis and modeling /software modeling/risk reduction; software integration lab operations/maintenance, mission assurance, configuration/data management, technical order management, proposal development, engineering studies and analysis, system performance metrics collection, and obsolescence/sustainability analysis reports.

FLIR Systems received $49,900,000 for repair and sustainment of the electro-optic sensors systems for the Ground Based Operational Surveillance System (G-BOSS). This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) as implemented by FAR 6.302-1.

GATR Technology received $440,045,436 for working on Warfighter Information Network – Tactical (WIN-T) and efforts to procure multiple size Inflatable Satellite Antennas, associated training, and logistics support.

Intuitive Imaging received a maximum $15,000,000 for digital imaging network-picture archive communications system.

Kalino received $7,085,485 support and training (non-personnel) services in Honolulu, HI.

L-3 received $20,292,121 for services to test and develop a beta design of the Gemini III transmission. Under this effort, the contractor shall further develop, integrate, and test the Gemini transmission design initiated under Tank Automotive Research, Development and Engineering Center, Broad Agency Announcement Topic 24 program. L-3 received $21,147,601 for hardware, tear-down and evaluation, and repair and modification services (up to one I/J Band Amplifier, Radio Frequency AM-7536/ULQ-21(V) Microwave Power Module, First Article, and 375 I/J Band Amplifiers, Radio Frequency AM-7536/ULQ-21(V) Microwave Power Module production units) for production units, and materials. L-3 received $12,300,000 for Video Data Link (VDL) systems, common data link waveform documentation, waveform testing equipment and associated training.

L-3; Globecomm Systems; Harris; General Dynamics; DRS Technical Services; Booz Allen Hamilton; Serco, Inc.; Computer Sciences Corporation; Intelligent Decisions, Inc.; Lockheed Martin; AT&T Government Solutions; and LGS Innovations received a collective $4,100,000,000 for communications and transmissions systems.

Lockheed Martin received $306,500,000 to procure persistent threat detection systems and related technical support services and material. This contract was non-competitive (one bid solicited, one bid received). Lockheed Martin received $97,400,000 for a continuation of information management technology services supporting the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to include headquarters, divisions, district centers, and field operating activities.

Material and Technical Support Service Corp. received $9,500,000 for research, development, testing, analysis, and assessment support of U.S. Air Force counter-proliferation efforts.

Microsoft received $66,400,000 for premier and consulting support services to include, planning and coordination support, risk assessments and support consulting, 24/7 problem resolution assistance, field engineering support, designated engineering support and architectural consulting services. This contract was not competitively procured under 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) as implemented by the FAR 6.302-1.

New World Solutions received $35,748,885 to provide the National Guard Intelligence Center with applied remote sensing image science support. The U.S. Army INSCOM (Charlottesville, VA) is the contracting activity.

Oracle America received $35,550,000 for procuring support, “technical refresh,” and upgrades for the GCSS– Marine Corps. This contract was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Phacil, Inc. received $10,947,689 to acquire computer facilities management services to support DOD High Performance Computing Modernization Program Office (HPCMPO)-Integrated Support Services (HISS).

Radiance Technology Inc. received $28,483,883 for the acquisition innovative laser system technologies.

Raytheon received $65,000,000 for analysis, research and development, procurement, production, sustainment and training support to U.S. Army Program Manager for Special Programs. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid received.

SAIC received $35,883,761 for software engineering, hardware, integration, technical support, and training requirements of the Integrated Strategic Planning and Analysis Network targeting function, including the areas of National Target Base production and National Desired Ground Zero List development.

SOL Engineering Service received $7,000,000 for support to the Geotechnical and Structures Laboratory to perform its mission.

Superior Communications received $10,740,530 to procure Harris mobile radios and components to be utilized within the CBRNE Response Enterprise, which interfaces with first responders, National Guard teams, military tactical components, law enforcement, and other DOD entities. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Total Concepts of Design received $10,600,000 for Mark 14 Cover Assembly (national stock number: 8140-00-038-9982, part number: 2642781).

TrellisWare Technologies received $11,697,231 to provide support in the development of Mobile Ad-Hoc Networking (MANET) solutions. This contract was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1(a)(2)(iii).

True Tandem LLC received $6,930,270 to provide IT services to support the Enterprise Knowledge Services initiative for the U.S. Army Reserve Command at Ft. Bragg. CGI Federal received $12,401,434 for Computer Network Defense and Information Assurance Enterprise (CND/IA) to monitor and handle network information systems operations for an estimated 800 cases per month in the National Capital Region and to support over 26,000 users. Information Technology Agency’s security services support consists of CND, IA, security architecture, and auditing support, all of which have several sub elements. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid received. Computer Sciences Corp. received $14,601,231 for IT services to support the Technology Services Organization’s (TSO) requirements and its role as an enterprise business systems integrator for the Marine Corps.

Vadum, Inc. received $9,798,383 for R&D supporting new electronic warfare capabilities. This was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid solicited and one bid was received.

World Wide Technology received $9,967,138 for work on the DLA Radio-Frequency Identification Program upgrade.

“SPACE-BASED” CONTRACTS

Harris Corp. received $6,735,165 for sustainment of the Space Control Depot to provide uninterrupted support to Space and Missile Systems Center Space Superiority operational Offensive Counterspace and Defensive Counterspace ground based systems and the Space Test and Training Range. Honeywell Technology Solutions received $550,355,001 for system and maintenance engineering, network support integration, on-site and off-site depot level maintenance, and software maintenance of the Air Force Satellite Control Network. Northrop Grumman received $36,771,485 to provide on-orbit operations and sustainment for the Space Tracking and Surveillance Systems – Demonstrator satellites.

Lockheed Martin received $42,410,080 for advanced procurement of non-recurring engineering and long-lead materials for the space-based infrared systems GEO 5-6 program and for providing additional material items and associated engineering. Lockheed Martin received $96,287,882 for Space Based Infrared Systems contractor logistics support (operations crew support; organizational and depot maintenance) at Boulder, CO and Buckley AFB. Lockheed Martin received $16,530,842 for a sustainment support study and system modifications for the contractor logistics support and Combined Task Force efforts required for continued support for operations, maintenance, and sustainment for the operational Space-Based-Infrared System ground systems assets.

Lockheed Martin received $48,600,000 to provide ongoing sustainment of Highly Elliptical Orbit (HEO) and Geosynchronous Elliptical Orbit (GEO) on-orbit assets. This sustainment is provided by the use of FOS in SBIRS Auxiliary Support Center and SBIRS Payload On-Orbit Test Sustainment. This includes ongoing sustainment of the flight software and databases, labs infrastructure, and performance trending of the payload.

L-3 received a maximum $63,404,093 for Advanced Extremely High Frequency COMSEC TRANSEC SYSTEM hardware production.

Northrop Grumman received $19,300,000 for support and sustainment (factory operations and management support for spacecraft and sensors, as well as on-site support and in depth missile threat analysis to the 2nd Space Warning Squadron) of the Defense Support Program (DSP). Space Coast Launch Services received $35,355,805 for operations, maintenance and engineering support to critical launch, spacecraft and ordnance facilities and support systems owned by the 45th Space Wing at Patrick AFB.

Honeywell International received $485,458,000 for the Embedded GPS Inertial Navigation System (EGI). SAIC received $7,940,000 for work on the GPS Directorate Systems Engineering and Integration (SE&I) Bridge 3.0. Technology Advancement Group received $8,832,000 for GPS production and related support to the U.S. Army Geospatial Center. Thales Components Corp. received a maximum $24,793,300 for Milstar traveling wave tubes.

SAIC received $33,934,215 to collect, process, store, and maintain high-resolution 3D geospatial information by conducting flight operations and terrestrial collection operations.

RADAR CONTRACTS

ARCTEC Alaska Joint Venture received $39,327,456 to operate and maintain the Alaska Radar System, consisting of 15 remote radar sites. BAE received a maximum $94,312,136 for advanced radar warning receiver ship sets and line replaceable units. BAE received $7,300,000 to operate, maintain, and support the perimeter acquisition radar attack characterization system and site at Cavalier Air Force Station.

Lockheed Martin received $13,100,000 to procure spares and production technical data package for the AN/TPQ-53 radar program. Lockheed Martin received $7,476,578 to conduct the technical refresh and integration of the AN/TPS-59A(V)3 Radar System Netra T4-1 Server Mod Kit, to include replacement of the radar’s data processor Netra T5220, operations console computers, and re-integration of the proprietary software. This contract was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) as implemented by FAR 6.302-1. Northrop Grumman received $10,761,825 for engineering and manufacturing work on the ground/air task-oriented radar (G/ATOR). This modification was not competitively procured.

Raytheon received $230,000,000 to operate X-Band radar in support of MDA’s sensors program. TOTE Services received $6,811,097 to operate the Sea-Based X-Band Radar Platform (SBX-1) in the Pacific Ocean.

OTHER RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $46,931,841 for advanced processes for emerging systems. The overall objective of this contract is to advance materials and manufacturing and testing technology for next-generation components and systems for the sponsors. This contract, like so many others, tells the U.S. taxpayer nothing.

Applied Research Associates; Survice Engineering; Mantech International Corporation; and Filius Corporation received $48,000,000 for analytical services associated with target descriptions, vulnerability, survivability, weapons effectiveness studies and support to current operations.

Chesapeake Defense Services; HP White Laboratory; and NTS Technical Systems received a collective $18,000,000 for ballistic and non-ballistic laboratory testing.

Engility Corporation received $9,679,180 for R&D and experimental engineering services for the Army Research Laboratory’s Vehicle Technology Directorate’s platform mechanics, propulsion technologies, autonomous systems and vehicle analysis sections.

Systems Planning and Analysis, Inc. received $8,069,861 for systems engineering and analysis support, arms control support, research and development support, program planning, and propulsion support services contract.

JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER CONTRACTS

Lockheed Martin received $3,405,427,661 to manufacture and deliver 19 F-35 CTOL for the USAF ($1,823,737,540; 53.55 percent); six F-35 STOVL for the USMC ($567,802,742; 16.67 percent); four F-35 Carrier Variant (CV) aircraft for the USN ($401,457,402; 11.79 percent); two F-35 CTOL aircraft for Norway; three F-35 CTOL aircraft for Italy; and one (1) F-35 STOVL for the UK. This contract also provides for related equipment. Work will be performed in TX (55 percent); CA (15 percent); FL (5 percent); NH (5 percent); MD (5 percent), the UK (10 percent); and Italy (5 percent). Purchases: Italy, Norway, UK, Australia, Turkey, Netherlands, Canada, and Denmark ($612,429,977; 34.46 percent).

Lockheed Martin received $742,657,068 to manufacture and deliver two F-35 CTOL aircraft to Australia and three F-35 CTOL aircraft to Italy. Work will be performed in TX (55 percent); CA (15 percent); FL (5 percent); NH (5 percent); MD (5 percent); the UK (10 percent); and Italy (5 percent). Purchases: USAF ($130,677,491; 17.60 percent); the USN/USMC ($66,199,572; 8.92 percent); and Italy, Australia, UK, Turkey, Netherlands, Canada, Norway and Denmark ($545,780,005; 73.49 percent).

Lockheed Martin received $46,018,410 for working “to ensure a manufacturing base with sufficient technical knowledge is established to support F-35 production requirements.” Work will be performed in seven states (CA, TX, NH, CA, GA, FL, and NY) and Canada. Lockheed Martin received $20,461,696 for “electronic components needed to support F-35 production and sustainment requirements due to current diminishing manufacturing sources.” Lockheed Martin received $10,774,083 to provide initial mission equipment and interim technical support for the F-35 United States Reprogramming Lab. Lockheed Martin received $99,010,000 to provide parts, material and components required to deliver 19 CTOL F-35s to the USAF. Lockheed Martin received $10,000,000 for “the initial lay-in of consumable piece parts for repair of repairables (sic) at U.S. government organic depots and original equipment manufacturers” in support of the F-35 Program.

United Technologies received $214,843,107 for initial spare modules, initial spare parts, replenishment spare parts, production non-recurring efforts on the F-35. Purchases: USN/USMC ($111,245,364; 51 percent), USAF ($72,711,358; 34 percent), the UK ($6,824,288; 3 percent), Italy ($8,850,625; 4 percent), the Netherlands ($2,350,434; 1 percent), Turkey ($2,722,643; 1 percent), Canada ($1,769,504; 1 percent), Australia ($6,245,484; 3 percent), Denmark ($816,366; 1 percent), and Norway ($1,307,041; 1 percent).

Lockheed Martin received $149,041,442 for the redesign and qualification of replacement F-35 Electronic Warfare system components. Work will be performed in four states (NH, TX, FL, and SC). This contract combines purchases for the USAF ($94,000,000; 63 percent), USN ($12,340,327; 8.3 percent), USMC ($11,000,000; 7.4 percent), and international partners ($31,701,115; 21.3 percent). Raytheon received $6,796,441 to procure eight Telemetry Instrumentation Kits to provide the F-35 with Joint Stand-off Weapon Separation Test Vehicles.

OSPREY CONTRACTS

Bell-Boeing Joint Project Office received $20,516,768 for upgrades to 15 existing USMC and 8 existing USAF V-22 training devices. The Marine Corps and Air Force devices will be upgraded to the MV-22 Block C2.02 and the CV-22 Block 20.2.01 configurations, respectively. Bell-Boeing Joint Project Office received $9,523,227 for engineering and flight test aircraft modifications to incorporate the Joint Allied Threat Awareness System and APR-39D(V)2 radar warning receiver into the MV-22. MOOG Inc. received $9,920,000 for the repair of 155 Swashplate actuators in support of the V-22 aircraft. This was a non-competitive requirement, per FAR 6.302-1. Rolls-Royce received $6,672,061 to procure 434 engine flight hours and 10 low power repairs in support of the MV-22 aircraft.

HAWKEYE CONTRACTS

Northrop Grumman received $11,655,626 for the design, development, first article, and production units for ten pieces of peculiar support equipment (PSE); and the procurement of 29 additional pieces of previously developed PSE for the E-2D Advanced Hawkeye aircraft. Northrop Grumman received $226,702,989 to work on an In-flight Refueling capable E-2D Advanced aircraft. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1. Rolls-Royce received $34,020,640 for the depot repair of T56-A-427 engines in support of the E-2 Advanced Hawkeye aircraft, including the repair of 20 power sections, 10 torque meters, and 20 gearboxes, and accessories. Rolls-Royce received $48,949,100 for engine depot activation. A&D GC, Inc. received $11,398,000 to construct an E-2D Aircrew Training Facility at Naval Base Ventura County. The project includes SCIF debrief spaces, secret internet protocol routing network, uninterrupted power supply, and other construction actions.

NAVY CONTRACTS

AAR Airlift Group received $15,217,498 for “vertical replenishment and other rotary-wing logistic services,” including search and rescue support; medical evacuations; passenger transfers; and internal cargo movement. Work will be performed in the U.S. 5th Fleet and U.S. 7th FleetAORs.

Evergreen Helicopters received $8,357,142 for vertical replenishment and other rotary-wing logistic services (search & rescue support; medical evacuations; passenger transfers; internal cargo movement). Evergreen Helicopters will provide two helicopters, personnel, support equipment, and all supplies necessary to perform flight operations in the U.S. 2nd Fleet, U.S. 5th Fleet, and U.S. 6th Fleet AORs.

Alion Science and Technology received $7,524,597 for professional support services in support of the Program Executive Office for Integrated Warfare Systems and the Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Ships).

Alpha Marine Services received $6,681,778 for harbor tug services at Kings Bay and Mayport, FL.

Alutiiq-Mele received $19,066,446 for base operation support services (management & admin, weapons support, supply services, facilities investment, grounds maintenance, janitorial services, pest control, street sweeping, vehicle support, equipment services, and environmental services) at NAWS China Lake. AOC Support Services received $11,351,737 for Base Operating Support services at the NAF El Centro. Del-Jen, Inc. received $26,679,395 for base operation support services at NAS Pensacola and surrounding areas including Saufley Field, Corry Station, and Bronson Field. EJB Facilities Services received $39,019,110 for base operations support (excluding grounds and janitorial services; including pavement clearance and utilities work) at various installations in the NAVFAC Northwest AOR. Mark Dunning Industries received $6,983,716 for base operations support services (grounds maintenance and landscaping, integrated solid waste management, custodial and pest control services) at Kings Bay.

American Bureau of Shipping received $8,500,000 to provide vessel classification services in accordance with statute 46 U.S.C. 3316. Work will be performed worldwide. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with FAR 6.302-5(c)(2)(i).

Atlantic Diving Supply received $47,521,661 for 973 seven-person combat raiding craft (I-CRC) and 563 15-person combat assault craft (I-CAC) inflatable boats, 932 I-CRC and 337 I-CAC motors and secondary items.

BAE received $13,561,479 for operation and maintenance of Navy communication, electronic, and computer systems in Oahu, HI (94 percent) and Geraldton, Australia (6 percent).

BAE received $18,227,633 for maintenance and modifications on the USS Kearsarge (LHD 3). BAE Systems received $40,371,916 for maintenance and modifications on the USS Barry (DDG 52). BAE received $7,799,275 for maintenance and modifications on the USS Higgins (DDG 76). BAE received $20,691,196 for USS Green Bay (LPD 20) dry-docking, planning, repair, alteration and material support services.

EMCOR Government Services received $40,502,374 for Regional Base Operating Support services at various government facilities within a 100-mile radius of the Washington Navy Yard.

Boeing received $69,790,447 to procure one C-40A Clipper aircraft for the U.S. Navy. Boeing received $6,788,211 for ARC-210 Gen-V radio upgrade for C-32A and C-40B. Boeing received $23,604,456 for “eight additional instrumentation wafer components and support.”

Colonna’s Shipyard received $13,619,216 for drydocking, hull plating replacement, and propulsion engine removal to the USS Shamal (PC 13).

DRS Laurel Technologies received $22,008,022 for procurement of repair station console-associated training sets, engineering services, support and spares for DDG 51-class ships.

DRS Power & Control Technologies received $17,164,637 for DDG 51 Class Energy Storage Module First Article Unit preliminary design and detailed design non-recurring engineering, engineering services, and associated support.

General Dynamics (Bath Iron Works) received $13,312,764 for material and labor to complete work on the DDG 1000 deckhouse. General Dynamics (Electric Boat Corp.) received $25,668,778 for dry-docking and maintaining the USS Providence (SSN 719) in Groton, CT.

FLIR Systems Inc. received $49,852,526 for the Patrol Boat Electro-Optics System (PB-EOS) for the U.S. Coast Guard and Navy. Using the PB-EOS will enhance: low visibility & night navigation; maritime interception; coastal observation & surveillance; insertion & extraction operations; VBSS; combat search and rescue; identification friend or foe; reconnaissance & surveillance; and documenting navigational hazards.

International Marine and Industrial Applicators received $15,181,444 for preservation work (maintenance to systems and hull not available when the ship is waterborne) on the USS John C. Stennis (CVN 74). Vigor Shipyards received $7,260,245 for dry-docking, repair, and maintenance on the USS John C. Stennis (CVN 74).

Kaydon Corp. received $8,460,098 for the evaluation, repair/refurbishment and new manufacture of bull gears for the AN/SPS-49, AN/SPS-48E, and MK-82 air search radar systems.

Keystone Prepositioning Services received $7,343,358 for the operation and maintenance of three Kocak-class ships. When activated, the ships support movement of common-user and service-unique cargoes for DOD requirements.

L-3 received $10,956,633 to exercise an option for logistics support services in support of the Aircraft Intermediate Maintenance Department at NAS Pensacola and NAS Corpus Christi.  L-3 received $55,627,456 for maintenance and logistical support for 54 C-12 aircraft for the U.S. Navy (48) and the USMC (6). Work will be performed in eight U.S. states (72.5 percent); Manama (5.5 percent); Guantánamo Bay (5.5 percent); Atsugi, Japan (5.5 percent); Futenma, Japan (1.8 percent); Iwakuni, Japan (3.7 percent); Kadena, Japan ( 3.7 percent); and Misawa, Japan (1.8 percent). L-3 received $13,704,209 for the Service Life Extension Program (SLEP) of two LCAC craft. The SLEP will extend LCAC’s service life to 30 years.

LBI Inc. received $27,661,389 for procuring up to 60 deep draft submarine camel separators and associated installation, support, shipping and travel.

Lockheed Martin received $12,598,136 for design agent engineering services. Purchases: U.S. Navy (80.4 percent), Spain (6.7 percent), Germany (4.9 percent), Norway (1.9 percent), Japan (3.9 percent), and Australia (2.2 percent). This contract was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) as implemented by FAR 6.302-1.

Lockheed Martin received $23,171,609 for Product Support across Undersea Warfare (USW) Systems. This contract combines purchases for the U.S. Navy (97.4 percent) and the government of Japan (2.6 percent).

Lockheed Martin received $27,548,897 for engineering services supporting delivery, installation, and maintenance to all AN/BLQ-10(V) fleet operational systems delivered to the government. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(1), as implemented by FAR 6.302-1.

Lockheed Martin received $6,638,440 for the “repair of parts used in the AN/UYQ-70 advanced display system and the Navy’s current generation of the of Commercial-Off-The-Shelf display and processor systems for tactical and C4I applications for target acquisition and tracking, weapons control, theater air defense, anti-submarine warfare, battle group communication and airborne surveillance and control.” Work will be performed at 20 Lockheed Martin repair locations throughout the U.S. (90 percent), and Virginia Beach (10 percent).

Lockheed Martin received $95,727,501 for “definitization of the Navy’s fiscal 2012 AN/SQQ-89A(V)15 Surface Ship Undersea Warfare System production requirements and exercise of fiscal 2013 production options.” The AN/SQQ-89A(V)15 is a surface ship combat system with the capabilities to find and track undersea contacts; and to engage and evade submarines, mine-like small objects, and torpedo threats.

Maersk Line received $31,817,327 for operation and maintenance of five government-owned Maritime Prepositioning Force ships: USNS 2ND LT John P. Bobo (T-AK 3008), USNS SGT William R. Button (T-AK 3012), USNS 1ST LT Baldomero Lopez (T-AK 3010), USNS 1ST LT Jack Lummus (T-AK 3011) and USNS PFC Dewayne T. Williams (T-AK 3009). These civilian-crewed ships are deployed worldwide to strategically place equipment and supplies. Maersk Line received $7,883,584 for operation and maintenance of USNS GYSGT Fred W. Stockham (T-AK 3017). Maersk Line received $18,678,083 for the operation and maintenance of five U.S. Navy ocean surveillance ships and two U.S. Navy missile range instrumentation ships. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with the statutory authority of 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) as implemented by FAR 6.302-1. Maersk Line received $12,190,635 to charter the MV SSG Edward A. Carter Jr. to support the U.S. Army’s ammunition prepositioning program. Tote Services received $6,938,148 for the operation and maintenance of the USNS VADM K.R. Wheeler and the USNS Fast Tempo. These ships support military forces deployed worldwide.

Ocean Ships received $13,906,064 for operation and maintenance of two mobile landing platform ships, USNS Montford Point (MLP 1) and USNS John Glenn (MLP 2) which support the U.S. Navy’s prepositioning fleet by transferring rolling stock and other cargoes in-stream with other ships via ramp connections, as well as landing and deploying air-cushion non-displacement craft by means of inclined decks. Ocean Ships received $32,383,461 for operation and maintenance of eight Watson-class large, medium-speed, roll-on/roll-off ships. The ships preposition government-owned cargo, including hazardous materials such as explosives and ammunition, and vehicular, bulk and general cargoes. Offshore Service Vessels received $8,484,060 to charter the MV C-Champion, which is used as a platform for launching and recovering small boats; refueling and provisioning small boats; and assisting with limited maintenance for small boats. The vessel also provides support to maritime security operations.

Maritime International received $47,502,090 for the procurement triangular and cylindrical fender separators, DDG ship separators, Kevlar straps, and related contract support services for mooring equipment at shipyards inside and outside of the United States.

Navatek Ltd. received $7,328,471 for the Integration, Expansion and Validation of Tools for the Navy Standard Design Environment.

Northrop Grumman received $11,650,468 to procure the software development and flight test of three additional type E special signals required by the warfighter.

Northrop Grumman received $28,608,128 for completion of maritime modes development for the Multi-Platform Radar Technology Insertion Program (MP-RTIP). The total cumulative face value of the contract after this action is $1,514,521,395. Northrop Grumman received $85,300,000 to provide small tactical radar – lightweight (STARLite), synthetic aperture radar/ground moving target indicator (SAR/GMTI), system support. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid solicited and one bid received.

Northrop Grumman received $7,319,039 for support of the AN/TYQ-23(V)4 Tactical Air Operations Module, AN/TYQ-87(V)2 Sector Anti-Air Warfare Facility, Tactical Air Operations Module Interface Group, Multi-Radar Tracker, Multi-Channel Interface Unit, and critical components of the AN/TSQ-269 Mobile Tactical Air Operations Module; software sustainment, post production support (including training, logistics support, and engineering support), life cycle support, test laboratory sustainment, information assurance compliance, government property repair, and vendor level maintenance. This contract was not competitively procured under the statutory authority 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) as implemented by FAR 6.302-1.

Peckham Vocational Industries received $7,653,881 for the procurement of 3,369 full-up aircrew endurance vests, associated technical data, and spare parts for the U.S. Navy. The aircrew endurance vests include the CMU-37 crew vest with HBU-27 (1,554) and the CMU-38/P pilot vest (1,815).

Philadelphia Ship Repair received $8,476,483 for the removal of various systems (including the main propulsion shafting, controllable pitch propeller, main propulsion engines, pumps motors and valves) on at three-to-five U.S. Navy frigates. The contractor will then be required to ensure watertight integrity of the ship, balance the weight of the ship for a long ocean tow, and tow back to the PNBC Reserve Basin.

Phoenix International Holdings received $18,132,000 to manage, maintain, mobilize and operate the Submarine Rescue Diving and Recompression System (SRDRS) including associated facilities and equipment.

Progeny Systems Corp. received $10,757,105 to support the integrated shipboard/shore-based maintenance decision tool. This contract was not competitively procured under the authority of 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(5), authorized or required by Statue 15 U.S.C. 638 (r) aid to small business.

Progeny Systems received $8,257,426 to design and develop a maritime airborne service oriented engineering development model of the P-8A increment 3 architecture. Boeing received $172,322,906 to support the production (through integrated logistics; contractor support; spares; equipment; and technical publication updates) of 13 P-8A Lot IV aircraft. Raytheon received $29,531,677 for work and training in order to standup an organic depot maintenance facility to support the AN/APY-10 Radar (for the P-8A) at the Fleet Readiness Center South East, Jacksonville, FL. XTRA Aerospace received $15,958,369 to procure Boeing 737 commercial spare parts for the low rate initial production Lot IV effort in support of the P-8A fleet.

Raytheon received $7,203,307 for production of the hardware changes to the Dual Band Radar (DBR) and Common Array Power System, required to implement the DBR power system interface modifications to CVN 78.

Raytheon received a maximum $45,179,000 for manufacture and delivery of airborne low frequency sonar helicopter dipping sonar systems.

Lockheed Martin received $44,723,015 for the production and support of TB-37/U Multi Function Towed Arrays (MFTA) for the AN/SQQ-89A(V)15 Antisubmarine Warfare Combat Systems. The TB-37/U MFTA is the next generation passive and active sonar receiver.

Wartsila Defense Industries received a maximum $65,000,000 for water jet support and parts for the Improved Navy Lighterage System (INLS) at Blount Island Command; Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek-Fort Story and Naval Amphibious Base, Coronado. The work provides for water jet technical documentation, condition assessments, repairs and inventory parts management. This contract was a sole-source procurement per FAR 6.302-1.

Wyle Laboratories received $17,808,792 to procure Aircraft Electronic Attack and Electronic Support Systems modifications including analysis, design, development, integration, and testing of tactical operational flight software for electronic warfare systems in EA-6B, EA-18G, E-2C, MH-60R, BAMS, P-8A, and other advanced electronic attack derivatives and initiatives. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1. This contract combines purchases for the U.S. Navy ($17,630,704; 99 percent) and Australia ($178,088; 1 percent).

AIRCRAFT AND AIRCREW TRAINING

CSC Applied Technologies received $71,650,362 for operation and maintenance on T-38C/T-1A/T-6 undergraduate pilot training at Vance AFB. L-3 received $102,586,003 for logistics support of the T-1A aircraft at Vance AFB, Columbus AFB, Randolph AFB, Laughlin AFB, and Pensacola NAS. L-3 received $64,982,586 for additional logistics services and materials for maintenance required to support 36 T-45A and 168 T-45C aircraft based at NAS Meridian, NAS Kingsville, NAS Pensacola, and Patuxent River, MD. L-3 received $8,271,023 for contractor logistics services in support of T-39N and T-39G aircraft and associated equipment used in student naval flight officer training at NAS Pensacola. Northrop Grumman received $40,000,000 for engineering work on the T-38 and F-5 aircraft. Boeing received $9,707,984 for supplies/services for the T-45 Subsystems Service Life Assessment Program. Rolls-Royce received $50,728,950 for maintenance and related logistics support for approximately 223 in-service T-45 F405-RR-401 Adour engines under the Power-By-the-Hour (PBTH®) arrangement. Work will be performed NAS Meridian, (47 percent); NAS Kingsville (46 percent), NAS Pensacola (6 percent), and NAS Patuxent River, MD (1 percent).

Boeing will procure one additional Longbow crew trainer (at $11,427,527) for the Apache helicopter program. Boeing received $14,401,508 to acquire four Longbow crew trainers for the Apache program. 

CAE USA received $12,800,518 for support of the KC-135 Aircrew Training Systems (ATS) (includes upgrades and configuration management of current training systems hardware/software development and fielding new devices, on-site and on-call maintenance for aircrew training devices). CAE USA received $13,269,057 for support of the KC-135 Aircrew Training Systems Boom Operator Weapon System Trainer (BOWST), operations and maintenance and operational flight trainer along with BOWST database maintenance.

FlightSafety Services Corp. received $19,876,585 for support of the KC-10 Aircrew Training Systems (includes on-site contractor logistics support (CLS), obsolescence and technology insertion, student instruction, CLS on-site maintenance/spares/consumables/repairs, and support equipment maintenance/calibration for aircrew training devices).

L-3 received $8,850,576 for contractor owned and operated aircraft in support of commercial air services for military training support. This modification provides airborne threat simulation training for shipboard and aircraft squadron weapon systems operators and aircrew, to enhance abilities to counter potential enemy electronic warfare and electronic attack operations in an electronic combat environment. L3 received $11,781,299 for trainer maintenance services at Sheppard AFB and NAS Pensacola.

Lockheed Martin received $21,318,495 for the C-5M reliability enhancement and re-engining program acquisition, providing an aircraft maintenance system trainer and a flight control system trainer for Travis AFB. Lockheed Martin received $24,851,082 for technology upgrades to facilitate a new operating system. Effort includes technology refresh for F-22 training systems at Sheppard, Tyndall, Langley, Nellis, Hickam, and Elmendorf Air Force Bases.

J. K. Hill & Associates received $7,085,894 to provide an additional nine months of aircraft maintenance services and logistical support assistance for the USMC Fighter Light Attack Helicopter Training Squad located at MCAS Camp Pendleton.

SAIC received $14,448,532 to assist the U.S. Navy with fleet training, directive development, execution, assessment and readiness reporting. This contract will support the determination, deployment, coordination, communication, and implementation of fleet training policy.

AIRCRAFT

Boeing received a maximum $49,580,000 for engineering, analysis, test and technical support services and procurement in support of developmental, production, and sustainment of the Mission Enhanced Little Bird aircraft for USSOCOM. The procurement was not a full and open competition.

EFW Inc. received a maximum $19,824,724 for multi-purpose color display replacement. Location of performance is Texas and Israel.

Pratt & Whitney received a maximum $2,500,000,000 for various weapons systems spare parts.

Veraxx Engineering Corporation received $85,000,000 for supporting the fielded Special Operations Aviation suite of training aids, devices, simulators, and simulations.

Aviation Systems Engineering received $8,895,204 to extend the term of the contract for technical, analytical, administrative and material support services to Air Test and Evaluation Squadron One (VX1), in support of the test mission of commander, operational test and evaluation force. The contractor will be required to provide support services to test and analyze Navy Aircraft.

BAE received a maximum $10,559,999 for aircraft flight processors, circuit card assemblies, and power supplies.

Boeing received $12,871,280 for procuring 114 advanced navigation system retrofit kits for F/A-18E and F/A-18F aircraft. Boeing received $38,197,820 for procuring retrofit kits in support of the F/A-18E/F and EA-18G trailing edge flap engineering change proposal redesign. Boeing received $41,829,379 for engineering, fabrication, inspection and testing of 10 pre-production Operational Test Program Sets in support of the EA-18G aircraft in St. Louis, MO. Northrop Grumman received $10,865,042 for assembly, integration, and installation of equipment in support of the EA-18G airborne electronic attack unit operational flight program software testing and avionics subsystem emulation. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1. GE received $20,243,772 for procuring 240 FPU-12/A 480 gallon external fuel tanks for the F/A-18 E/F (182) and the EA-18G (58) aircraft, including related program support. Raytheon received $39,000,000 for procurement of 15 AN/APG-79 AESA radar systems for the F/A-18 E/F aircraft. Raytheon received $34,642,125 for working on the AN/APG-79 Active Electronically Scanned Array Radio Detection and Ranging General Purpose Processor upgrade in support of the F/A-18 E/F aircraft.

Boeing received $57,404,656 and $16,497,835 to repair various parts in support of the AV-8 aircraft. This contract was non-competitive per 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(1). Boeing received $64,784,278 for material and labor on the Apache-D helicopter. This is a non-competitive acquisition. Boeing received $7,200,000 for KC-135 fan ducts. AM General received $41,069,012 for detuned engines with containers. Boeing received $9,690,070 to order 100 each of the composite horizontal stabilators (CHS) and one each of the CHS tool string.

BPR Rico Equipment Inc. received a maximum $14,618,433 for spare tire retainers. Crane Electronics (doing business as STC Microwave Systems, Signal Technology Corp.) received $12,399,945 to repair ALQ-161A radio frequency surveillance/electronic countermeasure (RFS/ECM) system units used on the B-1 aircraft. Data Link Solutions received $13,362,375 to repair the multifunctional information distribution system joint tactical radios system used on multiple aircrafts. Doss Aviation received $23,000,000 for an initial flight screening program. Impact Instrumentation Inc. received a maximum $28,772,259 for airworthy aspirators. L-3 received $11,094,779 for helicopter maintenance at Kirtland AFB.

Lockheed Martin received $15,030,438 for repairing five items for the H60 Helicopters. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). Lockheed Martin received $7,150,637 for the repair of 12 items for the Common Cockpit for the H60 Helicopters. The contract was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Lockheed Martin received $29,361,640 for C-130J aircrew instruction and contractor logistic support for the C-130J Maintenance and Aircrew Training System devices. Lockheed Martin received $21,530,000 for converting the C-130 ATS II weapon system trainers from the H1 configuration to the H2 Configuration. Lockheed Martin received $8,757,527 to incorporate the Option X software upgrades onto Increment 2 HC/MC-130J aircraft. This contract modification will fix eight identified and approved deficiencies on the HC/MC-130J aircraft. Lockheed Martin received $8,580,084 for work at the C-130J Training System Support Center. Northrop Grumman received $26,381,175.00 for support of the C-130 Direct Sales Public Private Partnership for repair of 28 national stock numbers. Work will be performed at Warner Robins, GA.

Meggitt Aircraft Braking Systems received a maximum $224,766,585 for aircraft wheels, brakes, and spare parts. Moog Inc. received a maximum $17,999,683 for aircraft parts. NASCO Aircraft Brake received a maximum $29,080,238 for aircraft wheels and brakes, and spare/repair parts. Northrop Grumman received $24,111,329 for overhauling seven different B-2 Tailpipe components. Northrop Grumman received $6,637,223 for large aircraft infra-red counter measures (LAIRCM). Omega Aerial Refueling Services received $30,560,840 for contractor owned and operated aircraft services in support of the Commercial Air Services (CAS) Program, which provides aerial refueling services to the DOD. This contract was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1.

Northrop Grumman received $6,998,906 for work on the F-16 Radar Falcon 2020 contract, which provides improvements or upgrades to the current F-16 Block 30 AN/APG-68 radar system. Parker Hannifin Corp. received $14,369,245 on the F-16 Electrohydraulic Servo Valve Contract.

Northrop Grumman received $795,915,000 for logistics supporting AMC aircraft at McGuire AFB, Travis AFB, Lake Charles Maintenance Center, and Greensboro, NC. This contract involved unspecified FMS. Northrop Grumman received a maximum $11,304,521 to provide evaluations, analysis, repair designs, and/or testing to support the requirements for the A-10 aircraft structural integrity program and maintenance of operational safety, suitability, and effectiveness. Northrop Grumman received a maximum $28,085,500 for aircraft aft deck structural supports.

Pratt & Whitney received a maximum $13,907,430 for aircraft engine turbine nozzle segment replenishment spares. Pratt & Whitney received a maximum $7,878,650 for procurement aircraft engine compressor blade set replenishment spares. Pratt & Whitney received $18,386,813 for the purchase of an additional 5,434 low pressure turbine blades for the F119 PW-100 engines. Pratt & Whitney received a maximum $6,732,320 for aircraft engine turbine disk replenishment spares.

Pratt & Whitney received a minimum $19,400,643 and $14,078,493 for F100 aircraft engine spare part-diffuser cases. Pratt & Whitney received a minimum $13,785,252 for F100 aircraft engine spare-part rotor. United Technologies received a minimum $23,556,930 for replenishment spares of F100 aircraft engine fan rotors.

Raytheon received $20,018,361 for procuring 30 Forward Looking Infrared Radar kits for the CH-53K helicopters (5) and HH-60 helicopters (25). In addition, this delivery order will provide for the procurement for 25 L2G multifunction control units and 35 L2G system control units for the HH-60 helicopters; two Memory Loader Verifier System cables and software update, system integration and test support for the CH-53K helicopters; one technical data package; and repair of repairables analysis. Raytheon received $14,000,000 for the repair of AN/AAS-44(V) forward looking infrared radar system for the H-60 series helicopters. This was a non-competitive contract, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). Lockheed Martin received $98,399,462 for the manufacture and delivery of up to 50 AN/APS-153(V)1 radar kits to upgrade the MH-60R fleet aircraft. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1(a) (2). Lockheed Martin received $7,037,522 for ten organic airborne mine countermeasures technical insertion common console kits in support of the MH-60S program. Lockheed Martin received a maximum $10,881,328 for countermeasure receivers. Thales Communications received $15,125,500 for depot level specialized test equipment and the relevant technical data required to establish depot level support for the AN/AQS-22 Airborne Low Frequency Sonar in support of the MH-60R aircraft program. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c).

Raytheon received $7,101,016 for fifteen Air Traffic Navigation, Integration and Coordination System ES-19 retrofit upgrade kits and spares. Raytheon received $79,300,000 to assist the Product Management Office for Air Traffic Control Systems and the Communication-Electronics Command, Logistics Readiness Center with life cycle management support for 39 air traffic navigation, integration and coordination systems and 21 fixed base precision approach radar systems and equipment.

Rockwell Collins received a maximum $22,426,306 to provide USSOCOM with the degraded visual environments (DVE) system. The DVE systems integrate information from aircraft sensors to increase situational awareness for MH-47 and MH-60 aircrews. Boeing received a maximum $22,952,831 for the DVE system. Sierra Nevada Corp. received a maximum $22,585,880 for the DVE system.

Boeing received $19,253,048 for sustaining engineering on delivery order 0261 of basic ordering agreement for the MH-47G new build. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid received. Boeing received $78,237,601 for the MH-47G New Build (7 Aircraft).

Textron received $23,050,581 for work on baseline configuration upgrades for one AH-1Z Full Flight Simulator, one UH-1Y Full Flight Simulator, and one UH-1Y Flight Training Device for the U.S. Marine Corps. Textron received $34,313,824 for the repair/overhaul of five items required in support of the AH-1W Helicopter. This contract was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1. Textron received a maximum $27,962,676 and $14,196,000 for blade assemblies. Textron received a maximum $18,786,469 for main rotor gearbox assemblies. Textron received $18,760,539 to exercise an option for the manufacture of one UH-1Y build new helicopter for the USMC.

URS Federal Support Services received $9,527,000 for contract logistics support for the RC-26B aircraft used by the Air National Guard.

NOTABLE CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTS

Faith Enterprises Inc. received $9,958,370 for repair of Cadet Gym Phase 6. “Old racquetball and squash courts will be renovated, and structural floors added, to provide spaces for the Triathlon Club, weightlifting support space, Cross fit training space, and a television studio. The weightlifting space will be renovated and updated for current program requirements. Existing gym space will be renovated to accommodate gymnastics and support spaces, including retractable seating and space for various gymnastics equipment for competitions.” C.E.R., Inc. received $9,899,000 to demolish the current fitness center and then construct a new fitness center, a surface parking lot, and demolish Building 219 at NSF Dahlgren.

Harry Pepper & Associates received $10,284,372 for Hurricane Sandy waterfront repairs at Naval Station Guantánamo Bay. This work includes repairs to the Guantánamo Bay public marina and restoration of the recreational dive park. One doubts any assertions that the U.S. Executive Branch will close Guantánamo, since the Pentagon is funding various construction projects at this overseas base.

Hourigan Construction received $23,366,464 for design and construction of an Operation Facility at Joint Expeditionary Base, Little Creek-Fort Story. Fiscal 2013 military construction, Special Operations Command contract funds are obligated on this award.

MultiMAC JV received a maximum $20,000,000 to help DOD comply with Air Emission Regulations, Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act Regulations and Greenhouse Gas Regulations at DOD installations within the NAVFAC Atlantic AOR. Part of this contract allocates $469,280 for Asbestos Management Study at Rota, Spain. Are sailors stationed in Rota, Spain currently being exposed to asbestos in base housing? Veterans who were exposed to asbestos are entitled to compensation.

Tutor Perini Corp. received $23,813,707 to upgrade 60 existing housing units at Lockwood Terrace (Naval Base Guam) in order to bring them to current Navy standards which include reconfiguration of interior living spaces and expanding existing living areas.

CONSTRUCTION AND MAINTENANCE

Construction contracts tell the reader a lot about the Pentagon’s posture and future designs. With the government shutdown looming, the month of September witnessed a boom in DOD construction contracts.

Adira Construction; Contract and Purchasing Solutions; Greenland Enterprises; Locke-Lane Construction; Patriot Construction; and Turner Strategic Technologies received $50,000,000 for general construction projects located at Camp Lejeune, MCAS New River, MCAS Cherry Point, and other outlying facilities in North Carolina. The work to be performed provides for new construction, demolition, repair of buildings and infrastructure, communication systems, installation of high voltage electrical distribution systems, extending steam distribution systems, work on potable water distribution systems, extensions to the sewer systems, additional storm water control systems, painting, and removal of asbestos materials and lead paint. Barnhill Contracting; Morton Trucking; Onslow Grading & Paving; and S. T. Wooten Corp. received a cumulative $95,000,000 for construction projects (includes paving, site clearing activities, demolition work, storm drainage work, modifications to water and sewer distribution) located at Camp Lejeune, MCAS New River, MCAS Cherry Point, and outlying facilities in North Carolina.

A&D GC, Inc. received $7,514,000 for construction and repair of Building 237 (King Hall Auditorium) at Naval Support Activity Monterey. Cherokee Nation Construction Services received $7,485,615 for the repair of the South Admin Area of Building 9001. CNMS JV received $18,066,075 for design and repair of Headquarters Pacific Air Forces Building 1102 at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam. Contech Engineering received $9,474,334 for repairs to Telecommunication Building 390C and Van Pads at Marine Corps Base, HI. M. J. Takisaki Inc. received $6,966,033 for Repair Aircraft Maintenance Hangar Fire Protection Building 2050.

Abide International received $13,549,250 to retrofit the New Hogan Tainter Gate at Valley Springs, CA.

ABM Government Services; Apro International; and CACI Dynamic Systems received $17,014,891 to provide operational contracting support for vital supplies, services and construction to USCENTCOM Acquisition Support Services.

Absher Construction received $25,116,000 for the energy efficient project and production shop energy reduction project at Naval Base Kitsap. P & L General Contractors received $9,019,821 for modernization of industrial control systems at Naval Base Kitsap and Keyport Naval Underwater Warfare Center.

Ace Engineering received $45,000,000 for construction services at Cannon AFB.

Curtis-McKinley Roofing and Sheet Metal; Construction & Service Solutions; Brazos Roofing International of South Dakota; A-Vet/MGC Joint Venture; and Global-Pacific Tech Joint Venture 1 received $45,000,000 for construction services for the U.S. Army Reserves nationwide national roofing initiative.

Anthony and Gordon Construction received $15,340,000 for construction of the Aircraft Corrosion Control Facility at NAS Corpus Christi.

Akima Construction Services; Ayuda Management Corp.; Futurenet Group Inc.; Ma-Chis Kawv III; North Wind Neu Security Services; Security Construction Services and Zieson Construction Co. received $80,000,000 to provide worldwide design-build and construction capabilities for access control point (ACP) construction and equipment installation. The Matthews Group received $14,733,352 for the Design-Build project to upgrade the access control points 3 & 4 at the Defense Distribution Center, Susquehanna.

Akima Facilities Management received $8,515,252 to provide installation operations and maintenance support services for Ft. Gordon. Wolverine Services received $12,613,329 for logistics support services at Ft. Gordon. Walsh Federal received $91,777,000 for construction of a multi-story East Campus Building 1 on Ft. Meade.

AMEC Environment & Infrastructure; ITSI Gilbane; Shaw Environmental & Infrastructure; Weston Solutions; and Willbros Government Services received $80,000,000 for construction in support of the Naval Facilities Engineering and Expeditionary Warfare Center, Port Hueneme. The work cares for fuel systems at DOD facilities worldwide.

American Auto Logistics received $23,300,000 for transportation and storage services of privately owned vehicles.

AOC Environmental; C-3; Gideon Contracting; HCR Construction; NAE/Imperial JV 2; and Unified Services of Texas, Inc. each received $90,000,000 for multiple award construction contract (MACC), which will increase the level of design flexibility, reduce time to award construction contracts, ensure fair pricing based on competition, and aid in meeting the squadron’s small business goals. Work will be performed at Sheppard AFB, Altus AFB, Frederick Airfield, and the Sheppard AFB Texoma Annex.

Ayak LLC received a maximum $7,500,000 for repair, replacement and installation of various electrical distribution components.

Boro Developers received $13,822,431 for full restoration of the Jonah E. Kelley U.S. Army Reserve Center at Ft. Dix.

Brigadier Construction received $10,047,000 to renovate the law office and acquisition facility (F20011) at Wright Patterson AFB.

Bristol General Contractors received $15,175,280 for construction of a tactical equipment maintenance facility and brigade complex facilities. Hensel Phelps Construction received $25,693,160 for design and construction of a Weapons Surveillance Test Laboratory and Calibration Laboratory at Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach.

Bristol General Contractors; Ikhana LLC; Kisaq LLC; Komada LLC; K-W Construction; and LNV Inc. received a total $99,000,000 for construction projects located primarily within the NAVFAC Southeast AOR. GHD-Gerwick JV received a maximum $7,500,000 for Waterfront Engineering Services in the NAVFAC Southwest AOR. Gulf Coast Architectural Group received a maximum $30,000,000 for architecture and engineering services in NAVFAC Southeast AOR. Kenmar-Gaskins JV; Leebcor Services; Ocean/Turner JV; Richard Brady & Associates; and Whitesell-Green, Inc.; received a cumulative $95,000,000 for construction projects located primarily within NAVFAC Mid-Atlantic Hampton Roads AOR.

C3T received $8,292,800 to install flooring at various facilities on Ft. McCoy. Carothers Construction received $16,930,000 to construct a new commissary facility at Ft. Rucker. Halbert Construction received $18,518,659 to construct a dining facility and general administration building at Presidio of Monterey, CA.

Chugach Federal Solutions received $26,571,948 for installation support services at geographically separated locations. Work will be performed at Eareckson Air Station, Shemya Island, King Salmon, Anchorage, Alaska and Wake Island.

Diversified Service Contracting received $8,645,899 for base operating support services (e.g. janitorial services, grounds maintenance services, vehicles and equipment services, street sweeping, snow removal, and pest control) at the NAS Patuxent River.

Facility Services Management received $14,160,073 for support of the Installation Management Command, Directorate of Public Works mission at the U.S. Army Proving Ground, AZ.

Harley Ellis Deveraux; URS Group; Albery Kahn Associates; and Anderson, Eckstein and Westrick received $10,000,000 each to provide a full range of architect and engineering services in support to the Selfridge ANG Base, Michigan.

Harry Pepper & Associates received $36,096,437 for the Herbert Hoover Kike Rehabilitation – Structure Replacements.

Hensel Phelps Construction received $30,516,000 for construction of a new addition to the existing Vice Admiral James H. Doyle Jr. combat systems engineering site building at Moorestown, N.J.

J&J – BMAR JV received $8,915,624 to conduct services for base operations and maintenance to the U.S. Army Garrison – Detroit Arsenal (USAG-DTA), Warren, Mich.

John Bowman, Inc.; Hartland/Mass Joint Venture; SEK Joint Venture; and Blackhorse Worldwide received $49,000,000 for design, build and construction only task orders in Colorado and Wyoming.

John Keno and Company received $7,341,385 for Rosewood Park construction in Highland Park, IL..

Kipper Tool received a maximum $976,000,000 for procurement of commercial type construction equipment.

Mesa Energy Systems (doing business as EMCOR Services) received $9,593,970 for boiler replacement at MCAS Miramar.

Nova Group received $19,512,600 to demolish the majority of the Bulk Storage Farm currently located on Forbes Avenue in Edwards, CA.

Mitchell Industrial Contractors Inc./Brasfield & Gorrie received $25,833,000 for design and construction of a steel frame HQ building and four single-story frame structures with structural steel framing at MCAS Cherry Point.

Whiting-Turner Contracting received $10,521,405 for an armory at MCAS Cherry Point.

Nova Shimmick JV received $66,377,631 for replacement of the Fuel Pier at Naval Base Point Loma. Triton Marine Construction Corp. received $35,484,250 for repairs to Pier 4 and Wharves 4A and 4B at the Philadelphia Naval Business Center Annex. Watts Constructors received $9,995,652 for repair of the fendering system at Pier 6.

Akima Construction Services ($45,789,000); Banneker Ventures ($46,220,000); Patriot Construction ($33,195,000); Technical Services ($39,660,705); and Wycliffe Enterprises ($49,150,525) shall perform facility maintenance, alterations, repair and minor construction work in the Aberdeen and Edgewood areas of Aberdeen Proving Ground as well as various satellite off-post site locations.

G-W Management received $7,385,000 for repairs to the Scott Natatorium building at the U.S. Naval Academy Complex.

Precon Marine received $10,525,934 for Wharf One repairs. Sauer Inc. received $6,842,906 for repairs to Wharf Two at Naval Submarine Base, Kings Bay. Triton Marine Construction Corp. received $6,574,768 for repairs to wharf structure M1-M2 at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam.

Raytheon received $12,448,855 for depot level maintenance facility provision items ordered spares.

River City Construction received $56,098,000 for construction of a new DISA facility at Scott AFB.

Roy Anderson Corp. received $21,444,000 for design and construction of a potable water distribution replacement at Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany.

C.W. Ferrell Construction received $45,000,000 for construction projects within the South Atlantic Division. SupplyCore received $23,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations prime vendor bridge contract for the Southeast Zone 2 region. SAIC received $45,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations prime vendor bridge contract for the Southeast Zone 1 region.

SupplyCore received a maximum $45,915,438 for supply chain management and maintenance support.

Ulliman Schutte Construction received $24,887,000 for the Edgewood Area Wastewater Treatment Plant Enhanced Nutrient Removal Upgrade project.

CCI Solutions received $6,927,561 for concrete repairs at Dry Dock 1 at the Charlestown Naval Shipyard. Colonna Shipyard Inc. (doing business as Steel America) received $13,789,200 for construction of a steel caisson for graving Drydock 1 at Charlestown Naval Shipyard. W.F. Magann Corp. received $12,275,675 for the construction of the Drydock 1 caisson replacement at Norfolk Naval Shipyard.

Wiley & Wilson received $12,000,000 for architectural engineering services for secure projects supported by the real property services field office. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition.

TRAINING FACILITIES

A&D GC received $12,847,000 to design and construct a combat training tank and instruction facility to serve the Reconnaissance Training Company at Camp Pendleton. Cherokee Nation Construction Services received $14,231,855 for the renovation of Training Facility 206 at Dover AFB. L.S. Black Constructors Inc. received $16,968,000 for construction of a new readiness center at the Arden Hills Army Training Site. RQ Construction received a $27,703,840 for construction of a 127,171 sq. foot readiness center at JBLM. Trainor Enterprises received $36,696,000 for construction of a massive battalion-sized Operational Readiness Training Complex in Boise, Idaho.

BARRACKS AND HOUSING

DPR Hardin Construction Company received $20,195,000 for design, construction and renovations of Bachelor Quarters at Naval Station Norfolk. Environmental Management Resources received $6,975,538 for the design-build renovation of Quarters 4 Barracks and Lakeside Bachelor Enlisted Quarters A, for Naval Construction Battalion Center Gulfport. Environmental Management Resources received $11,444,076 for renovation and repair of Corry “A” School Bachelor Quarters 3707 and 3708 at Corry Station. I.E. Pacific, Inc. received $8,077,000 for the renovation of two Bachelor Enlisted Quarters at Naval Base Coronado. W.M. Jordan Co. received $30,580,750 for design and renovation of a bachelor quarters facility at JEBLC-FS.

Atwood Hay received $8,072,109 for repair of Castner Substation at Schofield Barracks. Dawson Technical received $10,165,368 for the renovation of the Aloha Center, Building 690 at Schofield Barracks. This was a non-competitive contract with one bid received. Purcell Construction received $46,650,000 for construction of a barracks addition and facility at Ft. Lee. RQ Construction received $13,986,000 for renovation of three barracks at NAB Coronado. TEAM Construction received $9,086,654 for renovation of Second Battalion Recruit Barracks Building 599 at MCRD Parris Island.

MEDICAL CONSTRUCTION

ESA South; Hamilton Pacific Chamberlain; K.O.O. Construction; Leebcor Services; Northview Enterprises; Terra Construction; and Aieson Construction Company received $49,000,000 for a ‘design-build’ contract servicing Army medical facilities west of the Mississippi River. Facility Defense Consultants and Hanke Constructors received $7,630,698 to construct a mental health building for expansion of services at the Marion Veterans Association medical center. R. A. Burch Construction received $14,688,088 for renovation and modernization of building 3230 for the dental clinic at Naval Base San Diego. Soltek Pacific Construction received $7,894,300 for restoration and modernization of General Surgery, Building 3, at Naval Medical Center San Diego. Stronghold Engineering received $46,557,217 for restoring the heating, ventilation and AC systems at Naval Medical Center, San Diego.

U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS

Altus Architectural Studios; Global Engineering Solutions; NIKA Technologies; Leo A Daly Company; NBBJ + SSOE; Rogers, Lovelock & Fritz; RTKL/SSR; Sherlock, Smith & Adams/Page Southerland Page JV; ZGF/AEI/KPFF JV received $49,800,000 for continued design services in support of the Medical Facilities Architect-Engineer Services to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Bristol Engineering Services; Cherokee General Corp.; CKY Inc.; Macro-Z-Technology; and Nordic Industries received $9,800,000 for design and horizontal construction projects for programs and projects managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Seattle District. Horizon Shipbuilding received $11,154,508 for the Shorty Baird Replacement (one inland river, all welded steel towboat) for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Little Rock District. Tompkins Associates received $9,500,000 to provide architectural and engineering design and planning services for military and civilian work for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Kansas City District. VW International received $13,000,000 for services in support of the IO&T program at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Huntsville Center. This contract supports the Yongsan Relocation Program at USAG-Humphrey’s in South Korea.

QUANTICO AND LEJEUNE

C.E.R., Inc. received $11,699,000 for the construction of a new dining facility space in the Weapons Training Battalion Mess Hall at Quantico. G-W Management Services received $6,854,000 to renovate the Security Battalion Headquarters and the G-6 communications in building 2043 at Quantico. Harper Construction received $27,063,290 for construction on the Student Officer Quarters at The Basic School at Quantico.

RQ-DPR Construction JV received $46,369,836 for design and construction of a Battalion Headquarters and an Applied Instruction Lab for SERE Training at Camp Lejeune. Whiting-Turner Contracting received $26,037,371 for design and construction of Staff NCO Academy Facilities at Camp Lejeune. Whiting-Turner Contracting received $38,635,704 for energy efficiency improvements at Camp Lejeune.

RIVERS, DAMS AND WATERWAYS

ABHE & SVOBODA received $7,449,310 for the repair and coating of East Bulkhead, N.J. Intercoastal Waterway and Point Pleasant Canal. Bauer Foundation received $11,431,960 to extend the barrier wall 155 feet at Center Dam, TN. This was a non-competitive solicitation. Boh Bros. Construction received $38,099,976 for Southeast Louisiana Urban Flood Control Project 23A. Work consists of construction of cast in place concrete covered canal, pulling and driving sheet piling, modifying existing utilities, and demolition of existing roadways and sidewalks. Brayman Construction received $15,208,219 for constructing an emptying basin adjacent to the new river wall of the lock downstream of the dam in Charleroi, PA. Thalle Construction received $34,000,220 for construction of the new lock at Kentucky Lock in Grand Rivers, KY. The contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid received. Veteran’s Contractor’s Group received $10,696,914 to support the Southeast Louisiana Urban Flood Control Project (SELA-09a) and construction of Soniat Canal Pump to the River Intake at Jefferson Parish, LA. 

Great Lakes Dock and Materials received $7,461,751 for repairing 0.5 miles of breakwater at Cleveland Harbor.

Heeter Construction received $11,451,737 for Bluestone Dam safety assurance and to install up to 278 anchors.

Henderson Consulting received $10,492,333 for Mississippi River/tributaries and Jefferson Heights levee enlargement.

AIRFIELD AND PAVING WORK

Baldi Brothers received $11,099,841 for design and construction of a combat aircraft loading apron for up to 30 rotary wing aircraft at MCAS Yuma. CCI Solutions received $11,556,752 to repair airfield and roadway pavements. Eastern Construction received $17,478,273 to repair and upgrade the Lima Taxiway to modern standards at McGuire AFB. Sand Point Services received $23,062,668 for repairs and upgrade of taxiway “Golf” at Joint Base McGuire/Dix. Summers Concrete Contracting received $10,000,000 for airfield pavements for one base year and four option years. Work will be performed at Moody AFB. Summers Concrete received $8,987,479 for the repair of taxiway kilo and hot cargo pads with new cement concrete pavement and asphalt shoulder pavement. The Matthews Group received $8,507,132 to replace the Sierra taxiway at Joint Base Andrews.

ASRC Civil Construction received $10,449,935 for paving work at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson. Asphalt Roads & Materials received $9,483,530 for asphalt paving and minor concrete work at various naval facilities throughout the Hampton Roads area of Virginia.

Nan Inc. received $6,992,897 for construction services to construct combat parking apron and addition at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam for the total force integration F-22 campus conversion. 

DREDGING AND EROSION CONTROL

Archer Western Construction received $75,714,070 for the Picayune Strand Restoration Project, Miller Pumping Station, Collier County, FL.

Cashman Dredging and Marine Contracting received $8,238,900 for maintenance dredging at Norwalk and New Haven, CT.

Eastman Aggregate Enterprise received $7,112,595 for flood control and emergency beach erosion control at Broward County, FL.

Great Lakes Dredge &Dock received $18,332,500 for the dredging and placement of 1,015,000 cubic yards of sand to restore the Asbury Park to Avon-by-the-Sea reach of the Sea Bright to Manasquan N.J. Beach Erosion Control project. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock received $36,900,000 to provide placement of beachfill, dredged from the Sea Bright borrow area, along the length of the constructed project footprint in Keansburg, N.J. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock received $8,030,480 for maintenance and associated dredging services for Kings Bay. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock received $6,875,000 for the Fire Island to Montauk Point, N.Y. Interim Coastal Damage Protection project.

Illinois Constructors Corporation received $11,369,090 to protect the Chicago shoreline from erosion.

Manson Construction received $6,934,900 for dredging Oakland Inner & Outer Harbor Channel of approximately 421,000 cubic yards of materials.

R.E. Staite Engineering received $6,863,494 for dredging Mole Pier and Pier 8 at Naval Base San Diego.

Weeks Marine received $9,646,550 for dredging Jones Inlet New York Federal Navigation project.

NATIONAL GUARD CONSTRUCTION

Bowen, Collins & Associates received $10,000,000 for architecture and engineer services on a broad range of investigative design and construction monitoring services for the Utah National Guard at Salt Lake City, West Jordon and St. George, Utah. Cox Construction received $21,899,000 for single construction of the maneuver area training and equipment site at Ft. Irwin for the California National Guard. RB Construction Group (Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico) received $16,753,881 for construction on the Puerto Rico Army National Guard Joint Forces Headquarters at Fort Buchanan, Guaynabo, Puerto Rico.

E-Corp; Anvil Builders; Sigma Services; Bara Infoware; Gwinn Construction; Rore, Inc.;  Northwind Engineering; Spanish Spring Construction; Pinecrest Construction and Development;  J.Davis Construction Management; Herrera Corporation; Walker River Construction; Power Services; Sullivan Construction; Anthem Builders; MIE, Inc.; Building Solutions; Metcalf Builders; Fast-Track Construction; Accel 7 JV; Komada; Charpie Construction; Yerba Buena Engineering & Construction; Pesavento Construction; Ace Engineering; R.L. Reed, Inc.; Northcon, Inc; Total Team Construction Services, Inc.; Glenn/Mar Construction, Inc.; MTM Builders; IEC-All Star; Truckee Meadows Construction Inc.; Pre-Con Industries; Shanks Electric Corporation; C-2 Construction; Cherokee General Corporation; JP General, Inc.; TMG Services, Inc.; Southwestern Dakotah; Raas Brothers, Inc.; Garcia J I Construction Company; and MJ Avila Company received a collective $30,000,000 to support sustainment, repair and maintenance and military construction projects of various size and value for the Nevada National Guard.

Macro Z Technology; Cable Links Construction; MTM Builders; Marcon Bld. & General Engineer Contractor; ACCU Construction; Coburn Contractors; Lead builders; Rore, Inc.; J.Davis Construction Management; Newton Construction Management, Inc.; Cox Construction; LG Services, Inc.; T&G Construction Co.; Interlog Corporation; Fast Track Construction; Portillo Concrete Company; Inland Flooring Contractors; Exbon Development; WEP Construction, Inc.; American Build & Design; Diani Building Corp.; RAASS Brothers, Inc.; Athena Engineering; Herrerra Corp.; Shanks Electric; Anderson & Burton Construction; Ponciano Construction; and Cyber Professional Solution received a collective $20,000,000 to support sustainment, repair and maintenance and military construction projects of various size and value for the California National Guard.

ENVIRONMENTAL ACTIVITIES

Baltimore Gas and Electric received $7,289,025 for construction efforts to implement an energy and water conservation project at the United States Naval Academy (USNA). The contract was procured under the authority of Title 10 U.S.C. Sec. 2304(c)(5), statute expressly authorizes or requires that the acquisition be made through another agency or from a specific source, as implemented by FAR 6.302-5.

Commercial Contractors Equipment received $8,621,767 to construct habitat features to restore fish and wildlife habitat at Benedictine Bottoms near Atchison, Kansas.

CTI-URS Environmental Services received $9,000,000 for environmental services in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Louisville mission boundaries. XCEL Engineering received $9,000,000 for environmental services in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Louisville mission boundaries.

Damosvision received $10,000,000 for monitoring of the historic area remediation site and New York Bight.

FPM Remediations received $44,962,593 for environmental remediation activities at Cannon AFB, Holloman AFB, Kirtland AFB, and Luke AFB.

Maverick Constructors received $ 9,995,726 for the Big Cypress Seminole Indian Reservation Western Water Conservation Restoration project.

Noblis Inc. and Logistics Management Institute received $40,000,000 to provide systems engineering, acquisition support, and advisory & assistance services to Air Force Civil Engineer (AFCEC). The contractors shall help AFCEC with the environmental restoration program; BRAC; environmental quality programs; pollution prevention/waste minimization; environmental impact analysis; design and construction management program; operational ranges cleanup; unexploded ordinance remediation; military munitions response program; Nuclear Biological Chemical, eleven “Homeland Defense Act of 2002-related initiatives”; enhanced use leasing program; heavy industrial construction; sustainability, and resource conservation. 

Helber Hastert & Fee Planners received a maximum $10,000,000 for architect-engineering services for the preparation of planning documents and related technical services for projects and activities at various locations worldwide. The work provides for the preparation of facilities and land use planning studies and project programming documents, environmental impact documents, cultural resources management plans, natural resources management plans, environmental studies and documents. 

Shaw Environmental & Infrastructure received $9,308,492 for a non-time-critical removal action at former Naval Station Treasure Island. Work will be performed in San Francisco, CA.

URS Group received $14,918,313 for environmental remediation services and Military Munitions Response Program at Hill AFB. URS Group received $24,319,254 for remediation at McConnell AFB.

HEALTHCARE

Abaxis Inc. ($21,493,381); Abbott Laboratories ($45,285,408); Becton Dickinson and Co. ($76,796,317); Cardinal Health 200 ($40,075,230); Dental Health Products ($23,584,219); DePuy Orthopaedics ($18,904,786); Henry Schein ($13,024,254); Johnson & Johnson ($42,095,798); Synthes USA Sales ($50,494,369); Tactical Medical Solutions ($13,075,872); Zimmer US Inc. ($36,894,684) will provide medical/surgical supplies and equipment.

Air Methods $9,299,933 for 61 Interim Medical Evacuation Mission Support System kits. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid received.

Amyx Inc.; Dynamic Systems Technology; Ho-Chunk Technical Solutions; Stratitia Inc.; Allied Technologies and Consulting; Axiom Corp.; Enterprise Resource Planning International; and Indrasoft Inc. received $99,000,000 to provide admin and management support services to U.S. Army Medical Material Agency core competencies.

Banyan Biomarkers received $12,950,816 for TBI work on the Johnson & Johnson/Ortho Clinical Diagnostics VITROs(r) MicroWell device to analyze clinical trial samples. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition.

Brighton Marine Health Center ($133,203,689 to provide comprehensive health care services to approximately 14,085 eligible uniformed beneficiaries); CHRISTUS Health ($143,853,014, approx.. 11,400 eligible beneficiaries); Martin’s Point Health Care Center ($283,542,374, approx.. 41,524); and PACMED Clinics ($132,105,989, approx. 13,048 eligible).  These contracts were not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 1073 sections 722 (b & f); 724 (e);726 (a-d) and NDAA Paragraphs 722(b) (1) and (2) of Subtitle C, Fiscal Year 1997, Public Law 104-201.

CACI-ISS Inc. received $74,826,531 for medical logistics and non-personal services support to the U.S. Air Force Expeditionary/Contingency Medical Material program. Cherokee Nation Technology Solutions received $40,000,000 for the non-personal support to the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition. Hologic received a maximum $32,300,000 for ThinPrep Pap test kits and related supplies. Job Options Inc. received $9,997,362 for custodial services at Naval Medical Center and various branch medical clinics/dental clinics in Metro San Diego. LMS Chemical (doing business as Pacific Environmental Services) received $47,618,249 for hospital housekeeping services in support of Tripler Army Medical Center. Mylan Specialty received a maximum $62,620,232 for epinephrine auto-injectors. Novartis Institute for BioMedical Research received a maximum $13,165,658 for the ADEPT-PROTECT program. Quest Diagnostics Clinical Laboratories received $17,997,133 for laboratory testing services for all military members and dependents. Revision Military Ltd. received a maximum $46,170,844 for universal prescription lens carriers to military services. Zoll Medical Corp. received $210,000,000 for defibrillators, monitors, warmers and infusers, and $20,513,974 for airworthy hospital defibrillators.

Central Care; Global Computer Products-Terra Health; GPA-HRSA; and Loyal Source Government Services received a maximum $45,000,000 for temporary medical staffing services (physicians and nurses) at military treatment facilities. NSR Solutions received $7,811,979 for per diem nursing services in support of Tripler Army Medical Center. SAIC received $29,946,672 to provide a nationwide nurse advice line service for the DOD TRICARE program.

Dentsply Professional received a maximum $31,213,855 for the distribution of a wide range of general dental supplies. Henry Schein Inc. received $25,328,219 for distributing general dental supplies to DOD facilities participating in the Dental Electronic Catalog (ECAT) program. Unimed Government Services received a maximum $12,500,000 for dental supplies and accessories.

Purdue Pharma ($11,423,701) and  Hospira Worldwide ($9,323,765) will provide various pharmaceutical products. Arbor Pharmaceuticals ($26,667,690); IImpax Laboratories ($88,726,023) Pfizer ($69,277,990) received the aforementioned amounts to provide various pharmaceutical products. Innovation Associates received a maximum $48,750,000 for pharmacy automation systems. EXP Pharmaceutical Services; Guaranteed Returns; and Pharma Logistics received a maximum $46,159,211 to process returns/disposals of expired/unneeded pharmaceuticals.

ENERGY AND FUEL

Acciona Energy North America Corp.; ECC Renewables; EDF Renewable Energy; Emerald Infrastructure; Energy Answers International; EIF United States Power Fund IV L.P.; Energy Management; Honeywell International; MidAmerican/Clark JV; Pacolet Milliken Enterprises; Siemens Government Technologies; Stronghold Engineering; and Energy Systems Group received a cumulative $7,000,000,000 for the purchase of energy from renewable and alternative energy production facilities that are designed, financed, constructed, operated and maintained by private sector entities on private land or on installations under jurisdiction of the DOD.

Acciona Energy North America Corp.; Cobra Industrial Services; Dominion Energy; Duke Energy; EDF Renewable Energy; Emerald Infrastructure; Enel Green Power North America; Everpower Wind Holdings; First Wind; Iberdrola Renewables; LTC Federal; NorthlandPower; Siemens Government Technologies; Stronghold Engineering; Turn Key Power Consortium; VERT Investment Group; and West Texas Power Company received a cumulative $7,000,000,000  for the purchase of energy from renewable and alternative energy production facilities that are designed, financed, constructed, operated and maintained by private sector entities on private land or on installations under DOD jurisdiction.

New Generation Power received a maximum $7,000,000,000 for the purchase of energy from renewable and alternative energy production facilities that are designed, financed, constructed, operated and maintained by private sector entities on private land or on installations under DOD jurisdiction.

Airport Aviation Services received a maximum $15,374,732 for jet fuel. DOSS Aviation received a maximum $7,803,920 for operation and maintenance of fixed fuel facilities, aviation aircraft fuel services, ground fuel services, emergency services, and environmental emergency spill response. Location of performance is Colorado and Naval Support Activity Greece. Interstate Storage and Pipeline Co. received a maximum $17,627,072 for a fuel storage terminal within a twelve mile radius of McGuire AFB. ITSI Gilbane received $10,027,816 for cleaning, inspection, and repair of fuel storage tanks located at Marine Corps Air Station, Iwakuni, Japan.

AMEC Environment & Infrastructure; AMERESCO, Inc.; BALFOUR BEATTY ENERGY SOLUTIONS; CH2M HILL CONSTRUCTORS; EATON CORPORATION; ECC Energy Conservation; PERINI MANAGEMENT SERVICES; SAIC; SHAW ENVIRONMENTAL & INFRASTRUCTURE, INC.; URS GROUP; and WESTON SOLUTIONS, INC. received $600,000,000 to assist DOD in energy conservation and development of alternative energy projects.

American Petroleum Tankers received $39,055,000 for the worldwide charter of two U.S.-flagged, Jones Act tankers. The tankers will be employed in worldwide cargo delivery to support the Defense Logistics Agency-Energy. Work will be performed at sea worldwide. Schuyler Line Navigation received $11,650,515 for chartering a U.S.-flagged, shallow-draft tanker, currently named the Bomar Eris, in support of Defense Logistics Agency-Energy missions. The anticipated primary area of performance is the Far East.

Piedmont Natural Gas Company received a maximum $107,464,640 for assumption of ownership, operation, and maintenance of the Natural Gas Distribution System in North Carolina.

Spectro received $6,845,333 for replenishment spares of spectrometers in support of DOD and FMS requirements.

UGI Utilities received $27,800,000 for labor, materials and equipment central boiler plant dual fuel conversion, retrofits and natural gas piping. This was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid received. Woodward Inc. received a maximum $12,880,000 for main fuel control.

FOOD SERVICES

FreshPack Produce received a maximum $37,213,064 for full-line fresh fruit and vegetable support. Hiland Dairy received a maximum $12,188,166 for various fresh milk and dairy products. The Mississippi Department of Rehabilitation Services received $6,827,220 for food services. U.S. Foods received a maximum $45,000,000 for prime vendor food and beverage support.

BUSINESS AND BUREAUCRACY

Accenture Federal Services received $14,494,794 for General Fund Enterprise Business System onsite support and change requests.

Air Liquide Industrial US LP received a maximum $17,171,720 for liquid nitrogen. Ordnance Systems received $8,032,815 for reactivation of magnesium nitration nitric acid unit 5 at Holston Army Ammunition Plant. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid solicited and one received. Linde, LLC received a maximum $15,703,357 for bulk helium.

Carahsoft Technology Corporation received $12,250,772 for an end of year requirement to evaluate services rendered in exercise of option evaluated at time of basic award. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition.  

CC Distributors received $22,000,000 to establish and operate a Contractor Operated Civil Engineer Supply Store (COCESS). The COCESS will provide a simplified method for authorized personnel to purchase quality material, tools and equipment used for work orders, construction, facility maintenance and repair, maintenance and repair, lawn and garden equipment repair and self-help type work.

Clayton Associates received a maximum $36,000,000 for Vacu tote storage boxes. Clinical Research Management received $11,998,984 to develop manufacturing, warehousing and delivery of cryopreserved platelets products in support of efforts to obtain U.S. FDA licensure. This contract was a non-competitive acquisition with one bid solicited and one received. Global Management Services received $10,782,901 for technical, administrative, and support services to reduce the quantity of aviation supply back-order requisitions from the military services.

Haworth; Allsteel; Teknion; and Knoll received $280,000,000 for systems and modular furniture purchases. “This approach ensures purchases meet program requirements while reducing costs and achieving 100 percent small business participation through dealer networks.”

Modular Container Systems received $24,000,000 for Mark 3 Modification 0 Pallet; national stock number: 3990-00-039-0223, part number: 564200 and Mark 12 Modification 1 Pallet; national stock number: 3990-00-566-2472, part number: 2645217.

Nomad Global Communication Solutions received a maximum $382,500,000 to procure fire/emergency vehicles and other vehicles.

SpectrumS4 received $675,117,000 for Advisory and Assistance Services (A&AS) capabilities. Services include the full spectrum of program management, financial management, contract management, and non-functionally aligned services for any stage of the systems life cycle from capability-based analysis and concept development through production, deployment, sustainment and disposal activities.

Systems Made Simple received $6,750,339 to provide systems integration and engineering support services to deliver full range technical expertise, functional knowledge management, hardware/software integration, deployment and maintenance of the capabilities, and provide documentation required to execute integrated Electronic Health Records.

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Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.

*Final notes: In recent months, DOD has branded several contracts with the following stamps: Small Business, Small Disadvantaged Business, Woman Owned Small Business, and Small Disadvantaged Woman Owned Business.

**Any clerical errors are the author’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly


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BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for October 2013

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Despite the Government Shutdown The Pentagon Spent $14,414, 916,043.00 in October 2013

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

Despite the government shutdown, the Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $14,414,916,043.00 on 183 individual contracts during October 2013. This amount is considerably less than previous months.

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES – Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations.

Valero Marketing and Supply received a maximum $330,851,251 to provide aviation turbine fuel to Israel.

AAI Corp. received $126,262,568 to provide logistics and operational support to the Army and USMC for shadow tactical unmanned aircraft systems. A portion of this contract includes FMS to Australia. Work will performed in Afghanistan.

DynCorp received $72,264,323 to train the Afghan National Army in multiple locations in Afghanistan.

Harris Corporation received $846,600,000 for providing Saudi Arabia, Poland, Czech Republic, El Salvador, Latvia and Romania with Harris radios.

L-3 received $7,289,689 to manufacture, test, deliver and support 13 Common Data Link Hawklink AN/ARQ-59 radio terminal sets for the Australian Navy MH-60R aircraft. Work will be performed in fourteen states and Canada.

Lockheed Martin received $180,991,416 to provide Saudi Arabia with two KC-130J aircraft and engineering support.

Lockheed Martin received $21,624,671 to provide Color Multipurpose Display Unit and Multi-Function Color Display to C-130J aircraft in order to replace obsolete central processor and graphics processor chip sets. This contract includes 15 percent FMS to Norway, Israel and Kuwait.

Lockheed Martin received $30,000,000 to produce and deliver two additional LRIP Lot VIII F-35 Joint Strike Fighter CTOL aircraft for Japan.

PKL Services received $9,958,180 to provide personnel and services necessary to maintain Singapore Air Force F-15SG and USAF F-15E aircraft based with the 366th Maintenance Group, located at Mountain Home AFB.

Raytheon received $10,934,694 for 31 Launcher Switching Multiplex Unit/Launcher Interface Control Assembly technical refresh kits and 17 Maintenance Assist Module Delta Kits for the Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) MK 49 Mod 3 Guided Missile Launch Systems (GMLS). The RAM MK 31 Guided Missile Weapon System (GMWS) is an Anti-Ship Missile Defense System development and production program between the United States and Germany. The MK 31 GMWS is comprised of the MK 44 Guided Missile Round Pack and the MK 49 GMLS (Awarded Sept. 30, 2013, but DOD included it in October’s contracts).

Raytheon received $17,328,258 to repair and service PATRIOT missile parts for Israel, Kuwait, Taiwan, Japan, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Netherlands and the UAE.  

Sikorsky received $86,832,600 to procure two additional Lot II S-70B anti-submarine warfare/anti-surface warfare aircraft for Brazil. President Rousseff may have cancelled a trip to the United States, but her country continues to support the U.S. military-industrial-congressional complex.

Tel-Instrument Electronics Corp. received $9,500,000 to manufacture and deliver radio frequency avionics flightline tester AN/USM-708 and/or AN/USM-719 to “various FMS customers.” This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

SALIENT CONTRACTS

DynCorp received $73,980,649 for receipt, inventory, accountability, maintenance, repair, periodic inspection and test, serviceability, marling, storage, security, shopping, and reporting of War Reserve Materials resources. Work will be performed at Shaw AFB, Langley AFB. Operations will occur at Thumrait, Oman; Masirah, Oman; Salalah Port, Oman; Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar; Al Jaber, Kuwait; Al Dhafra, UAE; and Manama, Bahrain.

Exelis Systems received $20,696,055 for base operation services at Forward Operating Location-Curacao. A base in Curacao allows the U.S. to conduct operations against Venezuelan sovereignty and to suppress indigenous movements of self-determination in the name of the “War on Drugs.”

Louis Berger Aircraft Services received $14,959,823 for air terminal and ground handling services at Kuwait International Airport (and its military portion known as: Abdullah Al Mubarak Air Base).

Northrop Grumman received $14,622,382 for DARPA’s Endurance program. Work will be performed in five states (CA, IL, MD, MA, and PA). Lockheed Martin received $11,386,743 for the Endurance program.

Novawurks received $42,627,714 “for phase two and three of the Phoenix program” for DARPA. Did the Pentagon really use the name Phoenix for another program?

Telecommunication Support Services (TSS) received $11,428,392 for work under the Mobile Air Surveillance System contract (for radar air surveillance; radio and satellite communications for counterdrug operations; host nation air sovereignty; search air rescue; and other regional operations in the USSOUTHCOM area of responsibility).

URS Group, Inc. received $31,181,234 for replacement of a fuel pier and truckload facility at Naval Station Guantánamo Bay. The Pentagon spent over $10 million in September on construction at Guantánamo Bay. Constant construction calls into question any Executive Branch assertions that the U.S. government will close the naval base.

UNMANNED SYSTEMS

Boeing received $24,726,375 for the purchase of 13 QF-16s, 12 “drone peculiar support equipment,” and integration engineering support.

General Atomics received a maximum $377,400,000 to produce 24 MQ-9 Block 5 Reaper aircraft, shipping containers, initial spares and support equipment. Work will be performed in Poway, CA.

Raytheon received $50,150,434 for 37 Multispectral Targeting System (MTS)-B Turret units, 37 MTS HD electronics units, associated containers, MTS-B initial shop replaceable unit/spares, and support equipment.

JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER

Lockheed Martin received $422,063,723 for providing F-35 ground maintenance, depot activation, supply chain management, and pilot and maintainer initial training. Work will be performed in Texas (35 percent); California (25 percent); the United Kingdom (20 percent); Florida (10 percent); New Hampshire (5 percent); and Maryland (5 percent). Purchases: USAF ($188,287,831; 44.6 percent), USMC ($125,641,895; 29.7 percent), USN ($66,558,160; 15.8 percent); the United Kingdom ($18,291,583; 4.3 percent); the Netherlands ($8,392,726; 2 percent); Australia ($4,856,254; 1.2 percent); Turkey ($2,975,016; .7 percent); Italy ($2,676,868; .6 percent); Canada ($1,933,807; .5 percent); Norway ($1,556,986; .4 percent); and Denmark ($892,597; .2 percent).

McKinsey & Company received $7,963,647 to support the F-35 operating and support cost reduction effort and the Collaborative Work Center.

United Technologies received $508,214,419 to procure 18 F-35 CTOL propulsion systems for the U.S. Air Force; six STOVL propulsion systems for the U.S. Marine Corps; and seven carrier variant propulsion systems for the U.S. Navy. This contract also procures three F-35 CTOL propulsion systems for Italy; two CTOL propulsion systems for Australia; one F-35 CTOL spare propulsion system for Italy; and one F-35 spare propulsion system for Australia. Included purchases: U.S. Navy and Marine Corps ($211,858,131; 42 percent); USAF ($210,822,019; 41 percent); and international partners ($85,534,269; 17 percent).

MISSILES, ROCKETS & BOMBS

Aerojet Rocketdyne received $16,085,503 for the procurement of a classified quantity of BLU-129 warhead casings (Awarded Sept. 30, 2013, but included in October’s contracts by DOD).

Analytical Services received $157,120,496 to support all phases of flight and ground testing; to develop, sustain and modernize operations of the Ballistic Missile Defense System test data management and data analysis lab infrastructure, test data transfer network connections, distributed operations systems and servers, and other systems.

BAE Systems received $21,652,898 for major production and service efforts on the Evolved Seasparrow Missile, NATO Seasparrow Surface Missile System, Stalker Long Range Electro-Optical Sensor Suite and day-to-day office operation in support of the 12 nations that comprise the NATO Seasparrow Consortium. This contract was not competitively procured based upon IAW 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(4). Raytheon received $6,920,249 for NATO Sea Sparrow Surface Missile System and Ship Self Defense System engineering, technical, logistic and programmatic services in support of Objective Configuration Phase II ship self-defense improvements and related efforts.

Beaver Aerospace & Defense received a maximum $23,097,009 to repair the Fast-Rising B Plug (FBRP) components for the Minuteman III ICBM weapon system. The B-Plug is the closing apparatus for the Personnel Access Hatch which is the entrance to the launch tube of the Minuteman III Launch Facility.

Exelis Inc. received $13,009,938 to procure 181 bomb rack 70/A digital improved triple ejector racks for the U.S. Navy (161) and Spain (20). This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6302-1. Purchases: U.S. Navy ($11,574,058; 89.53 percent) and Spain ($1,435,880; 10.47 percent). Exelis Systems received $23,275,661 for Launch and Test Range System support functions to the Eastern and Western Range: range sustainment, external user support, projects and engineering services, systems engineering and interim supply support spares for the sustainment period.

L-3 received $73,361,422 to develop and manufacture medium-range ballistic missile targets and provide integrated logistics support, including inventory storage and maintenance, pre-and post-mission analysis, launch preparation and execution, and engineering services.

Raytheon received $32,832,550 for Cooperative Engagement Capability (CEC) Design Agent and engineering services. CEC is a sensor netting system, which tries to improve “battle force Anti-Air Warfare capability by extracting and distributing sensor-derived information such that the superset of this data is available to all participating units.” This contract was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1(a)(2)(iii) (Awarded Sept. 27, 2013, but DOD included it in October’s contracts).

Raytheon received $385,742,176 for the engineering and modeling development phase design, development, integration, test and delivery of Air and Missile Defense S-Band Radar (AMDR-S) and Radar Suite Controller. The AMDR-S radar will be deployed on DDG 51 Flight III class ships. Work will be performed in eight states.

Raytheon received $406,024,307 to produce Aegis Weapon System AN/SPY-1D(V) Radar Transmitter Group and Missile Fire Control System (MFCS) MK 99 equipment and engineering services. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Raytheon received $9,606,647 for engineering and technical support for the Standard Missile program in Tucson, Arizona.

The Aerospace Corp. received $787,782,764 for general life cycle systems engineering and integration for the National Security Space Community. This includes planning, technical specification support, analyzing user needs, designing alternatives, ensuring interoperability and quality control, and assisting with test and evaluation, launch support, flight tests, orbital operations and integration of space systems into “effective systems of systems.” Work will be performed at Los Angeles AFB.

United Launch Services received $939,085,130 for mission assurance, program management, systems engineering, integration of space vehicles with launch vehicles, launch site and range operations, and launch infrastructure maintenance/sustainment for Delta IV and Atlas V launch vehicles. Work will be performed at Littleton, CO, Vandenberg AFB, and Cape Canaveral Air Station

IT, SPACE & CYBER

Agile Defense received $8,763,796 for corporate services support, including help desk and desktop customer support; audio-visual and video teleconference support; hardware management and maintenance; special C4 support; and information assurance/information protection support.

CACI Technologies; Centurum Information Technology; Computer Sciences Corp.; DRS Technical Services; General Dynamics; Lockheed Martin; ManTech Telecommunications & Information Systems; M.C. Dean, Inc.; SAIC; Secure Mission Solutions; Sotera Defense Solutions; Systems Research and Applications Corp.; Scientific Research Corp.; and STG, Inc. received $179,908,687 to procure transport computing & infrastructure services (including equipment and services associated with full system lifecycle support – R&D, test & evaluation, production & fielding of sustainable, secure, survivable, and interoperable C5ISR, Information Operations, Enterprise Information Services and Space Capabilities).

General Dynamics received $475,000,000 for R&D supporting the Warfighter Information Network- Tactical Increment 3. Requirements include fabrication, assembly, and coding of the configuration items necessary to complete the R&D phase for transition to the production and deployment phase. Support includes evolutionary product integration, testing, and evaluation.

Harris IT Services Corp. received $10,087,122 for selected C4 and support functions, including support to exercise and contingency operations, test centers, network infrastructure engineering, command & control and business systems, applications and information protection and event analysis.

Iridium Satellite received $7,241,112 for hardware and software repairs, maintenance, Gateway Technical Assistance Center support and Information Assurance Vulnerability Alert services for the EMSS DoD Gateway Iridium components. Iridium Satellite received a maximum $400,000,000 to provide unlimited DISA EMSS Iridium airtime for voice, data, paging and Distributed Tactical Communications System services for an unlimited number of federal government subscribers, and other DISA-sponsored subscribers. These contracts were non-competitive, per FAR 6.302-1.

Leidos Inc. received a maximum $36,717,969 to provide maintenance and logistics services in support of ISR programs.

Northrop Grumman received $48,750,000 for R&D regarding automatic target recognition (ATR). The Compact ATR and Sustainable Environment (CASE) program will develop and demonstrate the ability to add new target representations to ATR databases rapidly, including potentially on-the-fly target insertion. Technology developments will be demonstrated in both laboratory and field environments.

Northrop Grumman received $8,365,347 to support the Joint Distribution Process Analysis Center’s work on “global deployment and distribution network and infrastructure assessments, analytically driven operational courses of action, joint capability analysis to inform programmatic decisions, systems integration and data management, Joint Deployment Distribution Enterprise analysis/global distribution performance assessment, and future transformation analysis.” Although U.S. taxpayers read many words in this description, they come away with no understanding about the nature or intent of this contract. Then again, perhaps that’s the point of using corporate bureaucratese in Pentagon contracts.

Paragon Technology Group received $11,260,500 for program management office support. Disciplines include, but are not limited to: program control, resource management, requirements management, configuration management, test and evaluation, systems engineering, security engineering, program management support, risk management, information technology administrative support, acquisition support, and integration of all the disciplines.

Progeny Systems received $8,986,414 to procure engineering and technical services associated with Technology Infusion Methodology for commercial off-the-shelf-based systems and COTS Approach to Information Security. This contract was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(5).

SAIC received $14,110,134 for “Agile Transportation for the 21st Century Business Process Management services.” This modification provides for process and systems improvement and reengineering for BPM development activities for discrete and capacity-based deployment and distribution processes, including group passenger movements, distribution planning, route planning, sustainment planning (e.g., stock position management, distribution planning capacity management) and transportation execution activities.

SAIC received $8,399,044 for Advanced Laser Technology Research (ALTER) to improve laser development and laser damage and vulnerability testing programs and to provide facility and operations support to the Air Force Research Laboratory, Advanced Electric Laser Branch at Kirtland AFB.

Specpro Technical Services received $13,012,227 for “information systems engineering support, information assurance/system security support, system operation and maintenance, information management support, and applications development support” for DOD joint medical facilities in the National Capital Area/Region. This contract was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(1).

 apestry Solutions received $8,366,969 to support the Integrated Computerized Deployment System ICODES, including contract level and project management support, sustainment, enhancement, configuration management, information assurance, and help desk service. The contractor will provide services for the Military Surface Deployment and Distribution Command and USTRANSCOM.

TASC Inc. received $35,000,000 for the Optical Radiation Bioeffects and Safety (ORBS) program. ORBS’ objective is to conduct research on kinetic energy systems to assist in transitioning DoD technologies. Research includes: novel laser bioeffects, laser eye protection & advanced technology demonstration, and applied high energy laser bioeffects. Research will be conducted on optical radiation hazards expected in future combat scenarios, trying to develop of appropriate countermeasures.

The Bionetics Corporation received $13,741,824 for the Multi-Command PMEL contract. The contractor shall provide all management, personnel, equipment, tools, materials, supervision, and other items and services necessary to perform the PMEL services as defined in the performance work statement.

The SI organization received $83,748,017 for systems engineering and integration (SE&I) technical support for the GPS Enterprise system of stems, which are composed of three product segments: space segment, control segment and user segment.

ViaSat, Inc. received $11,406,320 for KS-252 follow-on production and sustainment.  

Wyle Laboratories received a $15,958,394 to provide information technology services in support of DARPA’s Support Services Office ITS support and services effort.

Xerox Corp.; Canon USA; Cartridge Technologies; Ricoh USA; Konica Minolta Business Solutions; Lexmark International; and KST Data Inc. received $498,000,000 to help “integrate, modernize and refresh the Army’s base architecture while providing standardized interfaces.”

GEAR, WEAPONRY & COMMUNICATIONS

Avon Protection Systems received $23,471,543 to procure voice protection units for use with the joint service general purpose mask.

BAE Systems received $195,430,914 to procure Paladin Integrated Management LRIP of 19 self-propelled Howitzers (SPH), 18 Carrier Ammunition Tracked (CAT) vehicles, 13 SPH Threshold 2 (T2) armor kits, 11 CAT T2 armor kits, and 37 lots of basic issue items.

Boeing received $19,320,670 for all work necessary to produce 2,040 CSEL hand held radios, AN/PRQ-7A, and accessories.

EaglePicher Technologies received $7,190,283 to manufacture 450 units of thermal crossover batteries. This procurement was solicited on a sole source basis in accordance 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Jameson LLC received $18,000,000 for extension/tent lights. Tennier Industries Inc. received $22,977,600 for trousers. Weckworth Manufacturing received $15,000,000 for sling cargo nets.

Medico Industries received a maximum $19,100,000 for Projectile Gun Unit (PGU)-45/B metal parts.

Navistar Defense received a maximum $7,260,077 for program and logistics support management for MRAP MaxxPro M1235A3 Dash with MaxxPro Survivability Upgrade (MSU).

Raytheon received $11,971,245 to support the Military Satellite Communications System (MILSATCOM) Global Broadcast System (GBS). This contract provides uninterrupted GBS to garrisoned and deployed war fighters.

Rockwell Collins Network Enabling Software received $14,960,418 for development, test, fielding and support of software. This contract supports the Tactical Air Control Party close air support system software version 1.4.5.

Secure Communication Systems received $17,434,072 for integrated soldier power and data systems and defense advanced GPS adapters.

United States Marine Inc. received $15,827,132 for post-production and contractor logistical support services for the combatant craft assault for USSOCOM.

SHIPS & NAVAL HARDWARE

Alliant Techsystems Operations received $7,478,270 to manufacture WW98 Initiating Propellant to be used on MK48 Advance Capability Torpedo system. A non-competitive contract [10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1)].

BAE Systems received $11,005,126 to fabricate, test and deliver three AN/SQQ-32(V)4 Sonar Set High Frequency Wideband upgrade systems, which are designed for deep water minehunting.

BAE Systems received $12,494,114 for regular overhaul and dry docking of USNS Amelia Earhart (T-AKE 6). Work includes inspection of the propeller shaft and stern tube, cleaning/painting of the hull, inspection and polish of the bow thruster propeller, installation of the chloropac unit, and overhaul of the seal valves.

BAE Systems received $13,171,617 for repairs to the USS Paul Hamilton (DDG 60). BAE Systems received $23,802,154 for depot-level maintenance to the USS Mobile Bay (CG 53) (Awarded Sept. 28, 2013; included in October’s contracts). BAE Systems received $70,777,435 for USS Princeton (CG 52) dry-docking, including depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications to update the ship’s military and technical capabilities. BAE Systems; Continental Maritime of San Diego; and General Dynamics received $35,000,000 for the completion of “Chief of Naval Operations availabilities,” and maintenance on DDG 51 and CG 47 class ships (awarded Sept. 30, 2013; included in DOD’s October contracts).

Bechtel Plant Machinery received $197,571,818 for naval nuclear propulsion components.

DRS Power & Control Technologies received $13,396,000 to procure rugged air circuit breakers and associated cradles in support of the LSD class midlife electric plant upgrade (Awarded Sept. 30, 2013; included in October’s contracts).

Epsilon Systems Solutions received $15,814,969 for professional and engineering support to the Southwest Regional Maintenance Center. These services include corrosion control; engines, machine and combat systems maintenance/support; and offsite repair programs on Naval Base San Diego. This contract was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

General Atomics received $51,997,981 to procure Advanced Arresting Gear equipment required to stand up the Runway Arresting Landing Site (RALS) in support of CVN-78 testing. RALS will enable the Navy to run arresting simulations with live aircraft prior to employing those aircraft onboard ship. Work will be performed in CA, MS, MA, PA, NJ and TX.

General Dynamics received $9,132,002 for DDG 1000 class services (technical and industrial engineering in the application of the detail design to support construction and the maintenance of the ship design).

Huntington Ingalls received $155,682,919 for engineering, technical, design, configuration management, Integrated Logistics Support, database management, research and development, modernization, trade and industrial support for nuclear submarines (Awarded Sept. 27, 2013, but included in October’s contract releases).

L3 received $10,970,754 for MK 20 Electro-Optical Sensor System units “including the associated equipment, services and emergent provisioned item order for spares requirements and level-of-effort engineering services.” The MK 20 Electro-Optical Sensor System is employed as a check sight and targeting sensor for anti-surface and anti-air warfare, and naval gun fire support missions (Awarded Sept. 24, 2013).

Lockheed Martin received $21,350,270 for DDG 51 Combat System Ship Integration Technical Data Packages and Design Budget Engineering Team Packages associated with incorporating the AEGIS Weapon System and associated Combat system elements into DDG 51 class ships.

Lockheed Martin received $6,532,228 for planning yard support efforts (vendor training and crew familiarization; trainer support; material planning and procurement; material warehousing; logistics product updates; and class sustainment management) in support of USS Fort Worth (LCS 3) (Awarded Sept 30, 2013).

Lockheed Martin received $7,703,991 to upgrade the LCS 1 Integrated Tactical Trainer. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Lockheed Martin received $8,847,668 to procure 20 AN/BVY-1 Integrated Submarine Imaging Systems (ISIS) and associated spares. The ISIS provides mission critical, all-weather, visual, and electronic search, digital image management, indication, warning, and platform architecture interface capabilities.

Lockheed Martin received $95,727,501 for “definitization” of the Navy’s AN/SQQ-89A(V)15 Surface Ship Undersea Warfare System production requirements and exercise of Fiscal 2013 production options. The AN/SQQ-89A(V)15 is a surface ship combat system with the capabilities to search, detect, classify, localize and track undersea contacts; and to engage and evade submarines, mine-like small objects, and torpedo threats. This contract was not competitively procured.

ManTech received $85,000,000 for architecture-engineering and/or environmental services for preparation of military readiness activities in the Pacific Ocean and the western U.S. This contract may also include work on training and testing areas and installations around the world. ManTech received $11,788,957 for engineering and technical support for reliability, maintainability, testability, quality assurance and diagnostic and system safety analysis during the design, development, production and in-service life cycles of all naval aircraft platforms and their systems.

Northrop Grumman received $20,356,252 to procure and deliver three AN/SPQ-9B radar sets with redundancy, two interface kits, Cooperative Engagement Capability, and one combat interface kit for Aegis (awarded Sept. 27, 2013).

Northrop Grumman received $9,932,848 for engineering services on technical data packages, and pre-production/production units for ship self-defense Mk2 command and control hardware for LSD 50, LSD 52, CVN 72 and CVN 78. This contract was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Patriot Contract Services received $63,346,311 to operate/maintain eight government-owned Watson-class, medium-speed, ships in support of Military Sealift Command worldwide prepositioning.

Raytheon received $58,000,000 for mission systems equipment for DDG 1000 and 1001, and schedule critical DDG 1002 mission systems equipment.

Raytheon received $7,307,299 for Cooperative Engagement Capability Common Array Block (CAB) family of antennas. The CAB-Surface will be utilized on surface ships and the CAB Expeditionary will be utilized for U.S. Marine Corps Composite Tracking Network.

AIRCRAFT

ATK received $49,418,935.00 for R&D on the Medium Class Stage III motor. Aerojet Rocketdyne received $28,938,705.00 for R&D on the Medium Class Stage III motor. These contractors shall demonstrate available and common emerging technologies that may be applicable to multiple future common strategic propulsion systems. The effort will begin the development of a flight motor design that will be a direct replacement for the SR-73.

Boeing received $59,569,990 for service of the Apache D unique components.

Boeing received $26,650,000 to upgrade eight flight trainers, six weapons tactics trainers, three part task trainers, and 44 mission system desktop trainers in support of the P-8A Multi-Mission Maritime aircraft LRIP II. Boeing received $99,606,355 to incorporate a Maintenance Training Device Suite (MTDS) and Ordnance Load Trainer into the P-8A Multi-Mission Maritime aircraft LRIP II. The MTDS Suite will include six Virtual Maintenance Trainer Devices and 14 Hardware Type II devices.

Breeze-Eastern Corp. received a maximum $37,067,231 for aircraft mount winches.

Canadian Commercial received $14,349,903 for Rotary Wing Airlift services for the North Warning System. Work will be performed at North Warning System radar sites throughout the Canadian arctic.

Defense Support Services received $14,878,790 to work on the Aerial Targets program, which directly supports live-fire weapons system testing and helps the 53rd Weapons Evaluation Group develop and test air-to-air missiles and for the F-22, F-35, F-16, and F-15 aircraft.

DynCorp International received $76,577,468 for base supply services to the Joint Primary Aircraft Training System T-6A/B Texan II aircraft. DynCorp received $39,652,740 for T-6, T-38 Undergraduate Pilot Training and T-38 Introduction to Fighter Fundamentals aircraft maintenance services. Work will be performed at Sheppard AFB.

Hamilton Sundstrand received $7,416,890 to repair 118 aircraft constant frequency generators for the V-22 Osprey. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Honeywell International received $19,100,000 for technical and engineering services to overhaul/repair of the T-55 family of engines at Corpus Christi Army Depot. Honeywell International received a maximum $502,425,544 to purchase spare parts for various weapon systems (aircraft, engines, helicopters, and related hardware). Honeywell International received a maximum $8,287,125 for engine lubricating cooler (Awarded Sept. 30, 2013).

Lockheed Martin received $26,772,401 to retrofit fielded Mission Training Centers with Out the Window visual systems upgrade and night vision goggles capability. This includes upgrades for F-22 Training Systems at Sheppard, Tyndall, Langley, Hickam, and Elmendorf.

M1 Support Services received $16,893,372 for program management, organizational and intermediate maintenance services for T-38 aircraft. Work will be performed at Beale, Holloman, Langley, Tyndall, and Whiteman Air Force bases.

MACRO Industries received a $16,912,163 for the C-130 Armor Plate Program. The C-130 Armor Plate Program replaces the current armor plate system for the C-130H aircraft.

Northrop Grumman received $414,500,000 for the Joint STARS System Improvement Program III (to increase E-8C performance, capability, reliability and maintainability).

Pall Aeropower received a maximum $16,904,640 for particle separators.

Raytheon received $40,248,828 to continue developing & testing Engineering Development Models of air (E-4, E-6) and ground fixed & transportable Command Post Terminals with Presidential & National Voice Conferencing for the Family of Advanced Beyond Line-of-Sight Terminals.

Sikorsky received $110,830,801 for maintenance on T-34, T-44, and T-6 aircraft. This contract also provides labor, services, facilities, equipment, tools, related support equipment, and material to support 92 T-34, 54 T-44, 42 T-6A, and 181 T-6B aircraft based at NAS Corpus Christi, NAS Whiting Field and NAS Pensacola.

Taitech and Innovative Scientific Solutions received a combined $31,820,000 for Technology for Sustained Supersonic Combustion (TSSC), which focuses on R&D of components and diagnostics for high-speed air breathing propulsion systems and integration into aircraft, weapons and launch systems.

BASE SERVICES

Defense Support Services received $18,703,564 for civil engineering services to manage the base operating support services and civil engineering at Sheppard AFB. Electronic Metrology Laboratory received $9,638,498 for base operating support services at NAS Whiting Field (facilities management, pest control, grounds maintenance, swimming pool maintenance, pavement clearance, electrical, gas, wastewater, water, environmental services, and vehicle work). Pride Industries received $19,258,736 for Dix base support services (management & maintenance to supplies, structures, grounds, roads, utilities, equipment, and billeting). Wolf Creek Federal Services received $8,357,229 for base operating support services (bachelor housing; facility management; facility investment; pest control; waste management; pavement clearance; utilities; vehicles & equipment; cranes; and environmental) primarily at Whidbey Island and Everett.

SupplyCore received a maximum $28,600,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations supplies for the Japan region. Universal Sodexho received a maximum $18,800,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations supplies for the Korea region.

CONSTRUCTION

ACC Construction received $21,786,027 to construct Phase III of Basic Training Complex III at Fort Jackson, SC. Akima Construction Services; Ayuda Management Corporation; FutureNet Group Inc.; Ma-Chis Kawv III; North Wind Neu Security Services; Security Construction Services; and Zieson Construction received a maximum $80,000,000 to design, build and construct an Access Control Point and install other equipment. FutureNet Group received $9,499,725 to construct a new entry control facility (which includes roadway relocation and construction of a sentry house, four sentry booths, and a raised over-watch station) at Parris Island. I.E.-Pacific received $12,612,000 to design and construct a security operations complex and military working dog facility at MCAS Yuma. M.A. Mortenson (doing business as Mortenson Construction) received $36,900,000 to design and construct a Littoral Combat Ship Training Facility at Naval Base San Diego (awarded Sept. 30, 2013). Railroad Construction Company received $8,039,755 for maintenance and repair of railroad and tracks at Naval Weapon Station Earle and other areas of responsibility. RORE-ITSI JV received $11,359,755 to construct a child development center to accommodate 120 children at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam. Sauer Inc. received $27,406,000 to design and construct an A School Barracks at NAS Oceana, Dam Neck Annex. Siemens Industry received $12,136,943 to design and construct an Energy Management and Control System and Direct Digital Control System for Heating Ventilation and Air Conditioning System Upgrades at Marine Corps Base Quantico (awarded Sept. 30, 2013).

American Equipment; Crane Technologies Group; HECO-Pacific Manufacturing; Piedmont Hoist and Crane; Sievert Electric Service and Sales; and Westmont Industries received a collective $30,000,000 for ordering new, and overhauling existing, weight handling equipment (cranes, monorails, hoists).

Asset Group received $7,307,000 for renovations (e.g. demolition, sheet rock, electrical, plumbing, fire systems, door replacement, stairwell repairs, heating, AC replacement, elevator upgrades) to building 600 at NAS Pensacola (awarded Sept. 30, 2013).

Conquistador Dorado JV; Integrated Pro Services; RDC Circle; and Veterans Contractors Group JV received a maximum $50,000,000 for hurricane protection and restoration services. FEDCON – JV received a maximum $48,372,000 to support the Hurricane and Storm Damage Risk Reduction System. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock received a maximum $30,700,221 for dredging beach fill and placing material on Folly Beach, SC.

MARSTEL-DAY received a maximum $10,000,000 for architect/engineering services for the Army Corps of Engineers to provide environmental, planning and encroachment management support to the USAF Office of the Civil Engineer Headquarters.

Phillips & Jordan; Ceres Environmental Services; Environmental Chemical Corp; Ashbritt Environmental; and Crowder Gulf received a maximum $240,000,000 for debris management services. W. M. Schlosser Company received $8,933,000 for high reservoir improvements, Washington Aqueduct Division, Washington D.C.

FOOD SERVICES

C&C Produce received a maximum $10,558,225 for fresh fruit and vegetables. Valley Fruit and Vegetable received a maximum $30,000,000 for fresh fruit and vegetables. Quality Distributors (located in Guam) received a maximum $8,300,000 for food distribution. Sysco Seattle Inc. received $51,000,000 and $15,750,000 for food distribution. Reinhart Foodservice received a maximum $31,500,000 for food and beverage. Sysco Nashville received a maximum $6,750,000 for food and beverage. 

Spraying Devices received a maximum $87,500,000 for agricultural equipment with spraying devices.

FUEL

AVFuel Corp. received $13,028,827 for fuel. Chevron received $29,754,648 for aviation turbine fuel. Jar Assets received $8,111,000 for transportation of bulk jet fuel and marine diesel fuel by barge. Vane Line Bunkering received $20,423,116 to transport bulk jet fuel and marine diesel fuel by barge. Kinder Morgan Tank Storage Terminals received $47,075,000 to provide and operate a fuel storage terminal. Mobil Oil Guam received $23,049,571 for fuel. Olgoonik Technical Services received a maximum $8,940,614 to operate and maintain bulk fuel facilities. Petromax received a maximum $42,782,189 for automotive gasoline.

HEALTHCARE & SAFETY

Anacor Pharmaceuticals received a maximum $13,495,328 for research toward overcoming resistance by the application of boron to ribosomal inhibitors. Cardinal Health ($130,086,972); Harvard Drug Group ($53,276,069); X-Gen Pharmaceuticals ($9,520,795) will provide pharmaceutical products. Hu-Friedy Mfg. received a maximum $10,920,310 for dental supplies.

Kuhana Associates received a maximum $7,842,873 for health care workers who will perform a full range of clinical support service at Davis-Monthan AFB. Marketing Assessment received a maximum $30,000,000 for warming blankets and other medical and emergency supplies. Whitehall Manufacturing Corp. received a maximum $14,760,000 for multiple leg slings.

Medtronic received a maximum $58,026,785 for radiology systems, subsystems, and components. Mindray DS USA received $35,817,633 for patient monitoring systems, subsystems, accessories, consumables, and training. Nihon Kohden America received a maximum $27,579,330 for patient monitoring systems, subsystems, accessories, consumables, spare and repair parts, and training. Spacelabs Medical received $13,460,681 for patient monitoring systems, subsystems, accessories, consumables, and training.

Atlantic Diving Supply; W.S. Darley; Unifire; The Mallory Co.; Federal Resources; and L.N. Curtis & Sons received a maximum $872,000,000 for fire and emergency services equipment. Tyco Fire Products received a maximum $13,710,201 for aqueous film forming foam. Wolverine Fire Protection received a maximum $16,354,747 to procure a fire protection system for Defense Logistics Agency warehouse facilities at Tinker AFB.

TRANSPORTATION

American Airlines; Evergreen International Airlines; North American Airlines; US Airways; and World Airways received $141,487,046 for international airlift services. Air Transport International; Atlas Air; Delta; Federal Express; Polar Air Cargo Worldwide; and MN Airlines (doing business as Sun Country Airlines) received $237,326,979. ABX Air; JetBlue Airways; Kalitta Air; Northern Air Cargo; Sky Lease I; Southern Air; United Airlines; and United Parcel Service received $168,183,810.

AAR Mobility Systems received a maximum $80,000,000 for specialized shipping/storage containers, shelters, and accessories. American Auto Logistics received $23,000,000 for shipping privately owned vehicles belonging to DOD service members and civilian employees. International Auto Logistics received $304,559,951 for transportation and storage of privately owned vehicles at multiple locations. Lockheed Martin received a minimum $8,340,165 for operational infrastructures, applications, and interfaces of the Integrated Data Environment Global Transportation Network Convergence (IGC) programs enterprise data warehouse. Lynden Air Cargo received $6,773,188 for moving up to 40,000 pounds of cargo from Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson to Eareckson Air Station (Shemya Island) and other satellite locations in Alaska.

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*Final notes: In recent months, DOD has branded several contracts with the following stamps: Small Business; Small Disadvantaged Business; Woman Owned Small Business; Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business; and Small Disadvantaged Woman Owned Business.

**Any clerical errors are the author’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.


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BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for November 2013

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The Pentagon Spent at Least $28,960,969,531on 197 Individual Contracts During November 2013

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $28,960,969,531.00 on 197 individual contracts during November 2013. To put this figure in perspective, the UN asked for $300 million of aid to help the victims of Typhoon Haiyan in early November. DOD often spends that much in an afternoon.

SALIENT CONTRACTS

AAR Airlift Group received an unspecified amount for providing the Pentagon with aircraft services in Uganda, CAR, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and South Sudan. For rotary wing aircraft, personnel, equipment, and maintenance to perform air transportation in Afghanistan, AAR Airlift Group received $151,582,265, Columbia Helicopters received $87,697,701, and Construction Helicopters received $33,602,864.

Atlantic Diving Supply; Noble Supply & Logistics; and Theodore Wille Intertrade (Switzerland) received $260,000,000 for maintenance, repair and operations supplies for the CENTCOM area of responsibility. 

BREMCOR JV received $18,922,837 for base operation support services (e.g. port operations; vehicles and equipment maintenance; heating, cooling and ventilation; pest control and janitorial services) at Naval Station Guantánamo BayThe U.S. government is not going to close Guantánamo Bay; millions of dollars have been allocated for projects there in recent months (over $31 million in October and over $10 million in September).

G4S received $11,495,146 for base operating services at Naval Support Activity, Bahrain. Work includes: management and supervision; providing materials, supplies, labor, and transportation; security, galley, facilities investment; custodial services and pest control; and waste management and grounds-keeping. Despite the popular uprising against the anti-democratic Al-Khalifa regime, the U.S. government continues to support the regime and maintain U.S. naval facilities in Al-Manama.

Institute for Defense Analysis (IDA) received $888,757,811 for providing research and analysis to the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the joint staff, combatant commands, and other DOD branches. This contract was not competitively processed because it was obtained under the FFRDC program.

Lockheed Martin received $9,999,830 for leasing the S301i, “a commercially-classed dry submersible vessel” and for supporting risk mitigation research, development, test, and evaluation for long-term Dry Combat Submersibles program objectives in support of USSOCOM. One offer was solicited and received. 

L3 Communications received $22,049,546 for C-12 contractor logistics support (e.g. maintenance, repair and support functions). Work will be performed worldwide at 19 sites to support C-12 aircraft for PACAF, Air Force Material Command, DIA and Defense Security Cooperation Agency. 15% of this contract is FMS funding.

Muscogee Nation Business Enterprise received $8,218,006 for life support services to “DOD Task Force for Business and Stability Operations.” These services will provide basic necessities, complex security, and personnel security primarily in Herat, Afghanistan. This contract was sole-source.

Phacil Inc. received $28,827,647 for the Modernization Eastern Range Network program, which upgrades mission communications at the Eastern Range to internet protocol v4 (IPv4) (IPv6 capable). Work will be performed at Patrick AFB, Cape Canaveral, Kennedy Space Center, Melbourne Beach Optical Tracking Annex, Jonathan Dickinson Missile Tracking Annex, Wallops Flight Facility, New Boston Tracking Station, and British territories Antigua Air Station and Ascension Auxiliary Airfield.

SOS International received $7,299,684 for public affairs operations in support of the U.S. war effort in Afghanistan. This contract essentially gives a private corporation millions of dollars to give the U.S. occupation of Afghanistan a friendly face across a variety of media.

Teledyne Scientific & Imaging received $8,409,250 for “Knowledge Representation in Neural Systems program. The objective of the program is to develop new theories that explain how conceptual knowledge is represented in the human brain and test those theories by demonstrating the ability to predict and interpret concept-related patterns of neural activity measured non-invasively.” 

University of California Santa Barbara received $56,591,679 to maintain the Collaborative Biotechnologies (ICB) University Affiliated Research Center. Services include engineering and research focusing on biotechnology solutions that address DOD needs. U.S. academia has long supported Pentagon aims.

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES – Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations.

Boeing received $15,500,000 for the “disorientation recovery function capability” on the F-15SA aircraft for Saudi Arabia’s Air Force. S&K Aerospace received $7,126,828 for Saudi Arabia’s F-15 “classified items Third Party Logistics Repair & Return management services.”

Cubic Defense Applications received $24,999,949 to provide Singapore, Morocco, Oman and Saudi Arabia with P5 Combat Training System (P5CTS) hardware. This award is a sole-source acquisition.

General Dynamics received $22,484,873 to provide the UK with “common missile compartment prototype material, manufacturing and testing.”

General Atomics received $27,607,349 for France’s MQ-9 Contractor Logistics Support Phase I program.

General Dynamics received $49,999,999 for approximately 600,000 hours of integrated logistics services in support of technical analysis and investigation of FMS Programs. Work will be performed in Maryland (59 percent); Virginia (13 percent); Pennsylvania (7 percent); Florida (6 percent); Kuwait (6 percent); Australia (5 percent); Egypt (1 percent); Japan (1 percent); Malaysia (1 percent); and Taiwan (1 percent). This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1. 

ISO Group received $7,635,520 for providing Oman with M60 spare parts.

Lockheed Martin received $10,458,900 for developing/testing 15 series modifications to the MH-60R VHF Omni-directional Range/Instrument Landing System, crash data recorder, and ADS-B Out for Australia.

Lockheed Martin received $300,000,000 for producing test vehicles, equipment, mission planning, flight programs, logistics support, sustainment, and engineering. This involves FMS to Finland and Australia

Pacific Architects & Engineers received $44,577,164 for development, testing, and installation of the SureTrak Surveillance System [PDF] for the Pentagon and various governments in Africa (80 percent of the contract). SureTrak is a data acquisition and display system used for airspace and shoreline surveillance, waterway clearance, and environmental monitoring functions. This contract was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). 

Raytheon received $9,720,715 for the procurement of 210 HARM AGM-88B/C Guidance Sections for the USAF (190) and Germany (20); 25 HARM AGM-88B/C Control Sections for the USAF (20) and Germany (5), including associated technical data. Purchases: USAF ($8,662,530; 89 percent); Germany ($1,058,185; 11 percent).

Sikorsky Aircraft received $46,867,800 to convert 26 UH-60M Black Hawk aircraft to configurations that meet Taiwan’s military needs. This contract was not paid for using FMS funds, but is placed in this category to give readers a more complete picture of U.S. military relations with other nations.

UNMANNED SYSTEMS

Hydroid Inc. received $26,231,287 for engineering, repair and training support for the Navy’s MK18 unmanned underwater vehicle family of systems. This contract was not competitively procured.

Insitu Inc. received $8,845,101 for the procurement of one LRIP II RQ-21A Blackjack Unmanned Aircraft System, including air vehicles, ground control stations, launch & recovery equipment, and air vehicle support equipment. 

Northrop Grumman received $13,857,607 for logistics services in support of the MQ-8B/C Fire Scout unmanned air vehicle. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c) (1). 

Raytheon received $9,084,334 for work on the MTS-B High Definition/Target Location Accuracy (HD/TLA), which is used on Predator aircraft.

Textron (Bell Helicopter) received $8,266,644 for providing three Bell 407 analog helicopters in support of upgrading the MQ-8C Fire Scout. This contract was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1. 

Toyon Research and Integrity Applications received a collective $42,282,088 to develop and field ISR and targeting systems to improve warfighter situational awareness and weapon delivery capabilities. 

UES Inc. received $46,200,000 for the Molecular Signatures program to develop technologies to discover, characterize, detect, and analyze complex biosignatures in order to provide tools for ISR and human performance assessment. “The program is charged with leading identification and characterization of the molecular attributes present in humans, the environment and pathogen biology for the purposes of developing human-centric ISR solutions.” 

MISSILES, ROCKETS & BOMBS

BAE Systems; Dynetics Inc.; Exelis; SAIC; and Teledyne Brown Engineering received $220,000,000 for test execution services and launch augmentation.

Boeing received a maximum $325,000,000 to perform systems engineering and integration requirements related to the Ballistic Missile Defense System. Northrop Grumman received $39,200,000 for R&D on integrated air missile defense. 

Honeywell International received $9,997,263 for the Pendulous Integrating Gyroscopic Accelerometer, which is a component on the ICBM. Honeywell will repair PIGA float assemblies which is an ongoing repair effort. This award is the result of a sole-source acquisition. 

Honeywell International received $7,279,938 to modify the design to develop a radiation hardened loop closure Application Specific Integration Circuit for the Strategic Fiber Optic Gyro, a part of the Strategic Systems and Launch Technologies (SSLT) program.

Kearfott Corp. received $18,700,000 to develop and test high fidelity inertial measurement units (IMU) that meet or exceed the requirements of MDA-STD-005 for the MDA’s Advanced Technology Risk Reduction. 

Lockheed Martin received $16,800,000 to develop and produce a mobile capability reconstitution of PAC-3 four-pack assemblies (four missiles in each Patriot canister). 

Lockheed Martin received $17,658,738 for life cycle launcher support for MLRS High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) Launcher Module and fire control systems. One bid solicited and one received. 

Lockheed Martin received $8,339,331 for procurement of Trident II (D5) missile production, support and life extension. Work will be performed 35 distinct locations within the U.S. “and other various locations.” This contract illustrates the entrenched nature of the military-industrial-congressional complex. Corporations, which profit from interminable war, place their stateside operations in many different congressional districts. They then pitch the production of war materiel as “jobs” to complicit Senators and Representatives. Spending on education or healthcare creates more jobs (PDF).

Northrop Grumman received a maximum $37,484,783 to procure weapons system outer wing panels. This contract is a sole-source acquisition. 

PAE Applied Technologies received $23,246,532 for range engineering, operations and maintenance services in support of the Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Divisions’ Atlantic Test Range and Atlantic Targets and Marine Operations Division.

Raytheon received $18,795,695 for contractor logistics support to repair High-speed Anti-Radiation Missile (HARM) Targeting System (HTS) pods.

Raytheon received $57,849,999 for tube-launched optically-tracked wireless guided missiles.  One bid was solicited and one received. Raytheon received $15,940,631 for engineering and technical support services for the standard missile program. 

SPACE, CYBER, IT & COMMS

A-YZ Corp. received $7,166,660 to create the capability to perform inference on real-world problems with 100 times “bigger” models than previously known to be achievable. This work will be done for DARPA. “Bigger models can translate into orders of magnitude, less training data required, less computation required for inference, and more accurate results. A-YZ will deliver a software prototype that will offer inference performance equal to or greater than 1e6-1e9 Metropolis-Hastings Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MH MCMC) samples per second and approximately 1e2-1e5 greater inference performance than existing systems.”

BAE Systems received $28,167,428 to procure 262 AN/ALE-55 fiber optic towed decoys (FOTDs) and 70 electronic frequency converters (EFC). These are components of the integrated defensive electronic counter measures suite. 

Booz Allen Hamilton; CACI; SAIC; D & S Consultants; Scientific Research Corp.; Dynamics Research Corp.; BAE Systems; and Systems Technologies Inc. received $497,000,000 for technical, administrative, and operation support services. 

CACI received $14,162,860 for professional support services (e.g. program analysis, monitoring support, administration, human resources, cost estimating, engineering support, information technology) in support of the Expeditionary Warfare Program Office. 

Data Link Solutions received $32,874,867 and ViaSat received $39,182,647 for Block Upgrade 2 (BU2) development and retrofits to Multifunctional Information Distribution System-Low Volume Terminal (MIDS-LVT) production/engineering services. These contracts were not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1 and 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). BAE Systems received $48,000,000 for systems engineering and integration of the MIDS-LVTs. This contract was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-4 & 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(4).

Federal Networked Systems; Dell Federal Systems; Harris IT Services Corp.; Sterling Computers Corp.; Force 3 Inc.; PCMall Inc.; Insight Public Sector Inc.; Presidio Networked Solutions Inc.; and FCN Inc. received a collective $6,900,000,000 for Network Centric Solutions-2 (NETCENTS-2) Netcentric Products. This contract will provide commercially available off-the-shelf products to support the Internet Protocol Network and will include: networking equipment, servers/storage, peripherals, multimedia, software, and identity management/biometric hardware and associated software.

General Electric received $19,970,000 for R&D to develop and demonstrate an aircraft tracking (IAT) framework to replace the baseline deterministic IAT framework currently used for legacy aircraft. 

Jacobs Technology received $12,800,149 to continue providing disciplined systems/specialty engineering and technical/Information Assurance services, support, and products using established government, contractor, and industry processes. This contract provides a broad array of classified cryptographic and information assurance (IA) systems, equipment, services and support across DOD and various FMS customers. Much of the contract supports developing, modernizing, testing, fielding, sustaining and disposing of COMSEC systems, sustaining SIGINT equipment, providing key management, providing IA services and field support services. 

Lockheed Martin received $105,083,207 to provide MILSATCOM Orbital Operations and Logistics Sustainment Support functions. Northrop Grumman received $8,192,012 for a protected Military Satellite Communications design for affordability risk reduction demonstration. 

Motorola Solutions received $17,248,849 for sustainment of various radio systems at 53 military installations worldwide. 

Northrop Grumman received $8,917,999 for the procurement of engineering and technical services consisting of parts procurement, repair, field, and marine repair services, software, and engineering support for the AN/WSN-7/7A Ring Laser Gyro Navigation (RLGN) systems, AN/WSN-7B Ring Laser Gyrocompass (RLGN), Integrated Bridge System (IBS)/Voice Management System and Navigation and Search Radar Systems. The contract was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). 

Odyssey Systems Consulting Group received $8,456,784 for “professional acquisition support services” at Hanscom AFB in support of Space C2 Surveillance Division and the Theater Battle Control Division of classified FMS (roughly 14% of contract).

Onyx-Ace Joint Venture received $10,000,000 for architect/engineer services and professional Geographic Information System services at various locations primarily in the Pacific and Indian Ocean.

Raytheon received $7,097,447 for Cooperative Engagement Capability (CEC) engineering services. CEC improves battle force effectiveness by improving overall situational awareness and by enabling longer range, cooperative, multiple, or layered engagement strategies. 

Raytheon received $42,765,853 to supply radio parts and equipment for the U.S. Navy and Australia.

Raytheon received $13,267,175 for radar operations and maintenance services. This will ensure the availability of the COBRA DANE’s radar facility to collect 100 percent of the tasked data that passes through its field of view. The necessary support shall be provided 24/7/365 at Eareckson Air Station.

GEAR, EQUIPMENT & TRAINING

API, LLC (Comerio, Puerto Rico) received a maximum $32,859,542 for duffel bags. 

Bremen-Bowdon Investments received a maximum $13,033,800 for Army blue dress coats. Bethel Industries received $13,967,796 for CUU trousers. Kandor Manufacturing (Arecibo, Puerto Rico) received $6,690,641 for CUU blouses. Short Bark Industries received $10,835,538 for CUU blouses. Excel Garment Manufacturing received $7,125,286 ABU clothing.

BAE Systems received $26,484,767 for Paladin Integrated Management LRIP technical data package and electronic technical manuals. 

Ensign-Bickford Aerospace and Defense received $8,650,874 for low-hazard linear shaped charges

Fidelity Technologies received $23,562,700 for armor kits for the Heavy Mobility Tactical Truck A4, Palletized Load System A1, Heavy Mobility Tactical Truck A4 Tanker Armor Module Kit and the M915A5. 

General Dynamics received $6,950,520 for an equitable adjustment resulting from a government stop-work order under the Ground Combat Vehicle Technology Development Phase contract. 

General Dynamics received $28,200,000 for Phase II of the Engineering Change Proposal Upgrade program. Upgrades include: improved automotive and electrical power generation, chassis upgrades and enhancements in vehicle network capabilities. 

The Hana Group received $6,803,449 for range and business/financial support services at Kauai, Hawaii.

Mahaffey Tent & Awning received $17,198,048 to provide support services & equipment (e.g. generators, tents, lights, handwash stations, and shower trailers) at the Joint Readiness Training Center.

Navistar Defense received $7,260,077 for supporting the acquisition of the contract data requirements list and program and logistics support management for the MRAP MaxxPro M1235A3 Dash with MaxxPro Survivability Upgrade (MSU).

Oshkosh received $74,086,915 for 246 FMTV and applicable federal retail excise tax.

TerraGroup received $49,900,000 for the Lightweight Water Purification System (LWPS).

Truetech Inc. received $17,912,955 to procure M8 and M9 chemical paper.

Ultra Armoring received $15,000,000 for the light capability rough terrain forklift (LCRTF) crew protection kit (CPK). 

AIRCRAFT

Ahntech Inc. received $12,435,300 to work on ACC’s Primary Training Ranges Operations and Maintenance Services (PTR O&M). Work includes range threat, scoring, and feedback systems, as well as target, road, grounds, and facility maintenance. Bering Sea Environmental received $6,762,241 for working on ACC’s Air Combat Training System Operations and Maintenance Support Services (ACTS O&M). This includes maintenance and repairs on ACTS pods and debriefing stations, loading of pods onto aircraft and preparing data cartridges before and after missions. This contract includes unclassified FMS (1.8 percent) to Singapore’s Air Force. 

Bell Boeing Joint Project Office (JPO) received $9,256,869 to upgrade four V-22 Ospreys (Block A to B, 50-69 series). Bell-Boeing JPO received $18,064,906 for logistics support for MV-22 and CV-22 aircraft. Bell-Boeing JPO received $33,023,240 for: engineering and technical support for V-22 flight control systems and avionics software; flight test planning and coordination of avionics and flight controls; and upgrade planning of avionics and flight controls. Rolls-Royce received $57,146,970 for maintenance services on the V-22’s inventory of AE1107C engines.

Bering Straits Logistics Services received $12,274,457 to provide the 76th Maintenance Wing with labor, supervision, materials, tools, equipment, protective equipment, storage, transportation and incidentals. 

Boeing received $26,879,866 for “diminishing manufacturing sources re-design” in support of Navy’s P-8A Full Rate Production Lot I aircraft. Boeing received $10,119,307 to repair P-8 aircraft. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with FAR 6.302-1On 11 November 2013, the state of Washington awarded Boeing the largest corporate tax break ever given by a state to a single company.

General Electric received $13,587,842 to repair various avionics components of the tactical moving map capability, and the AN-ASQ-215 mission data loader systems used in support of multiple platforms:  F-18, AV-8B, V-22, and the H-60 aircraft. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). 

General Electric received $8,048,888 to procure material for F414-GE-400 engines in support of the F/A-18E/F/G aircraft. Boeing received $37,338,608 to procure retrofit kits in support of the F/A-18E/F and EA-18G Trailing Edge Flap engineering change proposal redesign. Boeing received $8,343,276 for replacement/refurbishment of production life limit tooling for the F/A-18E/F and EA-18G aircraft. Boeing received $13,740,115 to procure aircraft armament equipment for F/A-18E/F and EA-18G aircraft.

L-3 received $96,370,902 for services in support of the P-3, EP-3 and NP-3 Sustainment Modification and Installation program (SMIP). This includes maintenance and fabrication of structural inspection kits, wing assemblies and installation, zone five kits and various refurbishments.

Lockheed Martin received $19,763,075 to retrofit fielded mission training centers with out the window visual systems upgrade and night vision goggles capability. Upgrades include F-22 training systems at Sheppard, Tyndall, Langley, Hickam, and Elmendorf AFB.

POND – FSB JV received $13,000,000 for architect and engineer services to support the Air Force KC-46A aircraft beddown. URS Group received $13,000,000 for architect and engineering services for the Army Corps of Engineers to support the Air Force KC-46C aircraft beddown.

Rockwell Collins received $10,834,820 for engineering services in support of the E-6B Mercury aircraft. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1. Rockwell Collins received $46,582,848 to manufacture and install two Block I modification kits on E-6B aircraft. This contract includes the manufacture and installation of four VTT retrofit modification kits in support of the LRIP E-6B aircraft, field support, differences training, software licenses and agreements, and updates to an operational flight trainer. DRS C3 & Aviation Co. received $50,892,583 for logistics services for the E-6B Mercury. Northrop Grumman received $18,533,888 to build, install and test modifications to the Multi-Role Tactical Common Data Link Ku Line-of-Sight and Ka satellite communications systems for incorporation into the E6-B aircraft.

Rockwell Collins received $6,539,431 to procure AN/ARC-210(V) electronic radios and ancillary equipment for a variety of aircraft.

Sikorsky Aircraft (owned by United Technologies) received $77,524,748 to procure seven Army UH-60M helicopters. Thales Communication received $8,815,933 to repair six items for the airborne low frequency sonar system for H-60 helicopters. This contract was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). CTC Enterprise Ventures Corp. received $14,205,582 to produce 10 carriage, stream, tow and recovery system kits in support of the MH-60S Airborne Mine Countermeasures program. BSC Partners received $30,456,711 to fabricate, install, and test four MH-60R Naval Aircrew Training Systems and three MH-60S Aircrew Virtual Environment Trainer (AVET) devices. This contract includes upgrading existing baselines to AVET S/N2 configurations. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-5. 

Textron (Bell Helicopter) received $13,929,461 to procure one AH-1Z Flight Training Device. Lockheed Martin received $13,297,674 for eight redesigned Turret Electronic Unit prototypes and related data items for the AN/AAQ-30 Target Sight Systems (TSS) that will go in the AH-1Z attack helicopter. This contract was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) and FAR 6.203-1(b)(1)(ii).

Trimble Navigation received $12,788,333 to provide 33 Laser Leveling systems, training, logistics and life cycle support. Collectively, the LLS consists of surveying equipment and grade control equipment. 

Y-Tech Services received $15,625,895 for aviation maintenance services in support of the Aviation Flight Test Directorate (PDF) at the Redstone Test Center. 

SHIP & NAVAL CONTRACTS

914 contractors received roughly $5,300,000,000 to work for the U.S. Navy in the following 22 functional service areas: 1) research and development support, 2) engineering system engineering and process engineering support, 3) modeling, simulation, stimulation and analysis support, 4) prototyping, pre-production, model-making and fabric support, 5) system design documentation and technical data support, 6) software engineering, development, programming and network support, 7) reliability, maintainability and availability support, 8) human factors, performance and usability engineering support, 9) system safety engineering support, 10) configuration management support, 11) quality assurance support, 12) information system development, information assurance and information technology support, 13) ship inactivation and disposal support, 14) interoperability, test and evaluation, trials support, 15) measurement facilities, range and instrumentation support, 16) acquisition logistics support, 17) supply and provisioning support, 18) training support, 19) in-service engineering, fleet introduction, installation and checkout support, 20) program support, 21) functional and administrative support, and 22) public affairs and multimedia support. 

BAE Systems received a maximum $11,093,991 for life preservers and component parts. 

Bechtel Marine Propulsion received $7,069,265,220 for naval nuclear propulsion work at the Bettis & Knolls Atomic Power Laboratories.

Birdon America received $9,397,711 for hardware, test, logistics demonstration, contractor support, and data deliverables for the Bridge Erection Boat. 

CACI received $8,436,370 to provide support services to NAVSUP in support of the Navy’s Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system. 

Delta Resources Inc.; Group W Inc.; Metron Scientific Solutions; Serco Inc.; and Systems Planning & Analysis received a cumulative $43,042,246 for providing “world class modeling and simulation services” in support of OPNAV Assessment Division (N81). 

Drew Marine USA received $9,202,490 for the worldwide supply, delivery and services for shipboard chemical treatment; foam testing, supply and disposal; industrial gases; and refrigerants for all Military Sealift Command (MSC) ships. PPG Industries received $8,916,209 to provide Military Sealift Command with paints, coatings, solvents, preservation products, and engineering/technical services. US Information Technologies received $12,952,659 for support services for maintenance and development of Military Sealift Command’s Oracle based information systems. 

Emprise Corp. received $8,739,750 to provide maintenance, reliability and system engineering services, DOD vessels. General Dynamics received $11,398,788 for maintenance on the USS San Antonio (LPD 17). General Dynamics received $12,144,761 for the fitting-out availability (engineering, planning, management, labor and material) of the USS Somerset (LPD 25). 

Exelis Inc. received $7,028,919 for the procurement of up to 62 radar signal simulators in support of MH-60R and S70-B aircraft for the U.S Navy (33), Australia (27), and Brazil (2) under the FMS program. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to the FAR 6.302-1

General Dynamics received $28,894,385 for missile tube procurement and hull welding/fabrication. This contract combines purchases for the USA (71 percent) and the UK (29 percent).

General Dynamics received $8,000,000 to provide non-nuclear submarine repair work on Groton based submarines under the New England Maintenance Manpower Initiative (NEMMI). LPI Technical Services; East Coast Repair & Fabrication; Q.E.D. Systems; Epsilon Systems Solutions; and Tecnico Corp. received $34,000,000 for depot-level repairs to U.S. Navy ships and submarines. Huntington Ingalls received $7,319,933 for planning and design yard functions for standard Navy valves in support of nuclear-powered submarines. 

General Dynamics received $8,766,998 to provide a Nuclear Regional Maintenance Department in support of operational nuclear submarines at the Naval Submarine Base, New London, CT. General Dynamics received $18,195,519 for reactor plant planning yard services for nuclear-powered submarines and support yard services for the Navy’s moored training ships in Groton, CT (95 percent) and Charleston, SC (5 percent). These contracts were not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). General Dynamics received $7,103,796 to provide ship’s force duties; protection and operation; and organizational-level repairs and preservation of floating dry dock ARDM-4 at Naval Submarine Base, New London, CT.

Glidepath Technologies received $12,205,945 to procure up to 40 AN/SPN-41B Azimuth and elevation radomes, which protect the AN/SPN-41B transmitting set from environmental conditions.

Helix Electric Inc. received $24,788,000 for Dry Dock 8 electrical distribution upgrade at Norfolk Naval Shipyard. The work to be performed provides for the upgrade of existing shore power to support the new class of aircraft carriers. 

Maersk Line received $73,677,038 for chartering one U.S.-flagged vessel, which shall function as a maritime support vessel. 

ManTech Systems Engineering Corp. received $24,248,855 for warfare analysis and assessments, modeling and simulation, advanced concept development and acquisition analysis support for the Naval Air Systems Command’s Warfare Analysis and Integration Department. 

Phoenix Air Group received $23,153,136 for contractor owned and operated aircraft for fleet training in support of government agencies and unspecified FMS customers. These aircraft will be utilized for training crews to counter potential enemy electronic warfare threats. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c).

Raytheon received $17,000,000 for deferred mission systems equipment for DDG 1001. Raytheon received $32,388,530 for lifecycle engineering and support services for LPD 17 integrated shipboard electronic systems. 

Silver Ships received $11,683,129, and Gravois Aluminum Boats (doing business as Metal Shark Aluminum Boats) received $13,782,379 to construct high speed maneuverable surface targets (HSMST). 

Vigor Marine received $12,954,046 for maintenance on the USNS Howard O. Lorenzen (T-AGM 25). Work will include: fuel oil fill; transfer and overflow systems modifications; main diesel engine fuel oil service piping modifications; relocation of AC seawater pumps; docking and undocking; and underwater hull cleaning and painting. 

CONSTRUCTION, DREDGING & BASE SUPPORT SERVICES

Ahtna Engineering Services; Bristol Environmental Remediation Services; Marsh Creek; BSI-TLI Joint Venture; and Chemtrack Alaska received $180,000,000 for environmental remediation services. Alliant Corp. received $9,000,000 to provide environmental services to the Army Corps of Engineers.

Atlantic NICC JV received $39,000,000 for construction, alteration and repair to various DOD sites within Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, D.C. 

The Bedwell Co. received $42,751,000 for work on the Communications Electronics Research Development and Engineering Center Flight Activity Facility Joint Base project. 

Black River Constructors JV received $7,299,000 to remove materials, dredged and otherwise, from the Mississippi River’s Grand Encampment Island in Wisconsin. Great Lakes Dock and Dredge Company received $10,273,971 for working on the Baltimore Harbor Dredging Project. Weeks Marine received $21,253,000 for pipeline dredging of the Bayport Flare and Houston Ship Channel in Texas.

Carothers Construction received $24,622,000 for the construction of a warehouse at New Cumberland.

City of Monterey, CA received $7,024,196 for base operations support services. Kings Bay Support Services received $37,741,080 for support services (e.g. public safety, harbor security, personnel support, facility management, swimming pool maintenance, utilities, wastewater, steam, water, telecommunications, compressed air, vehicle work, environmental) at Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay

Clark Construction Enterprises received $26,154,430 for building a hurricane and storm damage risk reduction system from in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana. Conti Enterprises received $44,828,475 for a hurricane and storm damage risk reduction system for Mississippi River levee from English Turn Bend to Belle Chasse. Shavers-Whittle Construction received $8,112,606 for work on the Southeast Louisiana Urban Flood Control Project in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana.

Hamp’s Construction received $11,658,930 for clearing and grubbing the existing levee in in Buras, Louisiana. Hamp’s will also remove abandoned pipelines, replace existing riprap armament, enlarge a levee, install deep soil mixing material for ground improvements, among other work.

K&N Industrial Equipment received $7,976,384 to rehab bridge cranes located at Lower Granite Dam and Little Goose Dam in Dayton and Pomeroy, Washington.

Leo Daly; HDR; and Ewing Cole received $25,000,000 to provide architect-engineer design services in support of the Medical Repair and Renewal program.

McTech Corp. received $51,784,000 to construct a dormitory, conference center, and advanced training center at Harpers Ferry, WV.

Nauset Construction received $20,521,858 to construct a new Unit Training Equipment Site and to demolish old facilities for the Massachusetts National Guard at Buzzards’ Bay, Massachusetts.

FOOD SERVICES

Coast Citrus Distributors received a maximum $15,000,000 for fresh fruit and vegetables. Quality Fruit and Vegetable received a maximum $30,000,000 for fresh fruit and vegetables. Labatt Food Service received a maximum $36,000,000 for food distribution. Shamrock Foods received a maximum $8,700,000 for food distribution. US Food Service Baltimore received a maximum $12,581,939 for food distribution. Sterling Foods received $65,571,186 for bakery components used in the MRE program. 

Pacific Unlimited (of Guam) received a maximum $262,500,000 for “subsistence support.” DOD later printed a retraction, stating “The contract to Pacific Unlimited Inc., originally announced on Nov. 4, 2013, was not awarded.”

HEALTHCARE & SAFETY

Allan Baker received a maximum $20,269,744 for optical lenses. 

American Innotek received a maximum $12,000,000 for disposable solid waste relief bags. 

American Regent received a maximum $28,074,324 for pharmaceutical products. DMS Pharmaceutical Group received a maximum $46,647,841 for pharmaceutical products. Greenstone Limited received a maximum $8,026,537 for pharmaceutical products. 

Cardinal Health 200 received a maximum $1,019,313,488 for medical and surgical supplies. Work will be performed in 29 states. Owens & Minor Distribution received a maximum $240,332,793 for medical and surgical supplies. Work will be performed in 30 states. Tyco Healthcare Group received a maximum $42,239,073 for medical and surgical supplies. Patterson Dental Supply received a maximum $14,607,354 for dental supplies. Ziehm Imaging received a maximum $22,156,582 for radiology systems, subsystems, and components. 

CareFusion 203 received a maximum $23,409,878 for ventilators and accessories. Hamilton Medical received a maximum $37,463,325 for work on the medical electronic catalogue program and to catalogue 118 ventilation systems and accessories. 

Henry M. Jackson Foundation received $6,505,355 to provide services, equipment, and facilities for traumatic brain injury patients.

FUEL & ENERGY

Dixie Chemical received $15,179,076 for production, storage, and distribution of various types of high density, synthetic hydrocarbon type propellants. ExxonMobile received $58,552,216 for fuel. Government Services Corp. received a maximum $13,830,840 for winter grade ultra-low sulfur diesel. Refinery Associates of Texas received $8,435,714 to provide fuel in Texas and the UAE.

Defense Contract Services received $20,790,000 to operate a fuels service center at Edwards AFB.

Heil Trailer International received $9,721,600 for 70 Flatrack Refueling Capability (FRC). The FRC is a self-contained and transportable fueling system for tactical vehicles, stationary equipment, and aircraft. 

Hess Corporation received a maximum $378,818,845 for electricity. 

Weston Solutions received $6,576,624 for design and construction of an MV-22 Aviation Fuel Storage Facility at MCAS Camp Pendleton

TRANSPORTATION

Air Transport International; Atlas Air; Delta Air Lines; Federal Express; Polar Air Cargo; and MN Airlines received $145,223,956 for international airlift services. National Air Cargo Group received $12,267,057 for international airlift services. 

American Auto Logistics LP received $69,000,000 to ship privately owned vehicles belonging to military service members and civilian employees. 

DRS-Sustainment Systems received $391,100,000 for supporting 318 Tunner 60K Aircraft Cargo Loaders at over 80 locations worldwide.

Easy Street JD&S received a maximum $633,000,000 to procure “commercial type material handling equipment.” Patriot Industries received a maximum $9,262,151 for modular lightweight load carrying equipment. 

URS Federal Technical Services received a maximum $7,976,352 for material distribution services to include receipt, storage, and issuance. 

# # # #

Final notes: DOD now annotates several contracts with the following stamps: Small Business; Small Business in HUBZone; Small Disadvantaged Business; Woman Owned Small Business; Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business; and Small Disadvantaged Woman Owned Business.

*Any clerical errors are the editor’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.


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BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for December 2013

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DOD spent at least $25,976,742,948 on roughly 300 individual contracts during December 2013

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $25,976,742,948 on roughly 300 individual contracts during December 2013.

SALIENT CONTRACTS

Aecom received $10,019,790 to passively gather, analyze, and disseminate open source atmospheric information. Aecom will help monitor, track and measure local sentiment regarding U.S. programs and policies in Afghanistan. Aecom will provide cultural advice; assistance with socio-economic, religious, and political issues; tribal matters; and communication strategies.

DynCorp International received $80,333,657 for aviation maintenance in Afghanistan.

D&D Machinery & Sales received $12,078,000 for C-17 support equipment. This contract includes nine percent FMS in support of the Strategic Airlift Capability (SAC) Consortium in Hungary.

Federal Prison Industries (FPI) received $15,948,000 for extreme cold/wet weather trousers. Incarcerated individuals work for cents per hour so the Pentagon can satisfy clothing requirements.

J. Walter Thompson (JWT) received $247,433,499 for Marine Corps Recruiting Command (MCRC) Advertising and Recruitment Services. DOD spends roughly $1.7 billion annually on advertising and recruiting youth (p. 146). DOD spent $7.7 billion on advertising and recruiting in 2008. Bloomberg News reports the Pentagon spent $136 million over four years just to put “U.S. ARMY” on a NASCAR vehicle.

Jorge Scientific Corp. received $7,309,301 for COIN [PDF] Advisory and Assistance Team services in Afghanistan. This includes training U.S. forces on how to train Afghanistan National Security Forces (ANSF). This was a sole-source acquisition.

KPMG LLP received $17,019,142 to provide all necessary management services, personnel and documentation required to support DLA’s financial audit. According to Reuters, Congress required an audit of the Pentagon in 1996. “The Pentagon missed that deadline and has remained in violation ever since.”

DARPA is a scientific and technological research agency of the Pentagon. A robot designed by Google recently won DARPA’s Robotics Challenge. Koniag Information Security Systems received $6,600,688 to support DARPA’s Security and Intelligence Directorate. Pfizer received $7,670,632 for R&D to develop technology for DARPA to identify and subsequently induce the production of protective antibodies to an emerging pathogen directly in an infected or exposed individual. SRI International received $11,652,825 to expand on speech-to-speech bilingual research for DARPA under the Broad Operational Language Technology (BOLT) program. Work will take place in 10 locations within the U.S. in addition to Marseille (4.95 percent); Hong Kong (1.03 percent); and Edinburgh (0.98 percent).

SAIC received $10,037,074 to provide care and training of Navy marine mammals.

Textron (Bell Helicopter) received $18,556,810 for logistics support for the Bell 407, Huey, Jet Ranger, and Kiowa A&C helicopters in Al Taji, Iraq. One bid was solicited with one received.

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES – Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations.

Lockheed Martin received $8,808,979 for sniper advanced targeting pods (ATP) for Saudi Arabia’s F-15SA aircraft. This is a source directed acquisition. Raytheon received $12,878,000 to provide Saudi Arabia with 94 IFF (AN/APX-114) interrogators. This is a sole-source acquisition. Raytheon received $11,662,862 to provide Saudi Arabia with 94 IFF (AN/APX-119) transponders. This is a sole source acquisition. Sikorsky received $105,300,000 to modify eight UH-60M helicopters for Saudi Arabia. One bid was solicited with one received.

Al Raha Group for Technical Services received $45,000,000 to provide Saudi Arabia with F-15 unclassified items, third party logistics, and repair and return management services. 

BAE Systems received $12,835,546 for the delivery, installation, and testing of six E-2C compatible AN/APX-122A Mode 5/S Interrogator units for France.

BAE Systems received $21,742,595 for 200 F-16 Mode 5 Advanced IFF combined interrogator transponders. 70 percent is FMS to Belgium, Denmark, Netherlands, Norway, and Portugal.

Boeing received $8,481,104 for logistics support/engineering services for Harpoon/SLAM-ER Missile System & Harpoon launch systems for the U.S. Navy ($3,122,737; 36.82 percent); South Korea ($759,253; 8.95 percent); Taiwan ($715,517; 8.43 percent); Turkey ($632,914; 7.46 percent); Egypt ($421,912; 4.97 percent); the UK ($317,393; 3.74 percent); Japan ($302,563; 3.57 percent); Pakistan ($283,035; 3.34 percent); Australia ($260,331; 3.07 percent); Chile ($223,047; 2.63 percent); Saudi Arabia ($223,212; 2.63 percent); Canada ($204,204; 2.41 percent); Israel ($165,053; 1.95 percent); Bahrain ($109,006; 1.29 percent); UAE ($106,102; 1.25 percent); the Netherlands ($83,584; .99 percent); Germany ($83,582; .99 percent); Kuwait ($77,246; .91 percent); Singapore ($75,386; .89 percent); Oman ($71,439; .84 percent); India ($64,462; .76 percent); Portugal ($62,687; .74 percent); Thailand ($45,825; .54 percent); Denmark ($41,791; .49 percent); and Malaysia ($28,823; .34 percent).

Boeing received $70,032,166 for 12 encapsulated harpoon tactical missiles; 5 harpoon Grade B exercise missiles; 2 encapsulated harpoon certification training vehicles and shipping containers; 100 harpoon improved fuse booster kits; 50 harpoon improved fuse kits; two harpoon blast test vehicles; and associated hardware and containers for the U.S. Navy ($2,393,673; 3.42 percent); South Korea ($38,122,613; 54.44 percent); Canada ($9,981,318; 14.25 percent); Japan ($7,679,885; 10.97 percent); Germany ($6,491,198; 9.27 percent); Australia ($3,354,415; 4.79 percent); Taiwan ($812,520; 1.16 percent); Saudi Arabia ($460,952; .66 percent); Turkey ($444,749; .64 percent); Egypt ($239,618; .34 percent); and the UK ($51,225; .07 percent). This contract was non-competitive, per FAR 6.302-1.

Exelis Inc. received $76,164,504 to procure and install nine ground control approach radar 2000 Systems (GCA-2000), including operator and maintenance training, at nine airbases in Poland.

Exelis Inc. received $9,796,591 to provide Pakistan with AN/ALQ-211 (V)-9 AIDEWS Pod spares. This is a source-directed acquisition.

General Atomics received $31,937,493 to provide the UK with logistics support (urgent repairs; field service representatives; inventory control; spares management; and field maintenance). This is a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $81,183,198 for one C-130J, advance procurement of two aircraft, and external fuel tank modification kits for Israel.

Lockheed Martin received $263,410,000 to provide Kuwait with fourteen four-pack Patriot missiles and seven launcher modifications kits. One bid was solicited with one received.

Lockheed Martin received $8,283,129 to support South Korea’s Peace Krypton Program. Support includes: a field service representative; core support, including all full-time workers; a system depot support facility, which is a Lockheed lab that simulates the same system located in South Korea; software development/upgrades; spare parts; and maintaining and upgrading a reconnaissance system.

Raytheon received $13,792,770 for the Taiwan Surveillance Radar program follow-on support. This creates a testing environment in CONUS for construction and system troubleshooting.

Raytheon received $27,230,781 to provide the UAE with AN/TPY-2 radar spares (as part of THAAD).

Raytheon received $70,000,000 to provide Morocco, Egypt and Iraq with 11 Advanced Countermeasures Electronic Systems (ACES), 34 ACES Line Replaceable Units (LRU), and a lifetime supply of parts. This is a sole-source acquisition. 

Sensor & Antenna Systems received $21,804,323 for eight Low Band Transmitters (LBT), 11 Vertically Polarized (VPOL) Antennas, and 17 High Band Horizontally Polarized (HPOL) Antennas for the AN/ALQ-99 for the U.S. Navy ($9,973, 082; 45.7 percent). AN/ALQ-99 TJS parts will also be provided to Australia ($11,831,241; 54.3 percent).

UNMANNED SYSTEMS

General Atomics received $110,453,269 for logistic support to the Gray Eagle. One bid was solicited with one received. General Atomics received $40,253,105 for full rate production of the Gray Eagle. One bid was solicited with one received.

General Atomics received $362,193,866 for Predator (MQ1)/Reaper (MQ9) logistic support. This may include: program management; technical manual work; software maintenance; inventory control; flight operations support, and repair/maintenance. This award is a sole-source acquisition. The 2014 NDAA, which was recently passed by the Senate, includes roughly $4.7 million for drone support at Ft. Drum.

AIRCRAFT

Air Cruisers Co. received $16,970,294 to repair life rafts that comprise the Multi-Place Life Raft (MPLR). The contract was not competitively procured in accordance FAR 6.302-1. 

Boeing received $46,652,280 for logistics, engineering, technical data updates, training and software integration support for F/A-18A-D, F/A-18E/F, and EA-18G aircraft for the U.S. Navy ($36,613,615; 78.3 percent); Australia ($7,030,930; 15.1 percent); Canada ($501,289; 1.1 percent), Spain ($501,289; 1.1 percent); Finland ($501,289; 1.1 percent); Switzerland ($501,289; 1.1 percent); Kuwait ($501,289; 1.1 percent); and Malaysia ($501,289; 1.1 percent). Boeing received $22,218,372 for automated maintenance environment integrated software for the F/A-18E/F and EA-18G aircraft for the U.S. Navy ($19,251,990; 86.6 percent) and Australia ($2,966,382; 13.4 percent).

Boeing received $872,766,714 for system upgrades for F/A-18 A-D, E/F and EA-18G aircraft for the U.S. Navy ($802,945,377; 92 percent); Australia ($29,674,068; 40 percent); Finland ($21,819,168; 2.50 percent); Switzerland ($6,982,134; .80 percent); Kuwait ($4,363,834; .50 percent); Malaysia ($4,363,833; .50 percent); and Canada ($2,618,300; .30 percent). This was non-competitive, per FAR 6.302-1. Boeing received $43,200,000 to instruct and train DOD personnel on how to install, operate and maintain equipment on AV-8B, EA-18G and F/A-18 aircraft. Work will be performed at 10 locations in 8 states, in addition to Atsugi, Japan (8 percent) and Kuwait (8 percent). Purchase: U.S. Navy ($30,240,000; 70 percent); USMC ($9,504,000, 22 percent); and Kuwait ($3,456,000, 8 percent). This contract was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1.

Raytheon received $69,198,968 to repair 65 Advanced Targeting Forward Looking Infrared (ATFLIR) System assemblies used on F/A-18 aircraft. The contract was non-competitive (sole source), per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). Raytheon received $40,911,284 to repair 40 APG 65/73 radar assemblies used on F/A-18 aircraft. The contract was non-competitive and sole-source, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

General Electric received $7,760,214 to work on the F414 Engine Component Improvement Program for the U.S. Navy ($7,343,378; 94.63 percent) and Australia ($416,836; 5.37 percent). General Electric received $7,500,074 to work on the F404 Engine Component Improvement Program for the U.S. Navy ($3,402,545; 45.3 percent); Canada ($821,474; 11 percent); Spain ($827,057; 11 percent); Sweden ($608,596; 8.1 percent); South Korea ($536,667; 7.2 percent); Australia ($413,175; 5.5 percent); Finland ($390,842; 5.2 percent); Kuwait ($240,088; 3.2 percent); Switzerland ($209,379; 2.8 percent); and Malaysia ($50,251; .7 percent). United Technologies (Pratt & Whitney) received $167,030,588 for operations, maintenance, and site/depot activation on LRIP VII of F135 engines for the U.S. Navy/USMC ($90,834,199; 54.4 percent); USAF ($56,544,842; 33.9 percent); and unnamed international partners ($19,651,547; 11.7 percent). This contract was non-competitive, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Lockheed Martin received $561,957,658 for nine months of sustainment (engineering, field service, supply chain management, maintenance, and reliability upgrades) for the F-22. Lockheed Martin received $108,194,928 F-22 sustainment. United Technologies (Pratt and Whitney) received $231,465,987 for F119 Engine Sustainment.

Lockheed Martin received $218,226,427 for advance procurement funding of long lead efforts associated with twenty-three C-130J aircraft. Global Defense Systems received $9,624,302 for C-130 Loadmaster Crashworthy seats (480). Lockheed Martin received $11,060,628 for logistics and engineering services on C/KC-130J aircraft for USMC/Marine Corps Reserve ($8,886,223; 80.3 percent); U.S. Coast Guard ($1,423,148; 12.9 percent); and Kuwait ($751,257; 6.8 percent). This contract was non-competitive, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

General Dynamics received $6,657,441 for engineering services and logistics for the tactical airspace integration air traffic control system. Work will be performed in Alabama, Afghanistan, and South Korea.

L-3 Communications received $22,921,771 for four AN/SRQ-4 and thirty-one AN/ARQ-59 Common Data Link Hawklink radio terminal sets for the MH-60R aircraft. Work will be performed in 14 states and in Toronto. Raytheon received $42,589,944 for airborne low frequency sonar helicopter dipping sonar systems. This is a sole source acquisition and includes FMS. Simmonds Precision Products received $7,945,029 to provide the following equipment to MH-60R/S aircraft: 8 integrated mechanical diagnostic systems (IMDS) production A1 kits, 27 IMDS vehicle health management/data transfer units, 17 IMDS retrofit kits, 19 IMDS Troy kits, and 19 IMDS production A1 kits.

Boeing received $617,676,589 to [re]manufacture twenty- two CH-47F helicopters and six new CH-47F helicopters. This also includes long lead funding for remanufacturing thirteen CH-47F helicopters.

Boeing received $75,679,707 for Product Service Integrator for the E-4B platform consisting of sustainment, depot maintenance, modification, and related support. This is a sole-source acquisition. 

Boeing received $750,000,000 for integrated engineering on the B-1. This is a sole source acquisition. EDO Corp. received $10,206,061 for repair of ALQ-161 radio frequency surveillance/electronic countermeasure (RFS/ECM) system components used on the B-1. This is a sole-source acquisition. 

Bell-Boeing JPO received $15,597,818 to work on the V-22 aircraft (engineering and technical support; delivery of 8 helmet mounted display retrofit kits, spares, support equipment, tooling and training devices). Bell Boeing JPO received $8,991,254 for two V-22 Block A-B (50-69 series) upgrade kits. 

Northrop Grumman received $19,970,000 for R&D to develop and demonstrate a probabilistic, risk-based, flight-by-flight individual aircraft tracking (IAT) framework to replace the baseline deterministic IAT framework currently used for legacy aircraft.  Northrop Grumman received $11,764,551 to provide engineering and technical support services on products within the Airborne Electronic Attack Integrated Product Team, including flight software for the EA-6B and the EA-18G. Northrop Grumman received $12,317,909 for Air Operations Center Weapon System (AOC WS) modernization engineering and manufacturing to incorporate the new program schedules/ strategy, and to clarify requirements.

BAE Systems received $11,527,257 to acquire engineering, a technical data package and technical training required to “develop organic depot activation repair capability” of the AN/APX-124 Mode S/5 IFF Transponder System at Tobyhanna Army Depot, PA.

Boeing received $6,781,461 for spares for eight P-8ALRIP Lot IV aircraft. 

CFM International received $8,531,880 for combustion liners. This contract is sole-source.

DynCorp International received $9,527,589 for aviation maintenance, installation of modification work orders, and auxiliary maintenance support.

EDO Corp. received $13,168,340 for repair, maintenance and modifications on the MK105 Magnetic Minesweeping Gear and MH-53E Airborne Mine Neutralization System [AMNS53 (PDF)] Launch & Recovery System and tracking system. This contract was non-competitive, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

General Electric received $65,388,516 to overhaul and repair T-700 engines. Lockheed Martin received $92,915,233 to modernize Apache target designation sight/pilot’s night vision sensor equipment. 

Gulfstream received $22,458,901 for logistics support services for C-37 aircraft. Gulfstream received $8,365,219 for engineering, field service representatives, and technical publications in support of DOD’s C-20 and C-37 (Gulfstream IV and V). Boeing received $81,972,630 for C-32A and C-40B/C fleet support.

King Aerospace received $32,353,000 for lifecycle support on airborne reconnaissance DeHaveilland Dash 7 aircraft. One bid was solicited with one received.

Lockheed Martin received $14,500,852 for engineering and logistics to field the Modernized Target Acquisition Designation Sight (M-TADS) High Reliability Turret. 

M1 Support Services received $38,722,328 for advanced instructor pilot support services for the U.S. Army Aviation Center of Excellence, 110TH Aviation Brigade Support at Ft. Rucker.

M7 Aerospace received $8,560,000 for maintenance, repair, and logistics on eleven C-26 aircraft. One bid was solicited with one received.

Northrop Grumman received $10,551,915 for fabrication, test, and delivery of 45 (LRIP) AH-1Z and UH-1Y mission computers. This contract was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1. Lockheed Martin received $33,996,000 for AN/AAQ-30(A) Target Sight Systems (TSS)/data to be used on the AH-1Z. This contract was non-competitive, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1), as set forth in FAR 6.302-1(b)(1)(ii). Textron (Bell Helicopter) received $11,163,306 for logistics and services in support of the H-1 upgrade.

Northrop Grumman received $9,531,889 for maintenance services on E-2C/D and C-2 aircraft in support of the VX-20 Squadron. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

Raytheon received $134,399,631 to develop Global Aircrew Strategic Network Terminals Increment I, a communication system that disseminates nuclear C2 messages from national-level authorities.

Raytheon received $55,150,107 for complete analyses of the Joint Precision Approach and Landing Systems (JPALS) and system requirements; development of manufacturing and production strategy; risk reduction activities; and management/planning of JPALS technical and business objectives.

Raytheon received $8,035,430 for work on naval aircraft advanced targeting systems. This contract is sole-source. Some work will be performed in Switzerland.

Rockwell Collins received $43,812,122 for B-2 Common VLF Receiver Increment 1 modification, qualification, and testing. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Sikorsky received $723,998,360 for 33 UH-60M, 24 HH-60M, and associated program management, systems engineering, provisioning, technical publications, and integrated logistics support. Sikorsky received $18,298,546 for maintenance on aircraft operated by adversary squadrons.

Southeast Aerospace received $7,350,121 to provide an additional 23 kits and miscellaneous parts for the Avionics System Upgrade of T-44 aircraft. 

NAVAL CONTRACTS

3 Phoenix received $10,576,352 for development, integration, and logistic support of the Torpedo Warning System (TWS), which allows surface ships to detect torpedoes and employ defensive measures.

AMSEC LLC received $45,779,743 for engineering, maintenance, operator training, and repair support for U.S. Navy aircraft carriers.

Austal USA received $14,057,992 to provide engineering, design services and affordability efforts to reduce Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) acquisition and lifecycle costs. Austal USA received $8,247,342 to assess engineering and production challenges, and to work on reducing LCS acquisition and lifecycle costs. General Dynamics (Bath Iron Works) received $7,684,132 for maintenance support, and in-service sustainment on the LCS-2 and LCS-4, including: training; logistics; engineering support; material planning/procurement; and material warehousing. Lockheed Martin received $23,275,441 to provide engineering, design, and affordability efforts to reduce LCS acquisition and lifecycle costs.

BAE Systems received $32,946,457 for regular maintenance and overhaul of USNS Supply (T-AOE 6).

BAE Systems received $48,860,666 for services in support of the Program Executive Office for Ships, Naval Sea Systems Command, PEO C4I, and the Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Division. Services include: design, integration, testing, installation, training, and support of shipboard C4I electronic communication systems. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1. 

BAE Systems received $56,517,376 for D-5 strategic weapons systems (SWS) programs to the U.S. and U.K; guided missile submarine attack weapons systems programs to the U.S.; Nuclear Weapons Security; to ensure that the existing TRIDENT II (D5) SWS is compatible with the Concept Development efforts being pursued for the CMC Program; and technical and engineering support to CMC efforts for SWS life cycle cost control evaluations. This contract was a sole source acquisition, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). Lockheed Martin received $58,785,716 for D-5 navigation subsystem engineering services. This provides for U.S. and U.K. fleet support, trainer systems support, Ohio-class SSBN engineered refueling overhauls, SSI4 trainer system, SSBN-R strategic weapon training system development, U.K. successor support, software modernization and Linked Autonomous Programmed Navigational Operational Trainer modernization. This is a sole-source acquisition in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Bath Iron Works received $23,124,445 for DDG-51 yard services (e.g. liaison; logistics; design; engineering ship trials; post-shakedown availabilities; materials; special studies).

CDM Federal Programs received $10,730,846 for the Naval Facilities Engineering Command utility inventory and risk assessment pilot. This work will move existing AutoCAD data and/or version 2.6 geographic information system data into the latest respective version of the utilities geographic information systems models. It will also combine geographic information systems data with existing MAXIMO data, asset data in spreadsheets and other databases. 

General Dynamics (Electric Boat) received $121,847,000 for additional material (steam and electric plant components; main propulsion unit efforts; ship service turbine generator work; hull work; mechanical and electrical system components) associated with submarines: SSN 793, SN 794 and SSN 795.

General Dynamics received $171,961,941 for USS Carter Hall (LSD-50) maintenance in Norfolk, VA.

General Dynamics received $21,400,000 for detail design and construction of Mobile Landing Platform (MLP) 3 Afloat Forward Staging Base (AFSB) and to accomplish limited AFSB block construction.

General Dynamics received $73,913,646 for maintenance and modernization of DDG 51 and FFG 7.

Huntington Ingalls Industries received $39,051,995 for life cycle engineering and support services on the Amphibious Transport Dock Ship Program LPD 17 class. Services include post-delivery planning and engineering; technical support; data maintenance and equipment management; systems integration; training and logistics support; and Fleet Modernization Program planning.

Lockheed Martin received $11,912,771 for work on the Integrated Common Processor (ICP) Program. Lockheed will provide software/hardware development, production, installation, training, maintenance to the U.S. Navy (90 percent) and Japan (10 percent). This contract was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) – only one responsible source (FAR 6.302-1).

Lockheed Martin received $124,531,317 for development and production of the acoustic rapid commercial-off-the-shelf insertion (A-RCI) and common acoustics processing for Technology Insertion 12 (TI12) through Technology Insertion 14 (TI14) for U.S. submarines. Lockheed Martin received $84,650,745 for A-RCI for 12 U.S. Navy submarines (Technology Insertion 14 including pre-cable kits). Lockheed Martin received $24,462,051 for the production and support of AN/BQS-25 low-cost conformal arrays (LCCA). The AN/BQS-25 LCCA is a passive planar array mounted on the aft submarine sail structure that is integrated with the A-RCI AN/BQQ-10 system to provide situational awareness and collision avoidance in high density environments. 

Marine Hydraulics International received $11,559,768 for USS Gonzalez (DDG-66) maintenance, alterations, and modernizations to update and improve its military and technical capabilities. 

Nacco Materials Handling Group (NMHG) received $28,725,000 for Navy shipboard-use forklifts.  

Raytheon received $41,585,979 to support the Ship Self Defense System MK 2 to complete development of CVN/Amphibious Modernization Advanced Capability Build 12/Technical Insertion 12.

SAIC received $14,425,908 for technical and engineering services in support of the NAVAIR Air Vehicle Engineering Department and Manned Flight Simulator/Air Combat Environment Test & Evaluation Facilities. Services develop advanced technology for evaluating air vehicle flying qualities and controllability, developing simulation software, and building prototype simulations. 

Sechan Electronics received $17,212,201 for procurement of the Target Detecting Device (TDD) MK 71 Mod 1 to support the Quickstrike Mine Improvement program. 

GEAR, SUPPLIES & EQUIPMENT

The Boston Globe recently reported on appalling conditions at factories where the U.S. government purchases clothing and uniforms. Altama Delta Corp. received $10,340,320 for hot weather combat boots. Rocky Brands Inc. received $14,957,408 for hot weather combat boots. Excel Garment Manufacturing received $7,125,286 for rip-stop ABU coats and trousers. Lion Vallen LTD Partnership received $20,000,000 for warehousing, distribution, and logistics support to fulfill clothing and textile requirements. 

Atlantic Diving Supply received $24,288,000 for tactical modular holsters. Military Hardware received $51,952,200 for tactical modular holsters (100-300,000 units).

General Dynamics received $107,309,000 to procure 1500 Manpack radio kits and 500 dismount kits. General Dynamics received $26,491,522 to sort and classify material turned in by units and to re-issue serviceable material to deploying units.

Honeywell Int. received $15,795,824 for repair/overhaul of AGT1500 engines used in the Abrams. Oshkosh received $9,500,000 to extend the ordering year for medium tactical vehicles to cover Jan. – 15 May 2014. Oshkosh received $104,944,411 for 545 medium tactical vehicles, 79 trailers, and applicable tax. Navistar Defense received $6,920,507 for field service support for MRAP MaxxPro vehicles. Oshkosh received $21,159,240 for 5,733 tire and engine automatic fire extinguishing kits for MRAP use. One bid was solicited with one received. L-3 received $37,641,154 for 122 Transmission Operational Reliability HMPT 800HP transmissions with required hardware for the Bradley. One bid solicited, one received.

Kongsberg (Norway) received $37,872,000 for maintenance on M153 CROWS.

Cyalume Technologies received $32,535,714 for chemical light sticks. L-3 received $25,938,211 for 40,842 M734A1 fuses and 99,791 M783 fuses. O.C. Lugo Co., Inc. received $15,300,000 for chlorate candles and igniters. 

Oasis Systems received $11,918,862 for professional acquisition support services at Hanscom AFB and Langley AFB. PE Systems received $8,968,305 for professional acquisition support services at Hanscom AFB, Langley AFB and Wright-Patterson AFB. Services support the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center (AFLCMC) and include classified FMS (1 percent) to Germany, Greece, Morocco, Oman, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, and Thailand. Quantech Services received $10,074,671 for professional acquisition support services at Hanscom AFB and Langley AFB. Services support the AFLCMC and include classified FMS (46 percent) to Afghanistan, Egypt, Jordan, and Oman.

Revision Military received $21,139,200 for the procurement of advanced combat helmets. 

SAIC received $24,958,310 to support the ammunition supply point/theater storage area, Camp Arifjan, Kuwait for the issue, storage, and receipt of Class V munitions.

Thales Raytheon Systems received $11,890,678 for life cycle services for the Sentinel radar system. One bid was solicited with one received.

MISSILES, BOMBS & ROCKETS

General Dynamics received $115,049,349 for engineering, development, and production on U.S. and UK Trident II Strategic Weapons Systems and SSBN Fire Control Subsystem (FCS); support to SSGN Attack Weapons Control Subsystem; and continued engineering and trade studies on U.S. SSBN replacement and UK SSBN successor common missile compartment. This was sole source, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). Northrop Grumman received $112,926,348 for Trident II (D5) Underwater Launcher System and Advanced Launcher development program work. This contract was sole source, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). Lockheed Martin received $61,092,053 for: engineering and missile test hardware to support common missile compartment (CMC) strategic weapon systems (SWS) integration and design/development for nozzle shield retention testing; integrating the Trident II missile and reentry SWS subsystems into the CMC for the Ohio replacement and UK successor programs; and designing a test facility compatible with existing and new submarine fleets. This contract was sole source, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). L3 (IEC) received $47,401,675 for technical support on instrumentation systems in support of Trident II flight tests. This contract was a sole-source acquisition pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c) (5). 

Lockheed Martin received $574,538,664 for Aegis Weapon System MK 7 equipment sets in support of DDG-51 shipbuilding. This was a sole-source contract, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). Lockheed Martin received $37,133,082 for the Aegis Platform Systems Engineering Agent (PSEA) activities and Aegis Modernization Advanced Capability Build engineering. Lockheed Martin received $37,089,502 for Aegis combat system engineering agent (CSEA) efforts for design, development, integration and delivery of program baselines and associated hardware design support. Raytheon received $29,521,981 for production of the AN/SPY-1D(V) radar transmitter group, missile fire control system MK 99 and site support. Raytheon is responsible for testing, shipyard installation, and other requirements. Teledyne Microwave Solutions received $49,152,320 to repair 1,600 10 KT traveling wave tubes (TWT) for AN-SPY-1 radar within the AEGIS system. The contract was non-competitive, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Booz Allen Hamilton received $18,062,895 for systems engineering and integration support to the Launch and Test Range System at Los Angeles AFB.

EDO Corp. received $39,041,621 for 450 BRU-55A/A bomb racks. This was non-competitive, per FAR 6.302-1.

Lockheed Martin received $232,545,447 for 190 joint air to surface standoff missile (JASSM) baseline missiles and JASSM extended range missiles (40); systems engineering; and test assets (3 percent FMS to Australia and Finland). This award is a sole source acquisition. Lockheed Martin received $216,475,072 for 150 JASSM baseline missiles and 60 JASSM extended range missiles; extended range avionics engineering change; and obsolescence management oversight. This is a sole source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $255,134,404 for 1824 rockets and 158 reduced-range practice rocket pods for the Guided MLRS for USA and Italy.

Lockheed Martin received $84,500,000 for Enhanced Laser Guided Training Rounds (ELGTR). This contract was non-competitive, FAR 6.302-1.

Northrop Grumman received $19,800,000 for R&D for the Integrated Air & Missile Defense and Battle Command System (IBCS). Northrop Grumman received $10,270,794 for R&D for Advance Electronic Protect and IBCS System development and demonstration.

Northrop Grumman received $7,697,898 for the ICBM Remote Visual Assessment (RVA) Wing III Retrofit program. This includes all support at the missile alert facility (e.g. Launch Control Center RVA feeds, closed circuit television system, flight security controller functions, supporting equipment) at Malmstrom AFB.

Phacil received $10,965,757 to design, procure, install, and test the Launch Sustainment System, Network Management System, and acquire initial operating spares at Patrick AFB.

Raytheon received $15,058,750 for 216 projectiles and 14 palletized containers. One bid was solicited with one received. Work is performed at 22 locations in 15 states, in addition to the UK and Sweden.

Raytheon received $16,331,483 for standard missile depot and intermediate level maintenance, all up round recertification, and special maintenance tasks. Raytheon received $35,019,637 for work on the MK-31 Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) Guided-Missile Weapon System (GMWS); guided-missile round pack and launching system support. Raytheon received $40,000,000 for system improvements to include design, development, and test of the AIM-120D missile. This is a sole source acquisition. Raytheon received $8,496,327 for technical support, overhaul, and life extension in support of the NATO Seasparrow missile system and test acquisition system (TAS). Raytheon received $80,474,905 for 200 full rate production Lot 10 AGM-154C-1 unitary joint stand-off weapon (JSOW) missiles and support equipment, and one AGM-154C-1 for a performance test.

SPACE, IT, CYBER & COMMS

AAI Corp. received $23,024,245 for logistics support to the One System Remote Video Terminal (OSRVT) in Afghanistan. 

Alion Science and Technology; Applied Research Associates; Engility; Exelis; Northrop Grumman; Raytheon; and Leidos received $4,000,000,000 to provide R&D and scientific and technological solutions for non-proliferation and counter-proliferation of WMD.

A-Tech Corp. received $60,000,000 to help Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) Spacecraft Technology Division in developing and integrating new technologies and innovative operational concepts.

BAE Systems received $16,472,873 for Common IFF hardware (including transponders, remote controls, mounts, power units, displays, and repairs) for the U.S. Army ($7,938,757; 48.2 percent); U.S. Navy ($6,682,819; 40.6 percent); South Korea ($820,525; 5 percent); Taiwan ($781,676; 4.7 percent); and the UAE ($249,096; 1.5 percent). This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 302-1.

Battelle Memorial Institute; Booz Allen Hamilton; Exelis Inc.; Northrop Grumman; Wintec Arrowmaker; SAIC; and Technical and Project Engineering received $80,000,000 to support the Army Research Laboratory’s increased unique mission cell requirements.

Boeing received $12,322,017 for satellite operations, maintenance, and anomaly resolution of the Space Based Space Surveillance (SBSS) Block 10 System. Boeing received $56,867,404 for on-orbit support, factory reach-back, maintenance, and storage. 

Booz Allen Hamilton received $49,916,668 to analyze, assess, study, and conduct operational exercises of ISR technologies and systems.

Circle City Telcom received $7,870,392 to complete installing and testing upgrades to Ft. Rucker’s IT infrastructure.

Diversitech Inc. received $7,499,501 for maintenance/repair on 7,352 pieces of equipment that support the Air Force Institute of Technology (AFIT), Air Force Research Laboratory, National Air & Space Intelligence Center (NASIC), and others. Northrop Grumman received $8,424,108 to help NASIC enhance and operate current infrastructure and to modernize NASIC’s Automated Virtual Information Production Support System.

EADS received $33,217,089 for six UH72A Lakota aircraft and six airborne communication 231 radios.

Encompass Digital Media received $10,915,918 for a DVIDS operations hub, which will transmit/receive video, data, and audio from DVIDS worldwide satellite transmitters and maintain up/downlink service to all portable SATCOM terminals accessing the DVIDS network. 

Exelis Inc. received $10,000,000 to support 120 operationally deployed systems and to continue basic development to address operational gaps in Information Support Server Environment Cross-Domain Sharing capabilities. Exelis Inc. received $10,931,575 for receiver transmitter and wiring harnesses spare parts. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Forward Slope ($28,651,472); Geocent ($22,109,107); G2 Software Systems ($23,420,492); Harmonia Holdings Group ($26,674,385); ISPA Technology ($24,017,291); and Moebius ($24,594,747) will support Space and Naval Warfare Systems (SPAWAR) Center Pacific C2 technologies and capabilities with science and technology research, systems engineering, architecture, design, development, integration, test, experimentation, implementation and support of C2 net-centric operations.

General Dynamics received $7,459,516 for security upgrades on Joint Execution and Tasking Systems for Space.

Intergraph Government Solutions (IGS) received $10,231,549 for ruggedized hardware designed to withstand shipboard environments. This was non-competitive, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Jacobs Technology received $11,341,989 for IT, management and assurance; software development; engineering and architectural compliance; and server support services.

Lockheed Martin received $103,865,047 for 36 electronic Consolidated Automated Support System (eCASS) LRIP units, including: radio frequency systems (36); self-maintenance and test calibration operational test program sets (10); calibration equipment (10); shore installation kits (36); ship installation kits (4); test program set development environment suites (5) and installations (18).

Lockheed Martin received $200,700,415 for GPS III space vehicles 05 and 06. Lockheed Martin received $116,069,077 for Space Vehicle 4 (SV4) launch operations.

Lockheed Martin received $47,347,121 to support mission operations for NORAD Cheyenne Mountain Complex/Integrated Tactical Warning/Attack Assessment in support of air/missile/space defense.

Mythics, Inc. received $19,770,292 for new products and support for Oracle. Oracle received $7,043,216 for Oracle PeopleSoft licenses and maintenance services.

Northrop Grumman received $65,288,028 for continued operations and sustainment of the vehicle and dismount exploitation radar (VADER) currently deployed in Afghanistan. Northrop Grumman received $10,500,000 for ground/air task-oriented radar (G/ATOR) engineering and manufacturing development; for associated engineering support services; and cost increases.

Northrop Grumman received $7,603,043 for modernization efforts of the JWARN product baseline; to improve functionality; to develop new capabilities for joint automated CBRNE warning and reporting.

Northrop Grumman received $7,784,925 to manufacture and deliver computers to the Navy. This contract is a sole source acquisition.

NOVA Corp. received $6,942,234 to provide IT support for the Office of Secretary of Defense (OSD).

Raytheon received $12,921,937 for cooperative engagement capability (CEC) for the AN/USG-2B Shipboard System and three planar array antenna assembly (PAAA) systems.

Raytheon received $172,680,000 for AN/TPY-2 #12 and associated spares.

Raytheon received $8,595,748 to assure implementation of M-Code Capabilities across OCX Block 1 and 2. Work will be performed at Aurora, CO.

Raytheon received $8,977,748 for common sensor payload (CSP) AN/AAS-53 high definition retrofits, which provide a day/night imaging and laser designator for ISR, and target acquisition/designation.

Raytheon received $97,850,000 to design, test, and deliver the Electronic Warfare Planning and Management Tool. 

Reema Consulting Services received $9,900,000 to support “program management soldier weapons” at Picatinny Arsenal, NJ through senior/junior operations; computer graphics; PA; technical editor; and IT.

SEDNA Digital Solutions received $11,797,558 for engineering and technical services for High Fidelity Simulation/Simulation and Common Processing System software development.

Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) received $11,151,506 to develop, test, integrate, and demonstrate System Manager and Link Manager Reference applications for the Telemetry Network System (TmNS) in support of the Major Range and Test Facility Base (MRTFB) Integrated Network Enhancement Telemetry Program Office. This contract was non-competitive, per FAR 6.302-1.

STG, Inc. received $16,989,443 for non-personal IT services and support to the 2nd Signal Center at Ft. Huachuca. One bid was solicited with one received.

SURVICE Engineering received $42,147,274 to collect, analyze, synthesize/process, and disseminate scientific/technical information for the Defense Technical Information Center (DTIC).

The Aerospace Corp. received $24,000,000 for space systems engineering and integration.

United Launch Services received $530,794,720 for launch vehicle support of: Air Force Atlas V 501, Atlas V 511, Delta IV 4,2, Delta IV 5,4, and an NRO Delta IV Heavy. Work will be performed at Centennial, CO, Vandenberg AFB and Cape Canaveral. This is a sole source acquisition.

Verizon (MCI Communications Services) received $11,071,650 for Defense Research & Engineering Network II telecomm services for the High Performance Computing Modernization program (HPCMP).

CONSTRUCTION, DREDGING & BASE SUPPORT SERVICES

A&D GC received $9,650,000 for design and construction of the Project Entry Control Gate 5 at Marine Corps Recruit Depot (MCRD), San Diego.

Alvarez & Marsal Real Estate Advisory Services received $88,000,000 for long-term post-closing management services in support of privatization of military housing, leasing, and sundry tasks related to Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) and other programs.

CDM Federal Programs received $9,500,000 to work with Kansas City District of the Corps of Engineers.

Creative Times Day School received $6,781,000 for an addition and alteration to an F-35 hanger at Hill AFB, UT.

Dills Architects, P.C.; KZF Design and CEMS Engineering Inc. received a total $10,000,000 to design and construct an elementary and secondary school area office. J&J Contractors received $31,687,000 for construction of Hanscom Middle School at Hanscom AFB.

Agate Construction received $7,592,200 to help repair the North Jetty at Barnegat Inlet, NJ. American Southwest Electronic received $13,087,038 to work on the West Bank Mississippi River Levee, Atchafalaya Basin Levee District, Pointe Coupee Parish, LA. Burns & McDonnell received $9,500,000 for military/civil works projects primarily within Great Lakes and Ohio River division. Choctaw Transportation; Luhr Bros.; Patton-Tully Marine; and Pine Bluff Sand & Gravel Co. received $48,000,000 for constructing various types of stone navigation structures in the Mississippi river. Dutra Dredging Company received $39,739,000 for dredging the Thimble Shoal Federal Navigation Channel and the Cape Henry Federal Navigation Channel in Newport News, VA. FEDCON JV received $34,536,510 to work on the hurricane storm damage and risk reduction system, Mississippi River Levee, Augusta to Oakville, LA. Luhr Bros. received $7,000,000 for equipment and personnel for dredging the Ohio River, its tributaries and the upper Mississippi River. Nordic Industries received $12,562,131 to construct the oxbow bypass in the Napa River, CA. Wolpert, Inc. received $9,500,000 to help the Army CoE with architectural/engineering projects primarily within the Great Lakes and Ohio River Division boundaries.

DZSP 21 received $85,998,135 for base operation support services (public affairs office; public safety; port operations; ordnance; material management; galley; facilities management; engineering; sustainment, utilities; vehicles; and environmental) at Joint Region Marianas, Guam.

Eagle Crusher Company received $157,500,000 for environmental equipment. 

EMCOR Government Services received $30,755,772 to repair and maintain property, facilities, and assets at Naval Support Activity Washington (NSAW), Naval Support Activity Bethesda (NSAB), Naval Support Activity South Potomac (NSASP), and MCB Quantico.

Exelis Systems Corp. received $11,538,204 for logistic support center base operations at Ft. Rucker.

Forest Products Distributors received $121,882,356 for wood products. Pelican Lumber & Export received $123,232,281 for wood products. S & S Forest Products received $123,223,834 for wood products.

Four Thirteen; Blackhawk Milcon; Altec, Inc.; PentaCon; American Contractor & Technology; Abba Construction; Jireh Group; and LeeTex Construction received $96,000,000 for construction, repair, and rehab of property at Red River Army Depot, TX.

IAP World Services received $12,598,143 for base operating support (general management and admin; facilities investment; waste management; pool maintenance; utilities operation; and environmental) at NAS Patuxent River and Point Lookout, MD.

J. Torres Company received $7,396,934 for solid waste, recycling, and landfill services at Edwards AFB.

JCON Group; Orocon/Carother JV; Mitchell Industrial Contractors; Brasfield & Gorrie; PentaCon; TMG Services; and Leebcor Services received $95,000,000 for construction projects located primarily within the NAVFAC Southeast.

Komada LLC received $15,000,000 for simplified acquisition of base engineering requests (SABER) to provide construction at Beale AFB. This is a single source award.

KPMG LLP received $12,834,740 for all necessary management services, personnel and documentation required for DLA audit readiness review.

Nova Group/Underground Construction JV received $52,364,400 for building a new fuel pipeline and upgrading an existing pipeline from Sasa Valley Fuel Farm to Andersen AFB, Guam.

S. S. Dannaway & Associates received $10,000,000 for architect-engineer services for fire protection at various NAVFAC Pacific locations.

Structural Assoc. Inc. (SAI) received $11,163,100 for soldier specialty care clinic at Ft. Drum.

Sundt Construction received $32,787,350 to repair a runway at Minot AFB.

T. B. Penick & Sons received $18,702,988 to renovate the medical clinic at MCAGCC, Twentynine Palms.

Trax International Corp. received $8,647,158 for test services supporting the Yuma Proving Ground, AZ.

Turner Construction received $41,407,500 to build a health clinic around North Severn, Naval Academy.

Watts Contrack JV received $57,084,144 to construct a hangar and aircraft staging area to support one MV-22 squadron (12 aircraft) in Kaneohe Bay, HI.

FUEL & ENERGY

Alon USA ($159,634,730); Calumet Shreveport Fuels ($189,694,644); Epic Aviation ($9,011,683); Equilon Enterprises ($1,359,019,230 and $281,774,306); ExxonMobil ($872,570,007); Hunt Refining Co. ($65,314,925); Husky Marketing & Supply ($194,906,385); Irving Oil Terminals ($42,164,940); Mercury Air Centers ($13,496,963); Petromax LLC ($154,116,245); Phillips 66 Co. ($292,016,625); Placid Refining Company ($320,296,759); Signature Flight Support Corp. ($14,649,857); Tesoro Refining & Marketing Co. ($89,568,843); Valero Marketing & Supply ($769,729,995); Wynnewood Energy Co. ($179,238,610); and Wyoming Refining Company ($59,814,800) will provide fuel to DOD.

Dayton Power & Light (DPL) received $26,102,136 for electrical services at Wright-Patterson AFB.

DL Management Services JV received $11,381,864 for aircraft refueling services. 

Heil Trailer International received $10,554,880 for 76 Flatrack refueling capability (FRC) units.

The Oilgear Co. received $16,000,000 for meter assembly skids and fuel.  

TXU Energy Retail received $24,753,778 for electricity and ancillary services at NASA.

FOOD SERVICES

Brothers Produce received $21,474,000 for fresh fruit and vegetables. Seashore Fruit & Produce received $49,500,000 for fresh fruit & vegetables.

Essence Bottling received $100,000,000 for bottled water.

Jianas Brothers Packaging received $14,143,534 for beverage base components used in MREs.

Pacific Unlimited received $262,500,000 to provide food to U.S. forces in Guam.

TRANSPORTATION

Alaska Airlines; Atlas Air; Federal Express; Kalitta Air; Miami Air International; National Air Cargo Group; Northern Air Cargo; Omni Air International; UPS; U.S. Airways; and World Airways Inc. received a total $146,635,339 for international cargo transportation.

CASS Holdings received $34,000,000 to refurbish the F71, F72, F73, and F78 AM2 matting packages in support of the Expeditionary Airfield Program. 

Cottonwood Inc. received $15,000,000 for vehicle cargo tie downs. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Defense Support Services (DS2) received $24,903,892 for instructional support services to conduct basic and advanced courses on the Navy’s Cargo Offload and Discharge System (COLDS).

Hornbeck Offshore Services received $8,080,209 to charter the offshore supply vessel, HOS Dominator.

Maersk Line Ltd. received $14,223,440 to charter one Ice-class certified, double-hulled tanker. 

Matson Navigation ($27,292,829); Totem Ocean Trailer Express ($15,421,735); and Sea Star Line ($7,342,931) will provide ocean and intermodal distribution services.

Solution Dynamics and Atlantic Diving Supply received $633,000,000 for commercial type material handling equipment. Atlantic Diving Supply received $84,063,089 for various commercial fasteners.

Textainer Equipment Management received $15,952,358 for the program management, leasing, transportation and repair of intermodal equipment.  

HEALTHCARE & SAFETY

AMO Sales & Services received $27,888,242 for medical equipment and maintenance. C.R. Bard received $46,261,496 for material availability and to provide medical surge, resupply, and sustainment material. 

Carestream Health received $70,228,104 for radiology systems, subsystems, and components. TeraRecon, Inc. received $30,000,000 for radiology systems, subsystems, accessories, service, manuals and repair parts.

Computer Sciences Corp. received $11,420,438 for U.S. Army Reserve specialty medical training, equipment and site maintenance, administrative support and all training for combat support hospitals.

Dixon Shane (doing business as R&S Northeast) received $18,360,764 for pharmaceutical products. 

Janssen Pharmaceuticals received $41,402,283 for pharmaceutical products. MWI Veterinary Supply received $43,422,331 for veterinary pharmaceutical products. 

Meridian Medical Technologies received $123,191,610 for nerve agent antidotes in auto-injectors and maintenance/readiness services. Physio-Control Inc. received $46,011,356 for defibrillators, related components, and accessories. Thomas Scientific received $9,600,000 for laboratory supplies and wares. 

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*Final notes: DOD annotates some contracts with the following stamps: Small Business; Small Business in HUBZone; Small Disadvantaged Business; Woman Owned Small Business; Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business; and Small Disadvantaged Woman Owned Business.

Any clerical errors are the editor’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.

BFP Exclusive EyeOpening Report: Exposing Every Pentagon Contract in 2013

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The Department of Defense (DOD) spent $331,456,507,052 on roughly 3,288 publicly-disclosed contracts during 2013

DOD’s declared budget was approximately $673 billion for 2013. The discrepancy between our figures and DOD’s arises when one considers wages, BAH, entitlements, allowances and retiree pay for the U.S. Armed Forces are not factored into daily contract announcements, and contracts under $6.5 million are not disclosed publicly.

Look for trends in this data. Discover where U.S. tax dollars are spent. For example, notice the large portion of money that corporations receive from maintenance contracts. Observe how many contracts are not bid on competitively, especially those pertaining to the Joint Strike Fighter and cyberspace. Scour the construction contracts in order to see where the Pentagon is building its infrastructure. The data is yours.

The contracts are arranged according to the following topics:

Unmanned Systems, Salient Contracts, Missiles, Rockets, and Bombs (PDF)

Foreign Military Sales, Gear and Equipment (PDF)

Space, Cyber and Information Technology (PDF)

Aircraft and Naval Contracts (PDF)

Construction, Environment and Base Support (PDF)

Fuel, Food, Transportation and Healthcare (PDF)

To avoid competitive bidding, DOD often invokes 10 U.S.C. 2304 and FAR 6.302, wherein the supplies or services are available from “only one responsible source” and/or no other supplier will satisfy DOD’s requirements. DOD also invokes 15 U.S.C. 638 to avoid competitive bidding when dealing with small businesses.

DOD annotated some 2013 contracts with the following stamps: Small Business; Small Business in HUBZone; Small Disadvantaged Business; Woman Owned Small Business; Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business; and Small Disadvantaged Woman Owned Business.

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*Editing consolidated similar contracts. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

**Any clerical errors are the editor’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.


BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for January 2014

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DOD spent $15,530,647,963+ on 186 individual contracts in January 2014

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $15,530,647,963 on 186 individual contracts during January 2014.

SALIENT CONTRACTS

Agentase LLC received $11,206,720 to support DARPA’s In Vivo Nanoplatforms program (IVN), which seeks to develop new classes of adaptable nanoparticles for persistent, distributed, unobtrusive physiologic and environmental sensing, and treatment of physiologic abnormalities, illness and infectious disease.

Airtec, Inc. received $9,477,860 to provide ISR services (utilizing two contractor-owned/operated aircraft, with government furnished property previously installed on the aircraft) for USSOUTHCOM in Bogota, Columbia.

Conti Federal Services, Inc.; Cosmopolitan Inc.; CT JV; M+W U.S., Inc.; Nibor Enterprises, Inc.; Oxford Construction of PA, Inc. received $24,975,000 for construction projects in Israel.

Foresight Renewable Solutions, LLC (FRSOL) received $7,000,000,000 for use in completing and awarding power purchase agreement task orders.

L-3 received $10,000,000 for commercial tubes to improve USSOCOM lighting capabilities. L-3 received $10,000,000 for commercial lighting tubes for USSOCOM. One bid was solicited with one received.

NEK Services, Inc. received $8,232,079 to provide instructors and role players to support the Joint Exploitation Training Center [PDF, p. 7 of 11], C. Company, 6th Battalion, 1st Special Warfare Training Group (Airborne), Ft. Bragg. This was awarded per FAR 8.405-6.

UNMANNED SYSTEMS

L-3 received $17, 611,443 for supplies and services associated with Surface Terminal Equipment for Hawklink Tactical Common Data Link (TCDL) and the LCS configurations, and the Vortex Mini-TCDL Shipset components in support of the VTOL Fire Scout MQ-8B/8C.

Law Company Inc. received $20,078,900 to construct a UAV hanger at Ft. Riley.

Northrop Grumman received $36,294,099 for logistics and engineering support for the Hunter UAS in Afghanistan and Sierra Vista, AZ.

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES

American International Contractors, Inc. received $9,788,000 for construction of the United Kingdom Maritime Component Command (UKMCC) including a warehouse and HQ at Mina Salman, Bahrain.

AMI Industries, Inc. received $8,817,781 to install aircraft ejection seats for Oman and Iraq. This is a sole-source acquisition. 

B3H Corp. received $6,856,100 for English language instructors and training using DLI-ELC courseware and methodology at King Abdul Aziz Air Base, Dhahran.

Lockheed Martin received $48,900,000 to provide Norway with return/repair support, spares, engineering, reps and modification for C-130J aircraft.

Raytheon received $10,510,029 to provide Denmark with 9 multi-spectral targeting systems (MTS) for MH-60R/S helicopters. This was not a full and open competition, per FAR 6.302-1.

United Technologies received $183,000,000 for work on Saudi Arabia’s Air Force DB110 Reconnaissance System [PDF]. This includes in-country setup, installation, ground stations, and pod survey studies.

United Technologies received $33,884,559 to remanufacture F-100-PW-100/200/220/220E/229 engine modules for Chile, Egypt, Jordan, Thailand, Taiwan, Greece and Indonesia.

MISSILES, ROCKETS & BOMBS

BAE Systems received $19,273,217 for MK 41 vertical launching system (VLS) canister production, which includes 89 MK 21 MOD 3 (SM-6) canisters, coding plugs, explosive bolts, and impulse cartridges. Lockheed Martin received $9,710,890 to produce MK 41 VLS AEGIS modernization module electronics. Lockheed Martin received $14,432,389 for one Mission Signal Processor suite and two array simulator cabinets for the Aegis Training & Readiness Center (ATRC).

GTI Systems received $78,200,000 for practice bombs and accoutrements.

Lockheed Martin received $31,674,868 to support Ballistic Missile Defense System (BMDS) flight test activities using LMSSC developed target hardware. Lockheed Martin received $20,618,247 for engineering, manufacturing, risk reduction, technical maturity efforts on the Long Range Anti-Ship Missile (LRASM) program.

Raytheon received $107,918,011 for work on the Patriot missile system. Raytheon received $156,000,000 for eight SM-3 Block IB missiles and “all up round build up.”

Raytheon received $17,257,960 for 28 LAU-115D/A missile launchers for Australia and 64 LAU-116-B/A missile launchers for the U.S. Navy (34 missiles – $5,819,780; 34 percent) and Australia (30 missiles – $11,438,180; 66 percent) in support of F/A-18E/F and EA-18G.

Raytheon received $52,084,929 for engineering and technical support to Phalanx, SeaRAM, and C-RAM required for maintenance, reliability, and improvements.

TASC Inc. received $6,933,916 for R&D on the Solid Rocket Motor Modernization Study, which includes investigating propulsion options and impacts for replacement or modernization of the Minuteman III.

SPACE, CYBER, IT & COMMS

Ball Aerospace received $9,133,111 for Advanced Laser Effects Research branch (ALTER) to advance laser weapon vulnerability research. Deliverables include: beam train work, test layout design, hardware fabrication, diagnostic instrumentation, raw data collection and documentation, and incidental programming.

Booz Allen Hamilton received $12,502,113 for program and financial management and administrative services in the Program Executive Office Enterprise Information Systems (PEO EIS), Naval Enterprise Networks (NEN) office. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

General Dynamics received $6,886,969 to design and develop a CAROUSEL Applicable Specific Integrated Circuit solution involved in testing of CAROUSEL crypto engines.

Harris Corp. received $13,693,104 for additional labor to provide uninterrupted logistics for Space & Missile Systems Center Space Superiority operational Offensive Counterspace and Defensive Counterspace ground-based systems at Palm Bay, FL.

Jacobs Technology Inc. received $15,215,028, $10,657,764 and $7,712,796 for engineering technical assistance, which consists of disciplined systems/specialty engineering and technical/information assurance services, support, and products. Some work will be performed at Hanscom AFB, Peterson AFB and Dahlgren, VA.

L-3 received $85,485,879 for spare and component satellite terminal parts. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Leidos Inc. received $62,480,000 to perform software engineering, integration, technical support, and training requirements for the Integrated Strategic Planning and Analysis Network quality review.

Lockheed Martin received $8,534,310 to modernize AN/FPS-117 Long Range Radars.

Northrop Grumman received $200,000,000 for acquisition and sustainment of Embedded GPS Inertial Navigation Systems (EGI). This is a sole-source acquisition and includes unclassified FMS to Iraq and Thailand (45 percent).

Northrop Grumman received $26,110,000 for Reliability and Maintainability Information Systems (REMIS) Sustainment and Development Services.

Sparta Inc. received $7,310,558 for engineering consulting and technical advisory services including special studies to support existing staff at Space & Missile Systems Center (SMC) at Los Angeles AFB.

AIRCRAFT

Aerospace Testing Alliance received $22,950,459 for operations, maintenance, information management and support of Arnold Engineering Development Complex.

Affordable Engineering Services, LLC received $20,832,874 to support air vehicle modification and instrumentation efforts.

Azimuth Corp. received $23,734,700 and General Dynamics received $23,734,700 to advance R&D on the Hardened Materials Research & Survivability Studies Program in order to advance technology, which protects Air Force aircrews and systems from a host of threats associated with photonic light and electromagnetic energy sources. Technical areas include optical/hardening materials and processing; electro-optic/infrared sensor protection; structural and warfighter protection; functional materials, proactive threat defeat, and high energy laser source materials.

Bell-Boeing JPO received $10,322,803 for logistics on MV-22 and CV-22 aircraft. Bell-Boeing JPO received $26,682,561 for V-22 flight test management, design and engineering work for Naval Rotary Wing Aircraft Test Squadron. Rolls-Royce received $13,556,862 for 17,226 engine flight hours in support of the MV-22. Rolls-Royce received $90,164,920 for forty AE1107C engines for the MV-22.

Boeing received $10,000,000 for items to ensure uninterrupted support to DOD. This is a sole-source acquisition. Boeing received $17,820,844 for remanufacturing and maintenance on the F/A-18 A-F. This was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1. Boeing received $26,836,716 for F/A-18 parts repair. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(1). Boeing received $38,103,120 for F/A-18E/F logistics and material. The was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(1).

CV International, Inc. received $15,916,531 for a modernized maintenance platform for CH-47, UH-60, AH-64, OH-58 and UAS aircraft.

EADS-NA received $9,454,370 for Lakota helicopter logistics.

EFW, Inc. received $11,666,579 to procure and install helmet display tracker system (HDTS PDF) kits for AH-1W aircraft.

General Electric received $572,500,000 to repair and replace 17 F414 engine components. This was non-competitive, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

L-3 received $129,000,000 for maintenance and modification of the C-12/RC-12/UC-35 aircraft fleet. L-3 received $13,764,771 for maintenance on F-16, F-18, H-60 and E-2C aircraft at NAS Fallon.

Lockheed Martin received $105,287,400 (P00026) for C-130J Long Term Sustainment Program. Lockheed Martin received $35,781,319 to develop a Universal Armament Interface capability in F-35 software for Small Diameter Bomb II, Mission Systems Integration Laboratory ground test only. 

Marvin Engineering Co. received $7,373,028 for 156 BRU-32 Ejector Bomb Racks for F/A-18 E/F and EA-18G aircraft.

Northrop Grumman received $12,083,976 for 11 AN/APR-39D(V)2 test assets. Northrop Grumman received $33,017,449 to design and build operational test program sets in support of the P-8A AN/ALQ 240 electronic repair depot standup at Naval Surface Warfare Center, Crane. Northrop Grumman received $52,298,661 for tasks, personnel, facilities, aircraft subsystems and equipment for the Battlefield Airborne Communications Node (BACN) E-11A at Kandahar AB, Afghanistan and Wichita, KS.

PLEXSYS Interface Products received $8,254,297 for continued AWACS MTC Block 30/35 CTSS on contractor-owned equipment until the trainers are replaced by Block 40/45 Mission Crew Training Systems.

Raytheon received $36,789,509 for second generation forward looking infrared (2GF) hardware and support to preserve the Army’s 2GF sensor industrial base. One bid was solicited, one received.

Rockwell Collins received $8,022,845 for AN/ARC-210(V) radios and equipment for a variety of aircraft. Rockwell Collins/ESA Vision Systems received $14,666,736 for spare parts for the A/24A-56 (JHMCS). This is a sole-source acquisition. A portion is FMS to Canada, Chile, Pakistan, Portugal, Thailand and Iraq.

Rolls Royce received $182,658,644 for C-130J propulsions sustainment, including logistics, program management, engineering services, spares, and technical data.

SelectTech Services Corp. received $7,680,250 for engineering technical support (preventive and remedial maintenance, inspection, modification, overhaul, fabrication, repair, calibration, certification and transport of experimental/test equipment, and laboratory instrumentation) necessary to perform maintenance and fabrication of experimental processing and test equipment at Wright-Patterson AFB.

Sikorsky received $14,352,600 for helicopter bearing assembly spindles. This is a sole-source acquisition. Sikorsky received $549,905,199 for eighteen MH-60S helicopters and nineteen MH-60R helicopters, including engineering, program management, advanced procurement funding and other logistics.

Textron (Bell Helicopter) received $13,495,182 for repair/overhaul of five high priority items for UH-1Y and AH-1Z helicopters. Textron received $18,556,810 for logistics support for Bell 407, Huey, Jet Ranger, and OH-58 helicopters. Work will be performed in Al Taji, Iraq and Piney Flats, TN.

The Entwistle Co. received $10,981,190 to repair 318 trough covers that support the Aircraft Launch & Recovery Equipment Program (ALREP). This was not a full and open competition, per FAR 6.302-1.

Thomas Instrument received $48,702,626 for aircraft winches. This is a sole-source acquisition. 

TTT-Cubed received $26,983,588 for services for the development, integration, and operational support of countermeasure and emitter threat simulator systems for the Airborne Threat Simulation (ATS) Organization.

NAVAL CONTRACTS

BAE Systems received $13,895,899 to update and improve the USS Wasp’s (LHD 1) military and technical capabilities. BAE Systems received $37,439,506 for USS Chung Hoon (DDG 93) dry-docking, including maintenance and modernization efforts. This was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1.

Bechtel Plant Machinery Inc. (BPMI) received $593,104,854 for naval nuclear propulsion components.

BriarTek Inc. received $8,070,975 for supplies and services to help install the Man Overboard Indicator (MOBI) on various ships. This was non-competitive, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) and FAR 6.302-1.

Cortana Corp. received $7,760,214 for R&D on sensors/systems in support of the Advanced Sensor Application Program and the Remote Environmental Sensor Program. 

Detyens Shipyards, Inc. received $9,654,055 for overhaul and dry-docking of fleet replenishment oiler USNS Leroy Grumman (T-AO 195). Work includes port main engine clutch and coupling overhaul; antenna cleaning, inspecting and refurbishing; helicopter deck sprinkler and hose reel piping renewal; fall blocks and fairlead sheaves; hull painting and cleaning; and flight deck non-skid renewal.

General Dynamics received $7,475,361 for USS Carter Hall (LSD 50) maintenance. General Dynamics received $15,000,000 for non-nuclear submarine repair work on Groton-based subs under the New England Maintenance Manpower Initiative (NEMMI). General Dynamics received $15,035,596 for tube and hull material for the Ohio Class Replacement Program for the U.S. (50 percent) and the UK (50 percent). General Dynamics received $29,848,059 for engineering and technical design services to support R&D of advanced submarine technologies.

Goodrich Corp. received $7,598,764 for engineering design services and fabrication of a full scale prototype submarine rotor component under the Hybrid Demonstration program for DARPA.

Huntington Ingalls received $8,163,923 and $9,800,000 for repair parts for USS Gerald Ford (CVN 78).

Lockheed Martin received $13,188,967 for training and crew familiarization; availability advanced planning; long lead time material; warehousing; logistics; and class sustainment management LCS-1 and LCS-3. Lockheed Martin received $8,863,977 for Technical Insertion 14 (TI-14) Integrated Submarine Imaging Systems (ISIS) and spares. The ISIS provides mission critical, all weather, visual, and electronic search, digital image management, indication, warning, and platform architecture interface capabilities.

Raytheon received $25,485,600 for engineering on the DDG 1000, including engineering, integration, production, and training and life cycle support.

Systems Engineering Support Co. received $18,626,453 for Navigation Sensor System Interface (NAVSSI) hardware. Micro USA Inc. received $17,622,114 for NAVSSI hardware.

Vigor Marine received $6,655,679 for engine overhaul, gyro replacement, diesel generator overhaul, hull cleaning and painting for USNS Yukon (T-AO 202). 

Vigor Shipyards received $33,077,000 for repair and alteration of the USS Momsen (DDG 82).

GEAR, EQUIPMENT, TRAINING & SMALL ARMS

AM General, LLC received $48,000,000 for HMMWV parts. This is a sole-source acquisition. 

Bluewater Defense Inc. (San Lorenzo, Puerto Rico) received $108,083,360 for permethrin uniform trousers. Bronze Star Apparel Group, Inc. received $11,111,611 for various Navy working uniforms.

Boeing received $7,131,719 for Combat Survivor Evader Locator (CSEL) logistics.

Design West Technologies, Inc. received $21,554,266 for 14 suspension lock-out kits and spare parts for the M119 Howitzer.

Garrett Container Systems received $19,541,184 for nine pieces of equipment that security forces use on a daily basis, including concealable body armor, Safariland 6005 SLS M-9 Berretta leg holster, nickel plated steel handcuffs, 21-inch expandable baton, mini-flashlights with holder, and whistle. 

General Dynamics received $72,690,235 for twelve M1A2 System Enhanced Package v2 tanks. One bid solicited, one received. General Dynamics received $48,000,000 to “continue the existing project manager for training devices live training transformation product line until the next consolidated product line management award.” General Dynamics received $25,960,947 to develop and produce 468 Seat Survivability Upgrade (SSU) Kits for MRAP vehicles.

Heckler & Koch received $19,647,426 for 12,400 M320/M320A1 grenade launchers. One bid was solicited with one received.

Kalmar RT received $8,211,055 for diesel engines, transmissions, parts and assemblies. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Robin Industries, Inc. received $10,694,880 for vehicle track shoe assemblies.

Ultimate Training Munitions Inc. received $11,250,000 for the close combat mission capability kit for the M4/M16 and M249.

CONSTRUCTION & DREDGING

Alutiiq received $6,989,861 for Redstone Information Technology Services to maintain operational continuity until the selection board has evaluated contractor proposals.

Arcadis Inc.; Nova Consulting Inc.; CH2M Hill Inc. and Black & Veatch Inc. received $9,900,000 for architectural and engineering services for the Washington Aqueduct.

Baker-AECOM JV received $60,000,000 for architect-engineer services for USCENTCOM. Stanley Consultants, Inc. received $60,000,000 for architect-engineer services for USCENTCOM. These are FMS contracts involving unnamed countries.

C.E.C. Inc. received $7,391,803 for work in and around the Lake Pontchartrain Bayou Bienvenue Swing Bridge.

Eisenbraun & Associates received $9,000,000 for a nationwide survey and mapping of shallow water habitat, floodplain changes and vegetation cover.

Four Thirteen Inc.; Blackhawk Milcon LLC; Altec Inc.; PentaCon LLC; American Contractor & Technology Inc.; Abba Construction Inc.; Jireh Group LLC; LeeTex Construction LLC; Heritage Constructors Inc.; JAM-MAP JV; and Bering Straits Technical Services, LLC received $48,000,000 for construction and rehab of Red River Army Depot (RRAD) property.

Great Lakes Dredge & Dock received $28,355,304 for deepening the main channel of the Delaware River.

Martinex Construction, Inc. received $19,244,014 for dredging three-to-six million cubic yards of material from the Savannah and Brunswick inner harbor.

Metals USA, I-Solutions Group received $99,253,923 for metal items.

Nakuuruq Solutions received $21,000,000 for machining, welding, fabrication & painting at Aberdeen Proving Ground. Bering Straits Technical Services (BSTS) received $6,778,700 to demolish, repair, and construct a variety of paving structures and drainage devices at Aberdeen Proving Ground.

Pond & Co. and Corrpro Companies, Inc. received $9,999,900 for cathodic protection and corrosion controls.

Tetra Tech/Pond JV received $9,500,000 for architectural and engineering services primarily within the Great Lakes and Ohio River boundaries. One bid was solicited with one received.

Wright & Wright Machinery Company received $776,000,000 for construction equipment.

Zyscovich, Inc.; Reynolds, Smith & Hills; and Schenkel & Shultz, Inc. received $10,000,000 for architectural/engineering to support DOD elementary and secondary schools within the U.S., overseas territories, Europe, Cuba, Japan, and South Korea.

ENVIRONMENTAL

AMEC Environment & Infrastructure; CH2M Hill Inc.; AECOM Technical Services; EA Engineering, Science & Technology Inc.; Earth Resources Technology; J. M. Waller Associates; SAIC; Tec-Weston JV; Tetra Tech, Inc. and URS Group Inc. received a collective $243,000,000 for environmental engineering support.

BOH Environmental LLC received $250,000,000 for containers and container parts. This is a sole-source acquisition. 

CDM Constructors Inc. received $77,476,628 to design and build a ‘Class A’ wastewater treatment plant at Joint Base Lewis-McChord (JBLM).

CH2M HILL Constructors received $44,240,000 for design and construction of NAVSEA Headquarters Recovery Restoration at Naval Support Activity Washington (NSAW).

Kemron Environmental Services; Inc.; Sovereign Consulting, Inc.; Bhate Environmental Associates, Inc.; North Wind, Inc.; Zapata, Inc.; and PPM Consultants received $25,000,000 for environmental remediation at contaminated sites located primarily within NAVFAC Southeast [SC (40 percent); TX (30 percent); MS (10 percent); AL (5 percent); GA (5 percent), LA (5 percent), elsewhere (5 percent)].

Mississippi Limestone Corp. received $8,751,228 for casting 94,640 squares of articulated concrete mattress, providing all necessary supplies, labor, and transportation to complete the project.  

Weeks Marine received $10,592,500 firm for beach restoration of NASA Wallops Island.

Wolverine Services LLC received $6,769,722 for facility maintenance and repair.

BASE SUPPORT & LOGISTICS

Accenture Federal Service received $7,523,792 for general fund enterprise business system onsite support and change requests.

American Water Operations & Maintenance Inc. received $288,021,970 to own and operate the water distribution system and wastewater collection system at Hill AFB.

Booze Allen Hamilton received $16,080,397 for engineering and technical assistance on the integrated personnel and pay system [PDF].

CoSTAR Services, Inc. received $9,865,087 for regional base operations support services at NAS Jacksonville, Naval Station Mayport, NOSC Atlanta, NOSC Augusta, GA, NOSC Columbus, GA, NOSC Bessemer, AL, NOSC Greenville, SC, NOSC Miami, NOSC Tallahassee, NOSC West Palm Beach, FL and MCRC Jacksonville, FL. Services may include facility investment, custodial, pest control, integrated solid waste management, and grounds maintenance and landscaping. 

EJB Facilities Services received $7,261,421 for base operations support at various installations in the NAVFAC Northwest. Work may include management/admin, visual services, security, housing, facilities support, pavement clearance, utilities, vehicle and equipment work, and environmental services.

Five Stones Research Corp. received $43,653,541 for HQ and directorate support services for the ATEC, Redstone Test Center.

General PAE Applied Technologies received $28,070,424 for base operations support at Keesler AFB.

Jacobs & HDR JV received $60,000,000 for analysis of DOD infrastructure for various locations throughout NAVFAC worldwide. Work supports Navy’s Sustainment, Restoration, and Modernization.

IBM received $19,905,753 for services supporting Army General Fund Audit Readiness. KPMG LLP received $10,730,426 and $36,243,243 for all necessary management services, personnel and documentation required to support DLA’s financial audit. St. Michaels Inc. received $10,490,323 to support management services, personnel and documentation required to support DLA’s financial audit.

Trax International received $44,113,856 for test support at Yuma Proving Ground.

Wolf Creek Federal Services Inc. received $12,960,577 for housing operations and maintenance services at Naval Base Guam and Andersen AFB in Santa Rita, Guam (60 percent) and Yigo, Guam (40 percent).

FOOD SERVICES

Coast Citrus Distributors received $35,158,808 for fresh fruit and vegetables. Valley Fruit & Produce received $14,691,191 for fresh fruit and vegetables.

Employment Source Inc. received $15,755,197 for dining facility attendant services at Ft. Bragg.

The Merchants Co. received $12,316,254 for food and beverages. This is a sole-source acquisition. Thermo PAC LLC received $20,428,312 for food. This contract is a sole-source acquisition. US Foods International received $42,226,006 for food distribution. US Foods Inc. received $7,232,994 for food distribution. This is a sole-source acquisition.

FUEL & ENERGY

Avfuel Corp. received $7,417,557 and $6,985,104 for jet fuel. Freeman Holdings of California received $28,455,164 for jet fuel. Lancair Corporation received $15,635,562 for jet fuel. This is a sole source acquisition. McClellan Jet Services received $37,307,380 for jet fuel. Signature Flight Support Corp. received $10,936,934 for jet fuel.

Intercomp Co. received $60,000,000 for various weight set commercial scales.

Isometrics, Inc. received $7,100,835 for design/production of A/S32 R-11 fuel trucks. 

Middle Atlantic Wholesale Lumber, R.D. Buie Enterprises Inc., S & S Forest Products, and Sylvan Forest Products Inc. each received $51,294,723 for wood products.

Safety Kleen received $12,930,214 for re-refined motor oil program parts.

Transport Systems & Products Inc. received $7,366,373 for self-propelled modular transport equipment manufactured by Scheuerle Fahrzeugfabrik GmbH in support of the moored training ship conversion project at Norfolk Naval Shipyard. Work will be performed in Pfedelbach, Germany. This contract was not competitively procured.

MEDICAL

ABM Government Services LLC received $45,000,000 for operation, maintenance, repair, and minor construction of medical research and materiel command laboratory facilities.

Brit Systems received $20,297,132 for digital imaging network-picture archive communication system.

Dispensers Optical Service Corp. received $17,006,713 for optical lenses. Randolph Engineering received $33,381,996 for optical frames and accessories.

Caduceus received $19,751,538 to provide San Antonio Military Medical Center (SAMMC) with 35 certified registered nurse anesthetists.

Esaote North America, Inc. received $7,500,000 for radiology systems, subsystems, accessories, services, manual, and repair parts. Pacsgear, Inc. received $30,000,000 for radiology systems, subsystems, accessories, service, manual, and repair/spare parts. Toshiba America Medical Systems received $187,732,814 for radiology systems, subsystems and components. Vital Images Inc. received $10,017,588 for radiology systems, subsystems and components.

General Electric received $43,200,000 for patient monitoring systems, subsystems, accessories, spare parts, and training.

MIL-Base Industries received $10,000,000 and Voto Manufacturing Sales Company received $10,000,000 for multiple leg slings.

Panakela LLC received $22,988,000 for oxygen system and related accessories.  

TRANSPORTATION

Patriot Contract Services LLC received $7,236,660 for operation and maintenance of four large, medium-speed, roll-on/roll-off ships worldwide for MSC.

Pontaris, LLC received $85,611,925 for trucking cargo throughout Afghanistan.

# # # #

*Editing consolidated similar contracts. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

**Any clerical errors are the editor’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

***To avoid competitive bidding, DOD invokes 10 U.S.C. 2304, FAR 6.302, and FAR 8.405-6. DOD also invokes 15 U.S.C. 638 to avoid competitive bidding when dealing with small businesses.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.

BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for March 2014

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DOD spent $34,742,395,713+ on 244 individual contracts in March 2014

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $34,742,395,713 on 244 individual contracts during March 2014.

SALIENT CONTRACTS

CACI Inc. received $27,114,681 “for logistics and engineering services performed at contingency locations.” One bid was solicited, one bid received. Army INSCOM at Ft. Belvoir is the contracting activity.

CH2M Hill Inc. received $7,333,250 for Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act Munitions Response sites investigations, Title II services, program support services, and community relations at the Vieques, Puerto Rico, Naval Training Range & Naval Ammunition Support Detachment.

D&S Consultants Inc. received $8,734,140 for IT operations and maintenance support for USSOUTHCOM Joint Task Force-Guántanamo Bay, Cuba.

General Dynamics received $12,414,345 to provide the 160th Signal Brigade and subordinate units with staff support in the areas of admin, operations and logistics support within the USCENTCOM area of responsibility. Work will be performed in Kuwait, Afghanistan and Qatar.

Honeywell Technology Solutions Inc. received $13,122,763 to support the U.S. Marine Corps, Afghanistan Retrograde and Redeployment Operations/Maintenance/Preservation Packaging and Packing Support. Work will be performed in Afghanistan.

Laughin, Marinaccio & Owens Inc. received $20,769,673 for Air National Guard recruiting and retention programs. This is a sole-source acquisition.

NAVMAR Applied Sciences Corp. (NASC) received $10,168,177 for engineering, integration, system maintenance/repair services, and training for the continued development of advanced sensors and systems in support of naval aviation missions of USSOCOM.

Tactical & Survival Specialties Inc.; W.S. Darley & Co.; ADS Inc.; Federal Resources Supply Co.; Source One Distributors Inc.; and H Squared Inc. received $10,000,000,000 to support special operational equipment tailored logistics support programs.

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES – Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations.

Beechcraft Corp. received $24,500,000 to provide Iraq with King Air 350 aircraft maintenance training. Work will occur at New Al-Muthana Airbase in Iraq and Wichita, KS. This is a sole-source acquisition. BH Defense LLC received $12,150,976 to ensure the continued development of Iraq’s defense forces through the education and development of its senior leadership at Iraq’s International Academy. This is in addition to the original contract: W91247-13-C-0015 from March 2013. Lockheed Martin received $24,000,000 to provide Iraq’s Air Force with training and technology transfer (in accordance with security assistance agreements and or security cooperation programs) as necessary for C-130J maintenance training requirements. Work will be at New Al-Muthana Air Base, Iraq (also known as Baghdad International Airport Complex).

Boeing received $10,814,354 for trade studies and analysis for the Japan AWACS mission computing upgrade DMS 3.X requirements planning and hardware procurement to procure end of life hardware. Lockheed Martin received $50,737,476 to support the development of Japan’s F-35A CTOL Air System, which is comprised of the Air Vehicle and the Autonomic Logistics Global Sustainment System. This was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1. Lockheed Martin received $65,280,712 for the development of a Common F-35A CTOL Air System comprised of the Air Vehicle and the Autonomic Logistics Global Sustainment System for Japan ($32,640,356; 50 percent) and Israel ($32,640,356; 50 percent).

EADS-N.A. received $34,018,858 to provide Thailand six Lakota helicopters with the environmental control unit, mission equipment package and airborne radio communication (ARC-231) radios.

Exelis Inc. received $75,281,878 to provide Turkey with twenty-one ALQ-211(V)-9 Advanced Integrated Defensive Electronic Warfare System (AIDEWS) pods. Exelis will also provide support services and spares, equipment, and countermeasures dispensing system integration for Turkey’s F-16D Block 50 program.

L-3 Communications received $38,000,000 to provide Australia with C-27J spare parts. Lockheed Martin received $13,065,996 to provide Australia with 19 radar receiver processors for MH-60R helicopters. This was non-competitively acquired per FAR 6.302.1.

Lockheed Martin received $6,882,489 develop and provide Egypt with 20 advanced countermeasure electronics system-system integrity (ACES SI) retrofit kits, modify 24 radar warning receivers and procure three electronic warfare memory loader verifiers for F-16C/D (16 C’s and 4 D’s) Block 52 aircraft.

Lockheed Martin received $610,892,663 to provide Kuwait with PATRIOT advanced capability production, which includes 92 one-pack missiles, 50 launcher modification kits and associated ground equipment, tooling, and spares. This is in addition to the original contract: W31P4Q-14-C-0034 from December 2013. Aviation Training Consulting LLC received $24,988,000 for providing Kuwait instructional services in support of the KC-130J, including instruction on operating KC-130J simulators and aircraft. This was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-4.

Lockheed Martin received $7,696,166 for non-recurring sustainment activities on the F-35 for the UK, to include site activation planning efforts for RAF Marham. A portion of this contract was paid for with International Partner Funds.

Lockheed Martin received $8,500,000 to provide Norway long lead-time efforts to incorporate a drag chute in the JSF’s CTOL air systems.

Longbow LLC (a joint effort between Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman) received $25,504,554 to provide Saudi Arabia’s Land Forces Aviation Command with spares, ground support equipment, integrated logistics and management.

Northrop Grumman received $12,400,000 though the Building Partnership Capacity programs to provide Romania (71.4 percent) and Lithuania (28.6 percent) with special operations forces laser aiming marker (SOFLAM), ground laser target designator (GLTD), provision item order spares and repairs. This was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) as implemented by FAR 6.302-1.

Raytheon received $7,287,470 to provide the UAE with technical assistance to their Hawk Missile System program.

Raytheon received $8,254,244 to repair and return PATRIOT missile parts to Holland, Israel, Japan, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Taiwan, and the UAE.

Textron received $22,466,146 to provide Afghanistan’s Armed Forces with an additional 10 months of field service representatives, which includes de-processing the Mobile Strike Force vehicles (MSFV) and training.

United Technologies Corp. received $10,242,104 for components and materials associated with the LRIP Lot VIII of eight F135 (CTOL) propulsion systems for Japan (6 engines for $7,681,578; 75 percent) and Israel (2 engines for $2,560,526; 25 percent).

UNMANNED SYSTEMS

AAI Corp. received $38,523,230 for five tactical common data link retrofit kits and mobile maintenance facility spares for the Shadow. L-3 Communications received $16,458,470 to support phase 2 of the DARPA mobile hotspots program, which is expected to deliver radio and router pods for mounting on the Shadow with all mobile hotspots subsystems wholly contained within the pods.

Arête Associates received $10,228,983 for Coastal Battlefield Reconnaissance and Analysis (COBRA) Program Systems Support for the AN/DVS-1 COBRA Block 1 System and support equipment. This was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1(a)(2)(iii).

General Atomics received $10,523,125 for five remote ground data terminals, five local ground data terminals, and initial related spares for the Gray Eagle.

General Atomics received $57,528,900 “for tasks necessary to fabricate, deliver and/or provide hardware, software, and documentation to support the tasks necessary to upgrade and modify the remote split operations (RSO) network to support internet protocols data standards. This is for the procurement of 234 Ground Control Station kits, seven containerized dual control segment kits, 25 Squadron Operations Center (SOC) low density kits, five Creech SOC low density kits, six Creech SOC high density kits, 24 relay kits, 71 relay circuit to packet kits, three Creech wide-area network kits, one Cannon WAN kit, 26 WAN LD kits, two Cannon SOC kits, 17 relay rack kits, ten network management kits, and related spares and support equipment. This is a sole-source acquisition.”

Insitu Inc. received $8,355,422 for hardware and services required to operate, maintain, and support previously procured RQ-21A EOC UAS “in support of overseas contingency operations.” Hardware and services include parts and in-theatre field service representatives.

Northrop Grumman received $20,236,014 for logistic services on the Hunter in Sierra Vista, AZ.

MISSILES, ROCKETS, BOMBS

BAE Systems received $21,080,510 for FY2014 MK 41 Vertical Launching System canister production requirements. BAE will provide sixty-six MK 14 MOD 2 canisters, sixty-six MK14 MOD 2 GFE upgrades, and fifty-two MK 21 MOD 2 canisters, with associated coding plug assemblies, explosive bolts, and impulse cartridge assemblies in support of MK 41 VLS canister production requirements. 

BAE Systems received $37,443,252 for 1,372 Advanced Precision Kill Weapon Systems (APKWS) II WGU-59/B Guidance Section, the Navy shipping and storage container; and supporting programmatic documentation for the APKWS II WGU-59/B Guidance Sections. Some overseas contingency operations funds were spent on this contract. This was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

Kaman Precision Products Inc. received $41,634,163 for Lot 11 production of Joint Programmable Fuze (JPF) systems. 9.209% of this purchase is paid for with FY2014 overseas contingency operations funds.

Northrop Grumman (at Hill AFB) received $13,719,542 for engineering services on ICBMs. Textron received $17,175,606 for up to 21 ICBM Flight MK 12A Mod 5F midsections.

Northrop Grumman received $750,000,000 for predominantly R&D, test and evaluation services for the development of the Ballistic Missile Defense System’s Command, Control, Battle Management, and Communications; the support infrastructure including all IT; facilities; ground and flight test; warfighter wargames and exercises; modeling and simulation; several operational cells including the Ballistic Missile Defense Network Operations & Security Center, the Joint Functional Command Component for Integrated Missile Defense, and the 100th Missile Defense Brigade (100th MDB).

Raytheon received $350,178,300 to increase the quantity of Standard Missile-3 (SM-3) Block IB missile material and all-up round build-up (procured on 9 Jan 2014) from eight to forty-four.

Raytheon received $6,880,715 for circuit card assemblies and electronic components. This is a sole-source acquisition. Raytheon received $7,420,000 for system electronic units. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Raytheon received $7,631,396 for production cut-in of an Advanced Range Telemetry (ARTM) transmitter into the AIM-120 Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air Missile (AMRAAM). This facilitates cut-in of ARTM into future production; including updates to all test equipment and technical documentation, test/safety approval, as well as depot repair infrastructure updates.

Raytheon received $8,908,069 for implementation, certification and integration of a replacement Input/Output (I/O) Circuit Card Assembly (CCA) into the current Satellite Data Link Transceiver (SDLT) production due to obsolescence of the Field Programmable Gate Array. This includes I/O CCA-level and SDLT assembly level integration and qualification to verify that a SDLT updated with a replaced I/O CCA meets all requirements. The SDLT is used for data communications between missile and missile/strike controller via satellite. 

Sierra Nevada Corp. received $14,022,709 for logistics support of the precision strike package on the AC-130W Stinger II Program at Cannon AFB. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Torch Technologies, Inc. received $70,997,405 for missile element simulation which will enhance and maintain the current suite of missile modeling simulation, hardware-in-the-loop and prototype development facilities.

AEGIS

Lockheed Martin received $8,138,640 to support of the critical modernization programs currently in process for the Aegis Weapon Systems (AWS) as well as logistics and sustainment support for the in-service Aegis ship fleet in order to prevent delays in the delivery of the AWS upgrades and schedule and operational impacts to the effected ship availabilities. Lockheed Martin received $13,697,367 to exercise contract options and incrementally fund the Aegis Platform Systems Engineering Agent (PSEA) activities and Aegis Modernization Advanced Capability Build (ACB) engineering. PSEA manages the in-service combat systems configurations as well as the integration of new or upgraded capability into CG 57 ships and DDG 51 ships. Lockheed Martin received $20,112,266 for material, equipment, and supplies to conduct the technical engineering to define, develop, integrate and test Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense 5.0 capability upgrade baseline for Navy Destroyers.

Lockheed Martin received $8,058,225 to provide test support at the Aegis Ashore Missile Defense Test Complex at the Pacific Missile Range Facility (PMRF), Kekaha, Hawaii. Lockheed Martin received $93,049,896 for production of Aegis Ashore Missile Defense System (AAMDS) in Poland and to provide multi-year procurement funding for Aegis Weapon System (AWS) MK 7 equipment sets. Raytheon received $45,057,874 for one AN/SPY-1D(V) Transmitter Group and select Missile Fire Control System MK 99 to support Aegis Ashore Missile Defense System in Poland.

SPACE

Boeing received $30,673,934 to support DARPA’s Airborne Launch Assist Space Access (ALASA) program.

InDyne Inc. received $30,805,507 for the operations and maintenance support services, training, command, control, communications, information and computer systems services, testing, modification and installation of communications, electronic, and security systems at launch facilities, launch control centers and test facilities for the 30th Space Wing, Vandenberg AFB.

Leidos Inc. received $7,850,000 for GPS Directorate Systems Engineering and Integration (SE&I) Bridge 4.0 which provides for SE&I support services to the GPS Directorate at Los Angeles AFB. This is a sole-source acquisition. Lockheed Martin received $245,778,905 for additional GPS III Space Vehicles 07 and 08.

ManTech SRS, Technologies, Inc. received $15,515,683 for systems engineering, product assurance, program safety, systems security, risk management, and launch integration management for the Launch & Range Systems Directorate at Los Angeles AFB.

Raytheon received $33,680,614 for the hypertemporal imaging space experiment payload. The primary objective of the hypertemporal imaging space experiment payload effort is to design, fabricate, test, and deliver a space-flight ready instrument capable of conducting hypertemporal imaging from a geosynchronous earth orbit. Detachment 8 of the AFRL at Kirtland AFB is the contracting activity.

CYBER, IT & COMMS

ASI Government, Inc.; Engility Corporation; Logistics Management Institute; Sysorex Government Services, Inc.; Suntiva, LLC; and Zantech IT Services, Inc received a total $461,000,000 for program management support services for the Program Executive Office Enterprise Information Systems (PEO EIS) headquarters, directorates, project/product offices and related organizations. This provides the full range of program management support in the functional areas of project/product management; business process reengineering; information systems security; contingency planning; and physical security.

CACI Inc. received $42,382,869; Honeywell received $43,196,813; and SERCO received $46,041,918 to provide life cycle sustainment, integration, acquisition and technical support for anti-terrorism/force protection Naval Electronic Surveillance Systems to DOD agencies and other government activities as required. CACI, Honeywell, and SERCO will compete for specific task orders during the ordering period.

Client Solutions Architect received $21,670,069 and Indus Technology Inc. received $21,797,616 to support the Space & Naval Warfare Systems Center Pacific (SSC Pacific) Radio Frequency and Network Systems Support Division to provide satellite communications, radio frequency and navigation systems support services. Kratos Technology & Training Solutions Inc. received $35,211,430; Mantech Systems Engineering Corp. received $33,607,344; SAIC received $35,265,817 and Salient Federal Solutions received $34,647,083 to support SSC Pacific Training Development & Support Center to provide training for a range of program offices.

Computer Systems Center Inc. received $12,000,000 to develop and field C2ISR and targeting systems for Deployable Tactical Operations Center Components. This was not competitively procured per FAR 6.302-1.

Defense Engineering Inc. received $12,313,615 for enterprise data storage services for the U.S. Information Technology Agency (ITA) Storage Services Branch.

DLT Solutions, LLC received $45,973,106 for software maintenance and support for perpetual enterprise Oracle software licenses used throughout USAF and the USTRANSCOM.

DRS Technical Services Inc. received $30,271,266 to operate control and maintain satellite communications between the continental U.S. and worldwide. It will also provide helpdesk and field operations support.

Engility Corp. received $36,550,954 for systems engineering and technical services in support of the Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Division’s (NAWCAD) Software Engineering and Acquisition Management Division. This includes systems integration and software development, platform simulation, integration and laboratory engineering, and software engineering. These services support the U.S. Navy ($32,895,854; 90 percent); Australia ($365,510; 1 percent); Brazil ($365,510; 1 percent); Canada ($365,510; 1 percent); Denmark ($365,510; 1 percent); Germany ($365,510; 1 percent); Japan ($365,510; 1 percent); Norway ($365,510; 1 percent); Pakistan ($365,510; 1 percent); South Korea ($365,510; 1 percent); and Thailand ($365,510; 1 percent). This was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1. 

General Electric received $72,955,840 for digital imaging network-picture archive communication system.

L-3 received $9,673,703 for tier 1 service desk support in the National Capital Region.

Leidos, Inc. received $9,791,760 for IT support for the maintenance of existing Army Enterprise Equipping System systems.

Mikel, Inc. received $6,689,497 for engineering and technical services for combat systems of the future. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(5) as authorized by 15 U.S.C. 638 (r), Aid to Small Business.

NetCentrics Corp. received $33,042,835 for IT operations front office support for the Office of the SECDEF (OSD), Washington Headquarters Services (WHS), WHS-supported organizations, Pentagon Force Protection Agency, Office of General Counsel, the Defense Legal Services Agency and the Central Adjudication facility, and the Office of Military Commissions. 

SAIC received $40,000,000 for four months of maintenance, repair, and operations in New Jersey.

The Centech Group Inc.; Epsilon Systems Solutions; Smartronix Inc.; SMS Data Products Group Inc.; Indus Corp.; Technica Corp.; Telos Corp.; Sumaria Systems Inc.; BTAS Inc.; American Systems Corp.; STG, Inc.; and MicroTechnologies LLC received a cumulative $5,790,000,000 for Network-Centric Solutions-2 (NETCENTS-2) network operations and infrastructure solutions. These corporations will support network operations, core enterprise services and infrastructure development and operations, includes network management/defense, services oriented architecture infrastructure, enterprise level security/management and implementation/operations, telephony infrastructure and services.

AIRCRAFT

Bell-Boeing JPO received $76,100,722 to manufacture and deliver one CV-22. Rolls-Royce received $39,599,668 for 26,495 V-22 flight hours and 26 low power MV-22 repairs under the Mission Care™ contract.

Boeing received $1,156,446,681 for full rate production of the AH-64E helicopter, seventy-two remanufactured helicopter systems and ten new helicopter systems. Boeing will also refresh five crew trainers, refurbish one crew trainer, and provide integrated logistics support, ground support equipment, initial spares, and engineering studies.

Boeing received $15,800,000 for the design, development, construction and test of a CH-47F Block II Lightweight Fuel System as part of the Airframe Component Improvement Program.

Canadian Commercial Corp. received $16,394,215 to repair four items required to support the P-3 aircraft. Work will be performed at Ft. Lauderdale (80 percent) and Ontario, Canada (20 percent). This was a non-competitive requirement in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). Viasat Inc. received $6,707,025 for spares, repairs and satellite support for the ArcLight Mobile Satellite Communication System in support of special projects aircraft and the EP-3. The ArcLight Mobile Satellite Communication System is a high frequency data link for airborne applications that provides a means to transmit data between aircraft, command posts and other military organizations that have access to the system. This was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1(a)(2)(iii).

Concurrent Technologies Corp. received $15,338,026 for engineering to help the continued modification of the carriage, stream, tow and recovery system, incorporating airborne countermeasures capabilities on MH-60S helicopters. This was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302.

Cubic Defense Applications Inc. received $6,883,316 for P5 Combat Training System (P5CTS) Depot follow-on CLS. The P5CTS consists of the airborne subsystem, or “pod” and the ground subsystem. The contract is for CLS for the procurement of supply chain/inventory management spares replenishment; repair and overhaul; demilitarization and disposal; systems/sustaining engineering and system integration. The location of performance is San Diego, CA, for the ground subsystem and Ft. Walton Beach for the airborne subsystem. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Exelis Inc. received $91,701,414 for the manufacture and delivery of 42 AN/ALQ-214(V)4 on-board jammer (OBJ) systems for the F/A-18C/D/E/F aircraft against RF guided surface-to-air and air-to-air threats (missiles). Raytheon received $23,651,848 for the procurement of 63 ECP-6279 retrofit kits in support of F/A-18 E/F and EA-18G. Boeing received $9,650,433 for major structural repair and maintenance equipment for the F/A-18E/F and EA-18G.

General Electric received $79,737,730 to repair twenty T64 engine (for CH53D/E and MH53E) components, along with manufacturing, engineering, and technical support to the Fleet Readiness Center East (FRCE), Cherry Point, N.C., with a goal of improving monthly output.

Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. received $102,062,349 for logistics support to DOD’s Gulfstream fleet (C-20 and C-37).

L-3 Communications received $58,488,748 to provide logistics services and materials for organizational, intermediate, and depot level maintenance required to support T-45TS aircraft based at NAS Meridian; NAS Kingsville and NAS Pensacola. This includes support and maintenance of the T-45 aircraft at all operational sites, outlying fields, and various detachments. This was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1. Rolls-Royce received $106,999,970 to provide intermediate, depot level maintenance and related logistics support for approximately 223 in-service T-45 F405-RR-401 Adour engines. This was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

Lockheed Martin received $10,630,597 to repair 13 items in support of the Multi-Mode Radar System, and the Electronic Measurement System for the H-60R Helicopter. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(1).

Lockheed Martin received $16,237,711 for specialized test equipment and associated technical data packages and adapters required to perform testing of line replacement modules for the E-2D AN/APY-9 radar. This was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

Lockheed Martin received $8,053,848 for radar data processors. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $84,289,101 for the C-5 Core Mission Computer/Color Weather Radar Engineering, Manufacturing and Development Program. This is a sole-source acquisition. General Electric received $24,902,353 to repair F138 (for the C-5) engines in Ohio. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Matrix Research Inc. received $45,085,000 for development and demonstration of supportable and manufacturable low observable (LO) technologies for the AFRL/RQK, Wright-Patterson AFB.

Raytheon received $12,814,344 for 16 turret units and eight electronics units for the Multi-Spectral Targeting Systems (MTS) for MH-60 aircraft. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) as implemented by FAR 6.302-1. Raytheon received $10,072,556 for 10 Multi-Spectral Targeting Systems (MTS) for HC/MC-130J aircraft. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) as implemented by FAR 6.302-1. Raytheon received $17,707,050 for 19 Multi-Spectral Targeting Systems for MH-60R/S helicopters.

Raytheon received $8,970,000 for aircraft circuit card assemblies. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Rockwell Collins Inc. received $8,292,793 for AN/ARC-210(V) electronic radios and ancillary equipment for a variety of aircraft. Equipment includes 57 control radio sets, 57 high power amplifiers, 57 low noise amplifier diplexers and 62 receiver transmitters.

Sikorsky Aircraft Corp. received $21,624,392 for “special progressive aircraft rework” on one VH-3D and two VH-60N presidential helicopters, including two months of field level support. Sikorsky Aircraft Corp. received $14,947,975 for cabin redesign to reduce the total gross weight allowing for greater lift capability of the VH-3D In-Service Presidential Helicopter.

Textron received $12,281,805 for the hardware and software upgrades in support of the H-1 Upgrade Program. Services include design, development, studies, and implementation of upgrades to software and ancillary hardware and/or improved functionality and obsolescence management of the H-1. Textron received $11,413,510 to provide systems engineering and program management for the production and delivery of AH-1Z and UH-1Y aircraft. Textron received $59,703,818 for long-lead items to manufacture/delivery 15 Lot 12 UH-1Y aircraft and 11 Lot 12 AH-1Z aircraft.

TFAB Ground Systems LLC received $76,812,703 for engine diagnostic systems to ensure readiness of Chinook and Blackhawk engines.

Triumph Gear Systems received $19,991,773 for aircraft parts and support. This is a sole-source acquisition.

JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER

Lockheed Martin received $52,141,562 to execute phase 3 of the Joint Strike Fighter Autonomics Logistics Information System (ALIS) Standard Operating Unit Version 2 (SOUv2) capability development effort, which includes integration of SOUv2 with the ALIS sustainment system and the F-35 air system.

Lockheed Martin received $118,875,655 to repair and replenish Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) assets (which include spare parts, training devices, support equipment and Autonomic Logistics Information System equipment) for the U.S. Air Force ($51,980,743; 43.7 percent), Marine Corps ($43,784,064; 36.8 percent), Navy ($15,822,614; 13.3 percent); the UK ($5,741,235; 4.9 percent); and the Netherlands ($1,546,999; 1.3 percent).

Lockheed Martin received $698,032,385 to procure long lead parts, materials and components in support of 57 LRIP Lot IX F-35 aircraft, including: 26 F-35A CTOL; six F-35B STOVL; two F-35C Carrier Variant; six F-35A CTOL aircraft for Norway; one F-35A CTOL for Italy; seven F-35A CTOL for Israel; two CTOL for Japan; six F-35B STOVL for the UK, and one F-35B STOVL for Italy. This was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). 

LCS

Austal USA received $683,716,119 to build two littoral combat ships, specifically basic seaframe construction, selected ship systems integration and test, and selected ship systems equipment.

Lockheed Martin received $698,911,656 to build two littoral combat ships, specifically basic seaframe construction, selected ship systems integration and test, and selected ship systems equipment.

Lockheed Martin received $22,235,508 for class service efforts and special studies, analyses and reviews for the LCS program. Lockheed Martin will provide engineering and design services as well as affordability efforts to reduce LCS acquisition and lifecycle costs.

Raytheon received $17,683,352 to fabricate, assemble, test and deliver three Airborne Mine Neutralization System (AMNS) LRIP systems and provide engineering services and support. The AMNS will be deployed from the MH-60 helicopter as part of the LCS mine countermeasures mission module. 

NAVAL SYSTEMS

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $24,000,000 for the procurement of Live Virtual Constructive Modeling and Simulation (LVCMS) Anti-submarine Warfare (ASW) Virtual At Sea Training (VAST). The LVCMS and ASW VAST training systems are networked, personal computer-based, deployable trainers designed to support integrated and coordinated ASW tactical training, Anti-Access Area Denial and Cyber Warfare using Joint Semi Automated Forces Navy Training Baseline simulation.

BAE Systems received $27,370,048 to provide ship repairs, hull, machinery, electrical, electronics, ship alterations and piping as required.

General Dynamics received $642,583,946 for construction of a DDG 51 class ship. $79,400,000 goes towards advanced procurement for the fiscal 2016-2017 ships. Huntington Ingalls Inc. received $601,990,190 to construct one DDG 51 class ship. $79,400,000 goes towards advanced procurement for fiscal 2016-2017 ships.

Cardno TEC-Leidos LLC received $50,000,000 for range sustainability services for military training range complexes and assets for various locations and environmental planning for National Environmental Policy Act and Executive Order 12114, with the preponderance of work involving Navy training range complexes within the Atlantic Fleet AOR and may also include work on ranges and installations around the world. The work provides services of an interdisciplinary team required to support the Tactical Training Theater Assessment and Planning (TAP) Program. The TAP program is intended to ensure the sustainability of Navy training ranges and operating areas to support global warfighter readiness.

Centurum Information Technology Inc. received $18,158,832 for depot-level repair and restoration support to include fabrication, manufacturing, re-manufacturing, restoration, repair, overhaul, and calibration involving electro-mechanical and mechanical units both ground and airborne, assemblies, subassemblies, and test equipment. This includes worldwide technical support to the fleet, shore facilities, and government agencies.

Communications & Power Industries and L-3 Communications each received $67,715,539 for evaluation, rebuilding and new production of double-duty cross field amplifiers utilized in the AN/SPY-1D(V) Radar System for the U.S. Navy (95 percent), Australia (2 percent), Spain (1 percent), Japan (1 percent) and South Korea (1 percent). This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Detyens Shipyards Inc. received $8,529,497 for regular overhaul and dry-docking of USNS Laramie (T-AO 203). Work includes clean and gas free tanks, voids, and cofferdams; deck non-skid resurfacing; ballast tank preservation, cylinder head and liner overhaul, main engine turbo overhaul, cargo system wire replacement; cargo console mechanical support; auxiliary boiler maintenance and inspection; annual lifeboat certification; house ventilation system cleaning; docking and undocking; propeller system maintenance and hub replacement; overhauling sea valves; and underwater hull cleaning and painting.

FLIR Systems Inc. received $18,191,712 to supply the U.S. Navy with weapon system turret unites. This is a sole-source acquisition.

General Dynamics (Electric Boat) received $57,167,957 USS Minnesota (SSN 783) post shakedown availability (PSA), which includes procuring long lead time material for maintenance, repair, alterations, testing and other work.

General Dynamics received $10,485,397 for multi-purpose processor (MPP) cabinet and the Total Ship Monitoring System (TSMS). This provides funding for development/production of the MPPs and TSMS (TI-14) for the U.S. submarine fleet.

General Dynamics received $128,500,000 to accomplish the detail design and construction of the Mobile Landing Platform 3 (MLP-3) Afloat Forward Staging Base (AFSB).

General Dynamics received $24,374,445 for class services associated with the detail design and construction of DDG 1000 class ships. This work will provide technical and industrial engineering in the interpretation and application of the detail design to support construction and the maintenance of the ship design. 

General Dynamics received $62,574,394 for the USS Pearl Harbor (LSD 52) fiscal 2014 extended dry-dock phased maintenance availability, which includes depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications that will update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities.

Huntington Ingalls Inc. received $1,294,817,351 to continue construction preparation efforts and provide the ability to procure additional material and advance construction activities for CVN 79.

Huntington Ingalls Inc. received $8,624,008 for propulsion plant engineering in support of life-cycle management of the systems identified for the CVN 68 class. This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with CVN BOA Class J&A 20,883 (E).

Interstate Electronics Corp. received $8,911,790 for a new technology refresh of the C-Band Pulse Doppler Radar (RADAR-C) Transmitter and replacement of the Navy Mobile Instrumentation Ship Communication System in support of Trident II flight tests. This was a sole source acquisition, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

L-3 received $6,764,229 for the Sea Shore Interface Installation, Highly Accelerated Life Test, and integrated logistics services in support of the Undersea Warfare Training Range, located off the coast of Jacksonville, FL.

Maersk Line, Ltd. received $7,117,355 for the operation and maintenance of five U.S. Navy ocean surveillance ships and two U.S. Navy missile range instrumentation ships, which support the Navy’s surveillance towed array sensor system operations and the U.S. Air Force’s dual band radar monitoring operations.

Systems Application & Technologies Inc. received $15,934,440 to provide the U.S. Navy ($15,456,406, 97 percent), Japan ($318,689, 2 percent), and Australia ($159,345, 1 percent) with maintenance and operations of aerial and seaborne target assets.

Vigor Industrial LLC received $6,875,938 for work on the USNS Guadalupe (T-AO 200). Work includes: 72,000-hour main engine maintenance; main engine turbocharger overhaul; port shaft brake overhaul; starboard power take-off clutch/coupling overhaul, deck non-skid preservation; roller door replacement; and gypsy winch overhauls.

Vigor Shipyards Inc. received $30,703,417 for repair and alteration to surface ships, like the USS Momsen (DDG 92), while in dry-dock.

GEAR, EQUIPMENT & TRAINING

Alliant Techsystems Operations received $19,225,386 and General Dynamics received $20,575,038 for M1002 cartridges for 120mm tank training ammunition.

API LLC (Camuy, Puerto Rico) received $11,716,450 for ACU coats. DeRossi & Son Company Inc. received $13,824,000 for men’s poly/wool, dress blue, Army coats. Pentaq Manufacturing Corp. received $27,244,510 for coats. Short Bark Industries, Inc. received $23,339,900 for ACU coats. Tullahoma Industries, LLC. received $25,482,000 for ACU trousers.

BAE Systems received $6,935,513 for spare parts for self-propelled howitzers and eighteen ammunition carrier tracked vehicles. DRS Tactical Systems Inc. received $12,596,227 for improved platform integration kits for the M777A2 and M119A3 howitzer. One bid was solicited with six received. Ronal Industries Inc. received $7,422,150 for 2,075 fan vaneaxials for the M109 howitzer.

Baum, Romstedt Technology Research Corp. received $9,608,333 to provide operational and field-support services for the MRAP vehicle. Oshkosh Corp. received $47,655,674 for 231 medium tactical vehicles.

BWAY Corp. received $47,207,822 for M2A2 ammunition containers.

Colt Defense LLC and Manroy USA received $54,491,305 for the M4 replacement barrel and front sight assembly (heavy variant) for the M4 Carbine Product Improvement Program. The M4 replacement barrel will be combined with other weapon components to form a single modification work order kit to convert fielded M4 carbines to M4A1 carbines. Colt Defense LLC and FN Manufacturing LLC received $16,321,305 for M4 rifle bolts for the M4 product improvement program.

General Dynamics received $74,655,710 for the development, design, and production of 916 Cougar egress upgrade kits in support of the Program Executive Officer Land Systems, Program Manager, MRAP vehicles. The kit includes upgrades to four existing vehicle systems: front doors; rear doors; rear steps; and exhaust.

IBM Corp. received $8,465,976 for year three of the Army Learning Management System (ALMS), which provides training for soldiers and Army civilians.

ICx Technologies Inc. received $12,316,540 for 12 dismounted reconnaissance sets, kits, and outfits army configuration systems.

Lion Vallen received $45,727,402 for warehousing, distribution, and logistics support to fulfill organizational clothing and individual equipment requirements. Lion-Vallen received $20,609,800 for logistics services to manage, support, and operate the Marine Corps Consolidated Storage Program Individual Issue Facility and Unit Issue Facility warehouse network. Work consists of managing infantry combat clothing equipment, CBRNE equipment, special training allowance pool, soft-walled shelters and camouflage netting, and contractor-owned contractor-operated Asset Visibility Capability system.

Lockheed Martin received $145,921,161 for thirteen AN/TPQ-53 radar systems, along with 13 corresponding sets of on-board spares.

Olin Corp.-Winchester Division received $28,748,479 for .50 caliber and 5.56mm ammunition.

Tactical & Survival Specialties, Inc.; W.S. Darley & Co.; Atlantic Diving Supply, Inc.; and Source One Distributors Inc. received $84,000,000 for tactical, survival, and rescue equipment.

Veyance Technologies Inc. received $10,638,028 to provide track shoe assemblies for the M88 vehicle.

ORDNANCE DISPOSAL

Exelis Inc. received $17,789,717 for continued procurement of post-production maintenance support of Navy crew fixed site systems and procurement and support of the transmitting set, counter measure AN/PLT-4 systems in support of the Joint Service Explosive Ordnance Disposal Counter Radio Controlled Improvised Explosive Device Electronic Warfare (JSEOD CREW) program.

QinetiQ received $6,779,411 for Man Transportable Robotic System (MTRS) MK2 post-production support. The MTRS MK2 provides EOD technicians with a man transportable capability to remotely perform reconnaissance.

Sierra Nevada Corp. received $43,488,133 to procure and support of transmitting set, countermeasures AN/PLT-5 to support EOD personnel.

CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS

Black Construction/MACE International JV received $95,000,000 for construction projects at Diego Garcia. Work includes construction, repair, renovation, demolition and alteration of facilities. Facilities include, but are not limited to: aviation and aircraft, marine, barracks and personnel housing, administrative, warehouse and supply, training, personnel support and service, security level and abasement and handling of hazardous/regulated material, etc.

Guam MACC Builders JV received $45,450,600 for design and construction of a high bay maintenance hangar to support forward operations and maintenance functions for the MQ-4C platform at Andersen AFB, Guam. Bulltrack-Watts JV received $13,349,723 for the design and construction of a dehumidified supply storage facility at Polaris Point, Naval Base, Guam. The warehouse shall also include support areas for office spaces, rest rooms and utility rooms. Work will provide paved driveways around the warehouse, new parking spaces and bicycle racks, and a stormwater collection/management system.

Admiral Metals Servicenter Inc. received $47,801,294 for steel alloy, stainless steel, bar, sheet, and plate materials. Charleston Aluminum LLC received $35,363,758 for carbon steel bar, sheet, and plate materials. I Solutions Direct Inc. received $46,641,107 and $68,724,679 for carbon steel bar, sheet, and plate materials. TW Metals received $43,478,335 for carbon steel bar and plate materials.

Atlantic Diving Supply received $776,000,000 for commercial type construction equipment.

Bilbro Construction Co., Inc. received $11,009,552 to design and construct a tracked vehicle maintenance cover at Twentynine Palms for the 1st Tank Battalion.

Boro Developers Inc. received $11,894,900 to build a dining facility at Ft. Dix.

CTS Cement Manufacturing Corp. received $13,701,394 for rigid concrete repair in California.

Hensel Phelps Construction received $245,125,000 for constructing a Joint Operations Center at Ft. Meade.

Holland & Holland received $9,035,374 for paving at Ft. Stewart.

HSU Construction; Athena Construction Group; APC Construction; Cherokee CRC, LLC; and FEI Construction Co. received a total $60,000,000 for design and construction services at various locations within Washington Headquarters Services (WHS) area of responsibility.

The Mason & Hanger Group, Inc. received $9,000,000 for architectural and engineering, national Army Reserve projects, and military projects within the Great Lakes and Ohio River Division.

National Institute of Building Sciences, Washington, D.C., received $12,500,000 for architectural design and engineering services for The National Institute of Building Sciences (NIBS). This is a sole-source procurement under FAR 6.302-5.

Northcon Construction Inc. received $8,000,000 for the maintenance, repair, upgrade and construction of facilities, primarily at Ft. Polk.

SupplyCore Inc. received $10,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations.

TSI Corp. received $8,425,301 to support engineering design, general maintenance services, service orders/HVAC technical support and heavy equipment ops/maintenance.

Washington Patriot Construction received $8,299,445 for relocation and consolidation of Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility (PSNS & IMF) Shop and Administrative Facilities at Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor in order to provide for construction of a new facility to house relocated existing Naval Support Operations.

Watts-Healy Tibbitts JV received $18,608,004 for the construction of a drydock waterfront facility at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam (JBPHH). The project includes shop spaces, meeting/conference rooms, break rooms, and administrative, engineering, project management and project team spaces.

Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. received $12,177,926 for repairs to building facades (phase 1) and windows (phase 2) for Rickover Hall at the Naval Support Activity, U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis.

DREDGING & FLOOD CONTROL

Boh Bros. Construction Co., LLC received $76,267,513 for the Southeast Louisiana Urban Flood Control Project, Louisiana Avenue Improvements.

Manson Construction Co. received $16,822,500 for dredging along the U.S. West Coast.

Mike Hooks Inc. received $45,000,000 to provide tools in support of dredging projects in AL, MS, and FL.

Tikigaq Construction LLC received $7,954,440 for the West Bank and vicinity Hurricane Storm Damage Risk Reduction System/Mississippi River Levee, Mississippi River and Tributaries Project.

FOOD SERVICES

Federal Contracts Corp. received $87,500,000 for commercial type agricultural equipment. 

Professional Contract Services Inc. received $14,594,454 for food and dining facility attendant services at Ft. Hood.

Imperial Sales Co. received $8,152,137 for commercial components for unitized group rations. Sysco received $21,375,000 and $12,488,422 and $39,375,000 for food and beverages. Tyson Foods, Inc. received $444,000,000 for commercial chicken items. US Foods Inc. received $27,418,049 for food and beverages.

MEDICAL

Advanced Design Corp. received $8,420,987 for field service technician support to gather data from helmet sensors used to examine mild-TBI. Work will be performed in Afghanistan.

Allergan USA Inc. received $37,242,251 for pharmaceutical products. Bayer received $49,375,502 for pharmaceutical products. West-Ward Pharmaceuticals, Inc. received $70,947,789 for pharmaceutical products.

Altitude Technologies received $28,636,252 for medical and surgical products. Cardinal Health Inc. received $16,760,817 for laboratory supplies. Federal Resources Supply Co. received $24,240,094 for medical test equipment and accessories. Government Scientific Source, Inc. received $333,000,000 for selection of a distributor who will make available medical laboratory supplies and wares for purchase.

Draeger Medical Inc. received $140,000,000 for anesthesia machines, monitors, ventilators and related accessories. Philips Medical Systems received $77,172,660 for patient monitoring systems, subsystems, accessories, consumables, spare and repair parts, and training. 

Genesis Vision received $50,000,000 for optical frames.

Siemens Medical Solutions Inc. received $1,789,537,539 for radiology systems, subsystems, accessories, service, and repair and parts. Hitachi Medical Systems America Inc. received $90,254,284 for radiology systems, components, upgrades, accessories, and installation.

Zimmer US, Inc. received $65,642,304 for orthopedic hip, knee, spine, and extremity trauma implant procedural packages.

CasePro Inc.; Catalyst Professional Services; Cherokee Medical Services LLC; Chesapeake Educational Services LLC; OMV Medical Inc.; Professional Performance Development Group Inc.; Saratoga Medical Center Inc.; and TCMP Staffing Services LLC received an aggregate $28,000,000 for physician, allied health, nursing, technologist, technician and assistant services in support of the Naval Hospital Jacksonville, FL; Naval Health Clinic Pensacola, FL; Naval Health Clinic Corpus Christi, TX; and affiliated clinics within FL, GA, IN, KS, LA MS, TN and TX. Contracts were issued as sole source requirements, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). Donal L. Mooney LLC received $23,717,819 to provide licensed vocational nurses for one year at San Antonio Military Medical Center.

Loyal Source Government Services; Aliron International, Inc.; Magnificus Corp.; Arora Group Inc.; The Royster Group, Inc.; Protege Health Services; and Franklin Government Services received a collective $381,000,000 for nursing services for the Northern Regional Medical Command. MedTrust LLC received $20,746,074 for registered nurses of various specialties, ranging from clinical to intensive care to the burn unit. 

LOGISTICS & BASE SUPPORT  

Alutiiq Pacific LLC; Securityhunter Inc.; and Split Pine Technologies LLC received a combined $33,000,000 for physical security access control at Navy shore installations throughout the world, including joint bases assigned to the Navy. Work provides for the design, procurement, installation, integration, testing and initial training for anti-terrorism force protection hardware and software. SAIC received $33,003,618 for anti-terrorism/force protection global sustainment at Navy regions, worldwide. This provides for preventative and corrective maintenance, repair and replacement, service calls, and systems/software upgrades for anti-terrorism/force protection ashore equipment.

Chimes District of Columbia, Inc. received $11,548,303 for custodial services at Ft. Bragg.

Chugach Federal Solutions Inc. received $30,862,237 for base operations support at various installations in NAVFAC Northwest. Work provides for, but is not limited to, all management/admin, visual services, security operations, fire and emergency services, facilities management and investment, medical facility investment, pest control, solid waste services, pavement clearance, base support vehicle/equipment services, environmental services, and utilities services.

EJB Facilities Services received $9,546,811 for base operations at various installations in NAVFAC Northwest. Work provides for, but is not limited to, all management and admin, visual services, security, housing, facilities support (excluding grounds and janitorial services), pavement clearance, utilities, base support vehicles and equipment, and environmental services. 

Newbegin Enterprise Inc. received $15,000,000 to provide automotive and related vehicle parts, automotive chemicals, corrosion control materials, upholstery material, and accessories for vehicles/equipment located in USAFCENT AOR.

Northrop Grumman received $30,793,383 for continued logistic support services on a 3 June 2013 contract.

PAE Applied Technologies LLC received $15,403,392 to meet the operations maintenance and logistics support of all range systems, equipment, government furnished databases and management systems. PAE will also determine, supply, and provide system support responsibilities, which include logistics support of isolated range equipment on, around, above and under the waters of San Clemente Island.

QUALX Corp. received $8,878,297 for records management support services, including development of governance strategy and document conversion from paper-to-electronic enterprise content management.

Universal Sodexho received $10,800,000 for maintenance, repair and operations supplies for the South Korea Region.

FUEL & ENERGY

Black & Veatch Special Projects Corp. received $9,500,000 for management and maintenance of the Navy’s electrical and mechanical utility systems for various locations under the cognizance of NAVFAC Atlantic.

Landmark Aviation Miami LLC received $6,602,581 for aircraft fuel services. 

Michael Baker Jr., Inc. received $7,603,530 for leak detection testing for Navy, Marine Corps and DLA Energy Facilities. Work provides for environmental and engineering assessments at DOD fuel systems including preparing program management documentation, environmental compliance reports and plans, release detection, optimization, and pollution prevention reports in support of DLA Energy fuel facilities, other facilities of interest, and in accordance with applicable regulatory guidance.

Shore Terminals LLC received $32,333,197 for petroleum storage.

Willbros Government Services received $14,229,960 for fuel services.

ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS 

AECOM Technical Services Inc.; CH2M Hill Constructors Inc.; Environmental Chemical Corp.; SAIC-CDM Solutions LLC; Sevenson Environmental Services Inc.; and Shaw Environmental & Infrastructure Inc. received a collective $120,000,000 for environmental remediation and long term response action for the Army Corps of Engineers, Northwestern Division, and EPA Region 2.

Cardno TEC-GMI JV; HDR Environmental, Operations & Construction Inc.; Leidons Inc.; and URS/Arcadis received a combined $27,750,000 for environmental consulting support to the Army Corps of Engineers, with a primary emphasis on the southwest Ft. Worth district to support military and civilian entities with environmental laws/regulations compliance.

TRANSPORTATION

American Auto Logistics, Limited Partnership received $25,000,000 to ship privately owned vehicles belonging to DOD employees.

Computer Science Corp. received $7,387,413 for Global Decision Support Systems (GDSS PDF) application support services, which includes GDSS system releases in a non-service-interrupted process that addresses system sustainment, support to fielding and operational maintenance and administrative support to meet financial and programmatic reporting needs.

Moran Towing Corp. received $11,147,644 for seven U.S.-flagged tractor tugs for day-to-day operations in Norfolk, VA and surrounding waters, including ship handling, docking and undocking services.

# # # #

*Editing consolidated similar contracts. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

**Any clerical errors are the editor’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

***To avoid competitive bidding, DOD invokes 10 U.S.C. 2304, FAR 6.302, and FAR 8.405-6. DOD also invokes 15 U.S.C. 638 to avoid competitive bidding when dealing with small businesses.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.

BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for April 2014

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DOD spent $29,177,364,278+ on 238 individual contracts in April 2014

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $29,177,364,278 on 238 individual contracts during April 2014.

REMOTELY PILOTED SYSTEMS

General Atomics received $141,444,171 for engineering development of the Block 50 ground control stations (GCS) and production of two system test and qualification system integration laboratories (SIL), one technical order development SIL, two fixed GCS, two mobile GCS, two software developer kits, and the associated spares for the Block 50 configuration. Block 50 tries to create an ergonomic crew workstation, enhanced situational awareness, and reduced/eliminated deficiencies in legacy GCS. Block 50 includes six 24” touchscreen displays, an enhanced heads-up display, primary control display, F-16 modeled stick and throttle, and new one-touch control panels. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Insitu Inc. received $10,222,289 to support the RQ-21A, including organizational level support during planned and surge flight operations.

iRobot Corp. received $59,220,496 for Man Transportable Robotic System [MTRS - (PDF)] production, repairs, parts, spares, training, enhancements, configuration management, and approved accessories.

Longbow LLC received $25,197,219 for seventeen radar electronics units and unmanned aerial system tactical common data link assemblies, a P4.00 software upgrade, and associated gold standard hardware for production testing.

Northrop Grumman received $43,781,216 for five MQ-8 Firescouts and one GCS.

Northrop Grumman received $40,691,060 for 94 Small Tactical Radar – Lightweight (STARLite) Synthetic Aperture Radar/Ground Moving Target Indicator (SAR/GMTI) systems for the U.S. Army. One bid solicited, one received. 

Northrop Grumman received $6,567,841 for radar system development and demonstration schedule extension; for Multi-Platform Radar Technology Insertion Program (MP-RTIP) development and alignment with the Global Hawk (RQ-4) Block 40 program schedule.

Raytheon received $15,844,476 for R&D support for the Tactical Control System (TCS), continuing the transition from the TCS baseline into the Unmanned Aerial System Control Segment architecture, integrating modern intuitive controls, automating testing procedures, and supporting the software baseline operating in the field. This was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

URS Federal Technical Services Inc. received $15,815,983 for program support for ACC’s UAS Operations Center Support. This includes 8 percent FMS to the UK.

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES – Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations.

Boeing received $9,901,126 to train Saudi Arabia’s Air Force on the F-15SA.

Hellfire Systems LLC received $28,408,525 to supply Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, and Jordan with 372 Hellfire II air-to-ground tactical containerized models: AGM-114R, AGM-114R-3, and AGM-114P-4A.

Raytheon received $17,034,929 for AN/SPY-1 Radar Transmitter Multi-Mission Signal Processor Capability ordnance alteration kits, RF Coherent Combiner ordnance alteration kits, Kill Assessment System ordnance alteration kits, High Volt Power Supply Sidewall Capacitor ordnance alteration kits, 10 kW Traveling Wave Tube monitoring circuit ordnance alteration kits, Aegis Weapon System Modernization requirements for Japan, and installation and test services in support of the AEGIS modernization effort.

Thales Defense & Security Inc. received $11,704,727 to provide Saudi Arabia with equipment to implement an air traffic control system on two SAG airbases: Khashm al-Aan and Dirab.

RECRUITMENT & RETENTION

McCann World Group Inc. received $196,034,789 for professional marketing and advertising services in support of a nationwide campaign of Army recruitment and retention.

ACADEMIA

Charles Stark Draper Laboratory received $283,126,264 for ongoing acquisition of Trident (D5) MK 6 Guidance System Repair Program with failure verification, test, repair and recertification of inertial measurement units, electronic assemblies, and electronic modules. This is a sole source acquisition pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Georgia Tech Applied Research Corp. received $19,999,676 for Systems Engineering, Modeling & Simulation, and Scientific Studies & Analysis Support on Emerging Threats Affecting National Security and DOD Acquisition Process. Georgia Tech will provide recommendations for specified areas of study, U.S./allies capability gaps concerning the threats, “and how the U.S. should posture itself to counter these threats in order to favorably shape the battlespace.”

THE OCCUPATION OF AFGHANISTAN

DynCorp International received $49,898,634 for mentoring and training in support of the Afghanistan Ministry of Interior and Afghanistan National Police. DOD continues to award contracts to DynCorp, despite the corporation’s track record [PDF] of mismanagement, scandal, fraud, waste, and abuse.

USSOCOM

Cyberspace Solutions (Reston, VA) received $35,556,730 for intelligence analyst support, in support of U.S. Special Operations Command.

Qinetiq received $7,750,000 for the Battlefield Air Targeting Man-Aided Knowledge II (BATMAN II)-Advanced Technology Demonstration Program. The BATMAN II program is designed to focus on advancing technologies relevant to Air Force special operators.

MISSILES, ROCKETS, BOMBS

Alliant Techsystems Operations LLC received $83,399,073 for full rate production Lot III of the advanced anti-radiation guided missile, including conversion of 110 AGM-88B high-speed anti-radiation missiles to AGM-88E all-up-rounds and captive air training missiles.

Ball Aerospace Technologies Inc. received $23,933,170 for Stalker” or long range electro-optical/infrared/laser range finder (SLREOSS) production. SLREOSS is used with NATO’s Seasparrow Missile System MK 57 on the MK 9 Tracker Illuminator System. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(1), as implemented by FAR 6.302-1.

Boeing received $80,000,000 for JDAM technical support — studies and analysis, product improvement, upgrades, aircraft/software integration, and testing.

Lockheed Martin received $21,319,984 to provide the UK with engineering/technical support and materials for the UK Trident II Missile System. United Kingdom contract funds ($21,319,984) were used. This was a sole-source acquisition, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(4).

Lockheed Martin received $9,085,206 for services to continue support of the AN/TPQ-53 radar fleet.

Raytheon received $36,964,090 for Standard Missile-3 (SM-3) Block IB engineering support.

Raytheon received $9,778,372 for up to 52,473 hours of advanced technology insertion and integration support of weapons systems (include AIM-9 Sidewinder, AIM-120 AMRAAM, AGM-65 Maverick, AGM-154 JSOW, R/UGM-109 Tomahawk, XM982 Excalibur, BGM-71 TOW, Standard Missile, Evolved SeaSparrow Missile, Talon, Pyros and Griffin). Also included are line of sight/non-line of sight technologies for seekers, multi-mode seekers, tube-launched UAS, autonomous weapons employment and precision targeting, and similar applications. This was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

Raytheon received $9,595,524 for AIM-9X Sidewinder mission support and sustainment for the U.S. Air Force & Navy, Singapore, Australia, Denmark, Finland, Turkey, South Korea, Switzerland, Saudi Arabia, and Poland.

Raytheon received $6,553,058 for (calendar years 2014-2016) Evolved Seasparrow Missile maintenance, re-certifications, and special maintenance tasks. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(1), as implemented by FAR 6.302-1.

Tower Industries Inc. received $6,598,704 to acquire 500-pound practice bombs. 

ORDNANCE DISPOSAL

El Dorado Engineering received $8,912,643 for engineering and demilitarization of munitions by providing analytical engineering and technical support services.

General Dynamics received $9,248,770 for improved mechanical remote fuze disassembly kit (I-MRFDK ) production units, training, system maintenance and spare and depot level repair parts. The I-MRFDK is a portable inerting/disassembly system operated by EOD techs to safely render fuzes inert.

SAIC received $9,422,253 for engineering and demilitarization of munitions by providing analytical engineering and technical support services.

Sierra Nevada Corp. received $46,500,000 for dismounted counter radio-controlled IED electronic warfare spares and services to sustain the Thor III and Baldr CREW systems.

AEGIS

Lockheed Martin received $45,351,395 for Aegis Weapon System MK 7 equipment sets.

Lockheed Martin received $13,684,749 to work on advanced concepts initiatives by the ABMD Program Office to identify technology for introduction into present and future Baselines/Spirals.

CYBER, IT & COMMS

Agilent Technologies, Inc. received $9,607,650 for signal generators. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Alutiiq Security & Technology; Atlantic CommTech, Corp.; Forward Slope Inc.; The Cameron Bell Corp.; Mandex Inc.; and Systems Applications & Solutions received a cumulative $9,980,000 for Ashore Systems engineering services. Initial contract arrangements involved exclusion of sources under small business set-aside provisions (10 U.S.C. 2304 (b)(2)). 

CDW Government received $22,982,965 for 19,073 laptops.

COLSA Corp. received $25,607,908 and Engineering Services Network Inc. received $24,530,896 to support the Space & Naval Warfare Systems Center Pacific (SSC Pacific) Integrated Voice Networks Branch to provide telephony network support.

DLT Solutions received $35,664,115 to provide Symantec brand-name software licenses and maintenance renewal for the Navy and Marine Corps.

Exelis Inc.; General Dynamics; Harris Corp.; and Thales Defense & Security Inc. received  $988,000,000 for SRW Appliqué Radio Systems for use by brigade combat teams.

Lockheed Martin received $13,362,252 to incorporate new add work, Phase 3, to the DARPA Behavioral Learning for Adaptive Electronic Warfare (BLADE) program. Phase 3 aims to refine/mature algorithms and software developed during Phase 2 and to apply them in tactically relevant environments and timeframes on tactical military electronic attack platforms.

NetCentrics Corp. received $11,486,816 for IT operations, back office support for the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) Washington Headquarters Services (WHS), WHS-supported organizations, and the Pentagon Force Protection Agency. SRA International Inc. received $7,349,801 to provide IT network support services for the Pentagon Force Protection Agency.

Northrop Grumman received $98,000,000 for sustainment/maintenance of the Global Adaptive Planning Collaborative Information Environment (GAP CIE) software system.

SAIC/LEIDOS Inc. received $9,499,534 for professional engineering “to support the warfare area of developmental, test and evaluation.”

Savi Technology Inc. received $102,000,000 for Active RFID hardware, software, documentation, and incidental services (training, warranty, technical engineering) to authorized government users worldwide.

JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER

BAE Systems received $47,352,248 for transmitter countermeasures T-1687A/ALE-70 (V) in support of the Joint Strike Fighter program. This was non-competitive, per 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(l).

Lockheed Martin received $54,574,234 for production technical assistance on F-35 Lot VII. Services include manufacturing technology transfer and planning tasks required to ensure a manufacturing base with sufficient technical knowledge to support F-35 production. Purchases: U.S. Navy ($21,912,810; 40 percent); U.S. Air Force ($21,053,484; 38.7 percent); and international partner governments ($11,607,930; 21.3 percent).

AIRCRAFT

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $14,138,642 for operational safety, suitability and effectiveness materials improvement program with the aim of increasing C-5 safety and mission readiness while reducing maintenance requirements and cost.

ARMTEC Countermeasures Co. received $11,450,440 for 390,800 M206 decoy countermeasure flares (389,300 for U.S. Air Force and 1500 for U.S. Army) for protection of helicopters and low altitude aircraft. Kilgore Flares Co, LLC. received $10,176,036 for 318,600 flares for U.S. Air Force and 1,200 for U.S. Army for protection of helicopters and low altitude aircraft.

Boeing received $6,632,674 for eight Reconfigurable Transportable Consolidated Automated Support System – Depot (RTCASS-D) conversion kits.

Boeing received $8,747,003 for software updates in support of the P-8A Poseidon aircraft. Northrop Grumman received $8,900,000 for two sets of AN/ALQ 240 (V) 1 weapons repairable assemblies in support of the P-8A AN/ALQ 240 Electronic Support Measures Repair Depot standup at NSWC Crane Division.

Boeing received $43,340,932 to support fielding new equipment and training for units receiving the CH-47F. Boeing received $18,962,520 to integrate improved drive train development with CH-47 Block II engineering. Boeing received $8,857,000 to provide additional production Lot 13 long lead funding and additional production Lot 12 over-and-above funding on CH-47F helicopters. Columbia Helicopters Inc. received $30,552,180 for Chinook aft & forward rotor heads. Minimum quantity (combined for the rotor heads) ten; maximum quantity 198.

Boeing received $26,725,000 to provide seven engineering changes proposals for fracture and maintenance areas on F/A-18 A-D under the Service Life Extension Program Phase C1 effort.

Boeing received $103,800,000 for advance procurement funding for purchase of long lead items as part of AH-64E Apache Full Rate (Lot 5).

Delta Industries received $37,177,882 for turbine exhaust engine cases.

Dynamic Aviation Group Inc. received $22,359,136 for continued operations, sustainment, and integration of three communications electronic attack with surveillance/recon aircraft, currently deployed in support of OEF. One bid was solicited, one received.

Elbit Systems received $12,255,000 for helicopter improved signal data converter. This is a sole source acquisition.

Hamilton Sundstrand Corp. received $7,354,035 to repair the V-22 Osprey aircraft constant frequency generator.

Kearfott Corp. received $8,628,628 for the Actuator, Electro-Me (minimum 120; maximum 1,440) for the Blackhawk weapons system. Lockheed Martin received $7,265,034 for the repair of 12 items of the common cockpit for H-60R/S helicopters. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C 2304(c)(1).

L-3 Communications received $18,086,317 for logistical, administrative, and base operations support to include data input and data gathering for the Corpus Christi Army Depot mission to overhaul, repair, modify, retrofit, test and modernize helicopters, engines and components for all services and foreign military customers.

L-3 Communications received $24,728,566 for labor skilled in the inspection, maintenance, and repair of the CH-47, UH-60, UH-1, AH-1, AH-64 and OH-58 aircraft and components.

Lockheed Martin received $14,713,606 to provide initial spares for the C-130J program on 64 aircraft (42 delivered C-130J and 22 HC/MC-130J). Lockheed Martin received $27,370,337 to provide extended service life center wing box on five C-130J aircraft.

Lockheed Martin received $24,449,293 to install a VADER system and an aerial precision geolocation kit on a King Air 350ER aircraft. One bid solicited, one received.

Lockheed Martin received $80,663,444 for Lot 9 Modernized Target Acquisition Pilot Night Vision Sensors (eight systems with one spare and four additional systems with four war replacement spares for USA; eight systems with one spare for Indonesia).

Midwest Air Traffic Control Service Inc. and Readiness Management Support LC received $109,874,600 for management and equipment maintenance to support air traffic control operations, airfield management, air to ground comms and maintenance, surveillance and precision radar operations and maintenance, voice communications systems operations and maintenance, and aviation C2 operations and maintenance. “Work will be performed in Southwest Asia.”

Northrop Grumman received $17,150,542 for testing/support during the Common Aviation Command & Control developmental & weapons tactic instructor test events.

Northrop Grumman received $31,135,442 for depot maintenance on 44 Navy/USMC Reserve F-5N/F aircraft. One percent of work will occur in Emmen, Switzerland. This was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

Northrop Grumman received $234,134,172 for Large Aircraft Infrared Counter Measures (LAIRCM) 2014 base hardware and support. Thirteen percent relates to unclassified FMS including: Germany, Australia, Saudi Arabia, and Strategic Airlift Capability-NATO Airlift Management Program.

Phoenix Air Group Inc. received $16,320,996 for contractor owned and operated aircraft for range clearing services for missile testing and fleet training in support of CNAF and DOD agencies.

Raytheon received $12,635,487 for developmental efforts in support of the Technology Development Phase of the Next Generation Jammer Program, which will replace the aging ALQ-99 Tactical Jamming System for integration on the EA-18G aircraft.

Raytheon received $14,393,119 for aircraft radar receivers, circuit card assemblies, electric synthesizers, and electronic components. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Rockwell Collins-ESA received $10,307,718 for items in support of the joint helmet mounted cueing system. This is a sole-source acquisition. Locations of performance are Texas, Oregon, and Israel. This contains FMS elements for Iraq.

Sikorsky received $7,927,579 for organizational, selected intermediate, and limited depot-level maintenance for aircraft operated by adversary squadrons — NAS Key West (40 percent); NAS Fallon (30 percent); and MCAS Yuma (30 percent).

Sonoran Technology & Professional Services LLC received $49,000,000 for F-16 weapons system support, F-16 academic instruction, F-16 aircrew training devices (ATD) instruction/console operations, and ATD cockpit operations, courseware development, and training support. This includes less than one percent unclassified FMS to Singapore.

Strata G Solutions received $6,743,271 to incorporate the revised Smart, Wireless, Internal Combustion Engine Spiral 3 Technical Data Package, including increased quantity prices for each contract line item number.

Textron received $38,409,418 for yoke assemblies. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Thales Defense & Security received $38,527,000 for Optimized Top Owl (OTO) Helmet Mounted Sight and Display (HMSD) Sustainment Capability services for the H-1 Aircraft program. This includes the facility, parts, and labor required for the OTO repair capabilities transition plan from Bordeaux, France to the United States.

Thales-Raytheon Systems Co. LLC received $17,743,765 to acquire Sentinel Mode 5 IFF kits and spares.

SECURITY & THE “HOMELAND”

Booz Allen Hamilton; Battelle Memorial Institute; Jacobs Technology Inc.; MacAulay-Brown Inc.; MRI Global; National Security Information Associates; Strategic Analysis Inc.; Leidos Inc.; Scitor Corp.; TASC Inc.; URS Federal Services Inc.; and Wyle Laboratories Inc. received $900,000,000 for Homeland Defense and Security Technical Area Tasks (HD TATs). These corporations will provide R&D, test and evaluation, and advisory and assistance services related to R&D efforts for TATs within the CBRN  defense, homeland defense and security, critical infrastructure protection, WMD, biometrics, medical, cultural studies and alternative energy focus areas.

L-3 GSS received $50,925,735 for Automated Installation Entry hardware and software for up to 35 military installations.

LITTORAL COMBAT SYSTEM

Austal USA received $6,726,406 for fabrication and assembly of a live fire test module in support of the Navys Independence variant LCS survivability testing program which is critical to class qualifications and ships eventual deployment.

General Dynamics (Bath Iron Works) received $28,697,034 for LCS class design services, which provide engineering, program, and technical support. This includes class baseline design services, class documentation services, class engineering studies and interim support services.

NAVAL PRODUCTS

3 Phoenix Inc. received $7,263,632 for two TB-29A Inverted Passive Electrical Network (iPEN) Towed Array production representative units, associated spares and test equipment. iPEN telemetry acts as a data fusion point for integration of TB-29A handling system sensor data.

3 Phoenix Inc. received $9,116,551 for engineering services for development, integration, testing, and logistic support of the torpedo warning system (TWS), which allows surface ships to detect torpedoes and employ defensive measures (including maneuver and countermeasures).

Aegisound LLC received $10,135,882 for flight deck cranial double hearing protection headsets.

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $25,002,968 for professional services in support of the Surface Warfare Directorate.

American Overseas Marine LLC received $32,668,153 for the operation and maintenance of seven large, medium-speed, roll-on/roll-off ships.

AMSEC LLC received $187,795,398 for engineering, technical, repair and logistics to afloat Navy surface ships and aircraft carriers.

BAE Systems received $6,715,693 for sixteen AN/UPX-41 (C) Digital Interrogators for the U.S. Navy (14) and Japan (2) and 45 Mode 5 IFF field change kits for the U.S. Navy (33) and Japan (12). This was not competitively procured (FAR 6.302-1). Purchases: U.S. Navy ($5,399,417; 80.4 percent) and Japan ($1,316,276; 19.6 percent).

General Dynamics received $11,000,000 to incrementally fund (non-nuclear) repairs on subs assigned to the Naval Submarine Support Facility, New London, CT, under the New England Maintenance Manpower Initiative (NEMMI).

General Dynamics (Bath Iron Works) received $28,716,385 for fleet maintenance sustainment support in San Diego, CA.

General Dynamics (Electric Boat) received $17,645,580,644 to build ten Virginia-class submarines from FY2014 to 2018. This was sole source (10 USC 2304 (c)(1) & FAR 6.302-1).

Huntington Ingalls Inc. received $7,674,064 for engineering and technical design services to support R&D of advanced submarine technologies for current and future submarine platforms.

L-3 KEO received $14,982,884 for the production of 16 universal modular masts (UMM), which are non-hull penetrating masts installed on Virginia-class submarines.

Lockheed Martin received $8,537,634 for Low Cost Conformal Array production units, spare modules and spare outboard electronics canisters. The Low Cost Conformal Array is a passive planar array mounted on the aft submarine sail structure that is integrated with the AN/BQQ-25 [PDF] to provide situational awareness and collision avoidance.

Northrop Grumman received $25,000,000 for repair, maintenance, engineering, change kits and integrated logistics documentation for the AN/AQS-14A Sonar Detecting Set, AQS-24 Mine Hunting System, ALQ-141 Acoustic Minehunting/Minesweeping System, USM-668 Intermediate Level Test Equipment, the Modified USM-668A ILTE, and the Swivel Slip-Ring Assembly.

Northrop Grumman received $88,153,800 for integrated bridge systems and steering/ship control systems, related hardware and associated services. Systems include chart servers, network interface boxes, flat panel displays, radar systems, navigation software, ship control software and displays, GPS, weather sensors, depth sensors, speed sensors, digital compass systems, and sonar systems. This was not competitively procured under 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Progeny Systems Corp. received $9,589,064 for engineering/technical services in support of the Navys AN/UYQ-100 Undersea Warfare Decision Support System. This was not competitively procured in accordance with FAR 6.302-5.

Raytheon received $8,347,097 for Cooperative Engagement Capability (CEC) for two AN/USG-2B Shipboard System, one DDG Mod Kit, and one DDG Mod INCO-R Kit. CEC is a sensor netting system that improves anti-air warfare capability/effectiveness by enhancing situational awareness and enabling longer-range, cooperative, multiple/layered engagement strategies.

Raytheon received $29,521,981 for production of the AN/SPY-1D(V) Radar Transmitter Group, Missile Fire Control System (MFCS) MK 99 and site support.

RFD Beaufort Inc. received $8,101,410 for 1,900 submarine escape and immersion equipment MK11 suits. This was not competitively procured [10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(l)].

RPR Industries received $11,601,492 for life preservers and component parts.

Timken Gears & Services Inc. received $55,327,134 for two DDG 51 class main reduction gear (MRG) shipsets. MRG is the set of gears that transmit power from two main propulsion power turbines to the propulsion shaft. Each DDG 51 has two gear sets, one for each propulsion shaft.

EDUCATION & TRAINING

Flight Safety Services Corp. received $11,787,928 to teach aircrew initial qualification courses, refresher courses, upgrade courses and others to fully qualify C-5 aircrews in all mission design series versions at Dover AFB, Travis AFB, Lackland AFB, Westover Air Reserve Base, and Martinsburg Air National Guard Base.

Northrop Grumman received $25,220,493 for Army Knowledge Online (AKO) Enterprise Services web-based enterprise information services.

URS Federal Inc.; Raytheon;Technical Software Services Inc.; Camber Corp.; General Dynamics; Northrop Grumman; Logistic Services International Inc.; Sonalysts Inc.; and Kratos Defense & Security Solutions received $33,079,710 to provide education training products and services to the Naval Education Training Command (NETC) in conjunction with Naval Education Training and Professional Development and Technology Center.

GEAR & EQUIPMENT

Airborne Systems North America of N.J. received $30,000,000 for 110 Joint Precision Airdrop Systems of 10,000 pounds, to include the Parachute and Autonomous Guidance Unit.

Air Liquide Industrial US LP received $25,310,221 for gaseous nitrogen.

Allied Tube & Conduit; Cobra Systems; and Iris Kim received $41,000,000 for concertina barbed tape.

Allison Transmission Inc. received $51,444,025 for ninety-nine X1100-3B transmissions for M1A2 Abrams tanks. L-3 Communications received $8,746,150 for 37,948 hours of systems technical support on the Bradley transmission. L-3 Communications received $10,533,875 for 26,752 hours of systems technical support for the Bradley transmission.

American Rheinmetall Munition received $12,811,540 for 66mm vehicle launched infrared smoke grenades in support of the U.S. Navy.

Carter Industries Inc. received $12,761,280 for flyers coveralls. Golden Manufacturing Co., Inc. received $54,873,720 for ACU coats. Omega Apparel received $7,499,520 for men’s trousers.Wolverine World Wide Inc. received $14,955,649 for safety boots.

Dayton Bag & Burlap Dayton received $74,098,240 for acrylic sandbags. NYP Corp. received $74,383,433 for acrylic sandbags.

Design West Technologies Inc. received $9,470,626 for a maximum of 650 filter fan housing assemblies for Army collective and protection units which clean and purify air.

Ensign-Bickford Aerospace & Defense Co. received $26,977,402 to test, manufacture, package and deliver M21/M23 blasting cap assemblies.

Hutchinson Industries Inc. received $28,168,596 for wheel and tire assemblies.

JCB Inc. received $39,446,851 for an estimated 90 High Mobility Engineer Excavators-Type-I (HMEE-I) and vehicle attachments.

Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace received $29,702,000 for depot support for the Common Remotely Operated Weapon Station (CROWS).

Oshkosh received $8,583,960 for 39 medium tactical vehicles (MTV) and applicable federal retail excise tax.

Lockheed Martin received $9,387,611 to develop a ground-based wind profiler to meet the functional, performance, and environmental requirements for precision airdrop, the objective of which is to develop an affordable, rugged, set-and-start solution for precise wind measurement for precision air drop (PAD) at forward operating bases that shall enable the government to achieve 50 meters drop accuracy.

Logos Technologies Inc. received $23,648,907 for field service representatives, operators, and analysts required to support Persistent Ground Surveillance Systems Kestrel systems. This was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Truetech received $8,071,865 for M256A2 chemical agent detector kits.

FUEL & ENERGY

Calumet San Antonio Refining received $36,393,732 for aviation turbine fuel.Dennis K. Burke Inc. received two separate installments of $65,282,707 for fuel.Foster Fuels Inc. received $8,268,245 for fuel.Global Montello Group received $36,202,002 for fuel. Indigo Energy Partners LLC received $20,745,146 for fuel.Mansfield Oil Co. received $14,541,401 for fuel. Naughton Energy Corp. received $18,217,525 for fuel. Papco Inc. received $37,197,905 for fuel.

Petroleum Traders Corp. received $66,882,605 for fuel. Ports Petroleum Co. Inc. received $7,126,629 for fuel. Riggins Oil received $9,735,913 for fuel. Signature Flight Support Corp. received $15,088,634 for fuel. Sprague Operating Resources LLC received $34,898,134 for fuel.Talley Petroleum Enterprises Inc. received $9,504,864 for fuel. United Metro Energy Corp. received $57,449,285 for fuel.

Computer Sites Inc. received $47,057,000 for emergency maintenance/preventive maintenance of DOD power conditioning equipment and “uninterruptable” power supply systems.

Direct Energy Business, LLC received $11,918,926 for electricity.

River Trading Company Ltd. received $16,871,250 for bituminous coal.

MEDICAL & SAFETY

1st American Systems & Services received $42,000,000 for Family Advocacy Program and Domestic Violence Counseling in the Pacific Region.

Atlantic Diving Supply received $66,783,068 for medical/surgical products.

Brasseler USA received $22,335,309 for distribution of general dental supplies. Dental Health Products received $38,436,832 for distribution of dental supplies.

Contracting Solutions International LLC; Distinctive Spectrum Healthcare JV; Protégé Health Services LLC; Saratoga Medical Center Inc.; and TIST Corp., Inc. received a cumulative $27,693,133 for various nursing services.

Exelan Pharmaceuticals received $8,509,384 for pharmaceutical products. Golden State Medical Supply received $22,512,293 for pharmaceutical supplies. Heyltex Corp. received $43,292,852 for pharmaceutical products.

Express Scripts Inc. received $33,800,000 to provide pharmacy benefit management services to DOD’s TRICARE pharmacy program.

Henry Schein Inc. received $26,602,450 for laboratory supplies. PerkinElmer Genetrics, Inc. received $9,700,000 for shipping of laboratory and pharmaceutical supplies.

Hologic Inc. received $78,910,453 for radiology systems, subsystems, and components.

MedImmune Biologics Inc. received $23,274,000 for intranasal influenza vaccine spray.

Rosenbauer America received $382,500,000 for fire and emergency vehicles.

CONSTRUCTION

AAA General Contractors; Blackhawk-MILCON JV; Briston Construction LLC; Cerrudo Services, Inc.; Charpie Construction Co.; Cherokee General Corp.; Direct Project Inc.; E-Corp.; Fortis Networks; IEC-ALL Star LLC; Komada; KWR Construction, Inc.; Loven Contracting, Inc.; Marsh Development, Inc.; MIE, Inc.; Menco Pacific, Inc.; MW Services Inc.; Northern Construction, LLC; Northwind Engineering, LLC; OP Solutions; Pace Pacific; Pacific Tech Construction; Power Services, Inc.; PRE CON Industries; RCDS Contractors, Inc.; R-CON Construction, Inc.; Rore, Inc.; Sigma Services; Shanks Electric Corp.; S & L Construction; Sun Eagle Corp.; Southwestern Dakotah, Inc.; TMG Services, Inc.; Total Team Construction Services; Vernadero Group Inc.; and Women’s Empowerment Partnership, Inc. received a cumulative $20,000,000 to support sustainment/repair and maintenance construction and new military construction projects for the Arizona Army and Air National Guard.

ABM Government Services LLC; Brasfield & Gorrie LLC; Hoar Construction LLC; ITSI Gilbane Co.; J&J Maintenance Inc.; John J. Kirlin Special Projects LLC; and United Excel Corp. received  $249,000,000 to design and build Army medical facilities.

Adira Construction Inc.; Contract & Purchasing Solutions Inc.; Greenland Enterprises Inc.; Locke-Lane Construction Inc.; Patriot Construction LLC; Turner Strategic Technologies LLC; and Sampson Contracting Inc. received a cumulative $50,000,000 for general construction projects located at Camp Lejeune, MCAS New River, MCAS Cherry Point, and other outlying facilities in North Carolina. Some work includes removing asbestos materials and lead paint. 

AECOM Technical Services Inc.; Baker-Stanley-Cardno JV; OTIE-RS&H JV; Parsons Brinkckerhoff-FSB-H&A JV; Parsons Government Services Inc.; and LEIDOS Inc. received a cumulative $950,000,000 to support military construction (MILCON), military family housing (MFH), and sustainment, restoration and modernization (SRM) programs worldwide. This is the result of a qualifications-based selection process in accordance with FAR 36.6 and the Brooks Act, Public Law 92-582.

Alessi Keyes Construction; AMR Construction LLC; Oren Atchley Co.; BES Design/Build LLC; Beshears Construction Inc.; C&M Contractors Inc.; Charpie Construction Co., Inc.; CWR Construction Inc.; DAV Construction Co.; Flynco Inc.;Haralson Property Resources; Hernandez Consulting LLC; HGL Construction; Hollon Contracting LLC; J&S Construction Company; Jack Helms Construction Co.; Jack Morgan Construction; Jane Construction LLC; K&E Construction Inc.; LJB Construction Inc.; Lobina Construction; McCormick Asphalt Paving & Excavation; Precise Concrete Works; Primestar Construction Corp.; RHI Inc.; Roederer Construction Inc.; Ross Sparks Builders; Structural Systems Inc.; and Wilkins Construction received a cumulative $20,000,000 for sustainment/repair and maintenance of National Guard military construction projects at Little Rock AFB, Camp Joseph T. Robinson, and Fort Smith Regional Airport.

Architura Corp.; Bailey Edward Design, Inc.; and Integrated Design JV; received a cumulative $10,000,000 for architecture-engineering services (design and rehab) for the Illinois Air and Army National Guard.

ARMTEC received $9,900,000 to design, develop, maintain and manufacture systems using combustible and consumable type products technology for the Army Research, Development and Engineering Command. One bid was solicited and one received.

Baldi Bros. Inc.; Coffman Specialties Inc.; Flatiron West Inc.; Granite Construction Co.; Kiewit Infrastructure West, Co.; and Reyes Construction Inc. received a cumulative $99,000,000 for airfield paving and heavy duty paving projects at various locations within NAVFAC Southwest. Projects may include, but are not limited to: paving of airfield runway, taxiway, apron, and support areas for aircraft; and heavy duty paving of areas intended for heavy military and other heavy operational vehicles and equipment.

Bates Engineers/Contractors Inc. received $46,000,000 for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Mobile District’s North Alabama Regional Construction Program.

Caddell Construction Co., Inc. received $34,311,000 for construction of the Waterfront North Land Water Interface at Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay.

Cherokee General Corporation; Pease Construction, Inc.; Performance Systems, Inc.; Alutiiq-Mele, LLC; and Pease & Sons, Inc. received a cumulative $100,000,000 for multi-disciplinary maintenance, repair, construction, and incidental design work for Joint Base Lewis-McChord.

C.J. Mahan Construction Co. received $11,801,329 for the Olmsted Major Lock Rehabilitation, Olmsted, IL.

Contrack International Inc. received $6,749,291 for constructing a power plant to power the Army prepositioned stocks-5 warehouses, Camp Arifjan, Kuwait.

EMCOR Government Services Inc. received $45,000,000 for operations, maintenance, repair and minor construction for the Fort Belvoir Community Hospital.

FTSI-Phelps JV received $13,961,000 for design and construction of a low-rise composite shop and Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron (MALS) Ground Support Equipment (GSE) holding shed at Marine Corps Base Hawaii.

Global-Pacific Tech JV $45,000,000 to design and construct projects related to building electrical systems and control and industrial processes for the Army Corps of Engineers, South Atlantic Division.

Guam MACC Builders A JV received $25,692,000 for the design and construction of an emergent repair facility at Naval Base, Guam.

The Haskell Co. received $6,883,727 for the mitigation of unsuitable soils under the taxiway apron for apron expansion, Phase II, parallel taxiway, hangar, and Marine vertical 22 maintenance hangar at MCAS New River.

Health Facility Solutions Company received $7,000,000 to support construction management activities for the Mobile District and South Atlantic Division, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Herner Construction Inc.; Lee Grover Construction; The Wilson Group Inc.; Roederer Construction Inc.; Lehr Construction Co.; Limbaugh Construction Co.; K & K Industries Inc.; J.M.L., Inc.; HC JV; Lawhon Construction; E L Crawford Construction; Berco Construction; Bartels & Missey Siding & Insulations; Brooner & Associates Construction; Sterling Excavation & Erection; J & S Construction; Glasgow Construction Co.; J.E. Novack Construction; Hof Construction Inc.; Bayshore Contractors LLC; Charpie Construction Co.; St. Louis Design & Construction Inc.; and Mechanical Service Inc. received a collective $20,000,000 for sustainment/repair/maintenance and construction for: Lambert International Airport; Jefferson Barracks, ANG; Kings Highway Reserve Center; Rosecrans Memorial Airport; Whiteman AFB, Fort Leonard Wood; Camp Clark Training Site; Camp Crowder Training Site; and Wappappello Training Site.

Infrastructure Defense Technologies received $20,000,000 for metal revetments.

Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc. received $9,000,000 for architect/engineer services, and design for Army Reserve projects nationwide and projects within the Great Lakes and Ohio River Division Boundaries.

Jacobs Government Services Co.; MWH-Cardno TEC Baker-A JV; and Zapata Inc. received $500,000,000 for architect-engineering services, including environmental projects (planning and programming, restoration, quality, and conservation) as required by the Air Force Civil Engineering Center. This is the result of a qualifications-based selection process in accordance with FAR 36.6 and the Brooks Act, Public Law 92-582.

Kiewit Infrastructure West Co.; Manson Construction Co.; Marathon Construction Co.; Nova Group, Inc.; Triton Marine Construction; and Watts Construction LLC received a cumulative $99,000,000 for construction of marine waterfront facilities located primarily within NAVFAC Northwest.

Midland Surveying, Inc. received $9,000,000 for architect-engineer surveying and mapping of shallow water habitat, floodplain changes and vegetation cover at various nationwide locations.

Mirador Enterprises Inc.; Mesa Verde Enterprises Inc.; R-Con Construction Inc.; Dawn, Inc./McTech Corp., JV; and E-Corp received $75,000,000 for a broad range of maintenance, repair, minor construction/alteration and renovation work on at Holloman AFB and federal property within a 100 mile radius.

Pacchiosi Drill USA Inc. received $8,918,970 to construct cutoff walls along the waterside slope of Sites R3A and L10 on the American River, Sacramento, CA.

PAT GD JV received $24,400,000 for piers and dredging in Umm Qasr, Iraq to include the design and construction of an approximately 165 meter floating pier for the Iraqi Navy and dredging of the adjacent harbor and navigational channel. PAT GD will ensure the harbor and channel remain dredged to the required depth for one year following the initial dredging.

Patricia I. Romero Inc.; Peter Vander Werff Construction; Dimensions Construction Inc.; I.E.-Pacific Inc.; and Halbert Construction Co. received $99,000,000 for construction at various locations within the NAVFAC Southwest.

Rand & Jones Enterprises, Co., Inc. received $8,000,000 for a Simplified Acquisition of Base Engineering Requirements contract for completion of minor, non-complex construction projects requiring minimum design. Typical projects involve a number of general construction disciplines including, but not limited to, plumbing, masonry, electrical, mechanical, architectural, painting, HVAC, and abatement.

RSP Architects received $9,000,000 for the design, construction of various Air Force Reserve projects.

Sylvan Forest Products Inc.; S&S Forest Products; R.D. Buie Enterprises; and Forest Products Distributors Inc. received a cumulative $60,796,669 for wood products.

TMG Services; Aerostar SES LLC; and Zieson Construction Co., LLC received $200,000,000 for repairs to the infrastructure for U.S. Air Force Medical Service healthcare facilities nationwide.

Tunista Construction received $9,525,000 to build a company operations facility at Fort Wainwright, Alaska.

UNIT Co. received $25,546,700 to build a warm storage hangar at Fort Wainwright, Alaska.

Value Management Strategies Inc. and Strategic Value Solutions Inc. received $9,000,000 for architectural/engineering management service for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Baltimore District Military, Environmental and Civil Works programs throughout the North Atlantic Division.

Watermark Environmental Inc.; Blackhawk-MILCON, JV; Custom Mechanical Systems Corp.; Krempp Construction Inc.; and Howard W. Pence received a cumulative $50,000,000 for construction projects at Naval Support Activity Crane located primarily within NAVFAC Midwest.

Whitman, Requardt & Associates LLP received $15,000,000 for multi-discipline architect-engineering services in support of projects primarily in New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania.

BASE SUPPORT & LOGISTICS

BCF Solutions Inc.; Booz Allen Hamilton; Bowhead Science & Technology; CommIT Enterprises Inc.; Deloitte Consulting LLP; TASC Inc.; and Whitney, Bradley & Brown Inc. received a cumulative $83,333,333 for program management and financial management support including non-inherently governmental services to perform analyses and research.

Interactive Process Technology received $8,257,570 to provide technical, analytical, and administrative support services to assist the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (AT&L).

Jacobs Technology received $20,689,631 to provide support services to the Aberdeen Test Center, Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD.

Jacobs Technology received $67,000,000 for additional diverse engineering, technical and acquisition support services. This includes 2.56 percent unclassified FMS to Australia, Bahrain, Belgium, Canada, Chile, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Japan, Jordon, Kuwait, Malaysia, Morocco, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Poland, Portugal, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Turkey, the UAE and the UK.

LEIDOS received $7,294,064 for mission support services for court room and case preparation. Services include translation, transcription, court reporters, and expert witnesses for commission hearings.

Logistics Management Institute received $7,031,240 for technical support to Defense Procurement & Acquisition Policy.

Lone Star Aerospace received $8,719,004 for additional predictive business and technical decision analysis services in support of Naval Air Systems Command and the Naval Aviation Enterprise.

Mirador Enterprises Inc. received $45,000,000 for the Holloman AFB Simplified Acquisition of Base Engineering Requirements program.

SOS International LLC; Mission Essential Personnel LLC; Digital Management Inc.; L-3 National Security Solutions; General Dynamics; and Decypher Technologies received a collective $33,000,000 to provide broad technical and analytical services to support and improve policy development, decision making, management/administration, and systems operations.

SupplyCore received $200,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations tailored logistics support prime vendor programs.

PROFESSIONAL ACQUISITION SUPPORT

Oasis Systems LLC received $11,801,189 for professional acquisition support services. Oasis Systems LLC received $8,983,870.00 for professional acquisition support services in support of Air Force Life Cycle Management Center HB and HBAJ divisions including FMS (84 percent of the contract). FMS countries include Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Qatar, Egypt, Belgium, Romania, Poland, and Colombia.

Odyssey Systems Consulting Group Ltd. received $11,445,617 for professional acquisition support services in support of Air Force Life Cycle Management Center, HBQ and HBD Divisions, including FMS (approximately 11 percent). FMS countries include Taiwan, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Israel, and Japan. Odyssey System Consulting Group Ltd. received $9,167,656 for professional acquisition support services in support of Air Force Life Cycle Management Center HBU and HNJ divisions.

P E Systems Inc. received $7,280,498 for professional acquisition support services in support of Air Force Life Cycle Management Center HNA and HBD Divisions, including FMS (approximately 13 percent). FMS countries include Jordan, Germany, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Oman, Greece, Thailand, France, Sweden, and the UK.

Quantech Services Inc. received $14,402,703 for professional acquisition support services. FMS accounts for approximately 38 percent. FMS countries include Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Japan, Australia, France, the UK, Egypt, Oman, Poland, Kyrgyzstan, Afghanistan, and Jordan.

DREDGING & ENVIRONMENTAL

Battelle Memorial Institute received $15,000,000 for environmental services and technologies support at Naval Facilities Engineering & Expeditionary Warfare Center, Port Hueneme, CA.

Bers-Weston Services JVA LLC received $95,000,000 for remediation of various hazardous waste sites within the United States and territories.

Brady GCE II received $20,000,000 for comprehensive environmental response, Compensation Liability Act, Resource Conservation & Recovery Act, underground storage tank studies and environmental engineering support services at Navy and Marine Corps installations in NAVFAC Southwest.

Potomac-Hudson Engineering Inc. received $30,000,000 to help prepare Navy and Marine Corps environmental planning documents for upland and desert projects in NAVFAC Southwest. Work provides for data collection, natural resource survey, and resource effects analysis work related to National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and other environmental planning services.

RLB Contracting Inc. received $8,286,850 for deep draft maintenance dredging of the Houston Ship Channel from Carpenters to Greens.

The Source Group Inc. received $13,810,540 and $10,432,295 for environmental remediation, assessment, and emergency response services.

FOOD SERVICES

Brothers Produce Inc. received $6,666,666 for fresh fruit and vegetables. Dexters Farms received $47,961,211 for fruit and vegetables. Stern Produce Co. received $16,625,000 for fresh fruit and vegetables.

Labatt Food Service received $17,250,000 for food distribution.

Louisiana Workforce Commission received $9,580,960 to provide food services to training units at the 162nd Infantry Brigade and rotational training units at the Joint Readiness Training Center, Fort Polk.

Sysco received $20,800,000 for food and beverages. Sysco received $12,000,000 for food and beverages. This is a sole-source acquisition.

# # # #

*Editing consolidated similar contracts. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

**Any clerical errors are the editors alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous months DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

***To avoid competitive bidding, DOD invokes 10 U.S.C. 2304, FAR 6.302, and FAR 8.405-6. DOD also invokes 15 U.S.C. 638 to avoid competitive bidding when dealing with small businesses.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst,is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.

BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for May 2014

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DOD spent $13,443,306,335+ on 249 individual contracts in May 2014

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $13,443,306,335 on 249 individual contracts during May 2014.

REMOTELY PILOTED MACHINES

AAI Corp. received $75,010,510 to support the Army Aviation & Missile Research, Development & Engineering Center, Software Engineering Directorate’s Joint System Integration Laboratory for technology integration into the contractor’s fleet of unmanned aircraft systems (including the Shadow) and associated ground support equipment to allow the demonstration of enhanced UAS platform, payload, and ground system performance.

AAI Corp. received $7,690,948 to develop, verify, and validate noise signature reduction design improvements for UAV engines Limited 1102 and Block 3 propulsion system engines.  This also covers software updates and integration of the small mission computer into the RQ-7BV2. 

Boeing received $27,685,574 for 23 QF-16 FSATs (Full-Scale Aerial Target) and 23 four-year warranties of the QF-16 Drone-Peculiar Equipment (DPE).

General Atomics received $296,941,937 for Gray Eagle logistics and fleet sustainment, including spares and repairs.

JAM-MAP JV received $9,420,746 to construct a UAV site work, utilities, and entry control point at Ft. Hood.

Northrop Grumman received $10,833,670 for development and integration of a Multi Capability Pod (MCAP) onto the MQ-8C, including the purchase of two MCAPS and one MCAP Mass Model. The MCAP provides multiple electronic warfare sensors for employment in the littorals. This was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

Northrop Grumman received $13,039,369 for the Enhanced Integrated Sensor Suite (EISS) Timing & Control (TAC) Module A-3 replacement effort, which ensures the completion of flight tests necessary to ensure EISS TAC module and associated software developments are compatible with the Global Hawk.

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES – Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations.

Alliant Techsystems received $15,167,984 to continue contractor logistic support on Iraq’s Cessna 208ISR caravan and the Cessna 208 armed caravan. This also includes aircraft maintenance and student training on both aircraft. Work will be performed at Joint Base Balad, Iraq.

Al Raha Group for Technical Services (Riyadh, Saudi Arabia) received $93,335,656 to provide Saudi Arabia with repair & return services for F-15 unclassified items. This is a sole-source acquisition.

BAE Systems received $139,963,796 to provide South Korea with 134 KF-16 upgraded aircraft. This is for initial development and long lead production. A future contract modification will increase the scope of work to the full program.

Conti Federal Services Inc. received $26,560,022 for a design-build construction contract for buildings, utilities and infrastructure at Shivta Artillery Base, Israel.

Georgia Tech Applied Research Corp. received $20,545,422 to improve Taiwan’s Electronic Warfare Sensor Systems. Georgia Tech will help centralize technical, engineering, and analytical support of all EW sensors, improve hardware/software EW capabilities, and improve expendable countermeasures tech.

L-3 Communications received $48,978,323 to provide Saudi Arabia with three UH-60L operational flight trainers. One bid was solicited and one received.

L-3 Communications received $7,621,505 to provide Australia with C-27J spares and support. This funding incorporates CONUS Spares Support functions for the Australian C-27J spares warehousing, packing, handling, shipping, transportation and item unique identification.

L-3 Communications received $19,018,574 to upgrade six CF-18C/D Advanced Distributed Combat Training Systems for Canada.

Lockheed Martin received $92,610,784 for Aegis Weapon System and Aegis Combat System engineering, in-country support, and staging support for Japan’s Aegis lifetime support requirements.

Lockheed Martin received $20,490,657 for AN/SQQ-89 engineering services, advanced capability build, technical insertion development and integration. FMS to Japan is 63 percent of this contract.

Lockheed Martin received $212,326,161 to provide Japan, Taiwan, Germany, the Netherlands, Kuwait, and the UAE with Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) Missile Support Center services.

Lockheed Martin received $101,900,000 to provide Israel with non-recurring engineering and sustainment tasks for mission systems software and autonomic logistics development of the F-35A CTOL Air System. In addition, this funding provides autonomic logistics hardware for Israeli pilot training.

Lockheed Martin received $7,253,896 to solve a radar interoperability issue affecting Pakistan and Thailand F-16 aircraft.

Lockheed Martin received $12,169,823 to install spiral upgrades on two P-3C for Norway’s Air Force. This was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-4.

Lockheed Martin received $15,590,000 to provide Taiwan with the upgrade and overhaul of twelve P-3C aircraft.

Raytheon received $10,051,025 for all test, failure analysis, quality, reliability, and maintenance on pre-Patriot Advanced Capability (PAC)-3 missile rounds. Countries participating are Israel, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, South Korea, Taiwan, and the UAE. One bid was solicited and one received.

Raytheon received $30,891,282 for MK 698 test sets with Evolved Seasparrow Missile and Standard Missile test capability, upgrade kits, installation kits, repair tool kits, associated spares and technical support. This is 100 percent FMS to Australia and the Netherlands.

Sierra Nevada Corp. received $34,425,000 for Afghan National Army Special Operations Forces contractor logistics for fixed-wing aircraft (PC-12) sustainment necessary to perform the maintenance operations and keep the aircraft operational. Work will be performed at Kabul International Airport and Kandahar, Afghanistan. This “urgent” 100 percent FMS contract for Afghanistan is a sole-source award.

Textron received $17,283,970 to provide India with the completion of mission control unit software development and aircraft integration for the sensor fuzed weapon. This is for the final phase of sensor fuzed weapon integration to their Jaguar aircraft.

TYR Tactical received $10,689,084 to provide Denmark nonstandard fragmentation shrapnel vests and projectile protection. One bid was solicited, with one bid received.

RECRUITMENT & RETENTION

Campbell-Ewald Co. received $55,433,097 for advertising and marketing services in support of Navy recruiting. This was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(1).

AFGHANISTAN

Academi Training Center (formerly Blackwater) received $8,801,172 for camp integrity, life support, and private security services in Afghanistan.

Erickson Transport, Inc. (formerly Evergreen Helicopters of Alaska) received $17,662,214; Berry Aviation, Inc. received $32,907,631; and AAR Airlift Group, Inc. received $42,519,795 for fixed-wing aircraft, personnel, equipment, tools, material, maintenance and supervision necessary to perform passenger and cargo air transportation service. Work will be performed in Afghanistan.

Imperatis Corp. received $9,399,893 to provide the capability for embedded counterinsurgency advisory and assistance teams “to analyze, advise, assist, and develop solutions” across Afghanistan.

Leonie Industries LLC received $55,449,092 for the Military Information Support Task Force-Afghanistan. Work will be performed in Afghanistan.

USAFRICOM & USSOUTHCOM

AAR Airlift Group, Inc. received $8,529,906 for dedicated rotary wing services in the Central Africa Region (Uganda, Central Africa Republic, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and South Sudan). 

Xtera Communications received $31,220,394 for delivery of an undersea fiber optic cable.

Work will be performed in USSOUTHCOM.

BIOMETRICS, SPECIAL OPERATIONS & BATTLEFIELD INTELLIGENCE

American Systems Corp.; Booz Allen Hamilton; Honeywell Technology Solutions, Inc.; Ideal Innovations, Inc.; SAIC; and Scientific Research Corp. received $33,133,000 for the procurement of biometric support services in the areas of R&D, investigation, analysis, test and evaluation procurement and reporting for counterterrorism, counterinsurgency and force protection technology needs, intelligence gathering technology, identity exploitation, and the development of multi-modal biometric technologies.

K-CRUZ received $48,000,000 to provide non-personal services for technical and logistic support on the Technology Applications Program Office, Mission Enhanced Little Bird (MELB), and Special Operational Mission Planning Environment program offices. The majority of the work will be performed in Ft. Eustis.

Zel Technologies, LLC received $25,000,000 to provide specialized services in science and engineering, business operation functions and other services in support of DIA‘s science and technology mission.

JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER (JSF)

IDSC Holdings, LLC received $6,857,381 for hand tools and toolboxes for LRIP 7, in support of the JSF F-35 Tool Control program. This was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

Lockheed Martin received $9,830,814 to execute Mode 5 IFF for the F-35 air system.

Okland Construction received $15,513,636 to design and build a facility for the second JSF at Luke AFB.

United Technologies Corp. received $105,170,571 for long-lead components, parts and materials in support of 34 LRIP Lot IX F-135 propulsions systems for the F-35 (including 26 F-135-PW-100 for the USAF; six F-135-PW-600 for the USMC; and two F-135-PW-100 for the U.S. Navy). United Tech will also procure 13 F-135-PW-100 and 6 F135-PW-600 systems for international partners and FMS customers. This was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). Purchases: U.S. Air Force ($32,259,578; 31 percent); the U.S. Navy ($27,321,004; 26 percent); international partners ($36,484,998; 35 percent) and international participants ($9,104,991; 8 percent).

AIRCRAFT

Bell Helicopter (Textron) received $377,772,560 for manufacture and delivery of 12 Lot 11 UH-1Y aircraft and 12 Lot 11 AH-1Z aircraft for the U.S. Marine Corps.

Boeing received $9,836,818 for supply chain management of spares/repairs for the F/A-18 E/F. 

Boeing received $19,459,507 to provide airframe structural support components. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Boeing received $25,891,028 for a CH-47 Chinook. 

Boeing received $21,985,964 for sustaining engineering on the Navy’s C-40A fleet, including project management and technical/engineering services. This was not competitively procured per FAR 6.302-2.

Boeing received $42,500,000 for F-15 vertical stabilizers.

EADS North America received $25,474,389 for contractor logistics support on the Lakota Utility Helicopter (UH-72A). Work will be performed in Columbia, MS. EADS North America received $33,797,867 for contractor logistic support for the UH-72A. EADS North America received $55,361,816 for ten UH-72A Lakota helicopters with ARC-231 radios.

Essex Industries, Inc. received $7,699,472 for emergency passenger oxygen system. This was a sole-source acquisition.

General Electric received $220,684,090 for depot services (rework and testing, receiving, packing, shipping, and reporting) on T700-GE-401 and T700-GE-401C turbo shaft engines, cold section modules and power turbine modules in support of H-60, H-1, AH-1W and AH-1Z aircraft.

L-3 Communications received $55,410,943 for logistics services of the TH-57 aircraft fleet. Services include all logistics and materials for organizational/depot maintenance. Work will be performed at NAS Whiting Field.

Lockheed Martin received $6,756,377 to repair 11 items for the command cockpit used in H-60R/S helicopters. This was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Lockheed Martin received $38,530,708 in support of the MH-60 integration and testing of the Advanced Data Transfer System, including mission system and common cockpit suite for the U.S. Navy ($34,850,684; 91 percent); Australia ($3,190,012; 8 percent); and Denmark ($490,012; 1 percent).

Lockheed Martin received $508,945,073 for incorporation of the C-5 Reliability Enhancement and Re-engining Program (RERP) Lot 7 Material and Fabrication effort. Lockheed Martin received $91,857,024 for incorporation of the C-5 RERP Lot 7 initial spares acquisition.

M7 Aerospace received $16,139,462 for logistics support on 12 Navy/Marine Corps UC-35 aircraft and seven Navy C-26 aircraft located at 10 global locations. Services include organizational/depot level maintenance, parts, support equipment maintenance, and engineering support. Some work will be performed at MCAS Futenma, Japan (15 percent); Fleet Marine Reserve Detachment, Belle Chase, Louisiana (10 percent); NAS Sigonella, Italy (10 percent); Naval Support Activity, Naples, Italy (10 percent); Al Udeid, Qatar (5 percent); and Moron, Spain (5 percent).

Martin Baker Aircraft received $26,408,026 for 89 Navy aircrew common ejection seats for F/A-18 series and EA-18G aircraft for the U.S. Navy (65) and Australia (24). In addition, this provides for associated hardware, equipment, technical data, and production support services for the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps ($18,803,335; 71 percent); NASA ($4,985; 0.2 percent); Australia ($6,866,956; 26 percent); Canada ($538,347; 2 percent); Switzerland ($154,525; .6 percent); and Malaysia ($39,878; .2 percent).

Northrop Grumman received $24,964,058 for 119 H-1 upgrade tech refresh mission computers for the UH-1Y and AH-1Z aircraft for the U.S. Marine Corps.

Overhaul Support Services LLC received $7,469,306 for the Drag Brace Landing for the Blackhawk (minimum 300; maximum 1,224).

Raytheon received $50,121,721 for sixteen APY-10 radar kits for P-8A Poseidon aircraft. This also provides installation and checkout technical support, configuration management, reliability and maintainability failure reporting and corrective actions, engineering change orders/proposals, integrated logistics, technical data, and sundry repairs.

Rockwell Collins Inc. received $6,587,938 for AN/ARC-210(V) electronic radios and ancillary equipment for a variety of aircraft. Equipment includes (14) C-12561A/ARCs; (46) MT-6567/ARCs; (15) MT-7006/ARCs; (14) AM-7526/ARCs; (14) MX-11745/ARCs; (2) communication security reprogramming kits; (2) C-12561A reprogramming kits, and (66) RT-1990(C)/ARCs.

Sikorsky Aircraft received $1,244,677,064 for the engineering and manufacturing development phase of the Presidential Helicopter Replacement program. This provides for six test aircraft and the associated support equipment, integration of mature government-defined mission systems, a training system including a flight training device and a maintenance training device, logistics, engineering, and test and evaluation support.

Sikorsky Aircraft received $143,381,783 to procure 13 Army UH-60M Black Hawk helicopters.

Sikorsky Aircraft receive $24,000,000 to realign the funding between FY2014 advance procurement funds and the planned aircraft production funds for FY2015, with no change to the UH-60 or HH-60 contract price.

Sikorsky Aircraft received $7,920,664 for Aircraft Mine Counter Measure Removable Mission Equipment B Kits in support of the MH-60S aircraft.

Ultra Flightline Systems received $9,990,280 for gyroscopes which support helicopter flight controls. This was a sole source acquisition.

United States Technologies, Inc. received $19,122,236 for hardware and modification services for the development, integration, and operational support of countermeasure and emitter threat simulator systems for the Airborne Threat Simulation Organization.

OSPREY

National Technologies Associates Inc. received $6,567,668 for engineering/logistics and acquisition logistics support to the V-22 Joint Program Office.

Northrop Grumman received $17,969,104 for engineering on the MV-22 Integrated Aircraft Survivability Equipment Suite upgrade, including integration of the AN/AAQ-24(V)25 software with an electronic warfare controller and the MV-22 mission computer.

Rolls-Royce received $8,021,387 for Mission CareTM support for the CV-22 AE1107C engine, including lower power engine removals.

AEGIS

Lockheed Martin received $54,706,543 to incrementally fund the Aegis Platform Systems Engineering Agent (PSEA) activities and Aegis Modernization Advanced Capability Build engineering. The PSEA manages the in-service combat systems configurations as well as the integration of new or upgraded capability into the CG57 class and the DDG 51 class.

Teradyne, Inc. received $6,975,538 for automated test system hardware and software to test circuit card assemblies for the MK41 Vertical Launch System program.  This was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1), as implemented by FAR 6.302-1.

LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP (LCS)

Astro Machine Works Inc. received $25,162,500 for the delivery of gun weapon systems (GWS) components in support of the battle management systems programs.

HART Technologies received $32,182,700 for rapid prototype development, hardware fabrication, hardware/software for prototype or prototype pre-production units and kits in support of the Battle Management Systems, Dragon Spear, and Littoral Combat Ship programs.

Leebcor Services, LLC received $13,799,474 for the construction of the LCS Logistics Support Facility at Naval Station Mayport.

Northrop Grumman received $20,917,239 to provide integration services for mission packages that will deploy from and integrate with the LCS. “The Navy’s plan is to use continuous evaluation of system maturity through a disciplined system engineering framework to improve mission capability in identified mission areas. LCS mission packages will be optimized for flexibility in the littorals.”

NAVAL CONTRACTS

AAR Airlift Group, Inc. received $6,922,160 to provide ship-based and shore-based vertical replenishment and other rotary-wing logistic services (search and rescue support, medical evacuations, passenger transfers, internal cargo movement, and dynamic interface testing) in support of Commander, Naval Air Forces Command. AAR Airlift Group, Inc., will provide helicopters, personnel, support equipment, and all supplies necessary to perform flight operations for the U.S. 5th and 7th Fleets.

BAE Systems received $12,361,701 for USS Mason (DDG 87) FY2014 maintenance, alterations, and modifications to upgrade the ship’s military and technical capabilities.

BAE Systems received $7,137,528 for the MK 45 5” gun system design agent services and waterfront/pierside support. BAE Systems will provide engineering, technical, logistics services and technical data to support the MK 45 5” gun system design, development, fabrication, production, operation and integration. This was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C 2304(c)(1) and FAR 6.302-1.

BAE Systems received $11,344,264 for depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications that will update and improve the USS Bulkeley’s (DDG 84) military and technical capabilities.

BAE Systems received $30,801,080 for USS Stout (DDG 55) maintenance, alterations, and modifications that will update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities.

Bechtel Plant Machinery Inc. received $17,792,893 for naval nuclear propulsion components.

Colonna’s Shipyard, Inc. received $13,262,660 for docking phased maintenance availability to include drydocking, hull plating replacement, propulsion engine removal and habitability onboard USS Zephyr (PC 8).

Conrad Shipyard LLC received $8,537,720 to lengthen NASA’s barge Pegasus.

Earl Industries L.L.C. received $23,238,392 for USS Hue City (CG 66) maintenance, including structural damage and aluminum welding. This also covers repairs to the superstructure, including the main propulsion gas turbine intake. This was not competitively procured – 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(3).

Entwistle Co. received $7,807,698 for torpedo and submarine wire coils.

General Atomics received $26,607,250 for Advanced Arresting Gear and Electromagnetic Aircraft Launch System long-lead time materials in support of the CVN 79 full production. This was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

General Dynamics received $9,048,214 for non-nuclear submarine repair work on Groton-based submarines under the New England Maintenance Manpower Initiative (NEMMI). This was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Huntington Ingalls received $12,168,588 for DDG 51 class follow yard services (FYS), which provide engineering, technical, material procurement and production support; configuration; class flight upgrades and new technology support; data & logistics management; lessons learned analysis; post-delivery tests and trials; post-shakedown availability support; reliability and maintainability; system safety program support; material and fleet turnover support; shipyard engineering team; turnkey; crew indoctrination, design tool/design standardization, detail design development, and other technical and engineering analyses for the purpose of supporting DDG 51 class ship construction and tests and trials.

Lockheed Martin received $31,777,262 for production of nine TB-37/U Multi-Function Towed Array (MFTA) production units, tow cables, electro-optical slip rings, drogues, and shipping products and the performance of engineering services.

Lockheed Martin received $23,649,192 for systems engineering and integration in support of Submarine Warfare Federated Tactical Systems. These services include requirements synthesis, technical performance parameter derivation, test and validation, and configuration management and control of the submarine fleet electronic interface database.

ManTech Systems received $8,852,349 to provide specific systems operation, sustainment and support services for the Navy Ship Maintenance & Logistics Information Systems (SMLIS) program. This was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Oceaneering International, Inc. received $8,941,224 for Advanced Mooring System (AMS) Phase III Development. The Office of Naval Research is interested in a technology designed to develop skin-to-skin mooring capabilities for the Navy because there is a need to quickly and safely moor lightweight hull connectors and high-flare container ships to the mobile landing platform in high sea states.

PAE Applied Technologies LLC received $20,712,232 for approximately 228,767 hours of range engineering and operations/maintenance services to the Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Divisions’ Atlantic Test Range and Atlantic Targets and Marine Operations Division.

Raytheon received $115,545,116 for MK15 Phalanx Close-In Weapon System (CIWS) upgrades and conversions, system overhauls and associated hardware.

Raytheon received $10,271,042 for the execution of Phase II CVN 78 Dual Band Radar, test and evaluation engineering support at the Raytheon IDS Software Development Laboratory and Wallops Island Engineering Test Center Land Based Test Site.

Raytheon received $11,014,015 for five AN/USG-3B Cooperative Engagement Capability (CEC) Airborne Systems. Sechan Electronics Inc. received $8,734,680 for production of Signal Data Processor – Sierra (SDP-S) assemblies in support of the Cooperative Engagement Capabilities (CEC) program. The SDP-S assemblies provide an open architecture assembly to the CEC systems using commercial-off-the-shelf components. The SDP-S provides the core of the CEC system providing processing capability. The SDP-S assemblies are used on CEC shipboard, airborne and land mobile platforms to provide a composite network picture.

Textron received $190,065,670 for 361 sensor fuzed weapons, seven trainers and 18 wind corrected munitions dispenser tail kits. This involves some FMS to South Korea.

Timken Gears & Services Inc. received $13,963,212 for a DDG 51 class main reduction gear assembly. The main reduction gear is the set of gears that transmit the power from two main propulsion power turbines to the propulsion shaft. Each DDG 51 class destroyer has two gear sets, one for each propulsion shaft.

Tyonek Services Corp. received $17,302,958 for depot level maintenance support services for the Fleet Readiness Center South East. 

Ultra Electronics Ocean Systems Inc. received $19,045,850 to manufacture parts for the Torpedo Countermeasures program. This was a sole source in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

VEHICLES

BAE Systems received $16,098,318 for V903 engines for Paladin integrated management LRIP vehicles.

BAE Systems and SAIC received $27,796,449 for the design and development services to improve the force protection of the Marine Corps Legacy Assault Amphibious Vehicle Personnel Carrier Variant Platform.

Fidelity Technologies Corp. received $8,008,925 for armor kits for the Heavy Mobility Tactical Truck A4 and M915A5.

Global Ground Support LLC received $38,073,233 for roughly 52 truck mounted deicers and 22 extended reach deicers.

IBIS TEK LLC received $17,990,222 for armored 58-gallon and 78-gallon B-Kits for the family of medium tactical vehicles (MTV). Oshkosh Corp. received $21,832,417 to add 100 Family of Medium Tactical Vehicles (FMTV) — 88 for the U.S. Army Reserve and 12 for Jordan.

Kyrish Government Group received $16,421,974 for automotive parts and maintenance hardware items.

Northrop Grumman received $27,345,564 for point-of-presence A-Kits (maximum #: 111) and soldier network extension A-Kits (maximum #: 525). A-Kits are a critical component of the network vehicle integration upgrade for the MRAP A-ATV.

Veyance Technologies, Inc. received $67,113,566 for vehicle track shoe assemblies. This is a sole-source acquisition.

CLOTHING

Burlington Apparel received $19,500,000 and $13,633,200 for Army poly/wool cloth.

Tullahoma Industries LLC. received $59,389,738 for ACU trousers.

GEAR & EQUIPMENT

ALCOA Automotive received $39,359,234 for 800 firing platforms to support M119A3 howitzer modernization.

Alliant Techsystems Operations LLC received $31,643,010 for 120 mm tank training ammunition. General Dynamics received $37,645,020 for M865 recapitalization cartridges for 120mm tank training ammunition.

Allied Tube & Conduit Corporation received $6,670,408 for razor wire. Cobra Systems, Inc. received $6,670,408 for razor wire.

American Rheinmetall Munitions Inc. received $6,797,433 for 34,762 grenades (66mm, smoke screening infra-red vehicle-launched) and first article test. Work will be performed in Germany.

BAE Systems received $444,812,310 for Individual and Enhanced Night Vision Goggle III weapons sights. DRS RSTA Inc. received $367,035,238 for Individual and Enhanced Night Vision Goggle III weapon sights.

Colt Defense LLC received $6,750,000 for breech bolt assemblies for the M16 rifle and M4 carbine.

FN Manufacturing, LLC received $18,268,158 for machine gun barrels.

General Dynamics received $12,743,632 for explosive cartridges (100,000); explosive d 5″ – (10,521); explosive d dye filled (5,163); improved conventional munitions (34,436); medium caliber – (1,116,122); and fuses (999,940).

Hoffman Engineering Corp. received $6,700,857 to manufacture/deliver up to 80 night vision goggle infrared test sets and up to 200 test set upgrade kits. This is the result of a sole-source acquisition. FMS orders (unclassified) are anticipated to be issued as part of this contract, but the specific FMS countries and purchase amounts have yet to be determined.

Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace received $37,000,000 for depot support for the CROWS. Kongsberg Defense & Aerospace received $49,683,100 for an additional quantity of M153 CROWS. 

Northrop Grumman received $15,890,745 to provide continued supplies, services and maintenance for the counter-rocket artillery mortar (C-RAM) command and control system.

Peckham Vocational Industries, Inc. received $18,905,472 for services to the Organizational Clothing and Individual Equipment (OCIE) Central Management Office to establish a national repair system to evaluate, clean and repair unserviceable, but economically repairable OCIE.

Phillystran Inc. received $21,258,655 for aramid rope. Whitehill Manufacturing Corp. received $6,741,345 for aramid rope.

Vinyl Technology received $9,287,082 to manufacture and deliver of advanced technology anti-gravity suit.

SPACE

Lockheed Martin received $41,206,525 for the Highly Elliptical Orbit (HEO) transition to operations. This funding will help add HEO-4 launch and early on-orbit test (LEOT) capabilities to the HEO-3 LEOT baseline. Work will occur in Sunnyvale and Azusa, CA; Boulder, Aurora, and Colorado Springs, CO.

Lockheed Martin received $20,000,000 for planning and production parts (including hinges, valves, structures and special test equipment) to support Space-Based Infrared Systems (SBIRS) Geosynchronous Earth Orbit (GEO) 5&6 satellite production.

Lockheed Martin received $7,400,000 to generate simulation scenarios in support of Air Force Operational Test & Evaluation Center’s initial operational test and evaluation at SBIRS Engineering and Manufacturing Development, Block 20. Work will be performed at Sunnyvale and Azuza, CA.

Raytheon received $22,000,000 for software coding and security on military GPS user equipment. Rockwell Collins received $20,022,313 for software coding and security on the military GPS user equipment contract.

CYBER, IT & COMMS

CGI Federal Inc. received $7,788,744 to extend computer network defense and information assurance labor until the re-compete can be awarded. This will continue protection of the computer systems at the Pentagon and the National Capital Region.  Work is to be performed at Ft. Belvoir, VA.

Exelis Systems Corp. received $143,100,534 for operations and maintenance support of Title X communications equipment and information systems under the Network Enterprise Technology Command (Army), 160th Signal Brigade and its subordinate units in southwest Asia. Work will be performed in Kuwait, Afghanistan and Bahrain.

Force 3, Inc. received $10,518,147 for the upgrade and maintenance support of Marine Corps outer routers.

Global Technical Systems Inc. received $84,900,000 for production of the Common Processing System (CPS), spares and associated engineering services. The CPS is a computer processing system based on an open architecture design. CPS consists of the enclosure assembly and three subsystems: the processing subsystem, the storage/extraction subsystem, and the input/output subsystem. It is intended to support the computer requirements of various Navy combat systems. GTS will provide for production, testing and delivery of CPS (both water cooled and air cooled), spares, and associated engineering services.

Graybar Electric Company Inc. received $18,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations for Southwest zone 1 region of the United States. This was a sole-source acquisition. SAIC received $21,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations for Southwest zone 2 region of the U.S. This was a sole-source acquisition. SAIC received $15,800,000 for maintenance, repair and operations for the Hawaii region. This contract was a sole-source acquisition.

ICF Inc. received $49,983,761 to support to the Army Research Laboratory Cyber Network Defense Research & Services.

Jacobs Technology Inc. received $60,430,781 for engineering and technology acquisition support, which consists of disciplined systems/specialty engineering and technical/information assurance services, support, and products using established government, contractor, and industry processes. This was a sole-source acquisition. This involves some FMS to Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Jordan, Australia and Taiwan. Jacobs Technology Inc. received $23,547,235 for the same work, which will take place at Hanscom, Lackland, Schreiver, Eglin, and Wright-Patterson AFBs. This is the result of a sole source acquisition. This includes some FMS to Oman and Taiwan. Jacobs Technology, Inc. received $21,487,699 for the same work, which will take place at Hanscom, Lackland, Maxwell, and Wright-Patterson AFBs. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $14,220,326 to operate and sustain the National Cyber Range capability which is designed to allow potentially virulent code to be introduced and studied on the range without compromising the range itself.

Long Wave Inc.; SiteMaster Inc.; and Shape Construction Inc. received a collective $45,000,000 for construction services on specialized antennas, towers, and communication facilities at Navy installations worldwide. This includes $669,794 for SiteMaster to extend top-load radials at the Naval Radio Transmitting Facility, Aguada, Puerto Rico.

Matrix Research Corp. received $36,027,000 for R&D to address problems of concurrent detection, tracking, imaging, and classification/identification of targets within contested and challenging environments. This will include the development of models, hardware, software, algorithms and techniques spanning basic, applied and advanced research for both active and passive sensing.

Mythics Inc. received $11,041,269 to provide Program Manager Warfighter Information Network-Tactical software maintenance/support under license from Oracle.

Softchoice Corp. received $42,557,745; $17,487,675; and $15,703,370 to procure Microsoft software licenses and support, known as software assurance.

Verizon received $10,567,483 for the Priority Telecommunication Service to support the DHS Office of Emergency Communications. This is a sole-source award pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

VIASAT, INC. received $30,641,786 for Enhanced Bandwidth Efficient Modem (EBEM) production and support to include: (1) fabrication and production delivery of: a. MD-1366(U) Strategic EBEM; b. MD-1366A(U), tactical EBEM; c. ethernet service expansion module; (2) post production software support; (3) hardware maintenance repair; (4) potential capabilities enhancement(s) via engineering change proposals.

MISSILES, BOMBS, ROCKETS

BAE Systems received $7,145,241 for logistics in support of the Common Missile Warning System (CMWS). BAE Systems received $447,051,113 for the acquisition of CMWS and associated spare parts. This includes systems engineering, technical, and logistics support services for both CMWS and Advanced Threat Infrared Countermeasures (ATIRCM).

Boeing received $7,300,000 to remanufacture 77 air launched cruise missile warhead arming devices. This is a sole source acquisition.

Edifice-Schlosser JV received $17,891,000 for the Joint Land Attack Cruise Missile Defense Elevated Netted Sensor System. Work will be performed at Aberdeen Proving Ground.

Lockheed Martin received $10,281,531 for MK 41 Vertical Launching System (VLS) electrical design agent, technical and engineering services for the U.S. Navy (96.3 percent) and Japan (3.7 percent). This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(1), as implemented by FAR 6.302-1.

Lockheed Martin received $10,330,445 for systems engineering joint air to surface standoff missile baseline and extended range program support.

Northrop Grumman received $37,974,775 for logistics support and engineering services to the Joint Tactical Ground Station (JTAGS) system Block 1 fielded units as well as associated exerciser and institutional training suites. Work will be performed in Colorado Springs, CO.

Raytheon received $38,401,383 for SM-2 and SM-6 engineering and technical services. This includes the following FMS nations: The Netherlands (1.7 percent), Taiwan (1.7 percent), Japan (1.4 percent), Germany (1 percent), South Korea (1 percent), Australia (.7 percent), and Spain (.2 percent).

EDUCATION & TRAINING

Alatec, Inc. received $7,689,231 for analytic mission support services to the U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) Analysis Center at White Sands Missile Range.

Armtec Countermeasures Co. received $29,900,000 for the manufacture of the simulator, flare, and SM-875/ALE (a training flare used to familiarize pilots and ordnance techs with use and handling).

Complete Parachute Solutions, Inc. received $21,717,415 to provide training and technical support for the Multi-Mission Parachute Course (MMPC). The contractor will train “non-military free-fall qualified Marines in military free-fall and parachuting techniques.” This is sole-source procurement, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1), implemented by FAR 6.302-1(a)(2)(iii)(B).

Northrop Grumman; Booz Allen Hamilton; Capstone Corp.; SAIC; Lockheed Martin; General Dynamics; and MacAulay-Brown Inc. received a cumulative $876,934,815 for Joint Force Development program support for training and real-world ops by offering varying combinations of education/academics, training assessment, experimentation (warfighting solutions), and infrastructure as the foundation of learning.

CBRNE

Camber Corp. received $49,000,000 for incident response systems logistics support for the Marine Corps in support of the Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear team.

FUEL & ENERGY

Foster Fuels Inc. received $853,187,052 for fuel for DHS and FEMA.

Georgia Power Company received $11,169,322 for electrical services for Ft. Gordon.

Meggitt (Rockmart), Inc. received $7,600,327 for aircraft fuel cells.

Nolin Rural Electric Cooperative received $10,412,675 for one year of electrical distribution system services. 

Olsson Industrial Electric received $34,990,238 to replace the 4160/480 volt station service electrical system at McNary Lock and Dam, Umatilla, Oregon.

 Phillips 66 Company received $9,407,144 for fuel and delivery service to Altus AFB. Phillips 66 Company received $7,218,029 for fuel and delivery service to Tinker AFB.

Shell Marine Products US received $14,953,192 for the supply and related services of lubricant oil products for the Engineering Directorate of the Military Sealift Command and other government agencies. 

Value Recovery Holding LLC received $10,418,747 for support services to the Army Energy Initiative Task Force.

MEDICAL

Allied Joint Venture received $20,000,000 for medical, dental, hospital, and surgical supplies.

Beacon Point Associates received $8,000,000 for medical surgical items.

Bowers + Kubota Consulting received $9,800,000 to provide management and technical support for Army Pacific Regional Medical Command.

CasePro Inc.; Professional Performance Development Group Inc.; Chesapeake Educational Services; and InGenesis Arora Healthcare LLC received a cumulative $70,000,000 for physician services. These were sole-source requirements in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Digirad Corporation received $10,923,649; ICAD, Inc. received $12,000,000; and Invivo Corporation received $11,788,948 for radiology systems, subsystems and components.

Fisher Scientific Company LLC received $120,000,000 for the selection of distributor who will use the electronic catalog program to make laboratory supplies available for purchase.

Genentech USA Inc. received $56,638,585 for pharmaceutical products in support of the Corporate Exigency Contract Program.

Henry Schein Inc. received $348,000,000 for dental supplies.

Oceanic Medical Products, Inc. received $50,000,000 for anesthesia systems, related components and accessories.

Rochester Optical received $19,080,028 for the selection of a manufacturer for the optical electronic catalog program and to make various optical frames available for purchase.

Stemnion, Inc. received $9,894,778 to provide R&D services in support the Naval Medical Research Center’s cellular combat wound initiative.

TQM Inc.; Lighthouse for the Blind; and MSGI Corp. received $45,000,000 to supply complete medical, surgical, pharmaceutical, dental, laboratory, veterinary equipment and materiel sets for the U.S. Army medical units, non-medical and medical support programs.

TRANSPORTATION 

Berenfield Containers, Inc. received $6,500,000 for steel shipping and storage drums.

DRS-Sustainment Systems Inc. received $19,574,481 for the Halvorsen 25K aircraft cargo loader contractor logistics support program. This supports 443 Tunner aircraft cargo loaders at over 166 worldwide locations.

Paramount Packaging received $18,000,000 for tote boxes used in shipping.

ENVIRONMENTAL

Battelle Memorial Institute received $30,000,000 for environmental restoration projects at various activities in NAVFAC Northwest.

Bethel/ERRG JV; EA Engineering, Science & Technology Inc.; and Environmental Compliance Consultants received a cumulative $30,000,000 for environmental quality services at various locations, primarily within Alaska.

General Dynamics received $12,683,602 for the demilitarization and disposal of 78,000 depleted uranium rounds.

Onopa/Dorado JV; Conquistador Dorado JV; Xperts Inc.; Coastal/QRI JV; and TFR Enterprise Inc. received a cumulative $580,000,000 for advanced contracting initiative debris management services for the U.S. and its territories (a small business set-aside contract).

FOOD SERVICES

Gaithersburg Farmers Supply Inc. received $87,500,000 for procurement of agricultural equipment.

Labatt Food Service received $49,500,000 for food and beverages.

Produce Source Partners received $36,000,000 for fruit and vegetables. Rohrer Brothers received $7,759,504 for fruit and vegetables.

US Foods, Inc. received $67,635,644 for food distribution.

BASE SUPPORT & LOGISTICS

Boeing received $13,500,000 for gap or transition coverage for national stock numbers items. This will allow for the supply chain to remain intact during the transition (to performance based items), ensuring uninterrupted support to the customer.

CACI Inc.; ECS Federal Inc.; and Centurum Information Technology Inc. received $32,578,210 to provide comprehensive program management support for strategic planning, change management, business process re-engineering for personnel and pay processes, business architecture development and support services, functional data management and governance support, and functional data quality management for the Bureau of Naval Personnel-Navy Personnel and Pay Modernization effort.

CH2M Hill Constructors, Inc. received $15,044,771 for furniture, fixtures and equipment for the Naval Sea Systems Command Headquarters Recovery Restoration at Naval Support Activity Washington.

EJB Facilities Services received $12,132,429 for base operations support at various installations in the NAVFAC Northwest. Work provides for, but is not limited to, all management and administration, visual services, security, housing, facilities support (excluding grounds and janitorial services), pavement clearance, utilities, vehicles and equipment, and environmental services.

Ernst & Young LLP received $21,786,077 to help the “assistant secretary of the Army for financial management and comptroller who requires audit preparation services to include personnel, equipment, supplies, facilities, transportation, tools, materials, supervision, and other items and non-personal services necessary to assist the Army in achieving auditability of the four general fund annual financial statements through improvements in the supporting financial systems, Army financial management processes, effective internal controls and supporting documentation.”

Information Management Resources Inc. received $8,500,000 to provide financial, administrative, logistical and technical services for operation and management integration of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Engineer Research & Development Center Environmental Laboratory in Vicksburg, Mississippi.

Northrop Grumman received $24,997,000 to continue key and essential logistics service support requirements at the Joint Readiness Training Center, Ft. Polk. One bid was solicited and one received.

SRA International received $17,802,501 for enterprise operations and security services, and information technology services, for the Army National Guard. One bid was solicited and one received.

CONSTRUCTION

Archer Western Aviation Partners received $143,727,000 for construction of a three-bay general maintenance hangar, two-bay corrosion control/fuel cell hangar, general purpose hangar, and aircraft parking apron at McConnell AFB.

Artesian Contracting Company, Inc. received $45,000,000; ESA South, Inc. received $45,000,000; S&M & Associates Inc. received $45,000,000; and T. L. Wallace Construction, Inc. received $45,000,000 for temporary roof repairs (residential structures) in support of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers/FEMA disaster response.

Blinderman Construction Co. received $11,356,438 for the renovation of Historical Building 211, Ft. Riley.

CDG Engineers received $9,000,000 for architectural and engineering services for civil works and support for other agencies for the St. Louis, Rock Island, and St. Paul Districts, the Mississippi Valley Division, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, or in other CONUS areas as needed.

C&N Universe Inc. received $7,200,590 for organizational level maintenance and repairs, service call repairs and operational support services for the Commander, Pacific Fleet Berthing and Messing Barge Program. Some work will be performed in: Yokosuka, Japan (7 percent); Sasebo, Japan (5.35 percent); and Guam (5 percent).

dck-ecc pacific guam, LLC received $53,728,000 for design and construction of an aircraft maintenance hangar for the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing at Andersen AFB in Yigo, Guam.

E-Corp; Mac Electric, Inc.; Mirador Enterprises, Inc.; Applied Construction Technologies; Engineering Construction Services LLC; Dawn Inc.; and McTech Corp. JV received a cumulative $12,800,000 for design and construction requirements (except military construction). This will consist of general construction categories in a broad range of maintenance, repair, minor and/or new construction for the Air Force Nuclear Weapons Center/PZIC. Work will be performed at Kirtland AFB and related sites.

Guam MACC Builders JV received $42,393,740 for construction of 28 modular storage magazines at the U.S. naval base in Santa Rita, Guam.

HGL Construction, Inc. received $10,000,000 for military and civil works construction within the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Southwestern Division.

InSynergy Engineering Inc. received $7,500,000 for architect-engineer services for various utility systems and energy studies at various locations in NAVFAC Pacific.

Jensen Construction Co. received $9,294,000 for control structure replacement for the Des Moines River Basin, Saylorville Lake Big Creek Diversion Dam, Polk County, Iowa.

Kipper Tool Co. received $85,010,115 for 401 hydraulic electric pneumatic petroleum operated equipment tools and special application tools for engineering tasks.

M. A. Mortenson Co. received $7,262,015 to increase the apron for aircraft maintenance hangar/apron/classrooms and combat aircraft loading area addition at MCAS New River. Specifically, this involves expanding the parking apron and relocating the wash rack for the parking apron.

MEB General Contractors received $8,433,000 for construction services to alter the KC-46A apron fuels distribution system, including supporting facilities, and to relocate fuel vents/valves at the 3-bay hangar and 2-bay hangars at McConnell AFB.

MN-FST JV received $30,000,000 for waterfront civil design and engineering services in NAVFAC Atlantic.

MOCA Systems Inc. received $7,000,000 to support construction management activities for the Mobile District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Mohawk Northeast, Inc. received $7,459,500 for breakwater repairs.

NAN-Samsung LLC received $69,749,203 for construction of the Combat Aviation Brigade Complex, Phase 2, Wheeler Army Airfield, Oahu, HI. 

Okland /Geneva JV received $19,481,987 for the construction of a fuselage trainer building on Cannon AFB.

Pacchiosi Drill USA received $9,232,436 for American River Common Features, Sites R7 and L7, to construct cutoff walls using the jet grout method along the waterside slope of the levee in Sacramento, CA.

Treen Box & Pallet Corp. and Cutter Lumber Products received a cumulative $48,000,000 for wooden pallets.

TSS-Garco JV received $7,716,000 for the construction of multi-purpose machine gun range PN54106 at the Yakima Training Center, WA.

Walbridge Aldinger Co. received $21,550,080 for construction of a CH-53K helicopter maintenance training facility and Regional Communication Station (RCS) at MCAS New River.

Watterson Construction Co. received $44,334,530 for the design and construction of the mechanical-electrical building, missile field number one in Ft. Greely, Alaska.

Weldin Construction, LLC received $10,000,000 for Simplified Acquisition of Base Engineer Requirements for a broad range of maintenance, repair, and minor construction work. Work will be performed at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson.

DREDGING

Dutra Dredging Co. received $8,000,000 for dredge rental with attendant plant and operations for maintenance dredging of the Mobile harbor channel, AL.

Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. received $17,731,250 for shore protection from hurricane and storm damage. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. received $25,376,872 for dredging the main channel of the Delaware River.

 

# # # #

*Editing consolidated similar contracts. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

**Any clerical errors are the editors alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous months DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

***To avoid competitive bidding, DOD invokes 10 U.S.C. 2304, FAR 6.302, and FAR 8.405-6. DOD also invokes 15 U.S.C. 638 to avoid competitive bidding when dealing with small businesses.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst,is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.

BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for June 2014

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DOD Spent $34,247,537,088+ on 276 Individual Contracts in June 2014

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $34,247,537,088 on 276 individual contracts during June 2014.

RECONNAISSANCE & REMOTELY PILOTED MACHINES

AAI Corp. received $22,474,050 to investigate, integrate, test and field Shadow improvements in the following areas: Air Vehicle (AV) fuel system; Engine Control Unit communications; Universal Ground Data Terminal reliability; Tactical Automatic Landing System multipath; AV GPS card initialization; Manned-to-Unmanned Teaming (MUM-T) technology insertions; Automated/electronic operator checklists implementation; and 2kW generator replacement.

General Atomics received $15,293,442 for the MQ-9 Fuel Bladder Retrofit Kits, Time Compliance Technical Orders (TCTO) and initial spares. This is for certified O-level TCTO to enable the removal of existing Aero Tech Labs fuel bladders and installation of the new fuel bladders on Reaper Block 1 aircraft. This funding also covers O-level retrofit hardware kits, updates existing technical orders and manuals, produces/delivers initial retrofit spares with the components of the respective fuel bladder retrofit kits. This is a sole-source acquisition. 

Navmar Applied Sciences Corp. received $7,958,350 for logistic services and mission travel for the TigerShark. Work will be performed in Afghanistan (92 percent), and Warminster, PA (8 percent).

Northrop Grumman received $8,465,734 for engineering and software sustainment on the Fire Scout (MQ-8B). Work will be performed in San Diego, CA.

Northrop Grumman received $61,326,794 for operations and maintenance services in support of the Broad Area Maritime Surveillance – Demonstrator (BAMS-D). This funding will cover logistics; organization, intermediate, and depot level maintenance; and field service representatives.

Northrop Grumman received $63,070,969 for Phase II continuation of post-demonstration activities in support of the Navy Unmanned Combat Air System program. This includes: continued X-47B aircraft systems, test bed and flight test support on shore and carrier detachments, continued development of Fleet Concepts of Operations, maintenance, lab and test bed operational support and continued flight test opportunities. 

Northrop Grumman received $89,663,365 for Battlefield Airborne Communications Node (BACN) E-11A and EQ-4B payload operation and support. Northrop Grumman will perform comprehensive tasks and provide personnel, facilities and material necessary to successfully maintain and support BACN E-11A and EQ-4B aircraft payload operations and support equipment. The BACN aircraft fleet consists of four E-11A aircraft located at Kandahar Air Field, Afghanistan, and three EQ-4B Block 20 aircraft located overseas at undisclosed locations.

Raytheon received $19,679,000 for Multi-Spectral Targeting Systems (MTS-C) and provision item order spares for Navy special projects aircraft. The MTS-C is an airborne, electro-optic, forward-looking, infrared, turreted sensor system, which provides long-range surveillance.

Record Steel & Construction, Inc. received $14,922,700 for building a 48,000 square foot training facility for remote piloted aircraft operators at Nellis AFB.

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES – Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations.

Airborne Systems North America of California, Inc. received $8,099,431 to provide India, Jordan, Moldova and Romania with: 37 T-11 personnel parachute systems, eight T-11 spare parts packages, 825 MC-6 personnel parachutes, and eight MC-6 spare parts packages.

Boeing received $135,173,889 to provide Saudi Arabia with Apache post-production support. Work will be performed in Saudi Arabia (80 percent) and Mesa, AZ (20 percent).

Exelis, Inc. received $9,647,241 for a Ground Control Approach System (GCA) in support of Saudi Arabia’s National Guard at Khasham Al An airbase.

Exelis Inc. received $15,262,451 for the design, engineering analysis, program, manufacture and test of the universal exciter upgrade to support the AN/ALQ 99 tactical jamming system used on the Prowler and the Growler. 90 percent of these funds are FMS to Australia. This was not competitively procured pursuant to the authority of 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Goodrich Corp. received two payments of $11,000,000 for PakistanDB-110 sustainment, which includes upgrade capabilities, spares, and support equipment. One of these is a sole-source acquisition.

Hawker Beechcraft Corp. received $7,851,932 to provide Iraq with one King Air 350 Extended Range aircraft.

L-3 Communications received $41,500,000 for procurement and modification of four ISR aircraft, training and spares “in support of the counterterrorism efforts in Yemen.”

L-3 Communications received $8,137,400 for ALR-69 Radar Warning Receiver (RWR) legacy system improvement program (LSIP) kits. L-3 will provide 110 LSIP kits to the Netherlands’ Air Force and 90 LSIP kits to Norway’s Air Force. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $11,638,343 for an engineering change proposal on the upgrade of 12 P-3C aircraft for Taiwan. Upgrades to the Link-11 and Advanced Tactical Data Link will provide high-speed computer-to-computer digital radio communications in high frequency and ultra-high frequency.

Northrop Grumman received $15,212,790 to repair Saudi Arabia’s AN/ALQ-135 Electronic Countermeasures System’s Band 3 and Bands 1&2 Traveling Wave Tubes. 

Rapiscan Systems, Inc. received $102,521,440 to provide Iraq with 80 Rapiscan Eagle M60‘s and contractor logistics support. One bid was solicited and one received.

Raytheon received $13,296,203 for the development of the drawings and specifications for the Joint Standoff Weapon (JSOW) C Block III variant for Saudi Arabia. This was not competitively procured, 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Raytheon received $391,540,645 for Tube Launched Optically Tracked Wireless Guided (TOW) Missiles. Some of these missiles are destined for Oman and Saudi Arabia.

Sikorsky Aircraft received $115,705,556 to provide Denmark with engineering and program support on the production and delivery of nine MH-60R aircraft.  

Sikorsky received $14,000,000 to incorporate the Engineering Change Proposal 4330AU into the MH-60R aircraft for Australia under the FMS Program. This order also includes the delivery of 22 Emergency Locator Transmitter kits.

LEGAL

Systems Research & Applications Corp. received $7,512,136 to assist with case preparation for Office of Military Commissions hearings for enemy combatants detained as a result of overseas contingency operations.

RECRUITMENT & RETENTION

Infused Solutions received $7,789,734 for administrative support for the U.S. Army Recruiting Command from July 1, 2014 through June 30, 2015.

AFGHANISTAN

A-T Solutions received $23,889,413 for Asymmetric Warfare Group (AWG) operations support. A-T will provide personnel, expertise and the skills in support of AWG’s mission to predict, mitigate, counter, and defeat asymmetric and emerging hybrid threats. Work will be performed at Ft. Meade.

MECTS Services, JV received $16,283,732 for logistics and spare/repair parts in support of the Persistent Ground Surveillance System (PGSS). Some work will be performed in Afghanistan (24 percent). 2013 Department of Homeland Security funds in the amount of $816,775 are obligated on this award.

Northrop Grumman received $6,990,140 for Rocket Artillery Mortar Warn Equipment for 2-44 Air Defense Artillery fielding six platoons. This involves some FMS to Afghanistan.

SENTEL Corp. received $53,514,853 for integrated logistics support for property accountability in the 401st Army Field Support Brigade (AFSB) in Afghanistan.

Vista Research, Inc. received $8,381,917 for upgrade and replacement of fielded Wide Area Surveillance Vista Radars and Processor Systems in support of the Army’s PGSS Program. Some work will be performed in Afghanistan (50 percent). This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

USSOCOM

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $18,009,823 for SOF personnel recovery aircraft materials, manufacturing and testing. A main aim is to extend the operational life of Air Force SOF and personnel recovery aircraft.

Sierra Nevada Corp. received $10,500,000 in support of U.S. Special Operations Command. This will allow ground-based forces to digitally provide overhead aircraft with Personal Location Information and designate targets digitally to on-board aircraft computer systems allowing pilots to see where friendly forces are located on the aircraft Common Operating Picture as well as the GPS location of the target. This is a sole-source acquisition.

USCENTCOM

Kellogg Brown & Root (KBR) received $22,142,994 for base operating support services at Isa Air Base, Bahrain and its outlying support sites including the Patriot Battery Site at Riffa, Bahrain. Work includes all management, supervision, labor, materials, and equipment necessary to perform services for general information, management and administration, galley, housing (bachelor/unaccompanied), facility support (investment, management, custodial, pest control, waste management, grounds maintenance and landscaping), electrical, wastewater, water and base support vehicles and equipment, and environmental. 

USAFRICOM

Kellogg, Brown & Root received $56,563,357 for base operation support services at Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti. Work provides for public safety (security operations, emergency management, and fire/emergency services), air operations, ordnance, supply operations, laundry services, morale welfare and recreation, galley (food services), housing (bachelor quarters), facility support (facilities investment, janitorial services, grounds maintenance, pest control, refuse collection, and roads), utilities (electrical generation, wastewater treatment, and water operations), base support vehicles equipment, and environmental services. Work will be performed in Djibouti (95 percent), and Manda Bay, Kenya (5 percent).

SES Government Solutions received $8,245,160 for commercial on-orbit transponders to support Ku-band communications for USAFRICOM and operations and sustainment support. Work will be performed at Ramstein Air Base and “the western portion of Africa.”

USPACOM

DynCorp received $37,859,396 to provide services for Philippines Operations Support for the Joint Special Operations Task Force – Philippines (JSOTF-P). The work to be performed provides for all labor, supervision, management, tools, materials, equipment, facilities, transportation, incidental engineering, and other items necessary to provide support services. Work will be performed in the Philippines.

USSOUTHCOM

URS Group, Inc. received $10,819,000 for seawater reverse osmosis treatment plant recapitalization at Guantánamo Bay. Work provides for removal and replacement of four of the six existing reverse osmosis process units (trains) and accompanying process equipment in the Windward Desalination Plant, the source water for Naval Station Guantanamo Bay. Design and construction includes construction sequencing to maintain system operations throughout, the addition of concrete piers and access platforms, connection to the existing seawater supply header, installation of transfer pumps, installation of a minimum of five pre-engineered equipment enclosures, installation of pre-engineered metal canopy over all new equipment, and extension of site electrical supply and utilities.

RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT

Alion Science and Technology; Battelle Memorial Institute; Booz Allen Hamilton; EOIR Technologies, Inc.; Georgia Tech Research Institute; MacAulay-Brown, Inc.; Mantech TSG-2 JV;  Prescient Edge Corporation; Strategic Analysis, Inc.; TASC, Inc.; URS Federal Services; and Wyle Laboratories, Inc. received a cumulative $3,000,000,000 for Defense Systems Technical Area Tasks (DS TATs). The DS TATs contracts will provide research, development, test and evaluation, and advisory and assistance services related to R&D efforts for technical area tasks within the Advanced Materials; Autonomous Systems; Directed Energy; Energetics; Military Sensing; Non-Lethal Weapons and Information Operations; Reliability, Maintainability, Quality, Supportability, and Interoperability; Survivability and Vulnerability; and Weapons Systems focus areas.

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $47,721,229 to design and develop system testing, evaluation processes and procedures and advanced manufacturing techniques for the Global Force Protection System (GFPS).

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $24,909,860 for Life Cycle Engineering, Prototyping, Sustainability, and Manufacturing Processes for the Rapid Fielding Directorate in Advanced Materials Manufacturing & Testing Information Analysis Center (AMMTIAC). AMMTIAC’s objective is to providing greater levels of protection to the most critical subsystems of combat platforms.

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $19,623,009 for Advanced Materials, Redesign and Testing for Support Equipment and Vehicles. Advanced Materials, Manufacturing & Testing Information Analysis Center (AMMTIAC) aims to analyze and assess fundamental material, manufacturing, and testing requirements to support extension of the operational life of the support equipment and vehicle fleet.

Dynamic Animation Systems, Inc. received $7,799,646 for Modeling Architecture for Technology, Research, Experimentation II Engineering Services. One bid was solicited with one received.

EastCor Engineering, LLC received $29,405,380 for Magnum Project advanced R&D and operational field-testing and assessments using novel sensor systems for enhanced target detection and location.

L-3 Communications received $13,384,687 to work on the wide area 6-degree payload critical design/flight for the Army Research Laboratory.

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) received $656,656,998 for the operation of the Lincoln Laboratory Federally Funded Research and Development Center in Lexington, Massachusetts.

DARPA

Aurora Flight Sciences Corporation received $10,457,663 to provide the personnel, equipment, materials, tools, facilities, and program management and technical effort to design, develop, integrate, test, and deliver the contractual requirements of the program for building two X-Plane aircraft. Sikorsky Aircraft received $10,043,483 for air-vehicle design to meet the objective of the DARPA VTOL experimental aircraft (X-Plane) program.

Ibis Biosciences, Inc. received $7,217,926 to develop the PUMA Biosensor system, which is a new point-of-care hand-held device suitable for use in the field with molecular diagnostics for screening viruses, respiratory pathogens and bio threats.  

JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER (JSF)

Lockheed Martin received $8,942,741 for 14 repeatable release holdback bars and common sustainment support of the F-35 LRIP 6 aircraft. Purchases: U.S. Air Force ($3,087,673; 34.5 percent); the U.S. Navy ($2,549,316; 28.5 percent); the U.S. Marine Corps ($1,543,837; 17.3 percent); and the international partners ($1,761,915; 19.7 percent).

Lockheed Martin received $18,369,619 for procurement and delivery of electronic components needed to support F-35 production, sustainment, and operations and maintenance requirements. Purchases: U.S. Air Force ($9,346,195; 51 percent); U.S. Navy ($7,135,231; 39 percent); and international partners ($1,888,193; 10 percent).

Lockheed Martin received $75,980,553 for 252 helmet mounted display systems in support of F-35 for the U.S. Navy ($33,541,274; 44 percent); the U.S. Air Force ($28,938,439; 38 percent); unnamed international partners ($10,103,656; 13 percent); Japan ($2,264,917; 3 percent); and Israel ($1,132,267; 2 percent).

Lockheed Martin received $90,914,168 to incorporate the updated system architecture into the original Diminishing Manufacturing Sources redesign activity for the Electronic Warfare System in support of the F-35 Lot VII for the U.S military and international partners.

Lockheed Martin received $122,099,075 for initial aircraft spares for the F-35. Some work will be in Warton, UK (20 percent). Purchases: USMC ($38,254,135; 31.3 percent); USAF ($27,890,266; 22.9 percent); U.S. Navy ($10,837,918; 8.9 percent), and international partners ($45,116,756; 27.8 percent).

United Technologies Corp. (Pratt & Whitney) received $113,379,349 for operations and maintenance, engineering sustainment, site activation, and depot activation work in support of LRIP Lot VIII F135 propulsion systems. Some work will be in Bristol, UK (12 percent). Purchases: USAF ($50,035,487; 44.1 percent); the U.S. Navy/Marine Corps ($50,381,959; 44.4 percent) and international partners ($12,961,903; 11.5 percent).

AIRCRAFT

Armtec Countermeasures Co. received $20,928,143 for the manufacture of chaff cartridges in support of the airborne chaff countermeasures for the U.S. Navy/USMC (60 percent), USAF (38 percent), Australia (1.8 percent) and UAE (.2 percent).

BAE Systems received $10,737,652 for the design, development, integration, test and evaluation, installation, fielding, certification, maintenance and logistics support of the cooperative identification, non-cooperative target recognition, air traffic control equipment, systems and subsystems. This was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

Boeing received $10,236,136 for an engineering change proposal for the 5th and 6th Receiver Channel Wiring in support of the AN/APG-79.

Boeing received $11,150,000 for E-3 Engineering Services. This is a sole source acquisition. A portion of this funding is for FMS to France, the UK, Saudi Arabia and NATO.

Boeing received $14,863,552 for work on the P-8A Poseidon Increment 3 Interface Development. This includes two Mission Systems Emulation Environment (MSEE) units with all required hardware, Tactical Open Mission software with P-8 baseline architecture interface data exposure modifications, interface adapter computer software configuration items, and P-8A real-time simulator and interactive warfare simulator. This also includes the development, documentation, and delivery of hardware and software updates for four MSEE units. Boeing received $19,857,582 for one spare P-8A CFM-56 engine and one spare engine “build-up unit” in support of the P-8A Multi-mission Maritime Aircraft. Boeing received $28,688,558 for design, development, fabrication, installation and testing of the airworthiness cabin equipment and support testing to the existing P-8A Test aircraft.

Boeing received $22,200,000 for production of F/A-18E/F Infrared Search and Track Engineering Development Model systems and support equipment.

Boeing received $1,939,160,819 for full rate production of 11 Lot 38 F/A-18E for the U.S. Navy and 33 EA-18G aircraft for the U.S. Navy (21) and Australia (12). This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). Purchases: U.S. Navy ($1,405,732,929; 72.7 percent) and Australia ($533,427,890; 27.3 percent).

EADS-NA received $14,436,295 for logistics support for the Utility Helicopter 72A Lakota

Exelis, Inc. received $9,647,241 for a Ground Control Approach System (GCA). This is a sole-source acquisition. 

General Electric received $644,165 for additional “aviation consumable items.”

King Aerospace, Inc. received $9,458,209 for logistics services in support of C-9B aircraft, including base operations, planned maintenance interval inspections and engine shop visits.

Kollsman Inc. received $56,887,669 to repair four weapons assemblies on the night targeting system upgrade on the AH-1W helicopter. Work will be performed in Merrimack, NH. This was non-competitive, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Lockheed Martin received $11,333,603 for the production kits in support of the MH-60R/S Point & Click Operator System Interface and Link-16 retrofit programs. This was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

Lockheed Martin received $222,923,464 for the C-5 Reliability Enhancement and Re-engining Program (RERP). This funding will install GE engines and 69 aircraft enhancements in order to extend the C-5M fleet life through 2040. A total of 11 C-5 aircraft will be modified with RERP to increase aircraft performance, payload capability & transportation throughput.

Lord Corporation received $12,404,463 for unique weapon system components and/or components for specific uses on multiple aircraft. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Northrop Grumman received $3,643,333,802 to “definitize” the E-2D Advanced Hawkeye advanced acquisition contract (N00019-13-C-9999) to a multi-year, fixed-price-incentive-firm target contract. In addition, this provides for the procurement of 25 full rate production E-2D Advanced Hawkeye aircraft.

Northrop Grumman received $10,266,560 for avionics source data for the future acquisition of depot-level operational test program sets. The avionics source data consists of a detailed functional description document package and system synthesis model report for each avionics unit under test in support of the E-2D Advanced Hawkeye aircraft. Northrop Grumman received $8,258,253 to repair 51 line items for the Advanced Hawkeye system used on the E-2D aircraft. Work will be performed in 17 distinct locations within the U.S. This is non-competitive in accordance with 10 U.S.C 2304(c)(1). Northrop Grumman received $6,700,000 for two spare engines in support of the E-2D Advanced Hawkeye. Work will be performed in Indianapolis, IN (90 percent) and Bethpage, NY (10 percent).

Northrop Grumman received $9,900,000,000 for B-2 modernization and sustainment. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Northrop Grumman received $8,363,501 for repair/engineering on the AN/ALQ-218(V)2 Tactical Jamming System at Naval Surface Warfare Center, Crane, Indiana. The AN/ALQ-218 is a SIGINT package used on E/A-18G and P-8A aircraft.

Parsons Government Support Services Inc. received $7,107,395 for continuation of ground support equipment maintenance from July 1, 2014 – June 30, 2015 at Robins AFB.

Raytheon received $14,899,999 to retrofit an infrared marker into the existing Advanced Targeting Forward Looking Infrared (ATFLIR) pods for the F/A-18 E/F aircraft.

Rockwell Collins received $7,694,320 for AN/ARC-210(V) Electronic Radios and ancillary equipment for a variety of aircraft.  This provides for 80 RT-1939(C)/ARCs and 80 994M-4 Link 11 Smart Mounts without Isolators. Rockwell Collins received $15,947,962 for the procurement of AN/ARC-210(V) electronic radios and ancillary equipment for a variety of aircraft. This also provides for 182 RT-1990(C)/ARCs and conversion of four RT-1939(C)s to RT-1990(C)s.

Rockwell Collins received $11,916,219 to upgrade the E-6B Mercury Weapon System Trainer.

The Ross Group Construction Corp. received $16,645,200 for the construction of the KC-46A Fuselage Trainer Flight Training Center and the Fuselage Trainer at Altus AFB.

Scientific Research Corp. received $7,831,864 for 163 Multi-Function Color Display units and associated technical data to support retrofit of MFCD units into T-45 aircraft.

Sikorsky received $1,277,618,606 for the initial engineering, manufacturing and development Combat Rescue Helicopter (CRH) program. The CRH program will replace the aging HH-60G Pave Hawk helicopter with new air vehicles, training systems, and product support required for the Personnel Recovery mission. The requirement is for 112 new air vehicles, but the contract has been structured to handle fluctuations in quantity. 

Textron (Bell Helicopter) received $8,102,691 and $7,907,537 for aircraft blade assemblies. These were a sole-source acquisition.

Textron Inc. (Bell Helicopter) received $44,667,969 to repair parts on the UH-1Y and AH-1Z. This was non-competitive, per 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(1).

OSPREY

Form Fit & Function, LLC received $9,809,330 to manufacture support equipment for the V-22, to include hub and blade stands, blade trailer adapters, restraint tools, and actuators.

Rolls-Royce received $9,479,821 for 13 low power MV-22 repairs under the Mission CareTM contract. Work will be performed in Oakland, CA.

Triumph Gear Systems received $55,775,371 to repair various parts (including the pylon conversion actuator) on the MV-22 and CV-22. Work will be performed in Park City, UT. This was non-competitive, per10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

AEGIS

Lockheed Martin received $57,863,799 for technical engineering, configuration management, associated equipment/supplies, quality assurance, information assurance, and other operation and maintenance efforts required for the Aegis development and test sites, including the Combat Systems Engineering Development Site, SPY-1A Test Facility, and the Naval Systems Computing Center.

Lockheed Martin received $10,607,674 to repair the AN/UYQ-70 advanced display system used for processor systems for tactical and C4I applications for target acquisition and tracking, weapons control, theater air defense, anti-submarine warfare, battle group comms, and airborne surveillance and control. One company was solicited non-competitively and one offer was received, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Millennium Engineering & Integration Co. received $7,528,016 to provide mission planning, test execution and operations, data analysis and reporting, software and hardware maintenance/upgrades, and communications and facilities engineering in support of Missile Defense Communications and Operations Node systems in support of the Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense Program. This was not competitively procured in accordance with FAR 6.302-1 (a)(2) and DFARS 206.302-1.

LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP (LCS)

General Dynamics received $11,715,565 for engineering and management efforts in support of the post-shakedown availability (PSA) for USS Coronado (LCS 4). Efforts will include program management, production supervision, temporary protection services and transportation services necessary to complete the PSA.

NAVAL CONTRACTS

Airborne Systems Ltd. received two payments of $7,750,856 for components in support of the MK 59 Mod 0 Decoy Launch System. 

BAE Systems received $7,882,132 and General Dynamics received $7,346,539 to understand the risks and assist in determining the best approach for developing a High Waterspeed Amphibious Combat Vehicle (ACV). BAE and GD will continue detailed trade studies, requirements studies, operational effectiveness analyses and initial concept design results as they relate to flexibility and modularity requirements and the impacts to derived system specification requirements.

BAE Systems received $9,270,465 for ship repairs, hull, machinery, electrical, electronics, ship alterations, and piping alteration as required on USS Carney (DDG-64). The primary focus is on structural repairs and habitability upgrades.

BAE Systems received $10,354,523 for a 58-calendar day regular overhaul and dry docking availability of USNS Wally Schirra (T-AKE 8).

BAE Systems received $15,060,606 for USS Ramage (DDG-61) FY2014 Selected Restricted Availability (SRA). This includes maintenance, alterations, and modifications to update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities. Work will be in Norfolk, VA.

BAE Systems received $14,772,006 for the planning and execution of depot-level maintenance, alterations and modifications that will update and improve USS Harpers Ferry’s (LSD 49) military and technical capabilities. Work will be in San Diego, CA.

BAE Systems received $20,524,009 for USS Decatur (DDG 73) FY2014 dry-docking selected restricted availability, which includes depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications that will update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities.

Earl Industries, LLC (doing business as General Dynamics NASSCO) received $19,802,857 for maintenance to include dry-docking, hull plating replacement, propulsion engine removal and habitability work onboard USS Tornado (PC 14).

General Dynamics received $64,056,766 for advance material for the Mobile Landing Platform (MLP) 4 Afloat Forward Staging Base platform. This allows procurement of ship sets for the purchase specifications supporting integrated propulsion, main diesel generator engines, propeller and shafting, integrated bridge, and voice communications.

General Dynamics received $23,500,000 for “early industry involvement” associated with the LHA(R) program Flight 1 (LHA 8) ship design to initiate an affordability design phase.

General Dynamics received $20,745,556 for USS Boxer (LHD 4) FY2014 maintenance, which includes alterations and modifications that will update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities.

General Dynamics received $13,228,560 for procurement of Common Missile Compartment material for the Ohio Replacement Program (ORP). Purchases: U.S. Navy (37 percent) and the UK (63 percent). 

L-3 Unidyne Inc. received $22,231,067 for service life extension program (SLEP) of four landing craft, air-cushioned (LCAC) craft. This will extend LCAC service life from 20 to 30 years, sustain/enhance craft capability, replace obsolete electronics, repair corrosion damage, reduce life cycle cost by improving reliability and maintainability, increase survivability, and establish a common configuration baseline. Work will be performed in Camp Pendleton. L-3 Unidyne Inc. received $13,821,952 for SLEP of two LCAC. Work will be performed in Virginia Beach, VA.

Lockheed Martin received $20,000,000 for sustaining engineering services in support of the Consolidated Automated Support System (CASS) family of testers. This was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1.

Lockheed Martin received $12,171,921 for procurement and engineering efforts in support of the TRS-3D Radar installation for the Port Hueneme Test Ship.

Maersk Line, Ltd. received $7,103,568 for 92 days of operation and maintenance of five U.S. Navy ocean surveillance ships and one U.S. Navy missile range instrumentation ship.

Northrop Grumman received $24,000,000 for Navigation Warfare Technology Research Modeling, Simulation, Wargaming and Analyses at San Diego, CA.

Serco Inc. received $31,244,653 for Close-In Weapons System (CIWS) waterfront installation support. This funding will support the functions of an Alteration Installation Team with the installation of Ship Alterations, Ship Change Documents, and Ordnance Alterations as related to the CIWS on U.S. Navy, U.S. Army and U.S. Coast Guard vessels.

VEHICLES

AM General, LLC received $90,543,739 to recapitalize up to 760 Army National Guard HMMWV (M1152A1B2 and M1165A1B3 variants) to the current configuration.

BAE Systems received $9,818,307 for pre-positioned stocks (APS-5) for Bradley tracked vehicles in Kuwait.

BAE Systems received $20,819,031 for 88,619 “level of effort hours and dollars” for system technical support and sustainment system technical support for the Bradley family of vehicles and MLRS carrier.

C.E. Niehoff & Co. received $43,495,987 for generators and engine accessories for HMMWVs.

Choctaw Manufacturing Defense Contractor received $14,247,484 for 626 Medium Tactical Vehicle Replacement Modular Production Trailers and Water Dispensing System production units; training, provisioning data, and program support. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(5). FY2012 procurement (USMC) overseas contingency operations (OCO) funds in the amount of $8,933,217 are obligated at the time of award.

General Dynamics received $11,421,811 for 3 DVH Stryker ECP ICVV prototype vehicles.

LOC Performance Products Inc. received $161,623,918 for “engineering change proposal vehicle” modifications through installation of track kits, shock absorber kits, vehicle suspension support system kits, heavy weight torsion bar kits, and logistics support on BFV.

CLOTHING

American Apparel, Inc. received $16,186,860 for MCCUU trousers.

Crown Clothing Co. received $7,709,253 for men’s coats.

M&M Manufacturing, LLC (Lajas, Puerto Rico) received $21,207,508 for Navy working uniform blouses and trousers. 

GEAR & EQUIPMENT

American Rheinmetall Munition (ARM) received $26,037,082 for 3,154,286 40mm day/night M1110 practice cartridges (for training in the use of the 40mm low velocity cartridge under day and night/low-light conditions). This was a sole-source procurement, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). 

BAE Systems received $7,809,034 for 84 standardized pier side maintenance and repairs to the MK 38 Machine Gun System. BAE Systems received $10,783,000 for 61 fire support sensor systems and seven authorized stock-age list spares sets. BAE Systems received $89,460,000 for enhanced small arms protective inserts.

Capco, Inc. received $78,980,935 to procure the M205 tripod used with the M2/M2A1 Heavy Machine Gun and the MK19 Grenade Machine Gun.

Federal Resources Supply Company received $9,900,000 for respirator air filters, mask harness assemblies, respirator cartridges, breathing face-pieces and other replacement parts. This was a sole-source acquisition.

The Garrett Container Systems received $37,174,689 for Defensor Fortis – Load Carrying System 2 Kits and Accessories. This includes 36 distinctive pieces of equipment, including Rifleman Kits, Team Leader Kits, M-203 Grenadiers Kits, M-249 Squad Automatic Weapon Gunner Kits, M-240 Machine Gunner Kits, Military Working Dog Kits and Multi-Mission Kits.

Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace (Kongsberg, Norway) received $7,898,000 for depot support for the Common Remotely Operated Weapon System (CROWS).

Olin Corp. – Winchester Ammunition received $27,681,245 for 9mm frangible ammunition, which will be used for indoor and outdoor close quarter battle (CQB) training.

Raytheon received $33,176,807 for R&D associated with integrated power systems power load modules to be used for electromagnetic railgun pulse power containers design, and for the fabrication and testing of prototypes. Work will be performed in Tewksbury, MA.

SPACE

Aerospace Testing Alliance received $11,890,453 to increase the workload for the operations, maintenance, information management and support of Arnold Engineering Development Complex at Arnold AFB.

L-3 Communications received $8,281,679 to mature the software coding of the GPS receiver cards being developed and perform security certification to enable faster fielding of military-code capable GPS receivers to the warfighter.

LinQuest Corp. received $29,164,259 for additional System Engineering & Integration Support Services (SE&I). LinQuest will provide and maintain enterprise SE&I services for the current MILSATCOM Systems Directorate, execute and evolve standardized enterprise processes, control and manage the technical baseline and interface(s), perform system integration across the enterprise and within identified programs, develop and implement key systems engineering processes, developing tools and techniques (as necessary) to predict issues and enable timely action, and develop and maintain performance metrics. Work will be performed at Los Angeles AFB. This is the result of a sole source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $38,378,116 for Advanced Extremely High Frequency (AEHF) System Interim Contractor Sustainment Re-vector under cost line item number 0610.

Lockheed Martin received $452,000,000 for reentry system/reentry vehicles (RS/RV) subsystem support. This provides sustaining & maintenance engineering, aging surveillance, modification of systems & equipment, software maintenance, developmental & production engineering, and procurement of the MMIII RS/RV subsystem and related support equipment. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $914,699,474 for engineering, manufacturing and development, production and deployment for the Space Fence program. Work will be performed at Moorestown, NJ, and Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands. 

Lockheed Martin received $1,863,474,312 for Space-Based Infrared Systems (SBIRS) Geosynchronous Earth Orbit (GEO) 5 and 6 satellites, including performance incentives and options for acoustic testing and launch operations.

Miltec Corp. received $44,000,000 for labor, material, travel for research and development for the Advanced Hypersonic Weapon – Technology Demonstration for Space & Missile Defense Command.

Northrop Grumman received $7,000,000 and $7,000,000 for L-Band Radio Frequency Power Amplifier for the GPS Spacecraft Navigation Payload. The aim is to demonstrate the direct digital synthesis of GPS signals concept by design, fabrication, assembly, test, and demonstration of a Digital Beam Forming Element, Engineering Design Unit, and the key enabling technology of the Digital Phased Array GPS payload architecture.

Raytheon received $14,521,358 for Object Classification (OC) requirement database enhancements and deployment.

CYBER, IT & COMMS

APPTRICITY Corp. received $10,543,119 for annual license maintenance on the Transportation Coordinators Automated Information for Movements System II (TC-AIMS II) commercial supply chain solutions software: [Theater Operations Software (TOPS)]. One bid was solicited and one received.

ASRC Federal InuTeq received $15,749,022 to provide the High Performance Computing Modernization Program Office with technical and professional support for all phases of planning and execution.

BAE Systems received $70,100,000 for systems procurement with services for the LRIP for up to 30 tactical SIGINT payload systems and engineering support services.

Carahsoft received $14,424,968 to add additional users and products for software and licenses and support for Army Enterprise Resource Planning. 

Dell; IBM; Unicom Government, Inc.; CDW Government LLC; Iron Bow Technologies; and World Wide Technology, Inc. received a collective $774,000,000 for Information Technology Enterprise Solutions – 2 Hardware, which encompasses all requirements for IT, including hardware, software and incidental services for providing end-to-end solutions.

Dynamic Technology Systems, Inc. received $14,337,620 to extend IT related operations and maintenance tasks for a period of 12 months. Services include software and hardware support, application programming, and custom application configuration for the entire Enterprise Content Management System. Work will be performed at Ft. Belvoir, VA.

Hewlett Packard received $138,000,000 for continuity of services (CoSC) for Navy Marine Corps Intranet (NMCI).

Innova Systems International received $6,663,365 in support of the U.S. Marine Corps Training & Education Command (TECOM), Aviation Standards Branch, for software maintenance to support and implement enhanced functionality of the Marine Corps Sierra Hotel Aviation Readiness Program (M-SHARP) software. 

Lockheed Martin received $35,710,660 for the Army Navy/Transportable Radar Search (AN/TPS) 59A Version (V)3 Array Electronics.

Northrop Grumman received $3,750,297 for the Affordable Radio Frequency Multifunction Sensors (ARMS) Program. Raytheon received $7,051,595 for the Affordable Radio Frequency Multifunction Sensors (ARMS) program, which will focus on developing new manufacturing processes to enable an increase in reliability and a decrease in cycle time and costs for Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) sensors.

Northrop Grumman received $7,868,723 for non-personal IT support to the U.S. Army Regional Cyber Center – Europe (RCC-E)/U.S. Army 5th Signal Command.

Raytheon received $298,000,044 for the Family of Advanced Beyond Line of Sight Terminals (FAB-T) Command Post Terminals (CPT) Production program.

Raytheon received $8,735,016 for receiver exciters. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Rockwell Collins, Inc. received $38,712,696 for power supply equipment. Rockwell Collins, Inc. received $25,669,647 for digital data computers.

STG, Inc. received $27,229,337 for IT support for the 2d Signal Center Theater Network Operations & Security Center, Ft. Huachuca.

Tetrad Digital Integrity received $7,801,515 for IT services related to information assurance, mobile communication assets, shipboard electronic support and communication security support. Systems Technology Forum Limited received $7,386,653 for IT services related to information assurance, mobile communication assets, shipboard electronic support and communication security support. Syzygy Technologies, Inc. received $7,077,042 for IT services related to information assurance, mobile communication assets, shipboard electronic support and communication security support. 

Welkin Sciences received $9,909,482 for innovative research in advanced communication technologies.

MISSILES, BOMBS, ROCKETS

Alliant Techsystems Operations received $8,036,250 for production and delivery of Rocket Assisted Take Off rocket motors and initiators.

BAE Systems received $9,404,964 for 512×512 two-color high speed Digital Focal Plane Arrays (DFPAs) for missile defense. They offer a combination of high resolution, high frame rate and advanced digital processing functionality. BAE will deliver five DFPAs of the Baseline Development Run and three DFPAs of the Baseline Process Verification Run to the Missile Defense Agency (MDA) for additional testing, a set of interface electronics and a user guide to facilitate testing.

Boeing received $80,000,000 for Small Diameter Bomb Increment 1 (SDB 1) technical support. Boeing will provide SDB 1 weapon integration support, including technical support to the designated aircraft System Program Offices testing, upgrades, program management support, and software updates to the SDB 1system required to integrate the SBD 1 weapon system with other weapons systems. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $134,173,537 for highly specialized services to support Ballistic Missile Defense System flight test activities using the contractor’s developed target hardware.

Northrop Grumman received $15,000,000 for R&D on Advance Electronic Protect, Integrated Air and Missile Defense system of systems capability, and IAMD Battle Command System development and demonstration. 

Raytheon received $8,335,410 for the Norwegian Advanced Surface to Air Missile Systems sustainment and maintenance, for the base year with option up to four years. This is a new follow-on service contract for the missile system, an interim air defense capability deployed in the Homeland Defense Area 1.

Raytheon received $14,078,807 for NATO SEASPARROW Surface Missile System (NSSMS) design agent and special engineering tasks, land-based test site support, software maintenance support, and logistics management support services. Work will be performed in Portsmouth, RI. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Raytheon received $28,186,692 to procure 774 AIM-9X Production Inertial Measurement Units retrofits and upgrades, and an engineering investigation for the U.S. Navy and the U.S. Air Force. Raytheon will also provide 30 AIM-9X Block II All Up Round Tactical LRIP Lot 14 Missiles, 30 Block II Captive Air Training Missiles, 18 All Up Round Containers, one Spare Advanced Optical Target Detector, two Spare Tactical Guidance Units, eight Spare Captive Air Training Missile Guidance Units, and one lot of tooling for Belgium. Purchases: U.S. Navy ($2,877,451; 10.2 percent); U.S. Air Force ($3,410,626; 12.1 percent), and Belgium ($21,898,615; 77.7 percent).

Raytheon received $51,787,884 for 757 projectiles under the Option 5 Excalibur 155mm increment pound production option for the U.S. Army. Work will be performed in 19 locations within the U.S., in addition to: Kariskoga, Sweden (15.84 percent); United Kingdom (7.82 percent); Glenrothes, Scotland (6.01 percent).

Raytheon received $50,239,866 for the procurement of material, fabrication, test and delivery of 52 SM-3 Block IB missiles and related support efforts.

Raytheon received $73,442,290 for: FY2014 rolling airframe missile (RAM) guided-missile round pack requirements for the U.S. and allied navies, spares for Germany, and testing equipment upgrade and replacement requirements. This involves FMS to Japan (23 percent). Some work will be in Ottobrunn, Germany (42.7 percent). This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Raytheon received $80,768,012 for the Lot 7 Miniature Air Launched Decoy Jammer (MALD-J) missile (200) to include: data, mission planning, process verification program, and operational flight software. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Raytheon received $163,223,113 for Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile (AMRAAM) Program Support and Sustainment (PSAS), which provides sustaining engineering, program management, contractor logistics, and accomplishes the diminishing manufacturing sources and material shortage tasks of extending the life of the AMRAAM Central Processing Unit, improving the AMRAAM guidance section within the current performance envelope, and developing applicable test equipment. This is a sole source acquisition. 45.7 percent of these funds are FMS to: Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Israel, Singapore and the UAE.

Raytheon received $223,081,894 to provide 485 AIM-9X Block II All Up Round Tactical LRIP Lot 14 Missiles to the U.S. Navy (161), U.S. Air Force (158), Singapore (20), the Netherlands (28), Kuwait (1), and Turkey (117). These funds also provide 132 Block II Captive Air Training Missiles for the U.S. Navy (47), U.S. Air Force (55), the Netherlands (20), Singapore (8), and Morocco (2); 27 Special Air Training Missiles for the U.S. Navy (13), U.S. Air Force (12), the Netherlands (2); 180 All Up Round Containers for the U.S. Navy (59), U.S. Air Force (60), the Netherlands (18), Morocco (1), Singapore (8), and Turkey (34); two Spare Advanced Optical Target Detectors for Singapore (1), and Morocco (1); 10 Spare Tactical Guidance Units for the Netherlands (2), Singapore (2), and Turkey (6); and seven Spare Captive Air Training Missile Guidance Units for the Netherlands (2), and Singapore (5). Purchases: U.S. Navy ($74,071,450; 33.20 percent); U.S. Air Force ($74,148,758; 33.24 percent); Turkey ($46,902,085; 21.03 percent); the Netherlands ($16,471,972: 7.38 percent); Singapore ($10,574,904: 4.74 percent); Morocco ($522,442; .23 percent); and Kuwait ($390,283; .18 percent).

Raytheon received $235,485,020 for Phased Array Tracking Radar to Intercept on Target weapon system, procuring 72 radar digital processor upgrade kits: 62 for the United States and 10 for FMS (Kuwait and the Netherlands). These funds also procure spares for the United States, Kuwait and the Netherlands.

Raytheon received $275,434,620 for FY2014 Standard Missile 6 (SM-6) all-up rounds, and SM-6 and Standard Missile 2 (SM-2) spares and containers. Work will be performed in 15 locations across the U.S. (88.4 percent), and Wolverhampton, UK (11.6 percent).

ORDNANCE DISPOSAL

NIITEK received $26,122,231 for work on the Husky Mounted Detection System. One bid was solicited and one received.

NIITEK received $7,347,924 to develop enhanced downward-looking ground penetrating radar technology for real time detection of buried high and low metal antitank landmines and IEDs.

EDUCATION & TRAINING

CUBIC APPLICATIONS, INC. received $78,197,073 to support the Joint Readiness Training Center (JRTC) at Ft. Polk, LA, providing theatre specific combat training, mission rehearsal training, foreign security training team training and other combat forces training to prepare units for combat operations or deployment to combat theatre of operations.

Goodfellow Bros., Inc. received $27,345,000 to construct an infantry platoon battle course.

Lockheed Martin received $13,561,788 to provide training material, development and maintenance, instructor services, program management, admin and training systems in support of the Center for Surface Combat Systems (CSCS). This involves some FMS to Australia. This was non-competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-4 and DFARS 206.302-4.

Meggitt Training Systems, Inc. received $99,000,000 to provide next generation simulator for marksmanship and squad collective training, modify marksmanship trainers and simulated weapons to the Engagement Skills Trainer II (EST II) configuration, and procure EST mission essential requirements.

CBRNE

ICx Technologies, Inc. (doing business as Agentase, Inc.) received $6,574,220 in support of the joint program manager, “Nuclear Biological Chemical Contamination Avoidance,” to procure spare parts for the LRIP, dismounted reconnaissance, sets, kits, and outfits configuration systems for the U.S. military and civil support team.

Smiths Detection received $21,867,004 to purchase 3,353 M4A1 joint chemical agent detectors, 580 communication adapter kits, one platform interface kit, 2,713 Stryker communication adaptors, 137 sieve packs and 25 nozzles. 

FUEL & ENERGY

BP received $42,801,948 for direct supply of natural gas. Tiger Natural Gas, Inc. received $43,277,040 for direct supply of natural gas.

BP received $21,465,000 for fuel storage. Buckeye Terminals, LLC received $42,533,000 for fuel storage services. Global Companies, LLC received $24,300,000 for fuel storage services.

City Light & Power, Inc. received $281,622,253 for assumption of ownership, operation and maintenance of the electrical distribution system, and will furnish all necessary labor, management, supervision, permits, equipment, supplies, materials, transportation and any other incidental services for the complete ownership, operation, maintenance, repairs, upgrades, and improvements to the utility system. This is a 50-year base contract in California and Utah.

Essex Electro Engineers, Inc. received $6,658,080 for 72kW Generators.

TK&K Services, LLC received $18,915,900 for fuel management services to include personnel, equipment, vehicles, tools, materials, supplies, and supervision to manage all aspects of petroleum and cryogenic products.

MEDICAL

ABM Government Services; LB&B Associates Inc.; J&J Maintenance, Inc.; and Emcor Government Services received a cumulative $383,500,000 for increased capacity for operations and maintenance services in DOD medical treatment facilities.

American Mechanical Inc.; Central Environmental Inc.; and Patrick Mechanical Inc. received a cumulative $24,000,000 for the design, construction and repair of Utilidor Systems, Eielson AFB and other Alaskan military installations.

American Medical Depot received $60,000,000 for distribution of medical surgical items to all CONUS and OCONUS facilities that participate in the electronic catalog program.

ARGO/LRS JV; Clarke Project Solutions; Health Facility Solutions Co.; NIKA Architects Engineers; Polu Kai Services; and Team Integrated Engineering, Inc. received a cumulative $44,000,000 for medical facilities support services.

ABSG Consulting Inc.; Allied Reliability, Inc.; and Andromeda Systems Inc. received $45,000,000 and $45,000,000 for reliability-centered maintenance and condition monitoring at Army Medical Command facilities in CONUS, Alaska, Hawaii, U.S. possessions, and Germany. 

ArtCraft Optical Co., Inc. received $22,500,000 for aviation flight frames using the electronic catalog program.

Evergreen Helicopters, Inc. received $10,672,126 for service and support for Medical Evacuation for the U.S. Army Garrison, HI.

GlaxoSmithKline received $17,616,339 and Sanofi Pasteur received $8,969,432 for flu vaccines.

Hologic LP received $32,000,000 for ThinPrep pap test kits and related supplies. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Mapp Biopharmaceutical, Inc. received $8,152,103 for the development of a broad-spectrum monoclonal cocktail for prevention of VEEV, WEEV and EEEV, in support of the R&D enterprise.

Novartis Vaccines & Diagnostics Inc. received $22,200,000 to supply Japanese encephalitis vaccine.

ScImage, Inc. received $45,000,000 for digital imaging network-picture archive and communication system, components, system options and accessories, upgrades, training, maintenance services, and turnkey installation.

SeKON Enterprises, Inc. received $9,499,405 to support to the Defense Health Agency’s Information Management office. SeKON will provide analysis to support DHA IM office decisions on business need, mission priorities, alternatives solutions, business process change, policies, and funding. SeKON will also develop and manage business processes, health data management strategies and collaboration in the development and implementation of national health IT standards.

Skyline ULTD, Inc. received $18,834,131 to provide medical case management support to the Army National Guard HQ, states and territories.

Welch Allyn, Inc. received $43,650,000 for patient monitoring systems, subsystems, accessories, consumables, spare/repair parts and training.

ENVIRONMENTAL

AH Environmental Consultants, Inc. received $10,000,000 for environmental consulting services in NAVFAC Southeast.

Environmental Chemical Corporation (ECC); Ashbritt Environmental; CrowderGulf, LCC; and Ceres Environmental Services, Inc. received $240,000,000 for advanced contracting imitative debris management services.

Normandeau Associates, Inc.; Anchor QEA, LLC; and RTR /BLE (JV) received $27,000,000 for biological studies in the Snake and Columbia River basins and the Northwest.

FOOD SERVICES

Bimbo Bakeries USA received $8,839,822 for fresh bread and bakery products.

Pocono ProFoods received $79,800,000 and Renzi Bros. Inc. received $33,600,000 for food and beverages.

Sysco received $9,750,000 for food and beverages. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Sysco received $173,507,460 for subsistence support to various customers in Seattle, Washington – Zone 1 (Ships). Sysco received $110,818,565 for subsistence support to various customers in Seattle, Washington – Zone 2 (Land).

BASE SUPPORT & LOGISTICS

Accenture Federal Services received $42,446,917 for the general fund enterprise business system. 

American Systems Corp. and Advanced Technology International received $15,000,000 for field test and evaluation services in support of the Naval Facilities Engineering & Expeditionary Warfare Center (NAVFAC EXWC) Port Hueneme.

EMI Technologies received $20,000,000 to acquire general purpose instrumentation vans shelters and trailers in support of White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico. 

Exelis Systems Corp. received $6,536,121 for material, appliances and services for Family Housing maintenance services. This supports military members and their families residing in government family housing facilities. The objective is to maintain housing facilities (1,903+ units) properly for facility life cycle sustainment and provide the expected quality and safe living conditions in compliance with U.S. Air Force family housing standards. Work will be performed at the Kaiserslautern Military Community in Germany comprising Landstuhl, Ramstein, and Vogelweh Air Bases.

Fluor Federal Solutions, LLC received $45,100,173 for regional base operations support at NAS Jacksonville; Naval Station Mayport; Bureau of Medicine & Surgery; and Blount Island Command. Work provides regional base operating support services including, but not limited to: port operations, facilities support and investment, support vehicles and equipment, and environmental.

Genco Infrastructures Solutions, Inc. received $7,955,284 for warehousing and distribution support services.

ITT Exelis Systems Corp. received $9,490,510 for the Army Prepositioned Stock-5 support to the Army Field Support Battalion-Qatar.

KTU&A received $15,000,000 for facility planning services in NAVFAC Southwest. The work provides sustainable master planning, project planning documents, geospatial information and service, GPS services and other services.

RDR, Inc. received $7,492,815 for specialized professional services and training support for the Program Manager Special Programs program office.

SAIC; Booz Allen Hamilton; Engility Corp.; and National Technologies, Inc. received a cumulative $10,553,653 for business financial management and program, and business analysis services in support of the Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Division (NAWCAD).

SRA International, Inc. received $96,000,000 for support, sustainment, upgrades and modernization of personnel systems under the Navy’s Integrated Personnel and Pay System (IPPS) strategy to provide incremental improvements in business capabilities.

TRAX International Corp. received $34,668,877 for non-personal test support services in support of the U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground, AZ.

Wolverine Services, LLC received $8,237,534 for warehouse and distribution support services in Colorado and California.

Z Systems Corp. received $7,140,388 for material maintenance and supply support at Ft. Hood’s Logistics Readiness Center.

CONSTRUCTION

Aecom-Parsons JV received $7,848,425 for construction management technical support services for the Washington Headquarters Services, Acquisition Directorate, Facilities Services Directorate.

Arriba Corp. received $7,890,050 for additions and alterations to the Curtis Bay Army Reserve Center.

B & B General Contracting Inc. received $9,631,139 for repair of parking aprons A01B and A08B at the Combined Readiness Training Center. Work will be performed in Alpena, MI.

Bryan Construction, Inc. received $9,832,807 for work on Butts Army Airfield runway, Ft. Carson.

Cayo, LLC received $9,359,797 for the Lake Borgne Basin Levee District, Saint Bernard Parish Pump Stations, number 2 and 3 seepage repairs, Saint Bernard Parish, LA.

Construction Development Services, Inc.; Noah Enterprises, Inc.; Portico Services, LLC; Syncon, LLC; and Turner Strategic Technologies, LLC received a cumulative $95,000,000 for construction projects located within NAVFAC Mid-Atlantic Hampton Roads.

DPR Hardin Construction Company, LLC / Whitesell-Green, Inc., JV received $14,810,000 for design, construction and renovation of the Navy Exchange Service Command Headquarters in Virginia Beach.

Etcon, Inc. received $25,472,586 for paving.

Frontier-Arrowhead JV received $17,474,296 for river repairs to stone navigation structures on the Mississippi River.

Gilford Corp. received $11,117,705 for North Post Access Control Point, Ft. Belvoir. Gilford will construct an access road, control point and supporting facilities.

Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Company received $19,914,000 for the North Carolina Highway 12 Protection Project, Dare County, NC.

Guam MACC Builders A JV received $39,699,700 to design and construct X-Ray Wharf improvements to Berth 1 at Naval Base, Guam. The work includes the rehabilitation and modernization of the north berth at X-Ray Wharf to provide berthing and utilities for Auxiliary Cargo and Ammunition Ship (T-AKE) supply vessels. Work will be performed in Santa Rita, Guam.

Head, Inc. received $13,721,888 for the repair of the airfield at Naval Air Station/Joint Reserve Base New Orleans.

Hensel Phelps Construction Co. received $26,615,298 for the construction of a Submarine Production Support Facility at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam.

HGL Construction Inc.; McGoldrick Construction Services Corporation; MK JV; RWT, LLC; Terra Construction, LLC; The Trevino Group, Inc.; and Zieson Construction Co. received a cumulative $32,100,000 for construction supporting the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Southwestern Division.

J. Kokolakis Contracting, Inc. received $48,826,910 for renovation and modernization of the MacArthur Short Barracks at West Point.

John C. Grimberg Company, Inc. received $44,200,000 for design and construction of the Aircraft Prototype Facility Phase II at NAS Patuxent River. This involves construction of a hangar space for a single large aircraft or up to four smaller aircraft, with concrete pile and grade beam foundation, structural steel frame, insulated metal panel wall system, built-up roofing system over insulated structural metal deck, steel truss roof framing and sliding hangar doors on each end. The project will provide a secure facility, individual secure area(s), aircraft preparation bay and laboratories with equal-sized bays with separate zoning for fire protection alarm system and security systems.

Johnson Construction Co. received $9,599,509 for construction of a modern wastewater treatment plant to replace the existing wastewater treatment plant, and construct an influent screening building, two sequencing batch reactors for wastewater treatment, an aeration sludge holding tank, ultraviolet disinfection system, chemical storage, and a water pumping system in New Cumberland, PA.

Kisaq, LLC. received $18,197,353 for construction of an Army Reserve Center at MCAS Miramar.

KMEA MACTEC JV received $30,000,000 for stormwater, groundwater, wastewater and incidental potable water studies at Navy and USMC installations in NAVFAC Southwest.

MACNAK Korte Group LLC received $30,381,000 for a 240-person dormitory at Nellis AFB.

MACNAK Korte Team LLC received $19,716,709 to design/build in FY2014 a 144-person dormitory at Cannon AFB. The project also will include demolition of existing building 1156.

MACNAK Korte Group LLC received $15,947,269 and $15,947,269 to design and build civil engineer administration/operations facility at Beale AFB.

Maune, Belangia, Faulkenberry Architects, PA received $15,000,000 for architectural design and engineering services in NAVFAC Mid-Atlantic, primarily in Coastal North Carolina and the Hampton Roads region of Virginia.

G4S-SJC LLC received $19,835,665 for pier repairs at the United States Navy Support Facility, Diego Garcia.

RANCO Construction received $8,783,220 for the construction of a new central issuing facility at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst.

Raass Brothers, Inc. received $9,540,270 for constructing B-52 munitions storage igloos at Minot AFB.

Seaward Marine Corp. received $8,885,335 for Pier Complex Structural Repairs to Pier 4, Trestle 1a and 4 at Naval Weapon Station Earle.

S.T. Wooten Corp. Inc. received $9,975,000 for repairing various areas of runways 23R and 14L at MCAS Cherry Point.

TW Metals, Inc. received $15,000,000 for various metals, metal products, and related services in the North East region of the United States. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Valiant Construction LLC; Royce Construction Services, LLC; and Patriot Construction, LLC received $49,000,000 for a healthcare facility repair and construction in support of the U.S. Army Medical Command’s northern region.

Voith Hydro, Inc. received $47,257,431 for rehabilitation of three turbine generator units at Center Hill Dam, Lancaster, Tennessee.

DREDGING

Aerostar SES, LLC received $8,832,628 for improvements to the Jones Oyster-bed Island Dredged Material Containment Area.

Precon Marine, Inc. received $11,625,500 for Craney Island Northern Shoreline Revetment Phase III, Portsmouth, VA.

Weeks Marine, Inc. received $63,322,388 for dredging and beach fill of the main channel of the Delaware River.

# # # #

*Editing consolidated similar contracts. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

**Any clerical errors are the editor’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

***To avoid competitive bidding, DOD invokes 10 U.S.C. 2304, FAR 6.302, and FAR 8.405-6. DOD also uses 15 U.S.C. 638 to avoid competitive bidding when dealing with small businesses.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.

BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for July 2014

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DOD spent$15,136,162,557+ on 265 individual contracts in July 2014

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $15,136,162,557 on 265 individual contracts during July 2014.

REMOTELY PILOTED MACHINES

Archer Western Federal JV received $30,197,000 for construction of an UAV launch & recovery complex at Ft. Bliss.

Benchmark Contracting Inc. received $10,643,419 for construction of an UAV mission complex “physical protection system” at Creech AFB.

EDO Professional Services Inc. received $24,864,130 for technical service on Space & Naval Warfare Systems Center Pacific unmanned maritime systems (for fleet mine countermeasures & force protection). Work in Manama, Bahrain (65 percent); San Diego, CA (35 percent).

GenTech Systems received $11,825,274 to develop a Gatekeeper On The Move – Biometrics (GOTM-B) prototype in support of reconnaissance and surveillance payloads, sensors, delivery systems and platforms. The GOTM-B system is an innovative, non-contact, on the move, multimodal biometric (3D Finger, Face, and Iris) identity operations and force protection capability.

Northrop Grumman received $18,000,000 for a radar modification under the Multi-Platform Radar Technology Insertion Program (MP-RTIP). Work will occur at El Segundo.

Northrop Grumman received $17,059,000 to correct radar software deficiencies in the MP-RTIP of the Global Hawk Block 40 program.

Raytheon received $18,207,740 for repairs and sustainment on the Common Sensor Payload (CSP) AN/AAS-53. This includes depot repair, analysis, program and configuration management, maintenance, and field and software support.

Remotec Inc. received $8,801,324 for repairs to the MK3 Series Remote Ordnance Neutralization Systems (RONS), and upgrade/repair of the MK3 Mod 0 to the MK3 Mod 1 System. The Mod 1 upgrade will improve robots’ serviceability and capabilities, and increase availability of spare parts. In situations where it is not economically feasible to upgrade/repair the Mod 0, the option to purchase a new RONS MK3 Mod 1 will be available. This is a sole-source procurement, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES – Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations.

B3H Corp. received $7,069,922 to provide Saudi Arabia with English language instructors and training using DLI-ELC courseware and methodology. Work will occur in Saudi Arabia, specifically King Abdul Aziz AB.

Boeing received $20,753,552 to provide Australia engineering, program management, logistics and spares for AEA-18G aircraft.

Boeing received $17,858,824 to provide France with E-3F enhancements: full Mode 5 and Mode S-FAA radar capabilities for incorporation into mission and ground system suite.

Booz Allen Hamilton received $12,481,100 to support Saudi Arabia’s Navy through: training & education; engineering; program & financial management; plans & programs; C4I; naval ops; manpower & personnel management; tech support; logistics & supply; English language training; special studies & management. Some work will be performed in Saudi Arabia (90 percent). FMS funds of $4,800,000 are initially obligated.

Cessna Aircraft received $64,493,531 to provide Afghanistan with Interim Contractor Support (ICS) and Training on 26 C-208B aircraft, six T-182T aircraft, six aircrew training devices and aircraft maintenance training. Work will be performed at Kabul International Airport, Kandahar Air Base, and Shindand Air Base, Afghanistan.

FLIR Systems, Inc. received $7,171,955 to provide Austria with seven Star Safire 380-High Definition Thermal Imaging Systems, accessories, training, and extended warranty.

General Atomics received $12,648,312 to provide the UK with MQ-9 spare parts and support equipment. This is a sole-source acquisition.

General Dynamics received three payments of $65,256,769 to provide Iraq with specialized training, logistics, and base life support for its M1A1 Abrams Program.

Geographic Information Services, Inc. received $29,884,815 for software maintenance, database development, engineering support, integration services, and training for FMS purchasers to use the Weapon Danger Zone Tool (PDF).

Honeywell Aerospace received $121,890,543 to provide Turkey, Australia, the UAE, and Morocco with 440 T55-GA-714A engines and 365 T55-GA-714A engine fielding kits.

Lockheed Martin received $49,915,441 to provide South Korea and Finland with Stinger M934E6 fuses (legacy), M934E7 fuses (proximity capability), warhead body assemblies (legacy), and warhead body assemblies (proximity capability).

Lockheed Martin received $11,645,964 for logistics on Iraq’s Integrated Air Defense System. This includes engineering, on-site support, logistics, tech support, preventative/corrective maintenance, engineering analysis, and recommendations for logistical and lifecycle support for the IADS and equipment.

Lockheed Martin received $28,453,514 to provide Kuwait Launcher Modification Kit Phase II Redesign for the Patriot PAC-3.

Lockheed Martin received $564,700,000 to provide India with six C-130J-30s, field service representatives and three years of post-delivery support.

Northrop Grumman received $10,844,000 to provide Afghanistan with tactical support of the Counter-Rocket, Artillery, Mortar (C-RAM) Program Office including field engineering, field technical and reset support, logistics, training and technical manuals.

Northrop Grumman received $11,343,138 to provide Saudi Arabia with E-3 AWACS Radar Maintenance Technician Initial Skills Training program, presented under the auspices of the Security Assistance Training Program.

Oxford Construction of Pennsylvania, Inc. received $10,420,277 to construct two three-story structures for Israeli military’s recruitment center at Jalame Camp, Israel.

Raytheon/Lockheed Martin Javelin JV received $15,581,037 for Javelin Life Cycle contractor support for maintenance of command launch units and training devices. This is FMS to: Australia, Czech Republic, Indonesia, Ireland, Jordan, New Zealand, Norway, Oman and Taiwan.

Raytheon received $8,527,198 to provide Australia with AMRAAM Production, Lot 27.

MEDIA & MESSAGE CONTROL

Bluewater Communications Group; Globecomm Systems; and TVC Communications LLC received $15,000,000 to provide the Defense Media Activity (DMA) with Cisco satellite decoders and HD encryption systems.

Southeastern Archaeological Research; R. Christopher Goodwin & Associates; and Panamerican Consultants, Inc. received $20,000,000 for military and civil works cultural resources compliance programs.

AFGHANISTAN

Academi received $7,384,413 for private security services at FOB Dwyer, Afghanistan.

General Atomics received $38,781,663 for continued operations, sustainment, and integration of two deployed Highlighter fixed wing aircraft. Work will be performed in San Diego, CA; Bridgewater, Virginia; and Afghanistan.

DARPA

Lockheed Martin received $200,000,000 for the Long Range Anti-Ship Missile Accelerated Acquisition program. This was a sole-source acquisition for DARPA.

Northrop Grumman received $11,895,370 for Phase 1/Option 1 of the Arrays at Commercial Timescales (ACT) program. 

USSOUTHCOM

Intelligent Decisions Inc. received $8,569,058 for IT operations and maintenance support for USSOUTHCOM’s Joint Task Force-Guantánamo Bay (JTF-GTMO).

USSOCOM

Ensign-Bickford Aerospace & Defense received $20,777,054 for MK 165, MK 166, MK 167, MK 168, and MK 169 detonators in support of U.S. Special Operations Command.

Federal Contracting Inc. received $15,083,965 to design/build a Special Operations Forces group support battalion, and a two-company operations facility at Ft. Carson.

Watts Constructors LLC received $36,441,000 for designing and building the Special Operations Forces Battalion Operations Facility Complex at Ft. Carson.

RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT

Persistent Systems, LLC received $49,000,000 for the Program Manager for Special Programs program office for analysis and support, R&D, procurement and production, sustainment and training. One bid was solicited with one received.

Universal Technology Corp. received $100,000,000 and University of Dayton Research Institute received $100,000,000 to provide the Aerospace Systems Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory/RQ, with R&D in three core areas: propulsion research on gas turbine engines; energy, aerospace power and thermal management; and advanced propulsion.

University of Dayton Research Institute (UDRI) received $9,900,000 to help bridge the gaps and accelerate the initial development of selected nondestructive technology to a level of full-feasibility demonstration, to conduct studies of the applicability of selected technologies to a wide variety of potential applications, or development of new technologies to address specific needs. Work is performed primarily at Wright-Patterson AFB.

JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER (JSF)

Lockheed Martin received $278,649,002 for F-35 LRIP Lot VI. This provides non-recurring sustainment activities, to include procuring Depot Phases I-IV sustainment activities.

Lockheed Martin received $29,574,329 to update the F-35 Air System to be in compliance with informational security functional constraints.

Lockheed Martin received $6,785,176 for maintenance on Lot VII F-35 air systems in support of USMC ($6,143,467; 90.5 percent) and the Netherlands ($641,709; 9.5 percent).

AIRCRAFT

AAR Allen Services received $23,507,990 for 60-520 gas turbine power units for the Blackhawk weapon system. 

BAE Systems received $12,420,183 for 249 Mode 5 Combined Interrogator Transponder (CIT) Kits for the U.S. Navy (132), Finland (69), Australia (46) and Switzerland (2), in support of the F/A-18. This also procures 26 power-supply Shop Replaceable Assemblies for the U.S. Navy; 10 Integrated CIT systems for Finland (8) and Switzerland (2); and one lot of Production Acceptance Test Capability for the U.S. Navy. This was not competitively procured, per FAR.6.302-1. Purchases: U.S. Navy ($7,570,415; 61%); Finland ($2,874,560; 23.1%); Australia ($1,879,744; 15.1%); and Switzerland ($95,464; 0.8%).

Boeing received $6,947,488 for aircraft armament equipment; SUU-789A/A centerline pylons for the Navy (35) and Australia (RAAF) (15); and ALE-50 well covers for the U.S. Navy (11). FMS funds of $2,040,450 are initially obligated. Purchase: U.S. Navy ($4,907,038; 70 percent) and Australia ($2,040,450; 30 percent).

Boeing received $7,695,945 for additional FY2014 depot-level service life extension/remanufacturing, including maintenance support and sustainment capabilities, in support of F/A18 A-F aircraft.

Boeing received $10,111,976 for the repair of 23 B-1B Aircraft Secondary Structural Components at Dyess AFB.

Boeing received $38,199,550 for repair of various AV-8 parts. This was a non-competitive requirement, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Boeing received $44,983,385 for repairs of 214 various mission system components on the P-8A. This was a sole source requirement, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Data Link Solutions and ViaSat, Inc. received a combined $116,750,000 for systems engineering and integration for the Multifunctional Information Distribution System Low Volume Terminal (MIDS LVT) and the MIDS Joint Tactical Radio Systems (JTRS) terminal.

Defense Support Services, LLC received $47,514,293 for organizational level maintenance with limited intermediate level maintenance in support of aircraft assigned to Naval Test Wing Pacific at Point Mugu and China Lake.

DynCorp received $101,947,764 for organizational level maintenance and logistics on all aircraft and support equipment for which Naval Test Wing Atlantic has maintenance responsibility. This includes all rotary, fixed, lighter-than-air, and unmanned aircraft on-site for project testing, transient aircraft, loaner aircraft, leased aircraft, and tested civilian aircraft assigned to NAWCAD Patuxent River, MD.

Edaptive Computing Inc. received $20,000,000 to help the Large Aircraft Infrared Countermeasures (LAIRCM) Program Office evaluate and analyze acquisition, logistics, and sustainment operations to optimize performance.

Engineering & Software Systems Solution (doing business as ES3) received $7,500,000 for Landing Gear Emergency Response engineering service. ES3 will provide tech support to respond to urgent requests for engineering assistance. Efforts include mishap or failure analysis, system safety evaluation, failure modes and impact criticality analysis, and short-term remediation and fleet stabilization efforts for various weapon systems.

General Electric received $68,550,240 for 16 GE38-1B engines, closure kits, tooling, and associated systems engineering and program management in support of the CH-53K.

Georgia Tech Applied Research Corp. received $19,802,305 for NAVAIR Engineering and Analysis Support. Georgia Tech will work to improve airborne, ground and naval electronic detection, protection and guidance devices.

Korte Construction Co. received $36,154,000 for design and construction of the P-8A Multi-Missioned Maritime Aircraft Training Facility at NAS Whidbey Island. Includes design/construction of a two-story training facility, which includes space for 8 operational flight trainers, and 6 weapons tactical trainers with associated support network and comms equipment, classrooms and administrative spaces.

L-3 Communications received $151,365,660 for maintenance and logistics on about 200 T-45 aircraft based at NAS Meridian, Kingsville, Pensacola, and Patuxent River.

L-3 Communications received $29,803,395 for maintenance and logistics on T45TS aircraft based at NAS Meridian; NAS Kingsville; and NAS Pensacola. This includes support and maintenance of the T-45 aircraft at all operational sites, numerous outlying fields, and various detachment sites.

L-3 Communications received $14,089,284 for footprint reduction/storage area network to update existing architecture for the F/A-18E/F and EA-18G aircraft. Updates reduce Tactical Operational Flight Trainer (TOFT) host/instructor operator station hardware, centralize software storage, expand software storage for future TOFT enhancements, allow for multiple software configurations, and update all analog Mission Management System (MMS) video output to digital.

L-3 Communications received $6,816,326 for the remanufacture of F-16 Traveling Wave Tubes. Work will be in San Carlos, CA.

Lockheed Martin received $8,074,584 for C-5 Reliability Enhancement and Re-Engine Program (RERP) Production. This provides additional funding for Over and Above legacy work associated with Lot 5 aircraft, which allows Lockheed to complete repairs related to legacy issues found during C-5 RERP aircraft modification. This is sole source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $16,948,139 for prototype hardware/software system. Lockheed will provide AFRL innovative solutions for multi-platform signal collection, processing, exploitation and dissemination for new and existing ISR platforms. Work will be performed at Littleton, CO.

Mirador Enterprises, Inc. received $8,440,000 to build a flight simulator at Ft. Carson.

Northrop Grumman received $52,444,840 for material and services to perform an Equivalent Flight Hours fatigue test to substantiate the E-2D Advanced Hawkeye Aircraft service life. This was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1.

Northrop Grumman received $198,901,412 for design, development, and implementation of the Airborne Electronic Attack requirements for software configuration set upgrades to software/hardware on EA-6B and EA-18G for the U.S. ($179,011,271; 90 percent) and Australia ($19,890,141; 10 percent). Non-competitive, per FAR 6.302-1.

Sikorsky received $7,927,579 for maintenance of aircraft operated by adversary squadrons at NAS Key West, NAS Fallon, and MCAS Yuma.

Telephonics Corp. received $13,254,403 for the Enhanced Mode S-FAA Radar, Enhanced Mode 5 Radar, and procurement of long lead material and hardware support activities. This is a sole source acquisition.

Triumph Gear System, Inc. received $9,640,283 to repair an F/A-18 gearbox accessory. This was a sole source requirement, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Vision Systems International LLC received $7,768,862 for F-15 and F-16 sustainment of the Joint Helmet Mounted Cueing System (JHMCS). This is a sole source acquisition.

OSPREY

Bell-Boeing JPO received $14,641,931 for V-22 for the U.S. Air Force and Navy. This provides research, engineering, and technical analysis of new V-22 capabilities. Work will be performed at Ridley Park, PA (55 percent) and Ft. Worth, TX(45 percent).

Bell-Boeing JPO received $69,659,650 to provide non-recurring engineering (Phase II) of the V-22 Improved Inlet Solution (IIS), including completion of preliminary and critical design reviews; installation of an IIS retrofit kit for installation on a CV-22; installation of aircraft instrumentation to support flight test analysis; flight and qualification testing of the IIS design; and removal of the instrumentation from the test aircraft following flight testing.

Robertson Fuel Systems received $14,779,950 for two mission auxiliary fuel tank systems for the MV-22.

Rolls-Royce received $29,148,390 for Mission CareTM support for the AE1107C engine, including flight hours, and lower power engine removals and repairs, for the V-22 aircraft.

AEGIS

Lockheed Martin received $20,000,000 for support of advanced concept initiatives by the Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense (ABMD) Program Office to identify technology for introduction into present and future ABMD Baselines and upgrades.

Lockheed Martin received $40,662,000 for production of one multi-mission signal processor set, ballistic missile defense 4.0.2 equipment, and Aegis Weapon System upgraded equipment to support Aegis modernization capabilities. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S. C. 2304(c)(1), as implemented by FAR 6.302-1.

LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP (LCS)

Rolls Royce received $9,000,000 to repair one Marine Trent 30 marine gas turbine engine for the Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) Freedom variant. This provides repair and overhaul of the Marine Trent 30 marine gas turbine engine, replacement of non-repairable re-assembly to the LCS configuration, and pass-off testing to validate performance. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

NAVAL CONTRACTS

Advanced Crane Technologies LLC received $31,184,365 to modernize 14 60-ton portal cranes at Norfolk Naval Shipyard, Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, and Portsmouth Naval Shipyard.

BAE Systems received $43,245,218 for R&D activities associated with Integrated Power Systems power load modules, to be used for electromagnetic railgun pulse power containers design, and for the fabricating and testing of prototypes. K2 Energy Solutions received $81,400,000 for the fully self-contained battery intermediate energy store system required to power a large modular capacitor bank for the electromagnetic railgun. This was sole-sourced, per FAR 6.302-5.

Bechtel Plant Machinery received $39,437,949 for naval nuclear propulsion components. Work will be performed in Monroeville, PA (99 percent) and Schenectady, NY (1 percent).

Communications & Power Industries LLC received $18,841,200 for repair and remanufacture of AN/SLQ-32 output, driver and sidekick output traveling wave tubes (TWTs) to support the repair and refurbishment of Navy ships. Work in Palo Alto, CA.

General Atomics received $10,267,000 for integration and installation of the EMALS CVN-78 shipboard software and support.

Huntington Ingalls Inc. received $23,499,948 for early industry involvement associated with the LHA(R) Program Flight 1 (LHA 8) ship design to initiate an affordability design phase. Early industry involvement funding is awarded to U.S. shipyards that have the facilities and resources to build a large deck amphibious assault ship without major re-capitalization.

Northrop Grumman received $61,177,585 for logistics support, which includes managing the systems by furnishing repaired and new units for approximately 202 items for the WSN Ring Laser Gyro Navigation System, AN/BPS-15/16 Radar Set Weapon System, Guided Missile Destroyer Steering/Scalable Integrated Bridge System, and SPQ-9B Radar Set items. This was sole source, per 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(1).

Safe Boats International received $34,518,536 to build four MK VI Patrol Boats.

SUBMARINES

ERAPSCO received $165,997,792 for 141,263 AN/SSQ Series sonobuoys, and 5,000 MK-84 Signal Underwater Sound devices.

General Dynamics received $20,210,437 to migrate the AN/BYG-1 Weapons Control System from a Technology Insertion (TI-14) baseline to a TI-16, integrate Advanced Processing Build (APB-13 and APB-15), and deliver this capability in multiple variants to multiple submarine platforms. Purchases: U.S. Navy (86.36 percent) and Australia (13.64 percent).

L-3 received $17,772,601 for design, development, production and test of two thin line compact towed arrays, 10 test assets, engineering service hours, and spares.

Lockheed Martin received $10,944,817 for FY2014 Acoustic Rapid Commercial-Off-The-Shelf (COTS) Insertion (ARCI) Systems Production. A-RCI is a sonar system that integrates and improves towed array, hull array, sphere array, and other ship sensor processing, through rapid insertion of COTS based hardware and software. This funds development and production of the A-RCI and common acoustics processing for Technology Insertion 12 through Technology Insertion 14. Funding will purchase TI-14 Spares for 12 ships and one installation and check out kit for the Virginia Class.

Thales Defense & Security, Inc. received $13,437,584 for sonar transducers.

SHIP MAINTENANCE

AMSEC LLC; CDI Marine Co. LLC; and Q.E.D. Systems Inc. received a cumulative $96,800,000 for material kitting and technical/logistical support required for modernization of USS Blue Ridge (LCC 19) and USS Mount Whitney (LCC 20) under Extended Service Life Program.

BAE Systems received $15,866,612 for USS Decatur (DDG 73) FY2014 Dry-Docking Selected Restricted Availability (in San Diego, CA), which includes depot-level maintenance, alterations and modifications to update the ship’s military and technical capabilities.

BAE Systems received $15,178,728 for USS New Orleans (LPD 18) FY2014 selected restricted availability (SRA), which includes depot-level maintenance and modifications to update and improve military and technical capabilities.

BAE Systems received $27,625,758 for USS NITZE (DDG-94) FY2014 and 2015 docking selected restricted availability, which includes depot-level maintenance and modifications to update the ship’s military and technical capabilities.

BAE Systems received $29,773,261 for USS San Jacinto (CG 56) FY2014 dry-docking selected restricted availability.

BAE Systems received $54,698,937 for Docking Selected Restricted Availability to include structural work and extensive repairs/maintenance on USS Gettysburg (CG-64) in Jacksonville, FL.

Detyens Shipyards Inc. received $11,631,622 for a 75-calendar day regular overhaul and dry-docking of USNS Arctic (T-AOE 8). This was a 100% small business set-aside.

Huntington Ingalls Inc. received $13,759,894 for USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76) FY2014 planned incremental availability (in San Diego, CA), which includes depot-level maintenance and modifications to update the ship’s military and technical capabilities.

Pacific Ship Repair & Fabrication, Inc. received $9,093,866 for repair and modernization of USS Shoup (DDG 86). Work will be performed in Everett, WA.

Vigor Industrial, LLC received $16,984,940 for a 120-calendar day regular overhaul and dry-docking of USS Emory S. Land (AS 39). Work will be performed in Portland, OR.

VEHICLES

BAE Systems received $16,797,020 for technical support and sustainment system tech support for the Bradley.

Central Power Systems & Services received $6,540,024 for Detroit Diesel engine pistons and fuel injectors.

GTA Containers Inc. received $7,539,057 for 6,333 tarps and bows for the five-ton long wheel base vehicle.

Navistar Defense received $27,597,040 for MRAP hardware kits to upgrade MaxxPro Dash and long-wheel base ambulances.

Northrop Grumman received $18,258,765 for Integrated Air & Missile Defense S280 transition from the baseline M1085 shelter to the M1148 Load Handling System FMTV mounted S-280 shelter.

Pratt & Miller received $6,541,220 to complete the build, integration, final testing, and evaluation for the Occupant Centric Platform, Technology Enabled Capability Demonstrator test asset.

CLOTHING

Carter Industries, Inc. received $9,417,600 for improved combat vehicle crewman’s coveralls, universal camouflage pattern.

Federal Prison Industries, Inc. received $9,687,600 for physical fitness uniform t-shirts.

McRae Industries, Inc. received $14,393,768 for Army hot weather combat boots.

GEAR & EQUIPMENT

ATK received $23,005,070 for a LRIP of the M829E4 120mm armor-piercing, fin-stabilized, discarding sabot, with tracer cartridge.

BAE Systems received $88,330,859 on contract (W56HZV-09-C-0550) to extend existing M109A7 and M992A3 engineering and manufacturing to incorporate LRIP test support.

Berg Manufacturing, Inc. received $22,338,771 to supply metalworking machine shop sets shelters (numbering 2 to 220) and field service representative support (as needed).

Custom Manufacturing & Engineering received $7,085,250 for power supplies for various weapons systems.

Kaman Precision Products, Inc. received $8,475,368.48 for Lot 11 Production of Joint Programmable Fuze systems. 8 percent of funds are FMS to Morocco and Singapore.

Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace received $43,000,000 and $10,680,000 for depot support for the CROWS.

Milpower Source received $6,716,559 for portable universal battery systems for the M119A3 Howitzer. One bid solicited, one received.

Nomad Global Communication Solutions received $14,112,833 for 2 First Article Test units and up to 73 Custom Made Shelters in support of the National Guard Bureau Consequence Management Communications Unified Command Suite (UCS) program. This includes fabrication, qualification, testing, integration and mounting of the shelters onto chassis.

Will-Burt Advanced Composites received $19,465,444 for design, fabrication and delivery of radio frequency shielded enclosures (shelters) with weatherization, and electrical and fire suppression systems to house the electronic equipment infrastructure for the Relocatable Over-The-Horizon (ROTHR) system.

ORDNANCE DISPOSAL

Broadband Discovery Systems received $9,000,000 to build, test and assess multi-sensor stand-off person-borne IED detection systems. One bid solicited, one received.

CACI- Athena, Inc. received $12,646,545 for J-9 Operations Research Analysis (ORSA) support services. J-9 ORSA will provide rapidly deployable expertise in all aspects of counter-IED operations to support U.S. Forces.

ChemImage Bio Threat received $13,000,000 for enhancement, testing and delivery of Light Guard Mercury explosive detection systems. One bid solicited, one received.

SPACE

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $23,936,197 for Rapid Engineering Solutions for Lifecycle Support to address issues of mechanical, electronic, and electro-mechanical systems and sub-systems obsolescence and hard-to-acquire parts.

Astrium Services Government, Inc.; Harris Corp. Government Communications Systems; Space Systems/Loral, LLC; Millennium Engineering & Integration Company; Surrey Satellite Technology; Orbital Sciences Corp.; Boeing; Exoterra Resources; Lockheed Martin; Merging Excellence & Innovation Tech; ViviSat, LLC; Intelsat General Corp.; SES Government Solutions; and Eutelsat America Corp. received a cumulative $494,900,000 to provide rapid and flexible means for DOD to acquire commercial hosting capabilities for gov payloads. Procurement of hosted payload missions includes a fully-functioning on-orbit hosted payload space and ground system for government-furnished payloads on commercial platforms. In addition to the space and ground systems, the HoPS mission will also include related on-orbit support for data transfer from the hosted payload to the government end-user(s). The HoPS studies include those study activities related to enabling hosted payloads.

Honeywell Technology Solutions Inc. received $12,932,500 for the Hybrid site upgrade at Vandenberg AFB Tracking Station B-Side. Hybrid aims to upgrade the remaining sides of the eight Air Force Satellite Control Network sites. Hybrid will modernize the electronics with each of the sites and integrate those electronics with the existing Antenna.

Northrop Grumman received $9,922,486 for software enhancements, testing, integration and maintenance. This helps NASIC operate and enhance the databases, tools, dynamic web-based products, and related systems/capabilities. Work will be in Beavercreek, OH.

Northrop Grumman received $300,000,000 for systems engineering, management, and sustainment (SEMS) III. Northrop Grumman will provide systems engineering, systems/program management, and sustainment services for the Air Force Weather Agency’s (AFWA) enterprise information systems.

CYBER, IT & COMMS

Advanced Systems Development, Inc. received $6,539,047 for information systems operations support.

ATK; Battelle Memorial Institute; Booz Allen Hamilton; Concurrent Technologies; General Dynamics; and Leidos received a collective $300,000,000 for materials and services to meet the Armament, Research, Development, and Engineering Center’s mission requirements.

Alutiiq Pacific LLC received $23,221,444 and Systems Technology Forum Limited received $22,850,232 to support the Space & Naval Warfare Systems Center Pacific (SSC Pacific) Radio Frequency and Network Systems Support Division to provide satellite communications, radio frequency and navigation systems support.

Boeing received $6,969,157 for Radomes. This was a sole-source acquisition.

CACI received $9,423,610 for systems development support services in support of Military Sealift Command’s (MSC) Command, Control, Communications, and Computer Systems directorate. SAIC received $10,437,025 for IT ashore operations support services in support of MSC’s Command, Control, Communications & Computer Systems directorate.

Computer Sciences Corp. received $24,904,083 for IT services to support the Technology Services Organization’s (TSO) requirements and its role as an enterprise business systems integrator for the Marine Corps. The TSO supports a number of business mission areas across the Marine Corps, including Dep. Commandant Program & Resources, Dep. Commandant Manpower & Reserve Affairs, and Dep. Commandant Installation & Logistics.

Exelis, Inc. received $13,143,582 for Systems Engineering and Sustainment Integrator (SENSOR) FY2014 system sustainment contract line number 1022 extension project: product line management, system engineering, system repairs (including emergency site visits for immediate repairs); acquisition, repair and qualification of spare parts; preventative maintenance inspections; radome maintenance, supply management, plans, roadmaps and sustainability assessments; program management reviews; reports, vendor maintenance agreements/software licenses and logistic support review brochures; requirements definition, analysis and modeling/software modeling/risk reduction; software integration lab operations/maintenance, mission assurance, configuration/data management, technical order management, proposal development, engineering studies and analysis, system performance metrics collection, and obsolescence/sustainability analysis reports. Work will be at Colorado Springs, CO.

Exelis Inc. received $49,900,000 for new and enhanced software to research, develop, enhance, deploy and support the next-generation Cross Domain Transfer Solutions. This will be accomplished by: researching new cross domain transfer solution technologies; enhance current solutions utilizing technologies from varying Technology Readiness Levels; providing authorized users the ability to securely transfer data between interconnected security domains while protecting against unauthorized access or malicious attack; by deploying and supporting solutions to meet the current and evolving intelligence needs.

Hewlett-Packard received $8,792,988 for the technical refresh of laptop and desktop computers in support of the Air Force Reserve Command mission.

InfoReliance Corporation received $8,932,350 for Microsoft Consulting Services (MCS) in support of the DTRA Directorate of Information Operations (J6) at Ft. Belvoir.

Jacobs Technology, Inc. received $18,255,200 for engineering and technology acquisition support, which consists of disciplined systems/specialty engineering and technical/information assurance services, support, and products using established government and industry processes. This is a sole source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin; Jacobs Technology; SRA International; L-3; Raytheon; InfoReliance Corp.; CACI-ISS; Northrop Grumman; General Dynamics; and IBM received a cumulative $960,000,000 for Network-Centric Solutions-2 (NETCENTS-2) Application Services. This will provide services such as sustainment, migration, integration, training, help desk support, testing and operational support. Other services may include exposing data from Authoritative Data Sources to support web-services or Service Oriented Architecture constructs in Air Force enterprise environments.

Northrop Grumman received $9,240,820 to support Product Data Systems Data Management and Migration Support Program. Northrop Grumman will continue data system support for the Joint Engineering Data Management Information and Control System, Parts Configuration Management System, and Technical Data-Product Data Management System.

Northrop Grumman received $11,410,533 for oversight of all IT requirements for developing, administering, maintaining, and enhancing automated data and info systems.

SAIC received $89,526,485 for management and tech support for high performance computing services, capabilities, infrastructure, and technologies. Work will be performed at Wright-Patterson AFB; Aberdeen Proving Ground; Stennis Space Center and Vicksburg, Mississippi; Kihei, Hawaii; Lorton and McLean, VA.

Spin Systems, Inc. received $8,447,038 for the technical refresh and deployment, and operations and sustainment of the DOD Information Technology Portfolio Repository and the Department of the Navy Application & Database Management System IT platform. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Spry Methods Inc.; Gateway Ventures Inc.; Gemini Industries Inc.; and MH Harbor, LLC received a cumulative $33,326,967 for Information Dominance Program and financial management support services.

MISSILES, BOMBS, ROCKETS

Aerojet Rocketdyne received $18,507,839 for Stinger flight motors (1,000). Stinger flight motor funding supports the Service Life Extension Program (SLEP) of 850 Stinger Block I Missiles at McAlester Army Ammunition Plant, OK. The SLEP will replace all Stinger missile components susceptible to degradation due to aging (including the flight motor) providing a missile with a 10-year shelf life. One bid was solicited with one received.

BAE Systems received $32,409,117 to provide systems engineering/technical assistance support, training and development in performing integration, sustaining engineering and program management support functions for the Minuteman III Weapon System at Hill AFB.

DRS Laurel Technologies received $31,823,189 for hardware for Ship Self-Defense System (SSDS) Mk2 production hardware. The scope includes hardware production, assembly, configuration, alignment, integration, testing and shipping of the SSDS hardware.

Exelis Systems received $21,536,294 for support functions to the Launch & Test Range System Eastern and Western ranges: range sustainment; external user support, projects and engineering services (MDA, Navy, NASA, etc.; systems engineering; and interim supply support spares for the sustainment period). Work will be at Patrick AFB.

Lockheed Martin received $8,119,209 for industrial engineering support to include Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS), Block I/IA, GMLRS, HIMARS, MLRS M270/M270A1/M270B1/M270C1 launcher platforms, and Low Cost Reduced Range Practice Rocket (LCRRPR).

Lockheed Martin received $19,990,000 for long-lead material and the labor, planning and scheduling necessary for FY2015 Trident II D-5 missile production schedule. This was sole source, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Northrop Grumman received $31,000,000 for continued R&D of the integrated air and missile defense hardware and software systems.

Raytheon received $8,737,000 for Tomahawk Depot Missile maintenance, including direct fleet support for resolving technical issues with deployed weapons and inventory management for the U.S. Navy and the UK.

Raytheon/Lockheed Martin Javelin JV received $162,445,463 to acquire 361 Block 1 tactical missiles and 137 command launch unit retrofits for the U.S. Army; 189 Block 1 tactical missiles and 147 Block 1 tactical missiles for the U.S. Marine Corps; and 20 Block 1 tactical missiles for New Zealand and Jordan.

EDUCATION & TRAINING

Camber Corp.; Deloitte Consulting LLP; General Dynamics; Mission Essential Personnel; and Vose Technical Systems General received $56,384,558 for technical/professional support, and related tailored admin services for the Center for Civil Military Relations (CCMR) inside and outside the continental United States. Potential FMS: Egypt, Indonesia, Lebanon, Singapore, and Saudi Arabia. Combined, they’re less than two percent of total.

CGI Federal Inc. received $107,880,073 for the operational environment core functions requirement for the Army TRADOC’s G-2 support services.

Goodwill Industries received $12,748,338 to provide food and logistics support for the Galley and Uniform Issue Department, which supports training at the Recruit Training Command (RTC), Training Support Center (TSC), and other tenant activities located within the Naval Station Great Lakes. This was solicited and awarded non-competitively pursuant to the Javits-Wagner-O’Day Act and the rules of the Committee for the Purchase from People Who Are Blind or Severely Disabled, which implements the AbilityOne Program.

Northrop Grumman received $9,859,646 to continue key and essential logistics requirements at the Joint Readiness Training Center and Ft. Polk.

SAIC received $21,593,120 for U. S. Fleet Forces Command (USFLTFORCOM) highly specialized, comprehensive, analytical training and technical services in direct support of Fleet Deployment Training Program. SAIC will provide live, virtual, and constructive training program support, fleet training academics and instruction support, training exercise and event support. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(1).

Sonalysts; AMSEC; Delex Systems; and URS Federal Services, Inc. received a total $8,997,500 to produce interactive multimedia instruction courseware modules for NAVSEA’s on-board and schoolhouse training programs for all areas of submarine ops & procedures.

Technical & Project Engineering received $12,084,389 for professional software development and support, testing, training, and software and database maintenance services to support Army training models.

TrueTandem received $6,819,552 for enterprise knowledge services for U.S. Army Reserve.

CBRNE

Cubic Applications received $500,000,000 for J3/7 CBRNE exercise, training, capability assessment and capacity development support, which helps DTRA‘s Building Partnerships Divisions and functions in the daily performance of the Building Partnership mission.

FUEL & ENERGY

Atlantic Diving Supply Inc.; received $9,695,389 for 2,136 advanced integrated solar power case assemblies in support of USMC Ground Renewable Expeditionary Energy System under the Program Manager for Expeditionary Power Systems.

Bay Electric Co.; BITHENERGY, Inc.; Bright Light Federal; Ecoplexus; Essex Construction; Indian Energy LLC; Infinity Development Partners; Legatus6 LLC; Scatec Solar North America; SunLight General Capital LLC; and Third Sun Solar are being added to the Solar technology power awards. These companies and those previously announced will share $7,000,000,000 for producing solar technology.

BP received $112,842,240 and Shell received $12,517,260 for reformulated blendstock for oxygenate blending gasoline.

CCI Solutions received $10,172,160 for energy upgrades and repairs to Building 291 at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard.

Graybar Electric Company received $15,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations for the South central zone one region. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Inglett & Stubbs International received $7,449,713 for a smart power infrastructure demonstration for energy reliability and security, Phase 3, at Camp H.M. Smith.

Petroleum Traders Company received $15,838,744 for ultra-low-sulfur diesel fuel.

Pacific Energy Solutions LLC received $334,135,534 for purchase of reliable locally generated, alternating current, power from solar power generation systems that are designed, constructed, owned, operated, and maintained by the contractor on government property. Procured per 10 USC §2922(a) authority. Sites include three roof tops and one ground mount location (Waipio Peninsula) at JBPHH; six roof tops and two elevated photovoltaic (PV) structures at MCBH, and one roof top and one elevated PV at Camp Smith 

Walsh Construction Co. received $26,947,000 for construction of electrical capacity and cooling towers at Naval Support Activity Bethesda.

Wasatch Intergraded Waste Management District received $53,487,463 to pipe an estimated annual quantity of 447,800 Kilo-pounds of steam to Building 260 on to Hill AFB. This is a sole source acquisition.

MEDICAL

AvKare, Inc. received $9,728,923 for purchase of pravastatin. Locations of performance are Tennessee, Czech Republic and Israel.

Donald L. Mooney Enterprises LLC; Loyal Source Government Services LLC; Magnum Opus Technologies Inc.; and Vesa Health & Technology Inc. received a cumulative $130,430,320 for various ancillary services that include the labor bands of Allied Health, Technologist, Technician and Assistant. Work at: Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton; Naval Hospital Lemoore, CA; Naval Hospital Twenty-Nine Palms; Naval Medical Center, San Diego; Naval Hospital Bremerton, WA; Naval Hospital Oak Harbor, WA; Naval Health Clinic Hawaii; Naval Hospital Guam; and associated branch clinics (3 percent).

Golden State Medical Supply received $6,590,033 for medical supplies. Pelican/Hardigg Industries received $35,440,000 for medical items and accessories.

Professional Contract Services received $32,209,556 for healthcare housekeeping services, Evans Army Community Hospital, Ft. Carson.

Sea Box Inc. received $17,460,000 to manufacture and delivery Basic Expeditionary Airfield Resources (BEAR) Hygiene Systems (PDF). This provides for an additional 45 BEAR Hygiene Systems.

World Wide Technology received $6,542,299 for Medical Systems Infrastructure Modernization Multi-Site Phase II A and B Electronic List of Materials. This is for the purchase of a list of IT Network products such as network power supplies, switches, cables, etc., to be delivered to various CONUS/OCONUS Air Force Medical Treatment Facilities.

TRANSPORTATION & STORAGE

Boeing received $65,358,994 for 204 Cargo On/Off Loading System (COOLS) A-Kits; 204 COOLS B-Kits; and 22 COOLS Ballistic Protection System (BPS) Kits.

Federal Express Charter Programs received $57,810,843 for worldwide transportation. Team members include: Air Transport International LLC; Atlas Air, Inc.; Delta; Federal Express Corporation; Polar Air Cargo Worldwide; and MN Airlines.

Liberty Global Logistics LLC; American President Lines; and Farrell Lines, Inc. each received $513,625,650 for international commercial multimodal transportation services.

National Air Cargo Group received $513,625,650 for international commercial multimodal transportation services.

URS Federal Services received $11,767,117 for material distribution services to include receipt, storage and issue of material.

ENVIRONMENTAL

Ageiss, Inc.; Labat Environmental, Inc.; Potomac-Hudson Engineering; and Stell Environmental Enterprise, Inc. received $22,000,000 for environmental consulting services for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Southwest, Ft. Worth District.

Arcadis U.S., Inc. received $27,055,427 for performance-based remediation (PBR), which includes construction and engineering necessary for investigation, design, remedial action and construction, and environmental remediation activities to achieve minimum performance objectives to site closeout at 107 Installation Restoration Program sites at Vandenberg AFB.

Plexus Scientific Corp. received $8,466,187 for construction and engineering activities necessary for investigation, design, remedial action and construction, and environmental remediation activities. Plexus will support site closeout at 29 Installation Restoration Program sites. Work will be performed at Scott AFB.

URS Federal Services Inc. received $19,822,134 to provide hazardous material products and management services in Maryland.

USA Environmental, Inc. received $26,153,599 for munitions and explosives of concern removal at Vieques Naval Training Range and Naval Ammunition Support Detachment, Puerto Rico. Work removes surface, subsurface, and underwater munitions and explosives.

FOOD SERVICES

Gossner Foods received $25,577,791 for ultra-high temperature, shelf-stable milk.

HPC received $83,000,000 for subsistence support. 

Lakeview Center Inc. received $10,280,538 for dining facility/cook support.

Merchants Food Service received $7,220,745 for food distribution in LA & MS. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Sysco received $16,500,000 for food and beverages.

BASE SUPPORT & LOGISTICS

Accenture Federal Services, LLC received $8,701,870 for finance and audit business integration contractor support for the Navy Enterprise Resource Planning efforts. IBM received $12,223,063 for Army General Fund Audit Support Services.

Accenture Federal Services received $11,112,066 for general fund enterprise business systems onsite support and change requests.

Aleut Facilities Support Services received $95,986,770 for civil engineering support to cadets, active duty, civilians, and contractors at the U.S. Air Force Academy. This includes service request management, property maintenance, repair and operations, planning and engineering services, environmental services and protection, property management, housing and furnishing management, and emergency response. Aleut Facilities Support Services received $14,714,248 for support services to cadets, active duty, civilians, and contractors at the U.S. Air Force Academy. This includes Cadet Wing Operations (support cadet events; manage cadet quarters, furnishings, and supplies; operate cadet quarters facilities), academic program (develop presentation materials and supplies; operate academic facilities), and athletic program support (support for athletic events; maintain sports equipment and supplies; operation of athletic facilities).

Analytic Services Inc. received $6,490,089 to support the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (A,T & L) in: medical program; physical program; planning, programming, budgeting, executing, and financial support; international and interagency strategic relations; science and technology; and operations and admin support.

Atlas Executive Consulting; CBAIA Logistics; and Compendium Federal Technology received a cumulative $33,326,967 for program management and financial management support, including non-inherently governmental services to perform analyses and research.

Ch2M Hill Constructors, Inc. received $6,625,200 for water and wastewater operation and maintenance at Ft. Campbell.

EJB Facilities Services received $12,122,891 for base operations support at various installations in the NAVFAC Northwest. Work provides for, but is not limited to, all management and admin, visual services, security, housing, facilities support (excluding grounds and janitorial services), pavement clearance, utilities, base support vehicles and equipment, and environmental services to provide base operations support services.

Exelis Systems received $445,107,802 for base operations at Camp Arifjan, Camp Buehring, Udairi Range and Camp Patriot in Kuwait. This includes the aerial port of debarkation, and seaport of debarkation in Kuwait.

Jacobs Technology received $63,375,000 for support services to the Aberdeen Test Center, Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD.

KIRA, Inc. received $36,904,747 for base operations and maintenance services for the Directorate of Public Works, Ft. Carson.

Northrop Grumman received $62,266,368 for petroleum, oil, lubricants; ammunition supply point; vehicle and equipment maintenance; warehousing; and logistics at the National Training Center (Ft. Irwin).

PRIDE Industries received $14,862,152 to support Ft. Polk Directorate of Public Works Base Operations.

SAIC received $32,000,000 for maintenance, repair and operations for the Southeast Zone 1 region. This was a sole-source acquisition. SAIC received $10,500,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations for the South central zone two region. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Source America received $26,028,750 for facilities maintenance for the Department of Public Works, Ft. Knox.

SupplyCore Inc. received $8,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations for the North central region. This was a sole-source acquisition. SupplyCore Inc. received $8,000,000 for maintenance, repair and operations for the Southeast Zone 2 region. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Z Systems Corp. received $7,140,388 for maintenance and supply support at the Ft. Hood Logistics Readiness Center.

CONSTRUCTION

Alutiiq Diversified Services, LLC; ASRC Civil Construction, LLC; Bristol Design Build Services, LLC; Frawner Corp.; SBH Services, Inc.; and White Mountain Construction, LLC received $20,000,000 EACH for a broad range of maintenance, repair and minor construction work in Anchorage, Alaska.

AMEC-CAPE and Weston Solutions Inc. received $345,000,000 for Rapid Disaster Infrastructure Response for time sensitive, emergency construction and debris removal.

AMEC Environment & Infrastructure, Inc.; Gilbane Federal; CB&I Federal Services LLC; Weston Solutions, Inc.; and Willbros Government Services received $30,000,000 for construction in support of NAVFAC EXWC, Port Hueneme. Work provides engineering, cleaning, inspection, construction and repair of fuel systems at worldwide DOD facilities.

ARGO Systems, LLC received $7,684,677 to create oyster bars for Harris Creek and the Tred Avon River off the Choptank River, MD.

Benaka, Inc.; Black Horse Group; Cherokee General Corp.; H. V. Collins Co.; Structural Associates; Watermark; and Wu & Associates, Inc. received a cumulative $95,000,000 for construction projects in NAVFAC Mid-Atlantic, Public Works Department-Maine.

Benaka, Inc. received $6,673,999 to demolish Buildings 152 and 427 and renovate Building 474 at Naval Submarine Base, New London, CT.

Birmingham Industrial Construction/Robins & Morton JV; CTA I, LLC; McGoldrick Construction Services Corp.; Royce Construction Services, LLC; Total Team Construction Services, Inc.; and Valiant Construction, LLC received $49,000,000 for medical facilities repair and construction to support the Army Medical Command, Southern Region.

Black Construction/MACE International JV received $6,678,072 for repairs to worn out and deteriorated building components and utility systems of Unaccompanied Personnel Housing 7 at the U. S. Navy Support Facility, Diego Garcia.

Carlson Constructors Corp. received $21,862,091 to build a family housing at Ft. McCoy.

Carothers Construction, Inc. received $15,630,000 to construct a 36,000 square foot regional simulation center to include a controlled area, simulation communication rooms, simulation suites, secure communication infrastructure, network distribution nodes, operation centers, work cells, classrooms and administrative offices.

Carothers Construction, Inc. received $13,543,293 for construction of the Bridgeport Army Reserve Center in Branford, CT.

CH2M Hill / Clark Nexsen Energy Partners JV received $60,000,000 for architect and engineering and design services worldwide for energy efficient projects and services, which will require expertise in energy management, architectural, mechanical, electrical, structural, and environmental disciplines as it pertains to DOD utility systems and energy consuming systems in naval shore infrastructure.

Deutschmark Express; Sherrick Construction; Synergid Commercial; Graves Plumbing; Roederer Construction; Charpie Construction; Dunlap and Co.; Sycamore Engineering; Strebig Construction; Patterson Horth; Industrial Maintenance & Construction Services; LD Docsa; AML, Inc.; Nuvo Construction; Wycliffe Enterprises; Driftwood Builders; Fetters Construction; Veterans Construction Services; Valiant Construction; Avantti Builders Group; Krempp Construction; Building Associates; R.E. Crosby; JDH Contracting; Davis & Associates; CMS Corp.; Hannig Construction; Koetter Construction; Maven Construction; Bruns-Gutzwiller; Sunco Construction; Kings Trucking; CDI Inc.; Hal-PE; K&T Construction; JDM LLC; DC Design Construction; Integrated Environmental Solutions; IMR Development Corp.; TJB Air Conditioning; Ohio Paving & Construction Co.; Puente Construction Enterprises; Timus Nasco; Northwind Engineering; TMG Services; MKS Inc.; Hamilton Hunter Builders; J&B Builders; and Coburn Contractors received a cumulative $30,000,000 for sustainment/repair and maintenance, and military construction projects for the National Guard. Work will be performed in Indiana at Camp Atterbury, Mascatatuck Urban Training Center, Jefferson Proving Ground, Terre Haute and Ft. Wayne.

Fortis Networks, Inc. received $9,500,000 for military and civil works construction services in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Southwestern Division.

Hawaiian Rock Products Corp. (Mangilao, Guam) received $90,000,000 for airfield paving projects at various U. S. military installations around Guam.

Herman Construction Group; Rore, Inc.; M & M; and Premier Civil Construction received $95,000,000 for multi-discipline construction (i.e. civil, mechanical, electrical, demolition, etc.) with additional capability to perform large-scale projects at Luke AFB.

H.V. Collins Co. received $11,761,926 for renovations to three levels of Hewitt Hall Research Center of the Naval War College. Renovations include converting the existing garage (lower level) to interior high capacity book storage space, and repairs to the basement and first floor levels of Hewitt Hall, as well as garage conversion and other system modifications.

HNTB Corp. received $35,000,000 for architectural and engineering services required for planning and designs for the Arlington National Cemetery southern expansion project.

Howard W. Pence received $16,301,000 to build one, two-story classroom facility and two, three-story dormitories on a reinforced concrete foundation and concrete floor slab consisting of approximately 46,871 square feet. Work will be performed in Louisville, TN.

I.E.-Pacific, Inc. received $10,435,000 to renovate Building 302 at Naval Base Point Loma.

Insight Pacific LLC; Bethel-Webcor JV-1; Dawson-Hawaiian Builders I; JSR-ECC LLC; CT JV; and Environet Inc. received a cumulative $240,000,000 for construction projects primarily within the NAVFAC Hawaii.

Johnson Controls Building Automation Systems received $450,000,000 to procure and install utility monitoring and control systems and similar services (heating, ventilating, and air conditioning systems).

Joyce & Associates Construction; Daniels & Daniels Construction; Lifecycle Construction Services; OAC Action Construction; Olympic Enterprises, Inc.; and Vet Built, Inc. received $90,000,000 for general construction projects located at Camp Lejeune, MCAS Cherry Point, MCAS New River, and other outlying facilities in North Carolina.

K.L. House Construction received $21,285,500 to design/build the nuclear systems wing and sustainment center Phase II, Kirtland AFB.

Korte Construction received $48,276,440 for design/construction of the hangar 6 extension to accommodate P-8 aircraft, hangar 9 extension to accommodate P-3 aircraft, and repair and modernization of hangar 6 including seismic upgrades at NAS Whidbey Island, WA.

Michael Baker Jr. Inc. received $9,000,000 for architectural and engineering services for Army Reserve projects nationwide and military projects within the Great Lakes and Ohio River Division mission boundaries.

MW Builders, Inc. received $47,777,000 for construction services for a new five-story barracks/company operations facility, a common cooling tower with support facility, and associated site improvements.

Newt Marine Service; Western Contracting Corp.; Commercial Contractors Equipment, Inc.; and Arrowhead Contracting Inc. received a cumulative $49,000,000 for Missouri River recovery program from Ft. Peck Dam, Montana, to Kansas City.

Parsons Government Services, Inc. received $8,000,000 for architectural and engineering services for construction management support for the Mobile District and South Atlantic Division, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Raass Brothers, Inc. received $8,898,317 for building renovation in buildings 7416 and 7418, Ft. Carson.

R. J. Zaval & Sons Inc. received $12,272,783 for the Roseau Flood Risk Management Project to construct a 6,500-foot diversion channel, a channel inlet structure, a concrete restriction structure and drainage system in Roseau, Minnesota.

Strock Enterprises; Upstate Construction Services; Oddo Construction Services; Tidewater, Inc.; Great Lakes Dock & Materials; Geo. Gradel Co.; Morrish-Wallace Construction; Huffman Equipment Rental; and SAF, Inc. received a collective $40,000,000 for general construction throughout the lakes and rivers division.

Structural Builders, Inc.; Maverick Constructors, LLC; Semper Tek, Inc.; Artesian Contracting Company, Inc.; CCI Solutions, LLC; DTH Corp.; OAC Action Construction Corp.; RCA Contracting, Inc.; and Paul S. Akins Company, Inc. received $225,000,000 for design-build construction projects. Projects shall include all work necessary to design, construct, and/or renovate including design build and bid build facilities for Moody AFB, Grassy Pond and Grand Bay Range, GA, and Avon Park Range, FL.

Sustainable-Takisaki JV; Abatement Contractors of Montana; Imperial Construction; and RJS Construction Inc. received a cumulative $25,000,000 for construction at Fairchild AFB.

T. L. Wallace Construction received $25,000,000 for emergency temporary residential roof repairs for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers/FEMA disaster response in Hawaii.

URS Group Inc. received $8,000,000 for architectural and engineering services for the Mobile District and South Atlantic Division, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Voith Hydro, Inc.; National Electric Coil, Inc.; Alstom Power Inc.; and Andritz Hydro, Corp. received $99,500,000 for the rehabilitation and/or replacement of generating equipment at U.S. Army Corps of Engineers hydroelectric facilities within the Northwestern Division: Portland District, Seattle District, Walla Walla District, Omaha District and Kansas City District. This may also be used to perform emergency non-routine maintenance and assessment at Northwestern Division hydroelectric facilities.

Walsh Federal JV St. received $34,748,000 for construction at the Marshall Elementary School at Ft. Campbell.

Watts Constructors LLC received $9,395,000 for constructing an integrated water treatment system at Puget Sound Naval Shipyardand Intermediate Maintenance Facility, Bremerton, WA.

Zieson Construction Co.; Lavastida Development Group; Blackhawk Constructors; Hanke Construction; Ruiz-Tidewater JV; and HGL Construction, Inc. received a cumulative $49,000,000 to support military construction projects within the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Kansas City District.

DREDGING

Great Lakes Dredge & Dock received $17,027,415 for dredging shoaled material in New York harbor along Newark Bay Port Elizabeth Channel, Newark Bay north and south areas, and along Kill Van Kull in the vicinity of Constable Hook and Anchorage Channel.

Great Lakes Dock & Materials received $24,992,668 to repair the Cleveland East Breakwater.

# # # #

*Editing consolidated similar contracts. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

**Any clerical errors are the editor’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

***To avoid competitive bidding, DOD invokes 10 U.S.C. 2304, FAR 6.302, and FAR 8.405-6. DOD also invokes 15 U.S.C. 638 to avoid competitive bidding when dealing with small businesses.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst,is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.

BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for August 2014

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DOD spent $24,843,125,595+ on 325 individual contracts in August 2014

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $24,843,125,595 on 325 individual contracts during August 2014.

REMOTELY PILOTED MACHINES

Areté Associates received $10,316,696 for engineering services in support of AN/DVS-1 Coastal Battlefield Reconnaissance and Analysis (COBRA) Block 1 program.

CAE USA Inc. received $20,714,725 for MQ-1/9 Contract Aircrew Training and Courseware Development at Creech, Holloman, March Air Reserve Base, and Hancock ANG Base.

ImSAR LLC received $98,971,746 for R&D, rapid advancement and integration of small aperture radars on small UAVs.

Kutta Technologies, Inc. received $9,000,000 for the Synergistic Unmanned Manned Intelligent Teaming Mission Tasking System. One bid solicited, one received.

Northrop Grumman received $240,653,315 for three Block 30M RQ-4B Global Hawks. Each contains an Enhanced Integrated Sensor Suite and an Airborne Signals Intelligence Payload (ASIP), plus two additional ASIP sensors as retrofit kits.

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES – Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations.

Boeing received $234,700,000 for long lead items for the production and delivery of 24 AH-6I, initial spares and ground support equipment. This involves some FMS to Saudi Arabia.

General Dynamics received $38,526,856 to provide Canada and the UAE with Mark (MK) 80 General Purpose Bomb Body series: MK82-1= 1,662; MK82-6= 12,187; MK84-4= 736; MK84-10= 3,544.

L-3 Communications received $61,000,243 to modify and integrate ISR capabilities onto two King Air 350 aircraft for Saudi Arabia.

Northrop Grumman received $47,596,436 to provide France engineering and development of five E-2C compatible AN/ALQ-217 (PDF) electronic support measures units. This includes hardware/software modifications required for compatibility with the French E-2C aircraft, modification kits, aircrew and maintenance training, publications, post-installation ground and flight testing, and tech data.

Raytheon received $109,078,477 to provide Germany, Greece, Israel, Japan, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Kuwait, Netherlands, Spain, Taiwan, and Ukraine with engineering services for the Patriot System Tracking Radar. One bid was solicited and one received.

Raytheon received $59,486,000 to provide Taiwan with advice and assistance in the training, planning, fielding, deployment, operation, maintenance, and sustainment of the Patriot Air Defense System, associated equipment, and logistics support elements.

Raytheon received $36,553,657 for repair and maintenance on the SM-1 for Taiwan ($11,075,758; 30.3 percent), Spain ($7,347,285; 20.1 percent), Turkey ($4,240,224; 11.6 percent), Japan ($3,399,490; 9.3 percent), France ($3,253,275; 8.9 percent), Chile ($2,120,112; 5.8 percent), Bahrain ($2,010,452; 5.5 percent), Italy ($1,900,790; 5.2 percent), and Poland ($1,206,271; 3.3 percent). This includes core support and discrete tasking. This was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302.1.

Sikorsky received $30,351,927 to provide Saudi Arabia 12 UH-60M Black Hawk helicopters.

Sikorsky received $33,592,172 to provide Saudi Arabia with initial spares and aviation ground support equipment for 24 UH-60M Black Hawk helicopters.

USCENTCOM

BAE Systems received $6,621,547 to service prepositioned Bradley vehicles in Kuwait. This includes maintenance, supply, and transportation systems.

Exelis Systems Corporation received $83,133,390 for services to Army prepositioned stocks: maintenance, supply, and transportation systems in Kuwait.

USSOUTHCOM

Airtec Inc. received $10,780,768 for ISR services in support of USSOUTHCOM. Airtec will provide ISR utilizing two contractor-owned, contractor-operated aircraft. Work will be performed in Bogota, Columbia. This was non-competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1.

Telecommunication Support Services, Inc. (TSS) received $8,922,696 for Mobile Air Surveillance System (MASS) technical support. The MASS mission includes radar air surveillance; radio and satellite communications for counterdrug operations; host nation air sovereignty; air search and rescue; and other regional operations in USSOUTHCOM.

USSOCOM

American Rheinmetall Munitions received $16,783,613 to provide USSOCOM multi-bang, flash bang grenades. Work will be performed in Trittau, Germany.

DPR Hardin Whitesell-Green, Inc. JV received $27,546,924 to build a Special Operations Forces Sustainment Training Complex at Camp Lejeune.

Leading Technology Composites received $95,000,000 for Special Operations Forces personal equipment advanced requirements tactical stand-alone and modular supplemental armor protection (SPEAR TSA & MSAP) ballistic inserts.

RJC Architects Inc. received $30,000,000 for new construction and renovation of various projects for Naval Special Warfare Command, San Diego, CA.

JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER (JSF)

Lockheed Martin received $8,167,322 to provide maintenance and support on F-16 chase aircraft supporting the F-35.

Lockheed Martin received $12,789,893 for F-35 “Deployable Spares Package” spares.

Lockheed Martin received $19,994,879 for site activation efforts required for the stand-up of the UK Joint Strike Fighter Academic Training Center at RAF Marham.

Lockheed Martin received $46,197,710 for non-recurring technical assistance in support of F-35 for the USAF ($18,185,731; 39.3 percent); U.S. Navy ($9,092,864; 19.7 percent); USMC ($9,092,864; 19.7 percent); and international partners ($9,826,251; 21.3 percent). Some work will be in Samlesbury, UK (16.5 percent) and Laval, Canada (0.1 percent).

Lockheed Martin received $122,217,252 for support equipment for the F-35 aircraft. This includes sensor covers, tool sets, vacuum clamp sets, and heat gun assemblies.

Lockheed Martin received $232,794,734 towards F-35 LRIP Lot VI, providing non-recurring sustainment activities, to include procurement of 19 training devices and 69 items of complex support equipment.

United Technologies (Pratt & Whitney) received $7,822,454 to maintain and install 9 engineering change proposals for upgrade retrofits of 11 F-135B engines.

United Technologies Corp. (Pratt & Whitney) received $9,468,406 for Lot VI LRIP F135 support equipment for the USMC ($5,455,280; 58 percent); USAF ($2,684,019; 28 percent); and the international partners ($1,329,107; 14 percent). This includes handling, testing, and maintenance equipment and parts (borescope inspection kits, main engine inlet covers, lift nozzle module slings, lift gearbox adapters, and water wash cart systems).

OSPREY

Bell/Boeing JPO received $15,170,182 for repair of various parts on the V-22. One company was solicited for this non-competitive requirement in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c) (1).

Bell-Boeing JPO received $21,395,545 to replace the warning system and radar warning receiver system and to upgrade the capabilities of the programmer and associated software on the MV-22 Integrated Aircraft Survivability Equipment Universal Urgent Needs Statement Effort.

Exelis, Inc. received $190,000,000 to provide Suite of Integrated Radio Frequency Countermeasure components and services [PDF] to the Technology Applications program office and CV-22 program offices.

HELICOPTERS

Cliffdale Mfg. Inc. received $8,520,000 for maintenance and overhaul of the actuator, elect (OH-58D) – min. 100; max. 1,080. This includes 180 for unnamed FMS.

I. E. Pacific received $7,877,000 to design/build an H-60 trainer facility at Coronado.

Robertsons Fuels Systems received $47,916,209 for auxiliary fuel systems including reduced size crashworthy external fuel systems and internal auxiliary fuel system combo packs for the AH-64. This involves some FMS to Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, and South Korea.

FIXED WING AIRCRAFT

Aerospace Testing Alliance (ATA) received $224,044,944 to continue operations, maintenance, information management and support of Arnold Engineering Development Complex at Arnold AFB.

Alloy Surfaces Co. received $49,980,000 for 375,000 decoy infrared, countermeasure MJU-66/B flares. This was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(l).

Airborne Tactical Advantage Co. (ATAC) received $12,798,915 to service the Contracted Air Services program, which provides contractor-owned/operated Type III high subsonic and Type IV supersonic aircraft to the U.S. Navy for a wide variety of airborne threat simulations. ATA provides training, shipboard, and aircraft squadron weapon operators and aircrew. Work is in Newport News (45%); Point Mugu (35%); and overseas (20%). This was non-competitive, per FAR 6.302-1.

BAE Systems received $7,530,004 to augment the maintenance capabilities for the Instrumentation Radar Support Program with one-of-a-kind parts and supplies, on-site overhauls and emergency technical support. This involves unnamed FMS.

Boeing received $6,666,319 for a VC-25 Nitrogen Generation System Study to comply with FAA Final Rule FAA-2005-22997.

Boeing received $6,948,500 for Phase C1 of the F/A-18 A-D Airframe Service Life Extension Program. This includes 7 flight critical engineering change proposals for fracture and maintenance critical areas of the airframe.

Boeing received $9,365,890 to continue to refine itsVTOL Experimental Aircraft design, bringing it to a preliminary review level. Specifically, Boeing will complete the following milestones: system definition review, interim progress review and preliminary design review. This is an “other transaction” for DARPA.

Boeing received $30,385,333 to develop a structural repair manual for the P-8A.

BAE Systems received $74,000,000 for F-16 Stores System Tester sustainment. The contractor will provide F-16 Stores System Tester spares, as well as engineering and software development and maintenance support. This is a sole-source acquisition. FMS is approximately 33 percent of the contract, $6,753,382 of which goes towards Taiwan.

BAE Systems received $8,005,521 and Northrop Grumman received $10,006,600 to provide additional development and testing of the current Common Infrared Countermeasure (CRC) Technology Development phase system.

Boeing received $295,643,284 for long-lead items to be used in the manufacture and delivery of 12 Lot II P-8A aircraft for the U.S. Navy (8 for $152,043,495; 51 percent) and Australia (4 for $143,599,789; 49 percent). This was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1.

Communications Vertex Aerospace received $13,744,643 for logistics services for aircraft availability of 96 TH-57 aircraft. Services include “pre-flighting,” fueling, and safety details for designated missions. Work performed at NAS Whiting Field.

Defense Support Services LLC received $14,857,926 for ACC Acquisition Management and Integration Center contracting and program management oversight to include functional and quality assurance support for the aerial targets program which directly supports live-fire weapons system testing and enables the 53rd Weapons Evaluation Group in the developmental and operational weapons testing for all air-to-air missiles, and for the F-22, F-35, F-16, and F-15 aircraft. Work will be performed at Tyndall and Holloman AFB.

General Dynamics received $16,286,671 for full-rate production of 60 Lot 38 Type 3 Advanced Mission Computers for the E/A-18G aircraft for the U.S. Navy (48) and Australia (12). This was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 USC 2304 (c)(1). Purchases: U.S. Navy ($9,772,003; 60 percent) and Australia ($6,514,668; 40 percent).

General Electric received $123,409,100 for compressor parts. This is a sole-source acquisition.

General Electric received $311,491,670 for 75 Lot 14 F/A-18E/F F414-GE-400 engines and devices for U.S. Navy (48 install) and Australia (24 install and three spares). This also provides after burner modules, fan modules, high-pressure combustor modules, combustor modules, and high/low pressure turbine modules for the U.S. Navy ($194,856,028; 63 percent) and Australia ($116,635,642; 37 percent).

Honeywell International received $7,739,414 to work on the total integrated engine revitalization automated gas turbine 1500 program.

International Enterprises Inc. received $28,905,257 for F-16 electric module assemblies. This was a sole-source acquisition.

J.K. Hill & Associates; Sunrise Beach Corp.; Affordable Engineering Services; Aerospace Engineering & Support Inc.; M1 Support Services; Precision Turbines Inc.; and Zenetex LLC received a combined $96,500,000 for depot on-site contractor augmentee teams (DOCAT), which supplement maintenance/support personnel. Areas include modification, maintenance, inspection, and repair of various weaponry including, but not limited to: F-16, A-10, F-22, C-130, F-35, F-4, components, missiles, ground equipment and vehicles. Work will be performed at the Ogden Air Logistics Complex, Utah, and satellite operating locations to include Aerospace Maintenance & Regeneration Group (AMARG); Aircraft Maintenance Group, Randolph AFB; Missile Maintenance Group, F.E. Warren AFB; Malmstrom AFB; and Minot AFB. This is a 100 percent small business set-aside competitive acquisition.

L-3 Communications received $15,832,848 to add eight C-12s to the life-cycle support maintenance contract for the Army’s C-12/RC-12/UC-35 fleet.

L-3 Communications received $15,548,954 for 25 system configuration sets, Navy Aviation Simulation Master Plans, Next Generation Threat System upgrades and 25 liquid crystal display spare kits for F/A-18 Tactical Operational Flight Trainer Suites.

Lockheed Martin received $10,271,439 for transmitter receivers. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $12,875,160 for additional reliability and maintainability maturation program projects at Ft. Worth, TX.

Lockheed Martin received $116,717,704 for advance procurement funding needed for long lead parts to eventually produce fourteen C-130J aircraft.

M1 Support Services received $17,723,476 to continue T-38 program management, organizational and intermediate maintenance services support for ACC’s T-38 Companion Trainer program. Work will be performed at Beale, Holloman, Langley, Tyndall, and Whiteman Air Force Bases.

MCT Industries, Inc. received $7,991,633 for Aircraft Engine Trailers ETU-8/E and ETU-9/E. Roughly 75 of each type. FMS may be part of this funding, “but the origin of sale is unknown at this time.”

Northrop Grumman received $10,482,257 for product support and engineering investigations on the Full Rate Production Lot 2 E-2D Advanced Hawkeye Program.

Northrop Grumman received $32,502,712 for non-recurring engineering in support of the Full Rate Production Lot 2 E-2D Advanced Hawkeye. Work will be performed across the U.S. Some work will be in Aire Sur L’Adour, France (2.48 percent).

PAE Applied Technologies received $69,783,348 for range engineering, and operations and maintenance services in support of the Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Division’s Atlantic Test Range and ATMO Division. Services include: system operations, laboratory and field-testing, marine operations and target support services, engineering, range sustainability, maintenance, data reduction and analysis.

PAE Applied Technologies received $8,728,547 for support services on air vehicle modification and instrumentation efforts, to include design, engineering, acquisition, integration, installation, operational support and in-service engineering. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Parker Hannifin Corp. received $238,050,000 to support multiple aviation weapon systems. This is a sole-source contract.

Physical Optics Corp. received $10,449,470 for design, testing, and delivery of data transfer units and ground encryption devices on F/A-18 E/F and EA-18G.

Raytheon received $24,559,600 for 158 High Speed Anti-Radiation Command Launch Computers for the U.S. Navy (121 computers for $20,500,108; 83.5 percent) and Australia (37 computers for $4,059,492; 16.5 percent) for F/A-18 E/F and EA-18G aircraft.

SAIC received $144,000,000 for supply chain management of industrial hardware used in aviation maintenance, repair and overhaul.

Spectro, Inc. received $9,024,628 to repair spectrometers in support of U.S. Air Force and Army requirements. This is a sole-source acquisition.

UES Inc. received $9,000,000 for Mechanical Systems Performance Evaluation III. UES will research and develop turbine engine mechanical system technology engines being developed under the Versatile Affordable Advanced Turbine Engine and the Adaptive Engine Technology Development programs. Work will be performed at Wright-Patterson AFB.

United States Technologies Inc. received $13,825,350 for up to 5,270 of the various types of AN/ULQ-21 technique control modulator circuit card assemblies in support of the Airborne Threat Simulation Organization (ATSO). ATSO develops, integrates, and operationally supports countermeasures and emitter threat simulation systems.

AEGIS

Lockheed Martin received $60,802,243 for ship integration and test of the Aegis Weapon System (AWS) for AWS Baselines through Advanced Capability Build 12. This provides Aegis shipboard integration engineering, Aegis test team support, Aegis modernization team engineering support, ballistic missile defense test team support, and AWS element assessments. This was not competitively procured in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Lockheed Martin received $193,610,317 for material, equipment, and supplies to conduct the technical engineering to define, develop, integrate and test Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense 4.1 and 5.0 Capability Upgrade baselines through their respective certifications.

LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP (LCS)

CACI received $25,053,358 for professional support services in support of Program Executive Office Littoral Combat Ships. Services include: program management and acquisition support, technical and engineering support, business and financial management support and logistics support. This was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1), implemented in FAR 6.302-1.

General Dynamics received $9,759,692 for planning yard services in support of both variants of in-service Littoral Combat Ships. Bath Iron Works will provide engineering, planning, ship configuration, material and logistics support to maintain and modernize both variants of the LCS class.

General Dynamics received $17,203,639 for material and labor in support of the post-shakedown availability (PSA) for USS Coronado (LCS 4). Efforts include program management, production supervision, temporary protection services and transportation services necessary to complete the PSA. Work will be performed in San Diego, CA.

SUBMARINES

General Dynamics received $34,185,625 to migrate the AN/BYG-1 Tactical Control System from a Technology Insertion (TI-12) baseline to a TI-14, integrate Advanced Processing Build (APB-13 and APB-15) and deliver this capability to multiple submarine platforms for the U.S. Navy (91.22 percent) and Australia (8.78 percent).

Lockheed Martin received $59,728,305 for the Navy’s FY2014 AN/SQQ-89A(V)15 Surface Ship Undersea Warfare (USW) System and shore site development systems. Lockheed will develop and produce the Technical Insertion 14 baseline of the AN/SQQ-89A(V)15 USW systems. Purchases: U.S. Navy (74.6 percent); Japan (25.4 percent).

Lockheed Martin received $31,905,389 for production of 108 MK48 Mod 7 Common Broadband Advanced Sonar System (PDF) Functional Item Replacement (FIR) Kits, related engineering services to support CBASS FIR kits, CBASS FIR kit spares, and CBASS FIR kit warranty. The objective of the MK48 Mod 7 CBASS kit is to supply the U.S. Navy with functional item replacement upgrade kits consisting of a guidance and control box, broadband analog sonar receiver, preamplifier, cable assemblies, and guidance and control assembly materials.

Northrop Grumman received $27,625,777 for production of proof of manufacturing/first articles and functional item replacement level components of the MK54 Mod 0 Lightweight Torpedo (LWT) Array Kits, engineering services hours, hardware repair support, test equipment, additional spares and production support material, and warranty options. This includes some FMS to Australia and India.

Phoenix International Holdings Inc. received $14,840,283 for Submarine Rescue Diving and Recompression System (SRDRS) operation and maintenance services.

Raytheon received $59,159,691 for production of MK54 Mod 0 Lightweight Torpedo (LWT) Kits, and related engineering and repair services for upgrade of U.S. Navy LWT. Buyers include the U.S. Navy, India, Turkey and Australia.

Triton Marine Construction received $17,866,411 for structural repairs to Piers 2 and 15 at Naval Submarine Base New London, CT.

SHIP MAINTENANCE

BAE Systems received $7,397,159 for USS Ardent (MCM 12) FY2014 selected restricted availability, which includes depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications that update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities. Work will be performed in San Diego, CA.

BAE Systems received $7,807,207 for USS Scout (MCM-8) FY2014 selected restricted availability, which includes depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications that update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities. Work will be performed in San Diego, CA.

BAE Systems received $13,684,941 for USS Howard (DDG 83) FY2014 selected restricted availability (SRA), which includes planning and execution of depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications that will update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities.

BAE Systems received $16,614,546 for repair and alteration of USS Port Royal (CG 73) in Pearl Harbor, HI.

BAE Systems received $55,911,832 for USS Arleigh Burke (DDG 51) FY2015 extended selected restricted availability, which involves depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications that will update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities. Work will be performed in Norfolk, VA.

BAE Systems received $78,074,377 for USS Lake Erie (CG 70) FY2014 extended dry-docking selected restricted availability (SRA), which involves depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications that will update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities. Work will be performed in San Diego, CA.

General Dynamics received $139,953,434 for USS Pearl Harbor (LSD 52) FY2014 extended dry-dock phased maintenance availability, which includes depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications that will update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities. Work will be performed in San Diego, CA.

Huntington Ingalls received $49,646,289 to prepare for defueling work on the USS George Washington (CVN 73). This was non-competitive, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Huntington Ingalls received $25,648,075 for design and construction on the Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78). HI will complete the design/construction of 40 headquarters modification requisition changes to CVN 78 in Newport News, VA.

NAVAL CONTRACTS

BAE Systems; General Dynamics; Global Technical Systems; Northrop Grumman; and Serco, Inc. received $2,529,500,000 for Consolidated Afloat Networks and Enterprise Services (CANES) production units.

Epsilon Systems Solutions Inc. received $16,063,920 to provide intermediate-level support to the Southwest Regional Maintenance Center in San Diego, CA. This provides professional and engineering services, to include the areas of production operations, corrosion control, engines, machine, combat systems, production control, and offsite repair.

General Dynamics received $19,522,980 for Surface Electronic Warfare Improvement Program (SEWIP) Block 1B3 FY14 LRIP units. This procures 15 SEWIP Block 1B3 LRIP systems and associated data. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) and FAR 6.302-1.

Hornbeck Offshore Services, LLC received $19,754,900 to extend services of the long-term charter of U.S.-built, U.S.-flagged, contractor-owned and -operated surface escort vessels HOS Black Powder, HOS Westwind, HOS Eagle View, and HOS Arrowhead. These vessels escort U.S. Navy assets transiting into and out of U.S. Navy ports.

Northrop Grumman received $34,774,652 for production hardware for Ship Self-Defense System (SSDS) Mk2 production hardware.

Textron Inc. received $21,904,620 to build Landing Craft, Air Cushion (LCAC) 101 of the ship-to-shore connector (SSC) program.

VEHICLES

BAE Systems received $7,900,000 and General Dynamics received $7,900,000 for technical, cost, and risk assessments (given requirements for technology integration refinement), which leverage Ground Combat Vehicle (GCV) technology for potential incorporation into Future Fighting Vehicle (FFV) system. One bid was solicited with one received.

BMI Defense Systems received $12,219,736 to acquire 5,064 Gunners Accessory Package (GAP) 2.0 kits supporting the cross platform MRAP program.

Choctaw Manufacturing received $10,757,625 for 500 Medium Tactical Vehicle Replacement (MTVR) modular production trailers (MPT) and water dispensing systems to support U.S. Marine Corps’ Air-Ground Task Force and deployed Maritime Prepositioned Forces. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(5).

Navistar Defense received $9,763,940 to upgrade 487 home-stationed MRAP Maxx Pro dash vehicles to a final configuration, defined as LRIP configuration 21.

Navistar Defense, LLC received $38,423,006 for vehicle reset, which will include replacement of mandatory parts and labor for maintenance repairs to bring the vehicles to a condition code-A standard. Upgrades include bringing vehicles to a common configuration of LRIP as outlined as incoming configuration of M1235 Maxx Pro Dash, M1235 A1 Maxx Pro Dash with Independent Suspension System, M1235 A2 Maxx Pro dash Ambulance will be converted to a final configuration of M1235A4.

Oshkosh received $45,037,719 to reset and upgrade up to 800 Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) All-Terrain Vehicles (M-ATV).

Raydar Inc. received $25,973,375 for vehicular automated diagnostic systems (VADS), which allows trouble-shooting on a wide variety of USMC vehicles.

CLOTHING

American Apparel Inc. received $99,000,000 for men’s all-weather Army coats.

Golden Manufacturing Company received $36,716,648 and Puerto Rico Apparel Manufacturing Corp. (PRAMA) received $15,938,573 for Permethrin ACU coats.

Valley Apparel received $7,549,725 for men’s cold weather and summer flyers’ jackets.

GEAR & EQUIPMENT

Aardvark received $7,600,000 for components of the Launched Electric Stun Device (LESD) Program: TASER XP25 Cartridge, TASER X26 Conducted Electrical Weapon (CEW), Extended Digital Power Magazine (XDPM), and Holster for the CEW.

Alaska Structures, Inc. received $12,207,742 for 307 Medium Shelter Systems. This is a limited source competitive acquisition between two small businesses. Anchor Industries received $200,000,000 for commercial shelters.

Armor Source received $12,893,417 for 42,000 (max) Advanced Combat Vehicle crewman helmets. Ceeradyne Inc. received $19,041,312 for 42,000 (max) Advanced Combat Vehicle crewman helmets. Gentex Corp. received $14,825,236 for 42,000 (max) Advanced Combat Vehicle crewman helmets.

ATK received $47,900,000 for 105mm M724A1E1 kinetic energy target practice discarding sabot with tracer.

BAE Systems received $9,665,276 to modernize infrastructure, Building G-4, Holston Army Ammunition Plant, Kingsport, Tennessee.

Cubic Applications, Inc. received $7,342,769 for operating the Korea Battle Simulation Center. Work will be performed in South Korea.

Fraser Volpe received $16,000,000 for 1,306 M25E1 stabilized binoculars.

General Dynamics received $8,420,783 for 23,960 M1 high fragmentation artillery shells.

Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace received $13,202,364 for post-production conversion of CROWS M153A1 to CROWS M153.

L-3 received $22,250,000 for Fuze Munition Unit 160 A/B fuses. L-3 received $22,696,932 for an increased quantity of M783 fuses for the 60mm, 81mm and 120mm mortar cartridges.

NI Industries Inc. received $6,711,000 for ammo cartridge case manufacturing intellectual property, tooling, gages, miscellaneous inventory items and cartridge cases.

Northrop Grumman received $34,666,402 for continued operations and sustainment of the VADER currently deployed in theater.

Spectra Technologies LLC received $29,734,914 for M303 blasting demolition kits.

SPACE

ARCTEC Alaska JV received $32,062,792 for operation and maintenance of 15 distinct long-range radar sites, three remote radio sites, maintenance of the Regional Air Operations Center, and Maintenance Control and Communications Center within Alaska.

Computer Sciences Raytheon received $80,202,071 for operations, maintenance, and sustainment of critical range and launch processing systems that support the launch mission of the 45 SW and its launch customers at Cape Canaveral Air Station, Florida.

InDyne, Inc. received $30,663,645 for infrastructure operations and maintenance services for non-personal services involving operations and maintenance of the facilities, systems, equipment, utilities and infrastructure primarily for CCAFS and several Florida annexes in support of the 45th Space Wing (45 SW) and its mission partners.

Leidos, Inc. received $23,268,000 for systems engineering and integration support services at Los Angeles AFB.

Lockheed Martin received $24,191,749 for critical mission operations for NORAAD Cheyenne Mountain Complex/Integrated Tactical Warning/Attack Assessment (NCMC/ITWAA) in support of air, missile and space defense.

The Aerospace Corp. (TAC) received $6,589,859 for general life cycle systems engineering and integration for the National Security Space Community. TAC will provide planning, systems definition and technical specification support. They will also analyze user needs, design and design alternatives, interoperability, manufacturing and quality control. They will assist with test and evaluation, launch support, flight tests, orbital operations and integration of space systems into effective systems of systems.

United Paradyne Corp. received $8,462,353 for management, operations, maintenance and services to support launch programs for unconventional propellants, cryogenics and fuels accountability, personnel safety equipment, hazardous operations support, fleet management, systems and safety engineering, transient aircraft maintenance/aerospace ground equipment and precision measurement. Work will be at Vandenberg AFB.

CYBER, IT & COMMS

Ace Technology Partners received $7,047,715 for Fidelis eXtrusion Prevention System (XPS) standard maintenance and software. Air Force Life Cycle Management Center/HNCK, Cryptologic and Cyber Systems Division, Lackland AFB.

Data Intelligence LLC received $12,958,772; IntelliSolutions, Inc. received $13,689,953; and Tactical Engineering & Analysis, Inc. received $13,411,718 for engineering support for standards engineering and analysis, test support, configuration, architecture engineering and analysis services, fleet support engineering services, and Network Design Facility operation to ensure interoperability among Navy, joint service, and allied air, surface, subsurface and land command, control, communications, computers and ISR systems.

Data Link Solutions received $124,326,550 and ViaSat, Inc. received $72,673,450 for design and development work required to bring Tactical Targeting Network Technology (TTNT) capability to the Multifunctional Information Distribution System (MIDS) Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS) terminal and to achieve a successful critical design review.

DRS ICAS received $85,200,000 to build and deliver up to 600 Air Force Tactical Receive System-Ruggedized Concord Intelligence Broadcast Receivers. Work will be performed at Dayton, Ohio and Johnstown, PA. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Exelis Systems received $18,170,444 for information management/IT enterprise services for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Work will be in Vicksburg, Mississippi.

Harris IT Services received $450,000,000 to provide engineering, maintenance, and program management support for the Crisis Management System. This was arranged via “other than full and open competitive action” pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c) (6) or 41 U.S.C. 3304(a) (6). DITCO-National Capital Region, Fort Meade, Maryland is the contracting activity.

Harris RF Communication received $19,500,000 for approximately 1,500 AN/PRC-152A radios and accessories. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Honeywell Technology Solutions received $11,929,705 for the Unified S-Band Development Phase II at Transportable Remote Tracking Station Block Change. Work will be performed at Colorado Springs, CO.

Jacobs Technology received $11,514,275 for engineering and technology acquisition support services, which consists of disciplined systems/specialty engineering and technical/information assurance services, support, and products using established government, contractor, and industry processes. This is a sole source acquisition.

L-3 Communications received $29,146,854 for AEHF Communication Security/Transition Security (COMSEC/TRANSEC) Systems II (ACTS II), transitioning from electronic key management system to key management infrastructure. This is a sole-source acquisition. USAF Life Cycle Management Center, Cryptologic & Cyber Systems Division, Joint-Base San Antonio, TX, is the contracting activity.

Mythics, Inc. received $11,262,441 for a blanket purchase agreement requirement for an unlimited license agreement for a software license and support.

NEXGEN Communications received $8,432,040 for Miniaturized Receiver Transmitter (mRXTX) Prototype Modules. Contractor will develop and demonstrate a miniaturized Radio Frequency (RF) transmit/receive module to support Computational Leverage Against Surveillance Systems (CLASS) requirements. This effort encompasses the innovation, design, assembly and assessment of a miniaturized RF transmit/receive module. The fabrication of the receive module, and then the integration of transmit and receive modules, will be performed.

Rockwell Collins, Inc. received $35,364,765 for KC-10 Communication Navigation Surveillance/Air Traffic Management (CNS/ATM) kits and installs.

SAIC received $10,500,000 for prime vendor maintenance, repair and operations support. This was a sole-source acquisition.

SBD Alliant, LLC received $10,205,502 for IT services at the Defense Acquisition University (DAU) in Alexandria, VA.

MISSILES, BOMBS, ROCKETS

BAE Systems received $44,283,973 to operate, maintain and logistically support Solid State Phased Array Radar Systems (SSPARS) at Beale AFB, CCAFS, Clear, Thule AB, and RAF Fylingdales.

Ellwood National Forge Company received $68,648,430 for Bomb Live Unit 109 empty case assembly and container/pallet consisting of Bomb Live Unit-109/B Bomb Body (604 total), Bomb Live Unit-109 A/B Bomb Body (52 total), Bomb Live Unit-109 C/B Bomb Body (3,864 total), CNU-417/E container (2,224 total) and MHU-212 B/E pallet (26 total). This involves some FMS to Denmark.

General Dynamics received $8,990,973 for ongoing acquisition of the weapons systems shipboard development, integration requirements, and shipboard engineering for refueling support for the U.S. and the UK Trident II D5 missile program. This is a sole source acquisition negotiated under 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Lockheed Martin received $8,675,877 for contractor field support for PAC-3 missile. This involves some FMS to Taiwan.

Lockheed Martin received $124,600,000 for Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) ground components. This provides the U.S. government THAAD launchers, peculiar support equipment, THAAD fire control and communication spares, and launcher spares. This was a sole-source acquisition and one offer was received.

Modern Technology Solutions, Inc. (MTSI) received $25,472,255 for modeling, simulation, algorithms and analysis techniques for Missile Defense Concept & Technology Development. MTSI will develop high-fidelity, closed-loop (HFCL) simulations for the broad portfolio of future sensor and interceptor concepts.

Northrop Grumman received $89,951,041 for ICBM Propulsion/Ground/Guidance programs. Work will be at Hill AFB.

Northrop Grumman received $12,597,184 for ICBM Operational Software Sustainment Program (IOSSP). This provides sustainment of the IOSSP of the ICBM weapon system under the ICBM partial bridge contract at Hill AFB.

Northrop Grumman received $7,627,500 for hardware qualification and production required for the Strategic Systems Programs Shipboard Integration Increment 11 program; hardware and installation for the New START Treaty compliance program; hardware and installation for the Variable Energy Eject Actuator Strategic Systems Programs Alteration; development of the improved missile temperature monitoring capability; and hardware for the UK deep maintenance period. Work performed in 10 locations across the U.S.

Raytheon received $43,991,627 for design, development, and engineering analysis of the AIM-9X Block II Missile System for the U.S. Air Force ($23,620,000; 53.7 percent); U.S. Navy ($8,155,233; 18.5 percent); Turkey ($4,095,000; 9.3 percent); Oman ($2,590,000; 5.9 percent); Belgium ($2,100,000; 4.8 percent); Netherlands ($1,680,000; 3.8 percent); Singapore ($980,000; 2.2 percent); Malaysia ($701,394; 1.6 percent); and Morocco ($70,000; 0.2 percent). This includes replacements for AIM-9X Control Actuation System, inertial measurement unit, electronics unit processor and improvements in insensitive munitions performance in the hardware development and Operational Flight Software versions 9.4X, 9.15X and 10.X.

Raytheon received $21,235,744 to provide AIM-9X Sidewinder mission support and sustainment activities to: U.S. Air Force ($8,511,899; 40.08 percent); U.S. Navy ($8,501,000; 40.03 percent); Singapore ($469,205; 2.21 percent); Australia ($469,205; 2.21 percent); Denmark ($469,205; 2.21 percent); Finland ($469,205; 2.21 percent); Turkey ($469,205; 2.21 percent); SouthKorea ($469,205; 2.21 percent); Switzerland ($469,205; 2.21 percent); SaudiArabia ($469,205; 2.21 percent); and Poland ($469,205; 2.21 percent).

Raytheon received $8,451,000 for Standard Missile-2 (SM-2) and Standard Missile-6 (SM-6) engineering and technical services for the U.S. Navy (84.5) and Japan (15.5 percent). Some work will be performed in Maizura, Japan (11 percent).

RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $14,009,069 for advanced materials, components and systems for Anti-Tamper Systems Engineering, Test and Evaluation. Alion shall provide technical, engineering and expertise to perform research, development, test and evaluation utilizing emerging materials, components, and systems for technology protection.

Alion Science & Technology received $14,024,395 to help the Army Research Laboratory with sensors and electron devices. Alion shall provide technical, engineering, and expertise in the application of advanced materials, manufacturing, and testing to sensors and emitters and their components, including the design and integration of systems to incorporate solutions and the use of prognostics and diagnostics to ensure the functionality and effectiveness of those solutions. The work will be performed at Adelphi, MD.

Innovative Scientific Solutions (ISSI) received $45,005,000 for fundamental and applied combustion and component research. ISSI aims to design, fabricate, assemble, instrument and develop apparatus to perform research experiments in the areas of basic flame chemistry, emissions formation, heat transfer-fluid mechanics-combustion interaction, and related fields, as well as develop and test new combustion technologies and components.

Quanterion Solutions Inc. received $25,370,000 to provide services (analytical, expanding knowledge base, research, CBRNE outreach, combating WMD, maintaining the IT readiness and innovation) for operations at Defense Threat Reduction Information Analysis Center (DTRIAC) on Kirtland AFB.

NANOTECHNOLOGY

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $10,027,721 for nanotechnology development and technology transfer. Alion will provide technical, engineering, and expertise in nanotechnology applications in materials, manufacturing and testing.

EDUCATION & TRAINING

ASM Research, Inc. received $20,745,764 for operation and maintenance of the Army Training Requirements & Resources System (ATRRS).  

BGI LLC received $7,899,200 for EC-130H and A-10 aircrew training and courseware development training programs at Davis-Monthan AFB and Moody AFB.

Delaware Resource Group of Oklahoma received $11,757,127 for F-15C/E, F-16 and F-22A aircrew training and courseware development at Shaw AFB, Mountain Home AFB, Langley AFB, Nellis AFB, Seymour Johnson AFB, and Hill AFB.

FlightSafety International received $27,471,325 for Gulfstream Pilot/Flight Engineering Training services, providing initial and refresher academic and simulator training, and a variety of technical courses for U.S. Air Force pilots and flight engineers operating the Air Force Gulfstream series aircraft.

Glacial Technical Services (GTS) received $9,751,505 for role players in support of pre-deployment training for the USMC. GTS shall provide a “total turn-key operation” and may utilize foreign language specialists, civilians on the battlefield, and other role players to enhance realism in a simulated theater of operations. This was non-competitive, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(5).

Milburn Academy Inc. received $7,328,879 to provide foreign language services to U.S. Army Forces Command.

Nova Technologies received $55,000,000 for modification of the fire training system for simulated battlefield training of fire support specialists, joint fire observers and soldiers at the institutional and unit level.

CBRNE

Immediate Response Technologies received $44,959,802 for C2A1 Canister filter component of the M40A1/M42 field and combat vehicle chemical biological mask.

Veteran Corps of America received $10,070,960 for TruDefender FTX Handheld Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) for chemical identification. VCOA will provide rugged handheld FTIR chemical identification system, including one-year warranty and support, on-site training (one four-hour course per instrument for up to 10 students). Work will be at Tyndall AFB.

FUEL & ENERGY

Associated Petroleum Products Inc. received $6,716,271 and Brad Hall & Associates received $8,649,152 for ultra-low-sulfur diesel fuel.

BioUrja Trading received $72,705,120; BP received $59,079,000; Calumet Montana Refining received $9,474,317; Chevron received $104,455,466; Epic Aviation LLC received $12,002,258; Equilon Enterprises (doing business as Shell Oil Products US) received $349,749,657; Hawaii Independent Energy received $163,945,596; Petro Star Inc. received $168,337,222; Phillips 66 received $33,490,878; and Western Refining Company received $141,583,656 for aviation turbine fuel.

Claro Company Inc. received $6,896,162 for the repair of power lines on Shaw AFB.

Chevron received $9,355,150 for lubricating engine oil.

ExxonMobile received $373,923,333 for aviation turbine fuel and naval fuel. Valero received $491,703,924 for aviation turbine fuel and naval fuel.

GE received $58,400,000 for an energy recirculation system at the Naval Warfare Center, Carderock Division, Building 633. Work will be performed in Philadelphia.

Graybar Electric Company, Inc. received $16,600,000 for prime vendor maintenance, repair, and operations support for the Northeast region, zone two. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Voith Hydro received $21,920,646 for major rehabilitation of turbine units 1 and 2 at Denison Dam Power Plant, Denison, TX to design, manufacture, test and install 2 Francis turbine runner assemblies, including spare parts, tools and lifting devices.

MEDICINE & SAFETY

Abbott Laboratories Inc. received $19,540,180 for assessing and verifying TBI biomarkers to be used in the detection of mild TBI and to develop the assays for brain injury on a commercial device (Abbott i-Stat®), already in use in the military health system. One bid was solicited and one received.

A-Dec Inc. received $48,250,000 for medical items and accessories. Arthrex Inc. received $255,000,000 for medical items and accessories.

Battelle Memorial Institute received $6,577,033 for work on the Dialysis-Like Therapeutics (DLT) Integration program.

Concurrent Technologies Corp.; Consolidated Safety Service Inc.; and URS Group Inc. received a combined $78,554,443 to provide industrial hygiene support services for the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (BUMED).

Crash Rescue Equipment Service, Inc. received $11,330,244 for fire truck overhaul and repair in Dallas, TX.

Dental Health Products Inc. received $9,250,000 for dental and medical equipment. Dentsply Caulk received $21,000,000 for distribution of general dental supplies.

Dove Medical Supply LLC received $25,000,000 for laboratory supplies. Draeger Medical, Inc. received $60,000,000 for patient monitoring systems, subsystems and components.

Franklin Government Services; Loyal Source Government Services; QuarterLine Consulting Services; The Royster Group, Inc.; and Saratoga Medical Center, Inc. received a total $44,245,993 for physician services around the U.S.

Ichor Medical Systems received $8,640,535 for development and clinical assessment of a DNA-based antibody delivery platform for passive immunoprophylaxis. Work will be in San Diego, CA.

Johnson Controls BAS; Evergreen Fire Alarms LLC; and exp Federal Inc. received a combined $2,500,000,000 for utility monitoring & control and similar systems.

Life Technology Corp. received $9,100,000 to acquire reagents and consumable supplies for the DNA Identification Laboratory at the Armed Forces Medical Examiners System, Dover AFB.

MedTrust LLC received $20,746,039 for extension of specialized nursing services at San Antonio Military Medical Center, Joint Base San Antonio-Fort Sam Houston (JBSA-FSH), and Wilford Hall Ambulatory Surgical Center, Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland AFB.

Philips Healthcare received $17,924,500 for biomedical equipment maintenance at various Air Force and Army treatment facilities.

Shelby Group International, Inc. received $7,000,000 for optical frames.

TRANSPORTATION 

For international ocean and intermodal distribution services, the following companies received: Maersk Line Ltd. ($524,715,094); American President Lines Ltd. ($445,421,902); Farrell Lines Inc. ($141,326,919); American Roll-On Roll-Off Carrier LLC ($138,236,665); Liberty Global Logistics LLC ($90,428,969); Hapag-Lloyd USA ($84,616,444); Central Gulf Lines Inc. ($35,555,037); Foss International Inc. ($12,512,210); and Matson Navigation Company Inc. ($9,645,286);

For domestic and international segments of total delivery services, the following companies received: FedEx ($617,329,567); UPS ($617,329,567); Alaska Airlines ($203,365,417); National Air Cargo Group, Inc. ($203,365,417); and Polar Air Cargo ($203,365,417).

FedEx received $51,159,567 for over-packing and transportation of perishable subsistence to the Pacific Region in support of the Defense Commissary Agency and Defense Logistics Agency.

ENVIRONMENT

AGEISS Inc.; Cti-Urs Environmental Services; Stell Environmental Enterprises; Trieco Environmental JV; Trinity Analysis & Development Corp.; and PB&A/ECATS/Dial Cordy JV received $60,000,000 for environmental consulting services.

The Atlantic Group received $9,000,000 for surveying and mapping of shallow water habitat, floodplain changes and vegetation cover at nationwide locations.

Burleson Consulting Inc. received $7,000,000 to restore and monitor the natural habitat at Ft. Ord.

CAPE Environmental Management, Inc. received $12,500,000 for environmental remedial action services at various sites within NAVFAC Pacific.

Clover Leaf Solutions, Inc.; Gulf South Research Corp.; JESCO Environmental & Geotechnical Services; and Quaternary Resource Investigations received a combined $30,000,000 for environmental consulting services for projects within the Southwest Division or projects assigned to the Southwest Division.

Geomorph Information Systems; Gulf South Research Corporation; Hercules JV; and Vernadero Group Inc. received a combined $50,000,000 for natural resources related services (includes research, botanical, ornithological, mammal, amphibian, reptile and vertebrate surveys, wetland delineations, biological monitoring, natural resources plans, native plant community planning and restoration, wild land erosion control plans, fire management plans, analysis of the effects of military training or similar extensive land uses on natural resources at species, community, and landscape scale, geographic information system, research on natural resource related topics, and preparation of interpretive materials on natural resources) at various Navy and Marine Corps installations within NAVFAC Southwest.

Hesco Bastion, Inc. received $8,792,000 for partially textile-lined gabion baskets, refurbishment of said baskets, and technical advisory for the National Flood Fight Center (PDF), Rock Island, IL.

HGS Engineering, Inc.; Redhorse Corporation; and Environmental Research Group received $30,000,000 for environmental consulting services.

L.P.C. & D. Inc. (Las Piedras, Puerto Rico) received $18,600,000 for construction of a U-framed concrete stilling basin, transition channel and chute. Work also includes the removal of existing steel piling grade control structure, clearing and grubbing, demolition, offsite disposal, seeding, turbidity, environmental, and endangered species monitoring. Work will be performed in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Tetra Tech received $11,905,740 for desert tortoise pre-translocation analyses at Twentynine Palms. Work provides: pre-translocation analyses including clearance-level surveys; health assessments; apply radio transmitters; perform radio telemetry monitoring and activity movement analyses; establish long term monitoring plots; and evaluate the initial density, demography, habitat and disease status of desert tortoises at these plots. TT shall also construct barrier fences, repatriation pens, and holding pens for the desert tortoises.

FOOD SERVICES

DNO Inc. received $18,974,716 for fresh fruit and vegetables. The Produce Connection received $7,912,228 for fresh fruit and vegetables.

Sopakco Packaging received $23,874,720 for tailored operational training meals. The Wornick Company received $12,919,200 for tailored operational training meals.

Sysco received $10,650,000 for food and beverages. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Sysco received $30,500,000 for food and beverages. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Sysco received $281,250,000 for food and beverages.

US Foods received $16,450,000 and $9,000,000 for food. The former was a sole-source acquisition. US Foods received $17,250,000 for food. US Foods, Inc. received $23,250,000 for food and beverages. This was a sole-source acquisition. US Foods received $36,666,667 for food and beverages.

Texas Department of Assistive & Rehabilitative Services (Austin, TX) received $22,964,268 for food service to 13 dining facilities, one flight kitchen, and two warehouses. Work will be performed at Joint Base San Antonio Lackland; Lackland Training Annex; and Camp Bullis, TX.

BASE SUPPORT & LOGISTICS

Accenture Federal Services received $6,737,530 for development, testing, and implementation of the Electronic Technical Work Document (eTWD) system solution. The eTWD solution will replace the current paper-driven instructions and processes at the naval shipyards by using technology to integrate work instructions, drawings, data tables, verification signatures, problem resolution and work control forms into an online certifiable technical work document. Work will be performed in Kittery, ME.

Accenture received $7,265,958 for onsite support and change requests for General Fund Enterprise Systems.

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $25,172,296 for technical analysis, logistics and sustainment for USMC Headquarters.

American Water Operations & Maintenance, Inc. received $296,750,180 to assume ownership, operation, and maintenance of the potable and service water and wastewater utility systems.

ATAP Inc.; Advanced Technology Systems Company; Boneal Inc.; Charleston Logistics LLC. and Tec-Masters Inc. received $231,000,000 to provide services necessary to source, acquire and ensure delivery of a broad range of support equipment items, on demand, to the warfighter. Most of the work is to manage and leverage the supply chain for the scope of this contract, which encompasses approximately 3,000 national stock numbers. This is 100 percent small business set-aside acquisition. 25 percent will support FMS — the first orders are for Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Indonesia and Thailand.

BAE Systems received $65,000,000 for analysis and support, research and development, procurement and production, and sustainment for Program Manager for Special Programs office.

CACI received $7,399,219 and Professional Analysis Inc. received $6,740,525 for worldwide logistics service, including: support requirements for fleet logistics operations; enterprise-wide facilities and Global Shore Infrastructure Plan management; acquisition logistics; sustainment logistics; logistics systems and data management; Combat Logistics Force load management; ordnance management; and supply chain management.

Cassidian SAS (Elancourt, France) received $98,000,000 for support and sustainment of the Eagle Vision Data Acquisition Segment (DAS). The sustainment effort includes systems support, telephone support, software/hardware maintenance, onsite/emergency support, security accreditation, configuration management, sustaining engineering, spare management, sustainment training and overall program management. Support includes sustaining engineering, technical refresh, and the procurement of additional DAS systems.

CB&I Federal Services LLC received $7,112,683 for all labor, personnel, supervision, administration, material, equipment, tools, and transportation necessary, to perform Public Works functions at Fort Wainwright/Donnell, Alaska, and Yukon/Black Rapids, Alaska.

Cherokee Nation Red Wing; International Logistics Group; and Precision Air Inc. received a combined $57,000,000 to provide services necessary to source, acquire and ensure delivery of a broad range of support equipment items, on demand, to the warfighter. Most of the work is to manage and leverage the supply chain for the scope of this contract, which encompasses approximately 3,000 national stock numbers (NSNs). 25 percent of this funding supports FMS to South Korea and Chile.

The Concourse Group LLC received $29,000,000 for professional services in support of the Department of Navy’s Public Private Venture Program. Work provides for all aspects of special venture acquisitions, including family and unaccompanied housing public private ventures, enhanced use leasing, and other public-private venture opportunities such as energy, utilities, and lodging.

G4S received $63,561,125 for base operations services at U.S. Navy Support Facility, Diego Garcia — management and admin; command and staff; public safety; air operations; port operations; supply; MWR; galley; bachelor quarters; facilities support; utilities; base support vehicles and equipment; and environmental to provide integrated Base Operating Services.

G4S received $24,435,969 for base operating services at Naval Base Guantánamo Bay — family housing, facility management & investment, swimming pool care, custodial, pest control, integrated solid waste management, grounds maintenance and landscaping, etc.

Honeywell Technology Solutions received $71,979,673 for prepositioning and USMC logistics support for Blount Island Command. Work will be performed at the Blount Island Command Jacksonville, Florida (85 percent); aboard 12 maritime prepositioning ships (12 percent); 6 locations in Norway (2 percent); and one location in Kuwait (1 percent).

Jacobs Technology Inc. received $21,143,345 to provide engineering and technology acquisition support services which consist of disciplined systems/specialty engineering and technical/information assurance services, support, and products using established government, contractor, and industry processes. Work will be at Hanscom AFB, Washington, DC, Tinker AFB, Langley AFB, Wright-Patterson AFB, Robins AFB, Peterson AFB, and Offutt AFB. This is the result of a sole source acquisition.

MCR Federal, LLC received $15,481,427 for financial management and analysis, program cost analysis, operational cost analysis, billing rate development, billing and revenue, resource advisor (budget), command initiatives and business processes, financial systems analyst familiar with configuration and implementation of Enterprise Resource Planning Systems, Financial Improvement Audit Readiness, quality assurance/internal controls, accounting analysis, and analytical expertise using data analysis tools for data marts and cubes to analyze financial and logistics information. Work will be performed at Scott AFB.

MicroPact, Inc. received $12,989,520 for the Naval Justice Information System (PDF), which will provide enterprise support to U.S. Navy and USMC criminal justice case management and reporting. NJIS will enable end-to-end case management and incident reporting capabilities for law enforcement, investigations, command actions, corrections and judicial actions. This program includes replacement and retirement of the Consolidated Law Enforcement Operations Center, Corrections Management Information, Case Management systems. It migrates all legacy data from those systems into the NJIS database. Work is in Quantico, VA.

Noble Supply & Logistics received $410,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations tailored logistics support for the Southeast region, zone two.

SAIC received $19,000,000 for prime vendor maintenance, repair, and operations support for the Northeast region, zone one. This was a sole-source acquisition.

SupplyCore received $350,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations tailored logistics support for the Southeast region, zone one.

Trailboss Enterprises, Inc. received $17,963,792 for base operation support services at Forward Operating Location-Curaçao. Trailboss is responsible for program management and mission support, including aircraft equipment/servicing; maintenance and repair, meeting environmental standards, civil engineering support, fire protection, utilities, comms network support, logistics, services support of lodging and custodial, ops support, airfield operations and management.

TSI Corporation received $15,000,000 for professional administrative services, general trade and transportation services to support the U.S. National Guard.

CONSTRUCTION

Absher-Bethel JV received $33,061,944 for design/construction of a 168-person dormitory at Eielson AFB.

Alutiiq Manufacturing Contracts received $11,478,761 to repair the main apron access and alert pavements at Buckley AFB.

American Contractor & Technology; Can’t Be Beat Fence & Construction; Core Engineering & Construction; Double H Contracting; Drace Construction; Fairley Construction; Flagstar Construction Company; Gottfried Contracting; The Green-Simmons Company; Gulf Pacific Contracting; Hanco Corp.; Hernandez Consulting; Holliday Construction; J & J Contractors, Inc.; J & S Construction Company; J. O. Collins Contractor; J. W. Puckett & Company; Jay-Van Co.; Johnson-Laux Construction; Larry J. Sumrall Contractors; Laws Construction LLC; LHT Services; Mac’s Construction Co. Inc.; Multi-Con, Inc.; Northwind Engineering, LLC; OAC Action Construction; Orocon Construction; RAF Contracting Inc.; RDT Semper Tek JV; ReflecTech, Inc.; Southeast Cherokee Construction, Inc.; Stewart Development, LLC.; Tony Watson Electric, Inc.; Tradesmen Group, Inc.; Tri-Star Mechanical Contractors; Universal Services, LLC.; and W. B. Construction & Sons, Inc. received $555,000,000 (37 contracts, $15 million each) for design, maintenance, repair, and construction for Mississippi’s National Guard.

AMG S&P JV; AWA Wilson JV; Whitesell-Green Inc.; JSR ECC LLC; SGS LLC; and Solis Constructors Inc. received $537,840,000 for construction services for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Southwestern and Southwestern Fort Worth divisions.

Archer Western Federal JV received $36,998,000 to design and construct an attack/assault/cavalry hangar for rotary-wing aircraft at Joint Base Lewis-McChord.

Ayuda Management Corp.; Bristol General Contractors, LLC; Cherokee General; Global Engineering & Construction, LLC; JSR, Inc.; and Zieson Construction Co. received $49,000,000 for construction for the Army Corps of Engineers, Ft. Hood.

Baldi Bros. Inc. received $21,137,286 for airfield pavement repairs at NAWS China Lake.

Baldi Bros.; CJW Construction, Inc.; Granite Construction Company; Marathon Construction Corporation; and Reyes Construction, Inc. received a combined $99,000,000 for new construction, repair and renovation of heavy horizontal and civil engineering construction projects at various locations within the NAVFAC Southwest.

Boh Bros. Construction Co. received $116,956,672 for the Southeast Louisiana Urban Flood Control Project’s widening of the Florida Avenue Canal, Phase II and III, Orleans Parish, Louisiana.

Bristol General Contractors; Grancor Enterprises Inc.; JWC CMS JV; Rocky Mountain Excavating Inc.; and Sheffield Korte JV received $49,000,000 for construction in the Albuquerque District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Caddell Construction Co. (Delaware), LLC received $110,809,000 for construction of nuclear power training facilities at Joint Base Charleston.

Carothers Construction; Archer Western Construction; Brasfield & Gorrie General Contractors; Hensel Phelps Construction; and M.A. Mortenson Construction received a combined $240,000,000 for construction projects located primarily within NAVFAC Southeast. Work provides for primarily general building type projects (new construction, renovation, alteration, demolition, and repair work) including industrial, airfield, aircraft hangar, aircraft traffic control, infrastructure, admin, training, dorm, and community support facilities for DOD activities.

CJW Construction Inc.; Environet Inc.; Idaho Stage Construction; Jarrett Construction; PentaCon LLC; and RHD Enterprises Inc. received a collective $99,000,000 for construction projects located primarily within NAVFAC Northwest.

Drace Anderson JV received $12,536,888 for construction of an aircraft crash/rescue and fire station headquarters at NAS Key West.

ESI Construction Corp received $7,175,897 for restoring Turkey Creek Channel phase 3, construction project in Kansas City.

Global Engineering & Construction; John J. Kirlin Special Projects; J&J Worldwide Services; and Pioneer Contracting Co. received $49,000,000 for healthcare facility repair and construction for the Pacific Regional Medical Command.

Glover Construction Co. received $12,680,000 for phase four construction of a landfill at Camp Lejeune.

Goodwyn, Mills & Cawood; Smith Seckman Reid Inc.; CH2M Hill Inc.; and C2RL Engineering Inc. received $10,000,000 for architect/engineering services for the Tennessee Air National Guard and the Tennessee Army National Guard.

HDR Engineering Inc.; HCS Group P.C.; Thompson Engineering Inc.; Patriot Design LLC-A Fort Hill HCS Group JV; and Baskerville-Donovan Inc. received $36,000,000 for architect and engineering services to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers design program for the Mobile District’s Central, South America, Caribbean, and South Atlantic Division.

Joseph B. Fay Co. received $58,578,541 for construction of the Charleroi Locks and Dam river chamber completion, monoliths M-22 to M-27, Monongahela River, PA.

Kiewit Infrastructure South Co. received $26,977,306 to construct the Canton Dam auxiliary spillway at Canton Lake, Canton, OK.

Korte Construction Company received $23,800,000 for design and construction of the EA-18G Facility Upgrades at NAS Whidbey Island.

Layne Christensen Co. received $132,504,348 for wall rehabilitation construction, East Branch cutoff, East Branch Clarion River Lake, Wilcox, PA.

Leo A. Daly Co. received $30,000,000 for architecture/engineering in NAVFAC Southeast.

MACKNAK Korte Group received $7,143,462 for design and construction of the air support operations center expansion at Ft. Campbell.

Moorhead Brothers, Inc. received $9,800,000 for Joint Base Charleston paving maintenance.

Northview Enterprises, Inc.; Semper Tek, Inc.; Leebcor Services, LLC; AAECON General Contracting, LLC; and Starlight-ENET JV received $160,000,000 for construction services within the Louisville district mission boundaries.

Odyssey International Inc. received $15,000,000 for construction, renovation, maintenance and repair at Letterkenny Army Depot, Chambersburg, PA.

Old Veteran Construction Inc. received $14,988,000 for design and construction of a Reserve training center and admin facility at Marine Corps Reserve Training Center Belton.

Orocon–Carothers, JV1 received $28,370,000 for renovation and repairs of Building 603, Saufley Field, at NAS Pensacola.

Security Construction Services, Inc.; Meridian Construction Corp.; J.C.N. Construction Co., Inc.; Ironclad Services, Inc.; CCB, Inc.; CPM Constructors; Maron Construction Co.; Cornerstone Construction Services; Turnstone Corp.; Classic Site Solutions; Ricci Construction Co.; CMGC Catamount LLC; Aulson Co. Inc.; Cutter Enterprises; and Benaka Inc. received $10,000,000 EACH for sustainment/repair and maintenance, and military construction projects of various size and value for the National Guard, Pease Air National Guard Base, Concord Military Reservation, and all armories throughout New Hampshire.

Solpac Construction Inc. received $6,779,000 for restoration, modernization, and reconfiguration at the Restore Ophthalmology Department at Naval Medical Center San Diego.

Southeast Cherokee Construction received $8,050,000 to renovate National Guard Building 495 in Birmingham, Alabama.

Swinerton Builders received $57,611,751 for construction of the 4th ID, Combat Aviation Brigade, General Support Aviation Battalion maintenance hangar at Ft. Carson.

Swinerton Builders received $53,699,643 to design/ build a distributed common ground support operations facility at Beale AFB.

TCC-NLC JV; Ancor Inc.; and Orion Construction received $15,000,000 for facility repair and renewal at various military installations in Alaska.

Thompson Engineering received $8,000,000 for construction management, Mobile District and South Atlantic Division, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Vali Cooper International received $7,000,000 for construction management in the Mobile District and South Atlantic Division, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Watts Constructors received $14,500,000 to construct a railcar complex at Dry Dock Five, Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility.

Whiting-Turner Contracting; Robins & Morton Group; Turner Construction; United Excel Corp.; John J. Kirlin Special Projects; and DMCA, Inc. received $49,000,000 for healthcare and laboratory facility repair and construction for the U.S. Army Medical Research & Materiel Command.

DREDGING

Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. received $8,564,000 for maintenance dredging along the Hudson River.

Kiewit-Pittman JV received $65,794,195 for dredging a new bypass channel; constructing a new flood gate and supporting structures with associated mechanical and electrical systems; and the demolition of existing systems for the Bank Back Levee, Empire Floodgate, in Plaquemines Parish, LA.

Kokosing Construction Company/O’Brien & Gere, JV received $11,363,568 for 24-hours-a-day/seven-days-a-week confined disposal facility operations that include extensive on-site air monitoring, water treatment management services, dredging material disposal, and related services at the Indiana harbor and canal disposal facility.

Manson Construction Co. received $24,000,000 for maintenance dredging of mobile district bar channels in Alabama, Mississippi and Florida.

Mike Hooks, Inc. received $19,530,000 for maintenance dredging Calcasieu River and pass, mile 5.0 to mile 15.0, and Sabine Unit 1A and Devil’s Elbow, in Calcasieu and Cameron Parishes, LA.

Norfolk Dredging received $9,501,000 for dredging the Delaware River. Norfolk Dredging received $18,784,248 for dredging in Baltimore harbor and Chesapeake Bay, MD.

# # # #

 *Editing consolidated similar contracts. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

**Any clerical errors are the editor’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

***To avoid competitive bidding, DOD invokes 10 U.S.C. 2304, FAR 6.302, and FAR 8.405-6. DOD also invokes 15 U.S.C. 638 to avoid competitive bidding when dealing with small businesses.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.


BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for September 2014: Part I

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DOD spent $32,510,210,101+ on 693 individual contracts in September 2014

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $32,510,210,101 on 693 individual contracts during September 2014.

REMOTELY PILOTED MACHINES

KEYW Corp. received $38,000,000 for R&D assisting the Layer Sensor Exploitation Division at the AFRL in developing new C4ISR systems to exploit existing sensors of all kinds – target recognition, tracking, fusion, sensor management (autonomy) and registration.

General Atomics received $11,117,672 for engines and logistics for the Gray Eagle.

General Atomics received $13,630,641 for Blue Box High Definition hardware and development. This is a sole-source acquisition.

General Atomics received $38,907,316 for 62 ground data terminals, 50 MQ-9 C-Bands diplexer kits, spares and support equipment. This is a sole-source acquisition.

General Atomics received $40,906,190 for development of requirements description documents for the MQ-9 Block 1 UAS and the MQ-9 Reaper Block 5 UAS with the 904.6.0 system/software release. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Hydroid Inc. received $8,270,607 for engineering services and technical expertise for the development, testing, and installation of pre-planned product improvements for the MK 18 Family of Systems Unmanned Underwater Vehicle.

L-3 Communications received $23,115,046 for satellite communications terminals, Predator modem assembly, remote split operations racks, 70 MHz-to-fiber optic converters, and test and monitor subsystems. This is a sole-source acquisition.

L3 Communications received $6,850,000 for Predator Mission Aircrew Training Systems (PMATS) development and upgrades to the existing baseline. Work will be performed at Arlington, TX, and Creech AFB.

Northrop Grumman received $33,872,569 for International Maritime Satellite/Communication Security upgrade retrofit to the entire USAF Global Hawk air vehicle fleet, ground systems and spares.

Northrop Grumman received $78,066,102 for initial Global Hawk Block 40 spare parts. Work will be performed at Robins AFB. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Raytheon (MTS-B PDF) received $13,214,320 for gimbals. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Robotic Research, LLC received $9,611,149 for mapping, investigating, navigation, and targeting using advanced robotics architecture and system technology.

SRI International received $24,741,566 for support of the Desert Owl program and to provide continued operations, sustainment, and integration of aircraft platforms configured to host a suite of sensors deployed in support of OEF.

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES – Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations.

BAE Systems received $7,672,503 for work on an engineering change proposal for the Digital Electronic Warfare System for Saudi Arabia. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Booz Allen Hamilton received $43,293,745 to provide Saudi Arabia’s military with consulting, intensive management, logistics support, and contracting support.  This will take place inside the U.S. and Saudi Arabia.  Also, an office will be established in Saudi Arabia for local purchasing and hires to sustain the fleet of Abrams tanks.

Frontier Performance Polymers Corp. received $7,227,893 to provide Taiwan with MK12-3 polyurethane plug, a component of the MK67 propelling charge.

Hawker Beechcraft Corp. received $16,625,317 for logistics support on the Iraq Peace Dragon King Air 350 Program.

Hellfire Systems LLC received $68,721,521 to provide Iraq, Jordan, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia and Qatar with 1,361 Hellfire II tactical missiles in containers and air-to ground missiles: model AGM-114R, AGM-114R-3, AGM-114P-4A, TGM M36E7, and ATM-114Q-6.

Insitu, Inc. received $6,757,764 to provide the Czech Republic one ScanEagle System. The system consists of seven ScanEagle electro-optics and three ScanEagle infrared unmanned air systems.

Insitu Inc. received $10,976,866 to provide Yemen with one ScanEagle System, which consists of nine ScanEagle Electro-Optics and three ScanEagle Infra-red UAVs. This also provides 12-month/3,600 flight-hour sustainment (with testing, spares, manuals, and training, site activation team, field service representative; and force protection). Some work will be in and Sana’a (50 percent).

L-3 Communications received $10,092,484 to provide Australia with C-27J aircrew and maintenance training. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $60,000,000 to provide Japan with long lead parts, materials and components in support of four additional F-35A Air Systems.

Lockheed Martin received $11,090,210 to provide the UAE with THAAD spares. This delivers single missile transportation containers, support equipment, fire control and communication spares, and launcher spares.

MD Helicopters, Inc. received $35,670,600 to provide Afghanistan 12 rotary wing primary trainer MD 530F aircraft. Work will be performed in Mesa, AZ.

Nammo Talley Inc. received $63,000,000 to provide Israel M72 Light Assault Weapons and variants.

Northrop Grumman received $8,496,555 to provide the UK with thirteen Large Aircraft Infrared Countermeasures (LAIRCM) small laser transmitter assemblies.

Petromax, LLC received $45,693,862 to provide Israel with automotive gasoline. Valero received $324,925,809 to provide Israel with aviation turbine fuel.

Sikorsky received $203,569,092 to provide Mexico with 18 green UH-60M Blackhawks and 18 “FMS green government furnished property to contractor furnished property.”

Sikorsky received $93,250,000 to provide Mexico eight uniquely configured UH-60M aircraft and other support equipment and services. One bid was solicited and one received.

Swiftships Shipbuilding, LLC received $18,000,000 to provide Iraq with continuous naval lifecycle support – maintenance expertise emergent repairs, and platform overhaul for patrol boats, off-shore vessels, and defender boats. Work will be performed on Umm Qasr Naval Base, Iraq. This was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(4). Per FAR 6.302-4(a)(2).

Telephonics Corp. received $14,845,476 to manufacture and install 13 Mark XII/A All-Mode IFF Interrogator Systems on Sweden’s Long Range Air Defense Chain.  This includes seven Interrogator Systems for Swedish Navy’s Visby Class Corvettes in accordance with DOD’s Air Traffic Control Radar Beacon System IFF AIMS standards. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Textron received $15,221,528 to provide Bulgaria with mobile strike force vehicles, related fielding hardware, and technical services. The Bulgarian National Military Forces, deployed in support of ISAF, will use these vehicles in Afghanistan. One bid was solicited, with one received.

RECRUITMENT & RETENTION

GSD&M (Austin, TX) received $41,000,000 for U.S. Air Force national advertising and Marketing Services.

AFGHANISTAN

A-T Solutions, Inc. received $9,016,253 for “freedom of maneuver for the Afghan national security forces programs.” A-T will “develop and assess a spiral development and prototyping approach to expedite integration of technical and operational information.” Programs “integrate tactical training and technologies for host nation forces that support counter-IED operations in Afghanistan.” Work will be performed in Afghanistan ($7,573,652; 84 percent) and Fredericksburg, Virginia ($1,442,600; 16 percent).

Berger Cummins JV received $16,868,019 for Bagram Airfield Base 56MW operations and maintenance.

USAFRICOM

Atlantic Diving Supply, Inc. received $48,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations tailored logistics support for the Africa region, zone 1. Using services are Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps and “civilian agencies.”

Bukkehave, Inc. received $14,589,570 to provide Burkina Faso, Burundi, Chad, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Libya, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Tunisia, and Uganda heavy-duty truck variants (left and right hand drive). Items include flatbed truck, general transport (personnel carrier) truck, water-tank truck, fuel-tank truck, and common spare parts.

Bukkehave, Inc. received $11,607,670 to provide Burkina Faso, Burundi, Chad, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Libya, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Tunisia and Uganda with Toyota Land Cruiser truck variants (in both left-hand drive and right-hand drive): 2-door pickup, 4-door pickup, sport utility vehicle, ambulance, mobile maintenance truck, and common spare parts.  For more information about USAFRICOM, see Nick Turse’s reportage.

Cessna Aircraft Co. received $13,674,035 to provide USAFRICOM with three Cessna 208B Grand Caravan EXs, one aircrew training device, spares (including a spare aircraft engine), and training “in support of counterterrorism measures in Niger, Kenya and Mauritania.” This is a sole-source acquisition. “This contract involves pseudo FMS in conjunction with Section 1206 [PDF] funding.”

KBR Services, Inc. received $50,000,000 for construction projects located in Djibouti, Africa, areas managed by NAVFAC Europe Africa Southwest Asia [EURAFSWA PDF]. Work includes renovations, repairs, maintenance, replacement, alterations, demolition in Djibouti.

Noble Supply & Logistics received $57,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations tailored logistics support for the Africa region, zone 2. Using services are Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps and “civilian agencies.”

Scitor Corporation received $25,063,344 for high-altitude light detection and ranging off-nadir experimentation that includes technology demonstrations and assessments for counter insurgency operations to meet the objectives to advance high-altitude off-nadir data collections. Work will be in Djibouti (65 percent) and Baltimore, MD (35 percent). One bid was solicited, with one received.

USSOUTHCOM

Airtec, Inc. received $12,485,799 to provide operations, maintenance, and developmental test and evaluation services on a contractor-owned/contractor-operated Bombardier DHC-8/200 multi-sensor aircraft in support of the USSOUTHCOM flight missions. Work will be performed in Bogota, Colombia. This was non-competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

USSOCOM

K.O.O. Construction, Inc. received $12,489,000 for design and construction of a Close Quarters Combat & Dynamic Shooting Facility at Camp Michael Monsoor.

NAVMAR Applied Sciences Corp. received $8,180,100 for work on: Precision High Altitude Sonobuoy Emplacement; LADAR Identification Demonstration, and Low-Cost ISR UAV. This provides the development, test, and evaluation of advanced intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance sensors, as well as enhanced surveillance capabilities to the deployed warfighter that can be integrated into existing naval platforms to support USSOCOM.

NAVMAR Applied Sciences Corp. received $8,597,356 for work on: Precision High Altitude Sonobuoy Emplacement; Air-Deployable Expendable Multi-Parameter Environmental Probe; and Low Cost ISR UAV.  NAVMAR Applied Sciences Corp. received $12,296,784 for work on: Laser Radar Laser Detection & Ranging Identification Demonstration; Air-Deployable Expendable Multi-Parameter Environmental Probe; and Low Cost ISR UAV.

RQ Construction, LLC received $24,290,000 for design and construction of Special Operations Forces Indoor Dynamic Shooting Range Facility at Naval Base Coronado. The facility will be constructed as two buildings: one-story indoor dynamic shooting range and one-story administrative building.

ViaSat Inc. (Carlsbad, CA) received $50,000,000 for NSA Type 1 certified High Assurance Internet Protocol Encryptor devices, and associated ancillary items for various Special Operations Forces deployable nodes and product distribution systems satellite systems. This was a sole-source acquisition per FAR 6.302-1.

DARPA

AeroVironment Inc. (Monrovia, CA) received $19,035,007 and Northrop Grumman received $19,267,875 for work on DARPA’s Tactically Exploited Reconnaissance Node (TERN) program.

Leidos, Inc. received $6,547,341 to provide DARPA with innovative R&D in the area of Heterogeneous Networking and Advanced Communication Technologies Development.

NEXGEN Communications LLC received $10,740,878 cost-plus-fixed-fee contract for hardware and software. Contractor will develop application-specific integrated circuit and radio frequency integrated circuit technologies to support the radio frequency and signal processing requirements of DARPA’s Communications in Contested Environments program.

ACADEMIA

The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH) received $12,102,856 for engineering services supporting the engineering directorate on the work statement Advanced Weapon System and Manufacturing Technologies.

Charles Stark Draper Laboratories, Inc. received $10,180,016 for: engineering to develop and evaluate concepts to improve test equipment availability, reliability and maintainability in support of existing Trident II (D-5) weapon systems; test and evaluate MK6 MOD 1 engineering development units and preproduction units systems; research Trident (D-5) guidance and reentry technology; knowledge and support for hypersonic guidance, navigation and control applications utilizing an integrated avionics computer and GPS. This was sole-source per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Georgia Tech Applied Research Corp. received $6,819,823 for Air National Guard Developmental Engineering for Integrated Sensors. This provides threat system modeling and simulation roadmaps; engineering studies to identify investment alternatives; and generation of system roadmaps with investment strategies.

Georgia Tech Applied Research Corp. received $11,982,586 for university affiliated research center follow-up for radar related R&D. One bid was solicited, with one received.

Georgia Tech Applied Research Corp. received $16,988,225 for Advanced Automated Tactical Communications aircraft and electronic warfare system engineering and test. Georgia Tech will provide identification, generation, evaluation, test and documentation of modernization solutions to address modernization requirements for aircraft, sensors and support systems.

Georgia Tech Applied Research Corp. received $25,000,000 for Communications Electronics Command, Software Engineering Center, Army Reprogramming Analysis Team multispectral sensor research and development. Georgia Tech will establish a framework to conduct threat analysis, mission software development, modeling and simulations, validating and support of electronic warfare systems across multiple sensor spectrums.

RAND Corp. received $8,465,000 for 20 add-on independent studies to the RAND Arroyo Federally Funded Research & Development Center.

TT Government Solution, Inc. received $48,500,000 for R&D performed under the cyber security collaborative research alliance. Army Contracting Command, Research Triangle Park Division, Research Triangle Park, NC, is the contracting activity.

University of Dayton Research Institute received $42,000,000 for advanced behavior and life prediction of aerospace materials program at Wright-Patterson AFB.

University of Southern California received $7,685,884 to develop a mission-driven, domain-specific indexing and search system that will harvest and harmonize heterogeneous and obfuscated data to extract key elements of knowledge.

University of Southern California received $141,000,000 for R&D and other activities within the approved modeling and simulation core competencies in the areas of training, education, operations, health and other arenas where research, technologies and methodologies may be applied.

JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER (JSF)

Alion Science & Technology received $49,928,409 to provide application of materials, manufacturing and testing to increase supportability, survivability, producibility and affordability of the F-35 program. AS&T will also evaluate system performance, perform root cause analyses and identify failure modes or other component deficiencies.

Lockheed Martin received $24,868,359 to realign and increase concurrency funding for post-production concurrency changes to LRIP Lot VI F-35 aircraft. Work will be performed in Ft. Worth, TX.

Lockheed Martin received $246,613,000 to develop, test, and certify two Drag Chute Systems for LRIP Lot VII F-35 in Ft. Worth, TX (70%), and Edwards AFB (30%).

Lockheed Martin received $331,408,457 for F-35 non-recurring items, including special tooling, test equipment items and software lab upgrades for the USAF ($112,965,518; 34 percent); U.S. Navy ($56,482,759; 17 percent); the USMC ($56,482,759; 17 percent); international partners ($61,038,399; 19 percent); and unnamed FMS ($44,439,022; 13 percent).

Pratt & Whitney received $84,807,628 for non-recurring production and spare parts for LRIP VII F135 propulsion systems for USMC ($27,673,047; 33 percent); USAF ($27,577,967; 32 percent); U.S. Navy ($11,080,550; 13 percent); and unnamed international partners ($18,476,064; 22 percent). In addition, this funding procures one whole spare propulsion system, initial spare modules, program administrative labor and engineering assistance.

Pratt & Whitney received $65,566,174 for additional long-lead components, parts and materials associated with the LRIP Lot VIII of eight engines for Italy, including non-recurring engineering, initial spare parts and replenishment parts.  In addition, this funding provides tooling for each of the international partners, initial level spare parts for the USAF, USMC, U.S. Navy and the UK and Norway; and maintenance and replenishment spare parts for USAF, USMC, U.S. Navy and the UK and the Netherlands.

EAGLE, FALCON & HORNET

Boeing received $8,793,486 for depot-level service life extension and remanufacturing activities, including associated maintenance and sustainment of F/A-18E/F aircraft.

Boeing received $9,428,782 for engineering and logistics to improve F/A-18A-F and E/A-18G readiness, expand Interactive Electronic Technical Manual/Structural Repair Manual work packages, and maintenance planning.

Boeing received $14,764,403 for F/A-18E/F and E/A-18G aircraft armament equipment: 342 station control units for the U.S Navy (245) and Australia (97); six Ariel Refueling System (ARS) air probes, six ARS fuel probes, 12 ARS suspension lugs, 11 advanced launch system (ALR) -67 mounting bases, and 11 ALR-67 retainers for the U.S Navy; and 39 centerline feed thru plates for the U.S. Navy (24) and Australia (15). Purchases: U.S. Navy ($10,630,370; 72%) and Australia ($4,134,033; 28%).

Honeywell International, Inc. received $15,711,691 for 197 advanced multi-purpose displays for the F/A-18E/F and EA-18G for the U.S. Navy ($9,747,064; 62 percent) and Australia ($5,964,627; 38 percent). Breakdown: 80 5×5 FWD displays, 75 5×5 AFT displays and 8×10 displays, 52 FWD 5×5 displays, 48 5×5 AFT displays and 24 8×10 displays for the U.S. Navy, and 28 5×5 FWD displays, 27 5×5 AFT displays and 18 8×10 displays for Australia.

L-3 Communications received $16,018,203 for Distributed Mission Operations Mission Package 12/13/14 standards and sustaining updates to the F-16 Mission Training Center. Work will be performed at Arlington, TX.

Raytheon received $9,414,000 for 226 ALE-50 Bravo T3F launchers for U.S. Navy F/A-18 E/F aircraft.

Raytheon received $11,403,294 for repair of 288 radar component units consisting of 18 different weapons repairable assemblies used in F/A-18’s AESA. This was not competitively procured, per 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(l).

Raytheon received $40,950,000 to provide fifteen AN/APG-79 Active Electronically Scanned Array Radar Systems for F/A-18 E/F aircraft.

AIRCRAFT PROPULSION RESEARCH

Florida Turbine Technologies, Inc. received $20,000,000 for Versatile Affordable Advanced Turbine Engines (VAATE) III and follow-on technologies – to develop revolutionary and innovative technologies in three years.

Lockheed Martin received $30,000,000; Ohio Aerospace Institute received $20,000,000; and Williams International Co., LLC received $45,000,000 for Versatile Affordable Advanced Turbine Engines III [PDF] and beyond – to develop technologies in three years that will permit an order of magnitude increase in turbo-propulsion affordability over Y2K technology.

OTHER FIXED WING AIRCRAFT

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $45,431,567 for integrating new materials into current PMA 290 systems and introducing new manufacturing processes for future systems.

Aviation Systems Engineering (ASEC) received $8,565,330 for technical, analytical, administrative and material services to Air Test & Evaluation Squadron One (VX1).

Boeing received $293,197,885 for performance-based support across supported platforms.

Boeing received $102,000,000 for full rate production of the Next Generation Automatic Test System.

Boeing received $50,000,000 for multiplatform engineering services on B-1, C-17, F-15, E-3, KC-135 and AGM-86. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Boeing received $11,757,200 for training specific data storage architecture updates and upgrades in support of the P-8A. Boeingreceived $26,696,492 to retrofit the Data Storage Architecture Update in support of the LRIP Lot I, II, and III of the P-8A Multi-Mission Maritime aircraft. Boeingreceived $43,283,263 for integrated logistics and contractor services in support of the P-8A aircraft.

Boeing received $26,608,670 for depot maintenance and modifications on the E-4B platform in San Antonio, TX.  This is a sole-source acquisition.  Boeingreceived $9,774,956 for engineering services to finalize system requirements of an E-4B low frequency transmit system.

Boeing received $7,347,032 for engineering on the design, development, and testing of four prototype Service Life Extension Program kits for the T-45 aircraft, including the technical data package required for installation.

Boeing received $6,891,545 for landing gear. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Calculex, Inc. received $9,752,281 to support existing airborne data recorders (ADR) for the Air Force Test Center at Eglin AFB. This was a sole-source acquisition.  Telspan Data, LLC received $9,967,063 for data replay systems (DRS) for the Air Force Test Center at Eglin AFB. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Chromalloy Component Services Inc. received $8,149,470 to upgrade and implement Module 13/15 for F-108 engines in support of KC-135 aircraft.

DME Corp.; BAE Systems; Boeing; DRS Test & Energy Management; Lockheed Martin; and Universal Technical Resource Services Inc. received a combined $249,921,506 for engineering services on the Automated Test Systems Division (ATSD) of the Armament Research, Development & Engineering Center (ARDEC).

Doss Aviation, Inc. received $8,362,436 for logistics support of USAF Academy aircraft. Doss will maintain, support, tow, and modify aircraft.

Doss Aviation received $23,480,780 for work on USAF initial flight screening requirements in Pueblo, CA.

Doss Aviation, Inc. received $32,174,550 for advanced instructor pilot support to the 110th Aviation Brigade Support, Ft. Rucker.

EDO/Exelis, Inc. received $8,104,935 for AN/ALQ-161A sustaining engineering services and preprocessor flight software deficiency analysis. Work will be performed at North Amityville, NY, for the B-1. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Exelis, Inc. received $71,498,000 to provide Countermeasures System Operational Flight Program software deficiency analysis, block cycle software support, enhanced maintenance test set software support, original equipment manufacturer system sustaining engineering and maintainability/reliability system line replaceable unit-10 final redesign. This is a sole-source acquisition.

FLIR Systems Incorporated received $15,385,578 for infrared turret assemblies [PDF]. This was a sole-source acquisition.

GE Aviation Systems, LLC received $20,577,894 for forty-two P/N 697039001 propellers and associated spare parts for the C-130J. Work will be performed at Gloucester, United Kingdom. This is a sole-source acquisition.

GKN Aerospace Chem-Tronics Inc. received $9,728,213 for turbine augmenter exhaust nozzle support replenishment spares.

Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. received $7,134,947 to overhaul C-20 engines. Work will be performed in Lachine, Quebec.

HDR Engineering, Inc. received $9,999,900 for cathodic protection and corrosion control at various locations worldwide.

Impact Instrumentation Inc. received $35,000,000 for airworthy suction apparatus.

Ki Ho Military Acquisition Consulting, Inc. received $31,400,000 to identify developing technologies that can support A-10 missions, and eliminate or minimize operational and/or sustainability gaps. Work will be performed at Hill AFB.

Korean Air Lines Co., LTD. received $46,000,000 for depot support to A-10 aircraft stationed in the Asia/Pacific region. Work will be at KAL’s facility in Seoul.

L-3 Communications received $67,318,000 for T-1A logistics, maintenance, data and field service representatives.

L-3 Communications received $35,215,409 for flight ops support at Vance AFB.

L-3 Communications received $31,159,640 for production, modification and integration of ISR capabilities onto three Cessna 208B aircraft, spares and training.

L-3 Communications received $11,961,245 for maintenance, repair, and logistics support for the chief of Naval Air Training Aircraft’s intermediate maintenance departments in NAS Pensacola (60%) and NAS Corpus Christi  (40%).

L-3 Communications received $13,967,277 for a variety of maintenance and logistics support for F/A-18A-F, EA-18G, MH-60S, F-16A/B, and E-2C aircraft, in support of NSAWC at NAS Fallon.

L-3 Communications received $51,763,774 for aircraft maintenance and logistical life cycle support for 53 C-12 aircraft in Winnepeg, Canada (34 percent); San Angelo (34 percent) and Corpus Christi, TX (12 percent); and other locations (20 percent).

Leidos Inc. received $49,403,000 for R&D and to test integrated threat warning and countermeasure response, including missile & laser warning and hostile fire indication at Wright-Patterson AFB.

Lockheed Martin received $6,622,838 for sustainment of the Common Organizational Level Tester. Work will be performed at Orlando, FL.

Lockheed Martin received $6,568,120 to integrate system and Mission Computer software changes into the HC/MC Increment 2 aircraft. Work will be in Marietta, GA.

Lockheed Martin received $7,340,410 for C130J Maintenance & Aircrew Training System – 3 months instruction and logistics at Little Rock, Keesler, and Dyess AFBs.

Lockheed Martin received $9,476,790 to remove and replace F-22 (air intake) inlet coatings at Hill AFB to avert extensive disbond and reversion repairs.

Lockheed Martin received $9,519,633 to supply the C-5 Reliability Enhancement and Re-engining program Lot 7 readiness spares package.

Lockheed Martin received $10,030,304 for aircraft countermeasure receivers. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $13,983,000 for aircraft mission computers. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $34,721,663 for C-130J Large Aircraft Infrared Countermeasures (LAIRCM) acquisition, integration, and installation. This involves some FMS to Australia.

Lockheed Martin received $56,435,771 for depot partnering activations and partnering assessments in Ft. Worth, TX; Warner Robins, Hill, and Tinker AFBs.

Lockheed Martin received $413,158,693 for advance procurement funding and subsuming advance procurement into full production for purchase of one HC-130J aircraft and six MC-130J aircraft. Work will be performed at Marietta, GA.

Northrop Grumman received $7,213,934 for software sustainment in support of the Full Rate Production Lot 2 E-2D Advanced Hawkeye Program.

Northrop Grumman received $9,600,000 and $1,011,704, for spares and system engineering support. Work will be performed at Buffalo, NY and Eglin AFB.

Northrop Grumman received $19,748,015 for aircraft components and accessories. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Northrop Grumman received $27,988,682 for the LAIRCM C-130 Group A Kits and Installations. Northrop will provide the kits and associated installations to 28 C-130 aircraft (11 AC-130H, 12 MC-130U, and five EC-130J) in Crestview, FL.

Northrop Grumman received $37,667,818 for 241 advanced threat warning sensors in support of the AN/AAQ-24(V)25 Missile Warning System.

Omega Aerial Refueling Services, Inc. (OAR) received $31,251,920 for aircraft services in support of the Contracted Air Services Program, which provides aerial refueling to U.S. Navy, DOD and other government agencies, and FMS aircraft.

Parker Hannifin Corp. received $13,619,978 to overhaul the left- and right-hand Dewar assemblies, which are part of the C-5’s Fire Suppression System.

Raytheon received $18,348,948 for 12 Multi-Spectral Targeting Systems (AN/AAS-54) and spare parts for USAF C-130s.  Work will be performed in McKinney, TX.

Sikorsky received $19,144,382 for maintenance on T-34, T-44, and T-6 aircraft. This provides logistics, including labor, services, facilities, equipment, tools, and related equipment for 36 T-34s, 54 T-44s, 42 T-6As, and 207 T-6B aircraft, based primarily at the NAS Corpus Christi, NAS Whiting Field, and NAS Pensacola.

Stauder Consulting, Inc. received $16,597,866 for the preparation, production, and delivery of 170 AV-8B Airborne Variable Message Format Terminals (AVT). This was not competitively procured per FAR 6.302-1.

Textron (AAI Corp.) received $43,600,034 for manufacture and delivery of roughly 50 AN/USM-670A Joint Service Electronic Combat System Tester; 13 Laboratory JSECST; 410 AN/USM-670A Retrofit Kits; and 20 Laboratory JSECST Retrofit Kits. This involves unnamed FMS. This is a sole-source acquisition.

TriQuint CW Inc. received $10,655,643 for engineering on ALQ-155 Band 10S Receiver Transmitter on the B-52This is a sole-source acquisition.

United Technologies Corp. (Pratt & Whitney) received $7,627,698 for an additional 112 Rotor 5s for the F-22.  United Technologies Corp. (Pratt & Whitney) received $6,983,002 for a “rotable parts pool” for F119 PW-100 engines.

URS Federal Support Services Inc. received $10,000,000 for logistics support of the RC-26B aircraft utilized by the Air National Guard. URS will provide maintenance, repair, and all other support functions.

Wyle Laboratories, Inc. received $16,563,175 for operational services in support of the Naval Test Wing (NTW) squadrons, including aircrew at NAS Patuxent River, NAS Point Mugu, and NAS China Lake.

Zodiac Data Systems Inc. received $9,900,000 for sustainment of the current Airborne Data Recorder fleet. This includes extras, spare parts, repair/upgrade of existing data recorders. Work will be performed at Eglin AFB. This is sole-source.

OSPREY

Bell-Boeing JPO received $9,451,005 for standby flight display components on V-22 aircraft. This replaces obsolescent components no longer available due to diminishing manufacturing sources and material shortages.

Bell-Boeing JPO received $9,594,477 for non-recurring engineering required for the variable frequency generator-generator control unit update on the V-22.

Bell-Boeing JPO received $9,983,922 for upgrades to 13 Marine Corps MV-22 training devices to the MV-22 Block C-2.01 configuration.

Bell-Boeing JPO received $24,000,000 to upgrade the MV-22 Consolidated V-22 Electronics Maintenance Trainer, V-22 Sponson Part Task Trainer, V-22 Aircraft Maintenance Trainer, and Power Plants Training Article Trainers to the Block C configuration.

Bell Boeing JPO received $36,558,239 to repair various parts, including the Prop-Rotor Gearbox and HUB Assembly for the V-22 aircraft. One company was solicited for this non-competitive requirement per 10 U.S.C.2304 (c)(1).

Rolls-Royce received $10,055,878 for MissionCareTM support for the AE1107C engine, including lower power engine removals and repairs for the V-22 aircraft.

HELICOPTERS

AAR Airlift Group, Inc. received $15,332,330 for ship-based and shore-based vertical replenishment and other rotary-wing logistic services. These include search and rescue support; medical evac; passenger transfers; internal cargo movement; and dynamic interface testing in support of COMNAVAIRFOR to perform flight operations in the U.S. 5th Fleet and U.S. 7th Fleet AORs.  Erickson Helicopters, Inc. received $7,004,248 for ship-based and shore-rebased vertical replenishment and other rotary-wing logistic services. These include search and rescue support; medical evac; passenger transfers; internal cargo movement; and dynamic interface testing in support of COMNAVAIRFOR. Erickson will provide one detachment of two helicopters, personnel, support equipment, and supplies perform flight operations in U.S. 2nd Fleet, 5th Fleet, and 6th Fleet AORs.

ATK, LLC received $36,778,430 for M230-30MM automatic guns and 32 spare parts for the Apache.

Boeing received $27,700,422 for development, fabrication, testing and bench qualifying a modified electrical system that can be integrated into a twin engine, tandem rotor, which will improve the CH-47 electrical system.

Boeing received $130,000,000 to build seven new Apache AH-64E helicopters. Work will be performed in Mesa, AZ.

Boeing received $499,144,082 for engineering logistical support services encompassing the technical, engineering, logistics, data analysis, technical data reproduction, supportability, and management requirements for pre-through post-production, sustainment, and fleet support for all H-47 variants.

Elbit received $12,690,012 for 300 Apache aviator integrated helmets.

Gentex Corporation received $11,346,457 for aircrew integrated helmet systems component parts.

Lockheed Martin received $6,861,233 to work on integrating Digital Rocket Launcher capabilities updates into MH-60R and MH-60S avionics software.

Lockheed Martin received $8,879,035 for software modifications required for MH-60 Terrain Awareness Warning System (TAWS II) and Automatic Dependent Surveillance – Broadcast enhancements for the U.S. Navy ($8,395,805; 95 percent); Denmark ($392,585; 4 percent); and Australia ($90,645; 1 percent).

Raytheon received $48,000,000 for technical and system integration and software maintenance of Air Warrior [PDF].

Rockwell Collins, Inc. received $8,692,133 to integrate one Operational Flight Program for the Required Navigation Performance for Area Navigation software upgrade for MH-53E aircraft. Work will be performed in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

Rockwell Collins Inc. received $54,947,505 for control display units.

Rockwell Collins, Inc. received $151,296,000 for helicopter display units.

Sikorsky received $9,242,869 to support cabin interior and the environmental control system redesign of the VH-3D aircraft, including VIP seats, cabin interior, and special tooling.

Sikorsky received $12,070,183 for duel exhaust aircraft parts.

Sikorsky received $14,538,253 for maintenance and overhaul of UH-60 mechanical transmissions.

Sikorsky received $48,800,000 to provide specialized engineering analysis test and technical services (SEATTS) to the Aviation Applied Technology Directorate.

Textron (Bell Helicopter) received $41,776,269 for three UH-1Y training devices, one AH-1Z training device, aircraft and/or trainer revisions, aircraft common operational equipment, spares, tech data and three months of initial operation evaluation for each training device. This was non-competitive per FAR 6.302.1.

Thales Defense & Security, Inc. received $7,713,300 for repair coverage of six items for the Airborne Low Frequency Sonar system for the H-60. One company solicited, one offer received.

Woodward, Inc. received $47,235,265 for UH60 helicopter T700 common fuel control. One bid was solicited, with one received.

FLIGHT TRAINING

CAE USA, Inc. received $29,286,411 to support KC-135 aircrew training systems (all training devices to include upgrades and configuration of current system hardware/software development, and on-site/on-call maintenance for aircrew training devices). 

FlightSafety Services Corp. received $20,385,469 to support KC-10 Aircrew Training Systems at Travis AFB and McGuire AFB.

Lockheed Martin received $9,525,881 to update C-130 aircrew training systems courseware from the C-130H1 to C-130H2 configuration while maintaining student throughput. Work will be performed at Little Rock AFB.

Lockheed Martin received $11,028,030 for C-130 Aircrew Training System Electronic Control Loading System/Aerodynamic Model Update. Lockheed will work on a replacement for the existing “obsolete” Electronic Control Loading system. Work will be performed at Little Rock AFB and Dobbins AFB.

AEGIS

Lockheed Martin received $7,807,861 for engineering and design support for the Aegis Ashore program. Work will be in Moorestown, NJ, and Deveselu, Romania.

Lockheed Martin received $8,067,824 for work on an earlier contract incorporating Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense FY2015 Baseline 4.0.2 additional ship installations.

Lockheed Martin received $10,330,015 for test and engineering support for the Aegis Ashore program.

Lockheed Martin received $53,595,257 to develop and test Aegis Modernization baseline computer programs and equipment for Japan. This provides upgrades of Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force Atago Class Ships (DDGs 177 and 178) from Baseline 7 Phase 1R to Advanced Capability Build 12 with TI12 technology and capability.

LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP (LCS)

AAI Corp. received $33,893,014 for the Unmanned Influence Sweep System, which will allow the LCS to perform its mine warfare sweep mission.

Computer Sciences Corp. Defense & Intelligence Group received $16,610,372 to support the LCS Program Office, PMS 501, and the LCS Fleet Introduction & Sustainment Program Office, PMS 505. This was non-competitive per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Northrop Grumman received $18,970,332 for field upgradeable kits and fleet support for conversion of the AN/AQS-24A systems to the AN/AQS-24B configuration in support of the Airborne Mine Countermeasure Systems Program.

SAIC received $12,244,245 for Mine Warfare and Environmental Decision Aids Library (MEDAL) in support of the Mine Warfare Program Office, under Program Executive Office, LCS. This was non-competitive per FAR 6.302-1(a)(2).

SHIP MAINTENANCE

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $41,758,729 to increase the level of effort available to provide mission critical professional support to the Surface Warfare Directorate. This provides program management, engineering, logistics, technical support, planning and readiness, fleet introduction training and financial management in support of ongoing maintenance and modernization efforts.

BAE Systems received $9,592,537 for regular overhaul and dry-docking availability of USNS Henry J. Kaiser (T-AO 187).

BAE Systems received $22,905,907 to primarily conduct repair and alteration on the USS Hopper (DDG-90) systems and hull. Work will be performed in Honolulu, HI.

BAE Systems received $25,488,392 for USS Lake Erie (CG 70) depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications that will update/improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities.

BAE Systems received $35,274,734 for USS Pinckney (DDG 91) depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications that will update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities. Work will be performed in San Diego, CA.

Brodogradiliste Viktor Lenac D.D. (Rijeka, Croatia) received $21,383,394 for a 179-day Extended Service Life Program, dry docking and ship repair of USS Mount Whitney (LCC-20).

General Dynamics received $7,000,000 for USS Boxer (LHD 4) depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications that will update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities. Work will be performed in San Diego, CA.

General Dynamics received $14,478,332 for USS Harry S Truman (CVN 75) fiscal 2015 planned incremental availability (PIA), which consists of 82 work items consisting of repair/replace/preserve/install/clean in nature. This availability will accomplish seven ship alterations.

General Dynamics (Bath Iron Works) received $18,063,788 for FY2015 fleet maintenance sustainment support in San Diego, CA.

General Dynamics received $36,185,301 for USS Boxer (LHD 4) depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications that will update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities. Work will be performed in San Diego, CA.

Huntington Ingalls Inc. received $11,216,103 for USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76) depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications in Coronado, CA, that will update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities.

Huntington Ingalls Inc. received $24,230,190 for USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76) depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications in Coronado, CA, that will update and improve the ship’s military and technical capabilities.

L-3 Communications received $39,688,613 for hardware items and associated engineering and technical services for multiple U.S. Navy ship classes in support of analysis, repair, alteration, and product improvement of existing L-3 systems currently installed. This was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

ManTech Systems Engineering Corp. received $19,842,368 for uninterrupted enterprise support to the Navy Ship Maintenance and Logistics Support Information Systems program. ManTech will provide engineering in the areas of IT life cycle planning, operations and sustainment, documentation, program management, application technical refresh, testing, training, and deployment.

Progeny Systems Corp. received $10,667,238 to support the Integrated Shipboard/Shore-Based Maintenance Decision Tool. Progeny will continue to develop and integrate required software applications, hardware components, and overall system-level functionality to achieve manpower reduction aboard submarines and ships of the U.S. Navy.

The University of Washington (UW) received $12,776,050 for mid-life re-fit overhaul of research vessel Thomas G. Thompson (AGOR 23). This was a sole-source procurement per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1), implemented by FAR 6.302-1.

SUBMARINES

BTP Systems LLC received $23,244,682 for technical repair and engineering – including evaluations, repairs and replacement of failed components for the Submarine High Data Rate Antenna System (provides high capacity communications to submarines) and the Antenna Pedestal Group.

DRS Laurel Technologies received $171,065,633 to develop, integrate and produce Technology Insertion Hardware (TIH), the latest display, processor, and network requirements for submarine combat control and sonar systems.

General Dynamics received $310,771,700 for additional design agent, planning yard, engineering and technical support for active nuclear submarines.

General Dynamics received $234,229,426 for design agent, planning yard, engineering and technical support for active nuclear submarines. This was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1(a)(2)(iii).

Huntington Ingalls Industries Inc. received $11,472,139 for Norfolk Naval Shipyard nuclear-related trade labor support for maintenance and repair on USS Albany (SSN 753) and USS Maryland (SSBN 738). This requires trade labor that is trained, qualified, and authorized to maintain secondary propulsion plant systems.

L-3 KEO received $19,571,552 to provide two AN/BVS-1 Photonics Mast Systems for installation on Virginia-class submarines and two Integrated Submarine Imaging System Augmented Sensor (IAS) Low Profile Masts (LPM).

Lockheed Martin received $117,767,647 for engineering services and support of the AN/BVY-1 Integrated Submarine Imaging System and on board repair part kits.

3 Phoenix Inc. received $8,997,455 for continued software development, procurement of commercial off-the-shelf products, and hardware and software integration required to improve technology for U.S. Navy open architecture and Network Centric Operations and Warfare systems in support of USS Virginia-class submarines and other ship systems. 3 Phoenix Inc. shall continue to build upon previous Data Fusion & Visualization Interface efforts for Environmental Research Data. These services will support initiatives to improve performance through judicious use of lower power electronics, advanced algorithm design, and innovative applications of open software and hardware. Work will be in Chantilly, VA.

NAVAL CONTRACTS

3PSC, LLC received $14,915,581 for 182-day operation and maintenance of five U.S. Navy oceanographic survey ships (T-AGS).

American Petroleum Tankers, LLC received $36,515,000 and $36,515,000 to charter two Jones Act tankers, delivering cargo for DLA-Energy (DLA-E). 

American Petroleum Tankers, LLC received $36,515,000 to charter two U.S.-flagged, Jones Act tankers employed in worldwide cargo delivery to support DLA-Energy.

Appleton Marine Inc. received $22,374,985 for slewing arm davits (SLADs – used to raise and lower smaller watercraft to and from the ship’s deck) to be installed onboard various U.S. Navy vessels.

BAE Systems received $9,700,000 for FY2014 MK 110 Mod 0 gun mount and spares. The weapon system will be installed on U.S. Coast Guard National Security Cutter WMSL 755 upon completion.

BAE Systems received $28,697,931 for FY2014 production of the MK 38 Machine Gun System (MGS) for USA (95.83 percent) and Israel (4.17 percent).  This was not competitively procured per FAR 6.302-1(a)(2).

BAE Systems received $9,210,228 for operation and maintenance of Navy communication, electronic, and computer systems. Work will be performed at Oahu, HI (94 percent), and Geraldton, Australia (6 percent).

DRS Power & Control Technologies, Inc. received $15,730,289 for DDG 51 Class Power Conversion Module (PCM) for the Air & Missile Defense Radar (AMDR) preliminary design non-recurring engineering, engineering services, associated support, long-lead-time material, LRIP units for testing, and up to 12 production ship sets for DDG 51 Class ships. The AMDR PCM will supply power to the radar from the ship’s service electrical system.

Global Technical Systems Inc. received $22,204,809 for production, testing and delivery of Battle Force Tactical Training (BFTT) T46D systems, spares and associated engineering services. Work will be in Virginia Beach, VA.  AAI Corp. received $18,527,849 for acquisition of Trainers Simulator/Stimulator System hardware components for BFTT. This was non-competitive per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Goodrich Corp. received $39,820,000 for sonar dome rubber windows (SDRW), sonar composite domes (SCD), shipping and transportation installation fixtures, engineering and field service, inspection and repairs, and SCD production cell set-up and breakdown. SDRWs are bow-mounted equipment on all CG47 and DDG51 class ships and keel-mounted on FFG-7 class ships. Both SDRW and SCD provide an acoustically transparent housing for the sonar transducer array. Purchases: U.S. Navy (63 percent), Japan (13 percent), Poland (8 percent), Taiwan (8 percent) and Spain (8 percent). This was not competitively procured per FAR 6.302-1(a)(2).

Jacobs Technology received $171,559,893 for services in support of the Naval Air Warfare Center Weapons Division’s Combat Environment Simulation Division. Services include development and acquisition of new range systems, integration of various range systems, and upgrade/modernization of existing range systems.

Keystone Prepositioning Services received $7,338,088 for operation and maintenance of three ships. When activated, the ships support worldwide movement of common-user and service-unique cargoes for DOD.

Lockheed Martin received $147,492,347 for LRIP and fielding of Surface Electronic Warfare Improvement Program (SEWIP) Block 2 systems. This was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Maersk Line, Ltd. received $8,060,171 for operation and maintenance of USNS GYSGT Fred W. Stockham (T-AK 3017) in support of USMC Maritime Prepositioning Force worldwide. This is a continuation of an earlier contract.

Maersk Line Ltd. received $10,610,996 for maintenance of watercraft storage environment (including supply operations), watercraft care of supplies in storage maintenance, and preparation of watercraft for activation/exercises at Watercraft Equipment Base-Yokohama North Dock, Japan. 

Maersk Line Ltd. received $12,495,775 to charter MV SSG Edward A. Carter Jr. to support the U.S. Army’s ammunition prepositioning program. Work will take place “at sea in the Far East.”

Maersk Line Ltd. received $33,016,247 for operation and maintenance of five USNS Bobo-class ships in support of USMC Maritime Prepositioning Force worldwide.

Metson Marine Services, Inc. received $7,032,974 for maintenance, operations, logistics, vessel maintenance & operation, equipment operation, repair, vessel modifications, dock master services, asset inventory management and oil spill response capability for port operations at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, HI.

Ocean Ships, Inc. received $10,461,769 for operation and maintenance of two Mobile Landing Platform ships, USNS Montford Point and USNS John Glenn. These ships transfer rolling stock and other cargo in-stream with other ships.

Offshore Service Vessels, Inc. received $8,798,690 to charter maritime support vessel MV C-Champion, which is used as a platform for small boats – launching and recovering, refueling and provisioning, and assisting with limited maintenance. The vessel also provides support to maritime security operations.

Patriot Contract Services, LLC received $58,642,752 for operation and maintenance of eight government-owned Watson-class large medium-speed roll-on/roll-off ships in support of MSC worldwide prepositioning requirements.

Phoenix International Holdings Inc. received $75,000,000 for worldwide undersea deep ocean search and recovery operations and associated services to support the Director of Ocean Engineering, Supervisor of Salvage and Diving (SUPSALV). Work will be performed in Largo, MD.

Prism Maritime, LLC received $55,012,767 for Alteration Installation Team services in support of the Ship Defense & Expeditionary Warfare Department, Port Hueneme Division, Naval Surface Warfare Center, CA. Services include Alteration Installation Team services for critical and specific systems engineering, technical, product and fleet support, and planning services efforts and upgrades for the Ship Self-Defense System, NATO Sea Sparrow Missile Systems, Evolved Sea Sparrow Missile, Rolling Airframe Missile, Cooperative Engagement Capabilities, AN/SPQ-9B Radar, and Quick Reaction Capability.

Raytheon received $7,179,850 for engineering on the Air & Missile Defense Radar, S-Band (AMDR-S). Engineering includes: R&D, testing and eval efforts in support of technology insertion, excursion studies, and design upgrades; and engineering support services to the government for suite and combat system integration.

Raytheon received $38,287,642 for Cooperative Engagement Capability (CEC) design agent and engineering services for the U.S. Navy (91 percent) and Australia (9 percent).

Scientific Research Corp. received $75,621,478 for Program Executive Office Command Control Communications Computers and Intelligence (PEO C4I) – Carrier & Air Integration Program Office Program Manager Warfare and Ship Integration Program Office Program Manager Warfare –Testing, Integration and Installation (CTII) support services.

Sealift, Inc. received $8,069,785 to charter a U.S. flagged, self-sustaining ship, M/V MAJ Bernard F. Fisher, to support the USAF at-sea prepositioning program.

Sechan Electronics Inc. received $24,313,902 for production hardware for Ship Self-Defense System (SSDS) Mk2 production hardware – includes production, assembly, configuration, alignment, integration, testing and shipping of the SSDS hardware.

Tote Services Inc. received $7,136,462 for the operation and maintenance of the Offshore Petroleum Discharge System, which consists of one U.S. flagged self-sustaining vessel, USNS VADM K.R. Wheeler; tender vessel, USNS Fast Tempo, and associated equipment in support of the U.S. Navy.

SPACE

The Aerospace Corporation received $22,131,100 for FY2014 equipment costs for systems engineering and integration tasks by funding special purpose plant equipment costs. Work will be performed in El Segundo, CA.

The Aerospace Corporation received $811,607,999 for planning, systems definition, and technical specification support, analyze user needs, design and design alternative, interoperability, manufacturing and quality control, and assist with test and evaluation, launch support, flight tests, orbital operations and integration of space systems into effective systems of systems.

Aerospace Mass Properties Analysis, Inc. received $9,751,679 for research on “Optical Aperture Gating for Single-pixel and Imaging LIDAR Systems.” This will develop and deploy innovative targeting, imaging, environmental sensing, and counter measure systems utilizing the ultra-fast switch in support of the Navy Special Projects Program. This was non-competitive per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(5).

ARCTEC Alaska JV received $38,414,724 for operation and maintenance of the Alaska Radar System – 15 geographically separated long range radar sites, three remote radio sites, maintenance of the Regional Air Operations Center and Maintenance Control & Communications Center. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Boeing received $8,632,927 for R&D for system of systems integration technology and experimentation-technical area 1.

General Dynamics received $6,563,068 for R&D for system of systems integration technology and experimentation-technical area 1. GD will develop and demonstrate system of systems architectures.

Exelis, Inc. received $10,460,027 for the Ground-Based Electro-Optical Deep Space Surveillance (GEODSS) Modular Precision Absolute Control System Project. Exelis will provide a Modular Precision Angular Control System prototype, three refurbished mounts and spare motors. Work will be performed at Yoder, CO.

Exelis, Inc., (Patrick AFB) received $44,987,032 for modernization of the command destruct system at the Eastern Range, which is necessary to meet range safety requirements. Work will be performed at Patrick AFB, Cape Canaveral AFS, and Johnathan Dickinson Missile Tracking Annex, FL. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Harris IT Services received $8,207,316 for network support services at Los Angeles AFB. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Harris IT Services received $26,792,414 for operations, maintenance and logistics support of the Air Force Satellite Control Network antenna sites worldwide, as well as various communications, operations, software and related support services to the 50th Space Wing, Schriever AFB. Work will be performed at Schriever AFB, CO; Ellison Onizuka Satellite Operations Facility and Vandenberg Tracking Station, Vandenberg AFB, CA; Diego Garcia Station; Guam Tracking Station; Hawaii Tracking Station, Kaena Point, HI; New Boston Air Force Station; Eastern Vehicle Checkout Facility, Cape Canaveral; and Thule Tracking Station.

InDyne, Inc. received $16,734,098 for operations and maintenance support services, training, command, control, communications, information and computer systems services, testing, modification and installation of communications, electronic and security systems at launch facilities, launch control centers and test facilities for the 30 SW at Vandenberg AFB.

International Association of Virtual Organizations, Research & Scientific received $18,950,747 for work on “Automatic Three-Dimensional (3-D) Target Template Generation.” This will develop electronic light table capabilities and targeting workflow software for common geo-positioning service installations.

Interstate Electronics Corp. received $38,723,168 for flight test instrumentation management and support, follow-on Commanders Evaluation Test mission operations and data acquisition, data recording subsystem operational support, engineered refueling overhaul support, Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) flight test operations support, and strategic weapon system training.

Jacobs Technology received $83,132,319 for test support for electronic instrumentation operation; optical, meteorology and geodetic instrumentation operation; metrology and simulation; computation and automation; test operations and maintenance; ammunition management operations; technical and engineering services; range management; communication and information management; and data acquisition and management. Work will be performed in Yuma, AZ.

Lockheed Martin received $37,438,157 for Space Based Infrared System (SBIRS) logistics and the legacy sustainment baseline system.  Lockheed studies: deficiencies, failures and evolving requirements; changes in external user data needs or interfaces or changes in technology. Work will be in Colorado Springs, Boulder, and Greely, CO.

Lockheed Martin received $42,880,040 for dual band telemetry, tracking and communications capability for the SBIRS Geosynchronous Earth Orbiting 5-6 space vehicles. Lockheed will redesign them to accommodate the new dual band capable transponder box and cabling.  Lockheed will also add a Unified S-Band uplink frequency and modulation scheme to the existing Space to Ground Link System L-Band uplink capability.

Lockheed Martin received $44,184,746.00 for FY2014 studies and systems modifications for Space Based Infrared System (SBIRS).  Work will be performed in Boulder, CO; Sunnyvale and Azusa, CA; Buckley AFB; and Schriever AFB.

Northrop Grumman received $8,990,905 for six-month FY2015 on-orbit support and sustainment of the Defense Support Program (DSP) constellation. Work will be performed in Redondo Beach, CA.

Northrop Grumman received $7,297,827 for R&D of System of Systems Integration Technology and Experimentation-Technical Area 1. This provides development and demonstration of System of Systems architectures at El Segundo, CA.

Space Coast Launch Services (at Patrick AFB) received $36,328,456 to provide operations, maintenance and engineering support to critical launch, spacecraft and ordnance facilities and support systems owned by the 45 SW.

United Launch Services LLC received $938,372,859 for FY2015 EELV launch capability for the Delta IV and Atlas V families of launch vehicles. This provides mission assurance, program management, systems engineering, integration of the space vehicle with the launch vehicle, launch site and range operations, and launch infrastructure maintenance and sustainment. Work will be performed at Littleton, Colorado; Vandenberg AFB, and Cape Canaveral Air Station, FL.

United Launch Services LLC received $126,966,232 for backlog transportation and order launch vehicle production services; launch vehicle configuration of one Air Force Atlas V531; and backlog transportation at Centennial, CO, and Cape Canaveral, FL.

CYBER, IT & COMMS

3M Co. (St. Paul, MN) received $6,827,651 for annual renewal of maintenance and support for the 3M Care Innovation license software suite with support for Oracle Tuxedo middleware, Medicomp MEDCIN software Data Files and Data Support, and Healthcare Data Dictionary Terminology Consulting Services. This was other than full and open competition, per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

AAI Textron Systems received $9,931,778 for additional radio frequency electronic warfare systems integration test environment system (RF EW SITE) equipment (70 synthetic source instruments, 9 radio frequency switch matrix, and 3 stimulus cabinets) including shipping and set-up in support of the Electronic Combat Systems Evaluation Laboratory/Weapons System Simulation Laboratory at the Naval Air Warfare Center Weapons Division, Point Mugu, CA.

Absolute Business Corp.; Archimedes Global; Calhoun International; Circinus, LLC; Charles F. Day & Associates; E&M Technologies, Inc.; Integral Consulting Services; K-3 Enterprises, Inc.; Pluribus International Corp.; and The Buffalo Group received $2,160,000,000 for global intelligence support services acquisition.

BAE Systems; Booz Allen Hamilton; CACI; DynCorp International; Invertix Corp.; Lockheed Martin; ManTech; Northrop Grumman; Six3 Intelligence Solutions Inc.; Sotera Defense Solutions; and SRA International Inc. received a collective $5,040,000,000 for global intelligence support services acquisition. This acquisition is designed to acquire flexible, comprehensive, cost effective services to support
the Army’s need for fully integrated intelligence, security, information operations and related support.

Blackhawk Enterprise, Inc. received $7,738,213 to ensure the intelligence production and dissemination software applications and intelligence mission data, technology forecasting, and foreign material management software applications are continually maintained for appropriate security posture.

Carahsoft Technology Corp. received $15,012,167 for secure product support for large enterprises (maintenance) for all existing licenses and system application products specific support.

Carahsoft Technology Corp. received $7,135,539 for Enterprise Information Technology Resource Management and Pre-production Research Environment Program software tools and maintenance in support of U.S. Army Information Technology Agency (USAITA).

CGI Federal Inc. received $9,807,114 for engineering services in support of the modernization, virtualization, and migration of systems and applications from legacy data centers to authorized DOD enterprise data centers and hosting facilities (CGI Fairfax, Navy Enterprise Data Centers, Defense Information Systems Agency).

Cray received $26,840,000 to acquire balanced, commercial, production-grade, high-performance computing systems, which contain an appropriate combination of processor, memory, disk input/output, interconnect, and operating system capabilities, to conduct complex, tightly-coupled, large-scale, scientific calculations at the Army Research Lab’s DOD Super-Computing Resource Center (ARL DSRC).  

DRS Intelligence, Communication & Avionic Solutions LLC received $12,005,974 to manufacture joint tactical terminal – receivers (JTT-R), JTT-R production engineering test set racks; fixtures and tooling for the U.S. Navy (91 percent), and Australia (9 percent). This was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1) and FAR 6.302-1.

Edaptive Computing, Inc. received $24,900,000 for R&D of secure engineering of trusted systems. Edaptive Computing will deploy and transition modeling, analysis optimization, and protection tools and techniques to promote trusted systems engineering for hardware/software systems from concept analysis through acquisition and sustainment. Work will be performed in Dayton, OH.

Exelis, Inc. received $15,380,162 for form, fit and function replacement of electronic countermeasures sets. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Exelis Systems Corp. received $27,986,531 for IT support and services to support the mission of the 5th Signal CommandWork will be performed in Germany (80%), Romania (5%), Belgium (5%), Turkey (5%), and Israel (5%).  Army Contracting Command, NetCom Branch, Fort Huachuca, AZ, is the contracting activity.

General Dynamics received $20,155,487 for personnel, equipment, supplies, transportation, tools, materials, supervision and other items, and non-personal services necessary, for command, control, communications and computer information systems operations and maintenance for the 1st Signal Brigade throughout South Korea (Yongsan Garrison).

GXM Consulting received $9,868,927 to develop a program-level R&D process for deploying secure tactical applications on mobile communication platforms. Work will be performed in Afghanistan and Arlington, VA.

Herrick Technology Laboratories, Inc. received $9,704,228 for prototype hardware and software to develop new radio frequency technology, including R&D, integration and demonstration of novel radio frequency technology.

HP received $14,770,140 to support and maintain an IT infrastructure library.

IBM received $7,757,426 for systems and programming business, operations research and data analysis, basis and report, interface, conversion and enhancement services in support of the Navy Enterprise Resource Planning efforts.

Integrity Applications, Inc. received $6,825,715 to advance the start of data collection and processing through the use of multi-sensor data aggregation, advanced exploitation, and data fusion.

Intelligent Decisions, Inc. received $14,612,066 for Enterprise Land Mobile Radio Trunking System (ELMRTS) upgrade. This provides ELMR infrastructure equipment at 9 Air Force Reserve Command locations, and 3,151 portable and 304 mobile radios.

L-3 received $8,402,031 to help sustain the Army’s existing combat services support, for VSAT transmission systems and satellite communications terminals.

L-3 Communications received $20,306,274 for ACC force structure satellite communications terminals. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $45,000,000 for production, installation and continued sustainment of a General Service, Cross Domain Solution (CDS), Radiant Mercury (RM). RM is a CDS that brokers the exchange of data between different security domains by sanitizing, downgrading, guarding and transliterating formatted data between different security compartment levels. This sole-source acquisition was non-competitive, per FAR 6.302-1(a)(2) and FAR 6.302-1(a)(2)(ii)(A) and (B).

Lockheed Martin received $44,037,055 for Next Generation Technical Services III, which includes management and technical support to advance high performance computing services. Work will be performed at Wright-Patterson AFB; Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD; Stennis Space Center; Lorton, VA; and Bethesda, MD. One bid solicited, one received.

The McKenna Principals, Inc. (Woodbridge, VA) received $9,448,830 for software development, testing, and demonstration for DHS

Microsoft received $11,600,029 for Premier Support Services at Marine Corps facilities worldwide. This is sole-source per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Microsoft received $7,572,520 for consulting services for various functions in Ft. Huachuca.

N3 Government Solutions, LLC received $25,000,000 for support services and equipment. Work includes architectural design; design, development, integration and systems engineering; enterprise analysis and assessments; software, engineering, development and programming; and network administration.

NCI Information Systems, Inc. received $40,661,743 for non-personal information technology services and support requirements for the U.S. Army NETCOM G3/5/7, cyber network operations and security support.

Northrop Grumman received $30,000,000 for the W/V-band Satellite Communications Experiment program – to increase knowledge and understanding of atmospheric effects on radio frequency signal propagation.

Northrop Grumman; Georgia Tech Research Institute; Leidos; Dynetics, Inc.; Berrie Hill Research Corp.; MacAulay Brown Inc.; and Riverside Research Institute received $47,000,000 for R&D for the Advanced Novel Spectrum Warfare Environment Research (ANSWER), which tries to enable mission assured warfare capabilities in contested and denied environments consistent with A2/AD [PDF] scenarios.

SAIC received $423,800,000 for unspecified maintenance, repair, and operations. SAICreceived $23,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Seneca Telecommunications, LLC received $10,465,593 for Security Cooperation Enterprise Solution Program Management & Advisory Services. This involves unnamed FMS.

Sierra Nevada Corp. received $14,577,497 for software development [develop, demonstrate, and deliver, through a Feasibility Demonstration Model (FDM), end-to-end operational efficiencies toward fulfilling end-user requirements for GEOINT.]

Silicon Graphics received $27,340,000 to acquire balanced, commercial, production-grade, high-performance computing systems which contain an appropriate combination of processor, memory, disk input/output, interconnect, and operating system capabilities to conduct complex, tightly-coupled, large-scale, scientific calculations at the Engineer Research & Development Center’s DOD Super-Computing Resource Center (ERDC DSRC).

Sotera Defense Solutions received $24,728,542 for R&D on large data frameworks.

STG, Inc. received $7,561,521 for IT support services.

STS Systems Integration received $9,000,000 for work on fiber optic and cable infrastructure, including installation, upgrading, rerouting, terminating, testing and removing computer and comms at Wright-Patterson AFB. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Technique Solutions, Inc. received $25,000,000 for the entire spectrum of equipment and services associated with the Cyber Network Defense mission and information assurance support. 

TVAR Solutions, LLC received $20,990,000 for Army enterprise-wide Symantec business critical support and consulting services in Fort Belvoir, VA.

Tyco Electronics Subsea Communications LLC received $12,310,100 for 1,550 kilometers of SL-17 submarine fiber-optic cable, which the U.S. Navy uses to connect deep ocean measurement instruments to shore monitoring stations. This was sole-source per FAR 6.302-1(a)(2).

Unisys (Reston, VA) received $6,990,335 for Army Enterprise Service desk support.

Watts Constructors, LLC received $38,914,500 to build a satellite communications earth terminal station facility.

MISSILES, BOMBS, ROCKETS

Abacus Technology Corp. received $10,265,012 for command, control, communications and computer (C4) services at AFNWC, Kirtland AFB. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Aeroject Rocketdyne received $18,507,839 for 1,000 Stinger flight motors required to support the service life extension program of 850 Stinger Block 1 missiles at McAlester Army Ammunition Plant (MCAAP). One bid was solicited, with one received.

Boeing received $46,882,260 to procure, repair and supply investment material for the Intercontinental Ballistic Missile NS-50 Missile Guidance Set.

Boeing received $34,000,000 for engineering services for air launched cruise missiles. Boeing will provide system integration lab support, customer special request and other services. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Boeing received $13,997,592 to work on Trident II (D5) Navigation Subsystem component production and technical support services of the Electro-statically Supported Gyro Navigator, test equipment and software modernization, and repair of ESGN, for the United States and the UK. This was sole-source per Justification & Approval, 15,676 dated April 7, 2014.

Exelis received $10,344,841 for design updates, production and delivery of the Data Storage Service Life Extension Program for the Strategic Automated Command & Control System. This is a sole-source acquisition by the USAF Nuclear Weapon Center, Hill AFB.

General Dynamics received $57,952,312 for Hydra-70 Rocket System, including rockets, warheads, motors and containers. Work will be performed in Williston, VT (71 percent), and Camden, AR (29 percent).

General Dynamics received $18,750,489 for the Hydra-70 Rocket System, which includes M151 high explosive rockets, M255A1 rockets and M274 smoke signal practice rockets.

Lockheed Martin received $274,800,000 to help the Missile Defense Agency develop, integrate, and test Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system upgrades.

Lockheed Martin received $146,313,578 for Trident II (D5) missile production, D5 Life Extension development and production, and D5 Deployed Systems Support. United Kingdom funds ($48,473,708) are obligated.

Lockheed Martin received $100,000,000 for JASSM production, system upgrades, integration, sustainment, management and logistics. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $34,234,847 for design, development and procurement of facilities, equipment, and processes required for successful activation and support of a Trident II (D5) missile storage facility as well as the design and delivery of specialized support equipment for the movement and storage of D5 missiles at Camp Navajo, AZ.

Lockheed Martin received $9,078,498 for Subminiature Flight Safety System integration onto the Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile. Lockheed will complete all activities necessary to design, develop and qualify an SFSS demonstration unit via ground, captive-carry and flight test demonstration activity in the JASSM weapon system. Work will be performed at Orlando, FL. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $7,023,625 for Joint Air to Surface Standoff Missile (JASSM) software maintenance. Lockheed will enhance the software package: JASSM Enterprise Management System (JEMS) Phase 3B. This is a sole-source acquisition.

L-3 received $13,195,067 for FMU-139 C/B electronic bomb fuze and accessories, and a first article test and physical configuration audit. This includes 250 FMU 139C/B electronic bomb fuzes (6 pack) and 4,415 FMU 139 C/B electronic bomb fuzes (9 pack). Work will be performed in Cincinnati, OH (65 percent), and Orlando, FL (35 percent).

Marvin Engineering Co., Inc. received $12,816,113 for the upgrade and overhaul of 626 LAU-127 Missile Launchers. Work will be performed in Inglewood, CA.

Nisga’a Data Systems, LLC. received $17,891,203 for Video Teleconferencing Refresh Project for Washington Headquarters Services Enterprise Information Technology Services Division. This is sole-source per 15 U.S.C. 637(a) as a non-competitive 8(a) set-aside IAW FAR 19.808-1.

Northrop Grumman received $9,286,000 to highlight critical capabilities tied to objectives established by war-fighters when working with Integrated Air and Missile Defense (IAMD) program software and hardware components.

Northrop Grumman received $46,585,657 for system support functions, including support management; engineering and software; maintenance; and field service.

Northrop Grumman received $60,109,750 for Trident II (D5) Underwater Launcher System and Advanced Launcher Development Program support.

Raytheon received $8,023,289 for 18 SM-2 Block IIIA All-Up-Rounds for DDG 1000 class ships.

Raytheon received $8,881,587 for TOW missiles for the U.S Army, USMC, Saudi Arabia, Thailand and Lebanon.

Raytheon received $8,936,000 for SM 2 and SM depot level maintenance facility provision item ordered spares.

Raytheon received $10,309,629 for SM-6 test equipment, and SM-2 and SM-6 inert operational missiles with internal missile initializer and power supply. This will incorporate requirements for additional SM-6 test equipment, and SM-2 and SM-6 6 inert operational missiles.

Raytheon received $10,626,443 for FY2014 Evolved Seasparrow Missile (ESSM) spares for USA (94.75 percent), the UAE (2.77 percent), and Japan (2.48 percent).

Raytheon received $11,026,125 for GPS-Aided Inertial Navigation System II (GAINS) Phase III.

Raytheon received $11,375,910 for additional engineering services for calendar year 2014 for the PATRIOT program. 

Raytheon received $12,068,000 for FY2014 NATO Seasparrow Surface Missile Systems (NSSMS) MK 57 MOD 13 and Guided Missile Launching System (GMLS) MK 29 MOD 4/5.

Raytheon received $12,872,815 for AMRAAM production lot 27.  This involves unnamed FMS.

Raytheon received $13,664,382 for unique, common, and similar spare parts for Lot 14 Block I and Block II of AIM-9X missiles in support of USAF ($8,419,523; 61.62 percent); the U.S. Navy ($3,730,324; 27.30 percent); Saudi Arabia ($404,762; 2.96 percent); Oman ($311,377; 2.28 percent); South Korea ($305,031; 2.23 percent); Kuwait ($111,282; 0.82 percent); Morocco ($95,772; 0.70 percent); Malaysia ($93,405; 0.68 percent); Turkey ($71,263; 0.52 percent); Finland ($41,228; 0.30 percent); Switzerland ($32,612; 0.24 percent); Poland ($29,241; 0.21 percent); and Denmark ($18,562; 0.14 percent).

Raytheon received $15,057,012 for the Advanced Electronic Protection Improvement program to the AIM-120C-7 missile.

Raytheon received $15,500,000 to procure spares for the Land-based Phalanx Weapon System configuration of the MK15 Phalanx CIWS.

Raytheon received $49,482,902 to modify 500 AGM-65A/B guidance control sections to an AGM-65E2 configuration. This was non-competitive per FAR 6.302-1.

Raytheon received $53,252,500 for the production of an AN/TPY-2 Float Cooling Equipment Unit #2, Float Electronic Equipment Unit #2, Spares, Reliability Improvements, and Mission Assurance.

Raytheon/Lockheed Martin Javelin, JV (Tucson, AZ) received $84,278,759 for 534 Javelin Block 1 Missiles and 14 Javelin Command Launch Unit retrofits for the U.S. Army, USMC, Jordan, Qatar, and New Zealand.

Raytheon received $251,133,201 for 231 Tomahawk Block IV All-Up-Round missiles for the U.S. Navy (147 vertical launch systems and 64 capsule launch systems) and the UK (20 torpedo tube launch systems). Purchases: U.S. Navy ($224,536,361; 89.4 percent) and the UK ($26,596,840; 10.6 percent). This was not competitively procured, per FAR 6.302-1.

# # # #

*Editing consolidated similar contracts. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

**Any clerical errors are the editor’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

***To avoid competitive bidding, DOD invokes 10 U.S.C. 2304, FAR 6.302, and FAR 8.405-6. DOD also invokes 15 U.S.C. 638 to avoid competitive bidding when dealing with small businesses.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.

BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for September 2014: Part II

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DOD spent $32,510,210,101+ on 693 individual contracts in September 2014

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $32,510,210,101 on 693 individual contracts during September 2014.

*For part I see here.

VEHICLES

ATAP received $8,268,000 for Inspect Repair Only As Necessary (IROAN) of the MRAP Cougar.

BAE Systems received $10,506,287 for Bradley system technical support and sustainment system technical support.

BAE Systems received $153,654,146 for 53 M88A2 vehicles and three spares. One bid solicited, one received.

Elzly Technology Corporation received $9,900,000 for corrosion engineering support to assist the Tank-Automotive & Armaments Command and the Tank Automotive Research, Development & Engineering Center in: planning, logistics, maintenance, inspection, testing, training, engineering, and R&D.

General Dynamics received $61,196,977 for 1,067 Cougar egress upgrade kits in support of the Program Executive Officer Land Systems, Program Manager, MRAP vehicle program. This is sole-source.

Honeywell International, Inc. received $11,497,047 to modify the total integrated engine revitalization contract for hardware to meet the Anniston Army Depot (ANAD) production schedule and field repair site demand requirements.

Humanetics Innovative Solutions, Inc. received $9,999,647 for anthropomorphic test devices (a.k.a. crash test dummies), parts, calibration, repair and development.

Ibis Tek, LLC received $9,425,053 for vehicle windows.

International Automated Systems (IAS) received $52,236,909 for aviation light utility mobile maintenance cart, field support package, and authorized stock list and orientation training.

ManTech International Corp. received $50,000,000 for non-personal services required to support the operational test, data collection, and experimentation mission of the U.S. Army Operational Test Command (USAOTC), Ft. Hood.

Navistar Defense LLC received $43,968,950 for MRAP Long Wheeled Base Ambulance Medical Equipment Set A-Kits, MaxxPro Survivability Upgrade Kits and Spring Suspension System Kit.

Oshkosh Corporation received $11,198,820 to support the Logistics Vehicle System Replacement. Oshkosh will provide armor kits, emergency egress windows, tractor clevis pins, and armored integrated product support. This is sole-source per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Oshkosh received $12,753,068 for integrated logistics support to include interactive electronic technical manual updates reflecting current vehicle configurations, engineering changes, troubleshooting, maintenance tasks, and corrected errors; national maintenance work requirements to reflect the most recent vehicle configurations; and packaging data updates for the multiple heavy tactical vehicle variants.

Oshkosh Defense, LLC received $84,810,000 to extend a previous contract to work on the MTV family and help with technical support.

Oshkosh received $99,000,000 for six test assets, 495 modernized extended boom forklifts, 100 armored cabs and replacement parts.

ORDNANCE DISPOSAL

AAI Corp. received $27,316,800 to produce AN/GLM -11 (V) 1 and (V) 2 universal test sets [PDF] and provide engineering services and program and configuration management in support of the AN/GLM-11 series. This was not competitively procured per FAR 6.302-1(a)(2).

Advanced Reconnaissance Corp.; Applied Research Associates, Inc.; A-T Solutions; CyPhy Works, Inc.; EFW Inc.; L-3 Communications; NIITEK, Inc.; Primal Innovation; QinetiQ, Inc.; Robo-Team NA, Inc.; Advanced Technology Systems Co.; Applied Research Associates, Inc.; iRobot Corp.; K2 Solutions, Inc.; Lockheed Martin; QinetiQ, Inc.; Robo-Team NA, Inc.; Stolar Research Corp.; Science & Engineering Services; and Pearson Engineering Ltd. received $49,497,158 for the Army Research Lab/Joint IED Defeat Organization Culvert Denial Challenge program.

Alakai Defense Systems, Inc. received $8,734,134 for Check Point Explosives Detection Systems-2 (CPEDS-2) upgrades for detecting bulk homemade explosives and precursors in the field. One bid solicited, one received.

Carnegie Robotics LLC received $22,783,433 for an autonomous mine detection system that is being developed to provide the war fighter with capability to detect, mark and neutralize explosive hazards.

Critical Solutions International Inc. received $13,781,957 for developing the technical manual for the Husky Vehicle Mounted Mine Detector (VMMD).

Foster Miller received $9,420,522 for Man Transportable Robotic System MK2 [(MTRS) PDF] production, depot level repair parts, spares kits, accessories, consumable parts, reconditioning, conversion, enhancements and configuration management. This was not competitively procured per FAR 6.302-1(a)(2).

General Dynamics received $25,165,031 for demilitarization and disposal of MLRS M26 (H104) rocket pod containers, rockets, and components.

Gradient Technology received $7,120,000 for demilitarization and disposal of 1,468,896 pounds of bulk explosive D.

Highland Engineering, Inc. received $8,500,000 for production/delivery of military working dogs worldwide, deployable kennel systems, and logistics documentation.

Landmark Technologies, Inc. received $12,467,465 for J9 Operations Research System Analysis support services. Landmark will provide rapidly deployable ORSA expertise in all aspects of counter-IED operations to support U.S. forces.

Leidos Inc. received $150,097,661 to support the Saturn Arch effort and provide continued operations, sustainment, and integration of aircraft platforms configured to host a suite of sensors deployed in support of OEF in Afghanistan and Djibouti.

Leidos Inc. received $17,478,965 for additional Future Radiographic Systems (FRS), depot-level repair parts and engineering support. FRS provides portable real-time downrange imaging capability. FRS assists EOD in analyzing and determining the condition of a device or munitions.

Leidos, Inc. received $13,848,212 for the Night Eagle counter-IED detection system operating in Afghanistan. Services include logistics, hardware/software maintenance, flight operations, and associated facility and system support. Work will also be in the UAE; Germany; Reston and Bridgewater, VA; Las Vegas, NV; San Diego and Santa Rosa, CA; Silver Springs, MD; and Princeton, NJ.

MAS Zengrange Ltd. (Wellington, New Zealand) received $9,678,000 for additional transmitters, receivers and expendable XrX receivers for the mini-demolition remote firing device.

Tetra Tech EC, Inc. received $7,922,018 for non-time critical removal action for munitions clearance at former NAF Adak.

CLOTHING

Aurora Industries, LLC (Camuy, Puerto Rico) received $11,533,632 for flame resistant combat coats and trousers.

Burlington Apparel Fabrics received $9,696,000 for USAF polyester/wool serge cloth.

Federal Prison Industries, Inc. received $13,533,000 for Army physical fitness uniform jackets.

McRae Industries, Inc. received $6,963,008 for USMC hot weather boots.

Outdoor Research LLC received $12,377,449 for 106,835 pairs of intermediate cold weather gloves.

Pentaq Manufacturing Corp. received $18,499,172 and $31,895,125 for Army physical fitness uniform trousers.

Provengo, LLC received $45,407,529 for 150,160 temperate-weather and 150,160 hot-weather boots in support of the Rugged All Terrain Boot program.

Short Bark Industries, Inc. received $36,750,000 for production (max 375,000 individual EFRCE articles) of the Enhanced Flame Resistant Combat Ensemble (EFRCE) uniforms.  Work will be in Guanica, Puerto Rico.

Standard Safety Equipment received $7,542,000 for waterproof clothing bags.

SNC Manufacturing, LLC (Orocovis, Puerto Rico) received $96,281,660 for Permethrin ACU coats.

Tennier Industries Inc. received $22,977,600 for Army parkas and trousers.

GEAR & EQUIPMENT

ATK received $33,397,721 and $33,397,721 for 24 months of engineering and development of the XM25 Individual Semi-Automatic Airburst System.

Avon Protection Systems received $13,700,000 for M53 Joint Service General Purpose Mask sustainment. One bid solicited, with one received.

BAE Systems received $28,467,875 for 68 fire control system kits and spares; and for system training and field maintenance training for the M109A6 Paladin.

BAE Systems received $8,749,247 for ordnance handling and management including equipment, inventory, transportation, and supervision to receive, inspect, store, transport; to manage all types of ammo, explosives, ordnance material and weaponry; and for all peacetime and wartime munitions operations at Pearl Harbor.

BANC3 Inc. received $8,138,707 for engineering, software architectures, system engineering, and business operations support to command, power and integration – SETA Small Business Set Aside Effort Directorate.

DHS Systems received $200,000,000 for various commercial cold weather shelters and components.

Industries for the Blind, Inc. received $14,290,652 for an estimated 2,800 portable machinist measuring tool sets. One bid solicited, with one received.

Integrated Solutions for Systems, Inc. (IS4S) received $10,000,000 for enhanced lethality ordnance and modeling – R&D in three weapons core competencies: effectiveness, damage mechanisms and energetic materials.

Jay Moulding Corporation received $9,675,500 for retro lantern kits.

Lions Services received $8,882,887 for improved H-Nape retention systems.

Mills Manufacturing Corporation and Pioneer Aerospace Corporation received $25,350,000 for 6,250 (max.) MC-6 personnel parachute systems and 3,125 (max.) MC-6 canopies.

Ocenco Incorporated received $45,332,200 for self-contained breathing apparatus. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Proserve Crane & Equipment, Inc. received $6,563,431 for 93 various size bridge cranes for the Maneuver Systems Sustainment Center, Phase III, at the Red River Army Depot, TX.

U.S. Ordnance, Inc. received $11,236,402 for M2 machine gun barrel assemblies.

MISCELLANEOUS RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $16,173,281 for environmental technology and technical services support. Alion will use technical expertise in advanced materials, manufacturing, and testing to perform evaluation, analysis, planning, testing, and implementation in the areas of system engineering, technology assessment and technology transfer. Work will be performed at San Antonio, TX; McLean, VA; and Rome, NY.

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $24,896,089 for R&D, engineering, technical evaluation and information analysis and dissemination for the U.S. Army Rapid Equipping Force. Alion will try to create methods for design, R&D, production, and repair of metals, composites, ceramics, electronic materials, and energetic materials to produce, test, and validate prototypes for delivery to the Army.

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $24,926,478 for technical analysis, logistics and sustainment for Headquarters U. S. Marine Corps. Alion shall provide R&D expertise in areas such as non-destructive testing, corrosion, thermal-protection systems, rapid prototyping, integration and testing of experimental systems, low-volume production, condition-based maintenance, and real-time system monitoring.

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $47,316,614 to support the Army Tank and Automotive Research, Development and Engineering Center by development of solutions for technical and engineering problems. This includes solutions for problems in the science of materials and processes, in engineering, and in testing and evaluation.

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $49,420,155 to provide scientific, technical, and operational support information of DOD systems and military systems for the Armament Research, Development and Engineering Center. Work will be performed at Mount Arlington, NJ.

American Systems Corp; Beshenich Muir Associates LLC; DIGIFLIGHT Inc.; Dynamics Research Corporation; Geeks & Nerds Corps; Joint Research & Development Inc.; Logistics Systems Inc.; Man-Machine Systems Assessment Inc.; Survice Engineering Company LLC; TASC Inc.; and V.R.C. Corp. received a combined $444,000,000 for test and evaluation support services (includes database and database management, evaluation, analytical and verification, methodologies, studies and analysis, scientific and technical, and test and safety management).

Coherent Technical Services, Inc. received $8,087,228 for work on “Multiplex Data Bus Controller/Translator” in Lexington Park, MD.

International Biometric Group, LLC received $6,910,930 for R&D of software modules, interfaces, and data repositories that currently do not exist, in order to develop component virtual lab, also known as a Systems Integration Lab, that will be able to process and storage data in a non-proprietary architecture and serve as the software baseline for future R&D, testing and evaluation of biometric and forensic technologies.

Leidos, Inc. received $18,999,757 for sensor analysis, integration and test (SAIT), providing operational and technical analysis to AFRL to aide in determining which sensor technology concepts offer the optimal performance. Work will be performed at Beavercreek, OH.

Millennium; Subsystem Technologies, Inc.; WisEngineering, LLC; and International Logistics Systems, Inc. received $29,967,029 to provide weapon system and munitions life cycle supportability services in support of the Army Research Development & Engineering Command (RDECOM).

Progeny Systems Corp. received $9,587,392 for work on “Maritime Airborne Service Oriented Architecture Integration” in Manassas, VA.

Research & Engineering Development, LLC received $28,058,391 for R&D on an ISR framework for industrial sector collaboration.

Riverside Research Institute received $40,000,000 for R&D to advance antenna, electromagnetic and plasma physics technologies that contribute to Global Integrated ISR, air/space superiority, global precision attack, hypersonic and special operations. Work will be performed at Wright-Patterson AFB and Riverside Research Institute in Dayton, Ohio.

SAIC; Battelle Memorial Institute; Booz Allen Hamilton; Exelis Inc.; Northrop Grumman; Wintec Arrowmaker, Inc.; and Technical & Project Engineering, LLC received $150,000,000 to support the Army Research Lab’s (ARL) increased mission requirements.

Sensor Concepts Inc. received $9,749,996 for the Handheld Imaging Tool support equipment production unit. Sensor Concepts will harden the initial HIT design to meet requirements for field and depot use and to conduct LRIP runs to ramp up to full rate production of additional HITs. Work will be performed at Livermore, CA.

EDUCATION & TRAINING

Central Texas College (Killeen, TX) received $9,410,083 for education courses to sailors (in-class and distance learning) to include courses for academic skills, undergraduate and graduate levels.

Karcher Group, Inc. received $10,014,843 for delivery, installation, configuration and programming of all AV arrays required for USMC University in Quantico, VA.

Manufacturing Engineering Systems, Inc. received $8,683,871 for support services to assist Army continuing (adult) education.

S.E.R.E. Solutions, Inc. received $9,124,699 for SERE instruction services at Fairchild AFB and Lackland AFB.

CBRNE & WMD

Agilent Technologies received $9,000,000 for yearly full-service preventative maintenance support, unlimited on-site repairs, software upgrades, on-line technical support, and telephone assistance to resolve technical problems to government lab instruments in support of the Edgewood Chemical Biological Center (ECBC).

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $15,214,159 for advanced processes for persistent communications. Alion will develop solutions to help protect the systems from environmental, chemical and biological hazards in theater. Work will be performed at Warner Robins AFB.

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $49,966,859 for advanced processes for persistent communications. Alion will develop solutions to help protect the systems from environmental, chemical, and biological hazards in theater. Work will be performed at Rome, NY.

Booz Allen Hamilton received $95,500,000 to provide support services for countering WMD situational awareness, intelligence, operations, and data visualization support that enables DTRA to monitor global situational awareness of WMD threats and activities. Work will be performed at Ft. Belvoir.

Lockheed Martin received $7,089,077 for an equitable adjustment to the security hardware, associated software, equipment installation, system test, accreditation, certification and delivery of nuclear weapon security system equipment. Work will be in Pittsfield, MA (65.37 percent); Sunnyvale, CA (23.24 percent); Cape Canaveral, FL (10.90 percent); Kings Bay, GA (0.44 percent); and Bangor, WA (0.05 percent).

McCrone Associates Inc. received $10,135,521 for non-personal services to process and analyze particle samples for the purpose of nuclear test ban treaty verification for the Air Force Technical Applications Center nuclear directorate. This supports the U. S. Atomic Energy Detection System. The acquisition will provide technical expertise in particle analysis and operational analytical techniques.

S&K Electronics received $7,347,881 for the M3 Heater.

Schafer Corp. received $8,999,214 to provide non-personal services for the processing and analyzing of particle samples for the purpose of nuclear test ban treaty verification for the Air Force Technical Applications Center (ATFAC) in support of the U. S. Atomic Energy Detection System.

FUEL, ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE & UTILITIES  

American Water Operations & Maintenance Inc. received $13,491,321 to operate and maintain the water distribution and wastewater collection systems at Hill AFB.

Clark Energy Group LLC received $27,921,049 for energy conservation measures (ECMs) at 71 buildings at Webster Outlying Field, NAS Patuxent River.

DYNO Oil & Electric, LLC received $75,802,867 for aviation turbine fuel.

Fuel Services DL JV received $9,160,940 for fuel management services that provides all personnel, equipment, vehicles, tools, materials, supplies, and supervision to manage all aspects of petroleum and cryogenic products.

Graybar Electric Company received $24,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Hampton Roads Mechanical of Virginia, Inc. received $19,883,426 for utility systems at Naval installations in the Hampton Roads, VA, AOR.

Keystone Aviation LLC received $6,817,012 for Jet A fuel.

Old North Utility Services, Inc. received $193,513,320 for final price redetermination of privatization of water distribution and wastewater collection systems.

Palmetto State Utility Services received $7,447,164 for water infrastructure work. This is part of a 50-year base contract. Locations of performance are CA and SC.

Pick Electric, Inc. received $6,537,098 for the Libby Dam and Powerhouse (Montana) electrical distribution equipment replacement.

Portico Services received $18,644,270 to replace four generators and install four 2420kW Prime Duty, low RPM generators modified/derated to run on JP-8 fuel at Ascension Auxiliary Airfield, Ascension Island. This is a sole-source, 8a Alaskan Native Corporation acquisition.

PowerSecure, Inc. received $8,300,000 to repair and relocate a 115 kV transmission line at Eglin AFB.

ReEnergy Black River LLC received $288,918,210 for electricity.

Vane Line Bunkering, Inc. received $24,525,123 for transportation of bulk jet fuel and marine diesel fuel by barge.

Virginia Electric & Power received $17,687,041 for ownership, operation and maintenance of the electrical distribution system at Henderson Hall, Arlington, VA.

MEDICAL & SAFETY

Abbott Laboratories Inc. received $48,800,000 for medical test equipment and accessories.

ASM Research, Inc. (an Accenture Federal Services Company) received $7,723,444 to develop and map DOD/VA Joint Centralized Credentials Quality Assurance System (JCCQAS). ASM will develop a prototype to enable DOD & the VA to uniformly manage credentialed healthcare providers using a single interagency system for the Defense Health Agency Defense Health Services Systems Clinical Support Division.

AvKare, Inc. received $24,899,055 for pharmaceutical products.

BAE Systems received $9,653,246 for installation of additional anoxic treatment capacity in Building 221, Phase 1.

Brainscope Company, Inc. received $9,938,953 for R&D on the brain functions assessment of mild TBI, from initial injury to rehabilitation and treatment.

CACI Enterprise Solutions, Inc. received $6,959,213 for product improvement and transition support for the defense medical logistics enterprise solutions suite of applications in Ft. Detrick.

CACI-ISS, Inc. received $14,816,251 for medical logistics non-personal services in support of the Air Force Expeditionary/Contingency Medical Materiel Program performed at DOD and Air Reserve/Guard installations within the continental United States and in the Pacific theater. A small portion of these services supports Army prepositioned stock (APS) and unit deployment package requirements on Air Force installations.

CAE Healthcare Inc. received $28,500,000 for medical simulation products and accessories.

CliniComp, Intl. received $29,922,368 to provide Essentris sustainment, requirements, supplies, and services to the program executive officer, Defense Healthcare Management Systems. This provides services for operational support and sustainment for 57 existing Military Treatment Facilities (MTFs) with Clinical Information System Essentris products. Services include software and hardware sustainment, technical and customer support, proactive automated system monitoring and alerting, repair service, replacement parts, software updates, and configuration assistance.

Computer Science Corp. received $12,149,019 for operations, maintenance, and support of a DOD centralized data repository that records information about beneficiaries’ prescriptions filled worldwide, as well as other pharmaceutical data for the Military Health System. One bids solicited, one received.

Entergion, Inc. received $7,780,433 for testing of a platelet-derived hemostatic agent in order to obtain a U.S. FPA, investigational new drug application.

G4S received $9,004,710 to provide non-personal services involving fire protection, emergency management and medical services for Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. Work will be performed at Patrick AFB.

Golden State Medical Supply received $14,070,220 for pharmaceuticals.

Kforce Government Solutions, Inc. (KGS) received $25,498,060 for medical items and accessories.

Kforce Government Solutions, Inc. received $20,957,960 to procure, document, and deliver traumatic amputation task trainers to enhance DOD’s medical training capability. One bid was solicited, with one received.

Laboratory Corp. of America (Burlington, NC) received $52,365,750 for laboratory testing services for all military members and dependents.

Longview International received $8,291,746 for software design, development and testing to support emerging requirements in the DMLSS, DCAM and JMAR applications to meet information assurance and the establishment of new data exchanges/services. Work will be at the Joint Medical Logistics Functional Development Center at Ft. Detrick.

Nanotherapeutics, Inc. received $9,647,917 for Medical Countermeasures (MCM) Advanced Development and Manufacturing (ADM) capability for rapid development of countermeasures against chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear attacks and outbreaks of naturally occurring and genetically engineered infectious diseases.

Northrop Grumman received $6,918,615 to continue to modify the Defense Occupational and Environmental Health Readiness System-Industrial Hygiene (DOEHRS-IH) application in support of resolving system change requests and system incident reports. One bid was solicited, with one received.

Pegasus Medical Concepts, Inc. received $9,500,000 to provide labor, equipment, and materials to furnish, install, and label high-density shelving for Navy Medicine Medical Treatment Facilities.

Philips Healthcare (Andover, MA) received $27,366,537 for access to airworthy defibrillators inventory. Zoll Medical Corp. received $39,848,375 for access to airworthy defibrillators inventory.

SeKON Enterprises, Inc. received $12,433,560 to provide engineering, cyber security, and configuration management support services to the program executive officer, Defense Healthcare Management Systems.

Stanford University received $12,168,354 for R&D on the “Brain Trauma Evidence-based Consortium.”

Thornhill Research, Inc. received $36,365,985 for the Portable Patient Transport Life Support System.

Unissant, Inc. received $11,992,354 for engineering fixes and systems upgrades to Armed Forces Health Longitudinal Technology Application (AHLTA) and the Composite Health Care System (CHCS). Work will be performed in Reston (50%) and Falls Church, VA (50%).

3M (St. Paul, MN) received $26,042,557 for medical and surgical supplies.

TRANSPORTATION 

American Bureau of Shipping (Houston, TX) received $8,500,000 for vessel classification services in accordance with statute 46 U.S.C. 3316.

Birdon America, Inc. received $9,679,841 for work on bridge erection boats (BEB).

JAR Assets, Inc. received $10,822,800 for fuel transportation by tug and barge along the inland waterways and East Coast locations in the Atlantic Region.

Lynden Air Cargo LLC received $7,001,337 for moving up to 40,000 pounds of cargo from Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson to Eareckson Air Force Station (Shemya Island) and other various satellite locations.

Marine Terminals Corporation-East received $6,561,822 for stevedore and terminal services at the Military Ocean Terminal Sunny Point, NC.

Matson Navigation Company, Inc. ($28,657,471); Sea Star Line, LLC ($7,710,078); and Totem Ocean Trailer Express ($16,192,822) received funding for regional domestic ocean and intermodal distribution services.

Propper International, Inc. (Mayaguez, Puerto Rico) received $124,470,982 for modular lightweight load carrying equipment.

Total Concepts of Design Inc. received $6,762,400 for MK 3 MOD 0 and MK 12 MOD 1 metal material handling pallets used to transport different types of munitions.

For domestic airlift services, the following countries received a cumulative $13,133,133: United Airlines, Inc.; MN Airlines, LLC; Allegiant Air, LLC; Sierra Pacific Airlines, Inc.; Southwest Airlines; Miami Air International, Inc.; National Air Cargo Group; Omni Air International, Inc.; Atlas Air, Inc.; Delta Air Lines; Lynden Air Cargo; Northern Air Cargo, Inc.; Tatonduk Outfitters Ltd.; UPS; Fed-Ex; Flightworks, Inc.; Kalitta Charters, LLC; Phoenix Air Group, Inc.; Berry Aviation, Inc.; and East Coast Flight Services, Inc.

Wamore, Inc. and Airborne Systems North America of NJ, Inc. received $51,388,387 for 910 Joint Precision Aerial Delivery Systems (max) and applicable replacement components.

ENVIRONMENTAL

AH/BC NAVY JV, LLC received $50,000,000 for architectural and engineering services for Safe Drinking Water Act and Clean Water Act Environmental Compliance.

All Phase Services, Inc.; North Wind Solutions LLC; Bhate Environmental Associates Inc.; Charter Environmental Inc.; NCM Demolition & Remediation LP; and Perma-Fix Environmental Services Inc. received $9,600,000 for demolition of excess facilities throughout the northeastern U.S in support of the Facility Reduction Program.

Applied Aquatic Management, Inc. received $8,000,000 to conduct invasive species management, vegetation management mapping on U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and federal lands.

ARCADIS U.S., Inc. received $10,880,950 for environmental remediation activities at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, NJ.

CDM-AECOM Multimedia JV received $85,000,000 for architectural-engineering services involving preparation of studies, plans, specifications, design, reports, cost estimates and all associated engineering services in support of DOD environmental compliance within NAVFAC Atlantic.

DJ&A, P.C. received $9,000,000 for nationwide architect and engineer surveying and mapping of the shallow water habitat, floodplain changes and vegetation cover.

Element Environmental, LLC received $20,000,000 for environmental investigations, permit applications and related studies at various Navy and Marine Corps activities in the Pacific and Indian Ocean areas. Some work will be in Guam (25 percent), Japan (20 percent), Diego Garcia (5 percent), Singapore (5 percent) and South Korea (5 percent).

Tetra Tech EC, Inc. received $7,026,563 for environmental work at Hunters Point Naval ShipyardFY2014 Navy BRIC funds in the amount of $7,026,563 are being obligated initially.

FOOD SERVICES

Assistive & Rehabilitative Services received $9,374,650 for full food service in two dining facilities at Ft. Bliss.

Lakeview Center, Inc. received $11,945,653 for “Full Food Galley Services” at NAS Pensacola; the Explosive Ordnance Disposal School, Pensacola, FL; and Naval Construction Battalion Command, Gulfport, MS. One company was solicited for this non-competitive requirement, per FAR Part 8.7 and 41 U.S.C. Chapter 85. Funding issued under the AbilityOne Program supporting the blind and severely disabled.

The Mississippi Department of Rehabilitation Services (Madison, MS) received $6,915,012 for full food services at Keesler AFB.

Oklahoma Department of Rehabilitation Services received $10,450,049 to provide three full food service dining facilities, one dining facility attendant, troop issue subsistence activity, and full food service mobilization at Ft. Sill.

Shamrock Foods Company received $44,655,915 for subsistence support.

Sysco Hampton Roads received $7,950,000 for prime vendor food and beverage support. This was a sole-source acquisition.

US Foods Inc. received $10,650,000 for food and beverages. This was a sole-source acquisition.  U.S. Foods received $325,000,000 for food and beverages.

U.S. Foodservice Inc. received $17,108,775 for subsistence support for the Army, Air Force, and Department of Energy.

Work Services Corporation received $16,074,191 for full food service operations at Sheppard AFB.

CONSULTING

The Clearing Inc. received $6,689,586 for subject matter expertise, consultation, and advisory services for the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy (OUSDP) to create and report a single, accountable entity with oversight of personnel accounting resources, research, and operations across DOD.

Halfaker & Associates, LLC; Credence Management Solutions; ByteCubed, LLC; and Strategic Operational Solutions, Inc. received a cumulative $325,000,000 to provide support for the Office of Small Business Programs to develop market research tools and small business workforce development curricula.

BASE SUPPORT, ADMIN & LOGISTICS – Base operations (also known as base support services) usually consist of some of the following: facility management & investment, fire and emergency, grounds maintenance & landscaping, janitorial services, management & admin, pavement clearance, pest control, port operations, security, utilities, vehicles and equipment service, and waste management.

360 Patriot (Fairfax Station, VA) and AFMS Response (Mechanicsburg, PA) received $45,000,000 for financial, program management, and general administrative services to support the Washington Headquarters Services Acquisition Directorate.

Accenture Federal Services, LLC received $12,241,818 for work on the General Fund Enterprise Business System onsite support and change requests.

AED, Inc. received $27,000,000 for support services within NAVFAC Southeast. Some work will be in Cuba (3 percent) and Haiti (3 percent).

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $6,999,688 for improving Defense Logistics Agency’s distribution services, disposition capabilities and subsistence troop support supply chain’s operational effectiveness and efficiency. Work will be performed at Ft. Belvoir.

Alion Science & Technology Corp. received $48,459,676 to provide integrated tactical systems to identify and avoid using problematic materials, processes and assessment methods that can lead to unplanned and unbudgeted maintenance costs, shorter life-cycles, and reduced readiness.

BAE Systems received $12,500,000 for seven Automated Installation Entry Systems for entrance security at Army installations.

Calibre Systems, Inc. received $10,002,721 for cost and economic analysis of major weapons system programs and associated acquisition/financial management policies and procedures.

Chugach Federal Solutions received $51,953,332 for base operations at various installations in NAVFAC Northwest.

Computer Sciences Corp. received $90,650,000 for Learning Asset Development Sustainment and Support. This supports the Defense Acquisition University in research, analysis, design, maintenance, and integration of a variety of learning assets for DOD acquisition functional competencies.

Dark Mountain Innovations LLC; Health Facility Solutions Co.; and Vernadero Group Inc. received $9,900,000 for professional services for the U.S. Army Reserve Command, Army Reserve Installation Management Directorate; and Army Reserve Division, for various military programs within the United States and Puerto Rico.

Diversified Service Contracting Inc. received $9,896,047 for base operating support at the NAS Patuxent River.

DZSP 21, LLC (Hagatna, Guam) received $42,085,083 for base operating support services at Joint Region Marianas, Guam.

EDC Consulting received $11,686,665 for work on the Integrated Personnel and Pay System.

EMCOR Government Services, Inc. received $38,572,543 for regional base operating support at government facilities within a 100-mile radius of Washington Navy Yard.

Exelis Systems Corporation received $79,807,790 for day-to-day base operation and maintenance services (management, postal, comms, safety and occupational health/industrial hygiene and ambulance, civil engineering, logistics, U.S. Customs, reservation assistance office operations, local national payroll services, and transient alerts). Work will occur at Incirlik AB, Izmir AS, Ankara Support Facility, and the Office of Defense Cooperation-Turkey, and at Morón AB.

Facilitec, Inc. received $9,500,000 for panel systems and modular furniture for AMC HQ facilities at Scott AFB.

Fluor Federal Solutions, LLC received $27,209,971 for base operations support services at NAS Pensacola and the surrounding areas of Saufley Field, Corry Station, and Bronson Field.

Honeywell Technology Solutions, Inc. received $24,542,213 for supply, maintenance and logistics support services in support of the Army Prepositioned Stocks-3 (APS-3) Afloat Program at Army Strategic Logistics Activity Charleston, physically located at. Joint Base Charleston Naval Weapons Station, Goose Creek, SC. One bid was solicited, with one received.

Honeywell Technology Solutions Inc. received $11,050,167 for contract services to support Army Field Support Battalion – Northeast Asia operations at Camp Carroll, Waegwan, South Korea, and Sagami Army Depot, Japan.

IBM received $8,631,429 for finance and audit systems and programming business integration services in support of Navy Enterprise Resource Planning efforts.

Manu Kai, LLC received $74,269,130 for range operations support and base operations support services at the Pacific Missile Range Facility, Kauai, HI.

Mark Dunning Industries received $6,837,585 for base operations support at Naval Submarine Base, Kings Bay.

McKinsey & Company, Inc. received $7,305,753 for ammo industrial base strategic analysis in support of the Office of the Project Director for Joint Services. One bid solicited, one received.

TACG, LLC received $18,087,415 for maintenance and supply system information technology, system integration and modernization support. TACG will provide AFMC the functional and technical resources required to successfully modernize the maintenance and supply portfolios. Work will be performed at Wright-Patterson, Hill, Tinker, and Robins Air Force Bases. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Total Quality Systems, Inc. received $35,937,998 to provide joint service software development program for the Contingency Acquisition Support Model that allows users to generate a procurement-ready requirements package in a contingency environment. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Trident Systems Inc. received $24,900,000 for Collaboration Gateway. Trident will provide a focused but flexible contracting vehicle among the military and intelligence community and Trident Systems Inc.

TSAY/Ferguson-Williams, LLC received $25,457,793 for operations, maintenance, and support services at Ft. Stewart (72 %) and Hunter Army Airfield, GA (28 %).

Wolf Creek Federal Services, Inc. received $21,005,191 for base operations support at various installations in NAVFAC Northwest.

CONSTRUCTION

Acadia Engineers & Constructors received $10,000,000 to support energy and sustainable design projects primarily in the NAVFAC Mid-Atlantic Public Works Department Maine AOR.

ACC Construction Company received $22,129,201 to build an Army Reserve Center at Ft. Bragg.

ACE Engineering, Inc. received $20,000,000 to install and repair asphalt and concrete at NAS Pensacola, NAS Whiting Field, Naval Support Activity Panama City, Naval outlying fields located in FL and AL, and Naval Operations Support Center Tallahassee.

A&D GC, Inc. received $13,525,000 to repair and restore Bachelor Enlisted Quarters 520420 at Camp Pendleton.

A&D GC, Inc. received $12,017,000 to repair and modernize Bachelor Enlisted Quarters Building 41 at Naval Medical Center, San Diego.

AES Group, Inc.; O’Neill Contractors Inc.; and OPCON, Inc. received $15,000,000 for regional roofing multiple award construction primarily in NAVFAC Midwest.

Akima Construction Services, LLC received $44,000,000; Banneker Ventures, LLC received $44,000,000; Bering Straits Technical Services, LLC received $40,800,705; Patriot Construction, LLC received $34,775,000; and Wycliffe Enterprises, Inc. received $44,000,000 for all plant, labor, material, equipment and transportation necessary to perform facilities maintenance, alterations, repair and minor construction work in the Aberdeen and Edgewood areas of Aberdeen Proving Ground and various satellite posts.

Allied Pacific Builders, Inc. received $14,083,358 for design and construction of an Aviation Simulator Training Facility at Marine Corps Base Hawaii.

American Mechanical, Inc. received $22,329,309 for the repair and renovation of Building 660, Ft. Greely.

AOC Environmental Inc.; C3, LLC; Gideon Contracting, LLC; HCR Construction, Inc.; and Unified Services of Texas, Inc. received a combined $18,000,000 for base infrastructure support services at Sheppard AFB,  Lake Texoma Annex, TX, Altus AFB, and Frederick Airfield, OK.

Appledore Marine Engineering, Inc. received $10,000,000 for engineering and design services in support of waterfront facility projects primarily in NAVFAC Mid-Atlantic Maine DPW.

Archer Western Construction, LLC received $42,400,000 for airfield and lighting repairs at NAS Jacksonville.

Argo Systems LLC received $49,000,000 for construction projects at Ft. Bragg. Argo Systems LLCreceived $49,000,000 for construction projects in the Baltimore-Washington corridor.

Arriba Corp. received $12,514,800 for construction of a new multi-level parking garage located at the Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling.

ASI Constructors, Inc. received $8,222,350 for safety upgrades and repairs to three reservoir dams at Quantico Marine Corps Base, VA: Lunga, Breckinridge and Greys.

ASI – ECI JV received $31,897,100 for Illinois River basin work: major rehabilitation of the Lockport Pool and replacement of the Forebay Wall existing gravity wall with a roller compacted concrete wall.

Bara Infoware, Inc. (Ontario, CA) received $16,186,704 for construction of the total U.S. Army School System Training Center at Ft. Hunter Liggett, CA.

Benaka Inc. received $44,600,000 for construction and complete renovation of the Mission Operation Facility, Building 1A, Tobyhanna Army Depot, PA.

BergerABAM Inc. received $30,000,000 for civil engineering services for large projects in NAVFAC Southwest.

BlueForge LLC; C&C Contractors LLC; Colossal Construction Co. LLC; Gulf Building Corp. & Hernandez Consultants JV; HICAPS Inc.; KMK-DJI, JV; and Leebcor Services LLC received a combined $95,000,000 for construction within NAVFAC Southeast. As part of this funding, BlueForge LLC received $13,161,000 to design and construct a new weapons storage and inspection facility at Marine Corp Logistics Base Albany, GA.

Brigadier Construction Services LLC received $9,489,000 for training barracks renovation at Ft. Leonard Wood.

Bristol Engineering Services; Cherokee General Corporation; CKY, Inc.; Macro-Z-Technology; and Nordic Industries, Inc. received a cumulative $9,800,000 for construction work for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Seattle district.  Work will take place in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana and Northwestern division boundaries.

Bristol Engineering Services received $8,328,075 for airfield lighting repair and upgrade at Joint Base Lewis-McChord.

Bulltrack-Watts JV received $13,771,399 for repair and modernization of Romeo Wharf at Naval Base, Guam, to allow berthing of various Navy ships.

Burns & McDonnell received $15,000,000 for multidiscipline architect-engineering services in support of projects primarily in CT and RI.

BURR-MZT JV received $6,623,000 for energy efficiency measures in 11 buildings at Naval Base Kitsap and Jackson Park.

Cebco Construction, Inc. received $45,000,000 for roofing at Ft. Bragg.

Cianbro Corp. received $13,842,000 for structural repairs to Bridge #1 at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery, ME.

CNMS JV received $42,041,500 for design and repair of PACAF HQ, Building 1102 at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam.

Coburn Contractors, LLC received $6,631,081 for replacement of limited area perimeter lighting cable at Naval Base Kitsap – Bangor.

Colby Co., LLC received $10,000,000 for preparation of structural designs in support of projects in NAVFAC Mid-Atlantic DPW.

Consorzio Stabile GMG S.C.AR.L.; COSAP – Consorzio Stabile Appalti Pubblici (Italy); Elecnor, S.A. (Madrid, Spain); (N33191-14-D-1052); Maruf Sharif Construction Co.-MACEC (Dubai), and The Marshall Group LLC received a combined $48,000,000 for DOD construction projects in Bahrain and the UAE, areas managed by NAVFAC EURAFSWA.

Cox Construction received $7,314,623 for construction of the Maneuver Area Training and Equipment Site, Ft. Irwin.

CRAM Roofing Company, Inc.; Brazos Roofing International of South Dakota; JBlanco Enterprises, Inc.; Curtis-McKinley Roofing & Sheet Metal, Inc.; Carroll’s Roofing & Construction, LLC; Global-Pacific Tech JV2; RDT Alabama Roofing, LLC; and A-VET MGC II A JV received $200,000,000 for building envelope and roof repair and replacement construction services in support of the U.S. Army Reserves national roofing initiative, Army Installation Command Management Command, and AFRC. 

Cutting Edge Concrete Services, Inc. received $27,707,750 to repair taxiway shoulders and lights at Travis AFB.

Cutter Enterprises, LLC received $7,610,500 to repair and renovate the aircraft maintenance and hangar facility, Bradley ANG Base.

C.W. Roberts Contracting, Inc. received $9,000,000 for paving at Eglin AFB.

David Boland Inc. received $50,585,000 to construct the 4th ID Combat Aviation Battalion, Assault Battalion maintenance hangar at Ft. Carson.

Dawson-Hawaiian Builders received $16,231,000 to design and construct a low-rise building for the Third Radio Battalion Complex at Marine Corps Base Hawaii.

Diamond Industrial Corp.; East Carolina Mechanical; Mechworks Mechanical Contractors, Inc.; North State Mechanical, Inc.; R&W Construction Co., Inc.; and T.A. Woods Co. received a combined $95,000,000 for mechanical construction projects in Marine Corps Installations (MCI) East.

D & J Enterprises, Inc. received $240,000,000 for debris management in the United States and its territories.

Drace Anderson, JV received $8,245,085 to renovate “A” School Bachelor Enlisted Quarters 315 at Naval Construction Battalion Center Gulfport, Mississippi.

Eastern Construction & Electric Inc. received $9,223,007 for constructing a multi-purpose machine gun range at Campamento Santiago, Puerto Rico.

Eastern Construction & Electric Inc. received $8,637,488 to build a new bulk storage transfer pump house that includes emergency generator back up power at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst.

Eastern General Contractors, Inc. received $8,190,000 for renovation of visiting Airman Quarters, Building 5101 at Westover Air Reserve Base, MA. Eastern General Contractors, Inc. received $8,148,000 for renovation of visiting Airman Quarters, Building 5102 at Westover Air Reserve Base, MA.

EMLS-Future Net Group JV; RB Construction Company; and SAF, Inc. received $10,000,000 for maintenance, including general carpentry to doors, windows, roofing, and gutters in IL, IN, IO, MI, MN, MO, OH and WI.

E.P. Doyle & Son LLC received $14,507,220 for Permanent Barrier I building, to include installing the electrical and mechanical equipment, wiring, electrical duct banks, walkways and parking at the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal, Romeoville, IL.

Facility Support Services, LLC received $9,949,500 to repair Reserve forces operations and training facilities at Joint Base Andrews.

Facility Support Services, LLC; Rand Enterprises, Inc.; Vista Construction, LLC; Syncon, LLC; and Tazewell Homeland JV, LLC received a combined $95,000,000 for construction projects located within NAVFAC Mid-Atlantic Hampton Roads.

Garco Construction, Inc. received $48,343,250 for work on a lower granite juvenile fish facility, phase 1a, a stand-alone construction project in Pomeroy, WA.

Gilbane Federal received $32,929,672 to build a warehouse at a defense distribution depot in San Joaquin, CA.

Granite Construction Company Guam (Watsonville, CA) received $75,000,000 for paving construction services at U.S. facilities in Guam.

Guam Pacific International, LLC (Barrigada, Guam) received $9,241,558 to repair 18 high explosive magazines at Naval Magazine, Naval Base Guam.

Herman/JCG JV received $23,562,676 for renovation of the Old Guard Barracks (Building 247), Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall, VA.

Harper Construction Co. Inc. received $33,697,265 for repair and expansion of battalion headquarters, Building 5960, Ft. Sill, OK.

Harper Construction Co., Inc. received $11,652,082 for bachelor enlisted quarters modernization of Building 856 at NAS Lemoore.

Harry Pepper & Associates, Inc. received $44,953,484 for demolition and removal of the existing Herbert Hoover Dike culverts 12 and 2, and the construction of new water control structures S-274 and S-278. 

Head, Inc. received $17,539,425 for airfield repairs at NAS Corpus Christi.

Heapy Engineering Inc. received $12,000,000 for mechanical/electrical architect and engineer services in the areas of: site visits and investigations; design and economic analysis; construction drawings and specifications; survey of facilities for asbestos containing materials and lead coatings including sampling, testing, and abatement design; and detailed cost estimates and bidding schedules for each project. Work will be performed at Wright-Patterson AFB.

Heeter received $9,620,766 for Bluestone Dam safety assurance- Phase 4, anchors, Hinton, WV. This involves installation of 278 anchors in Bluestone Dam.

Hensel Phelps-Granite-Traylor Pacific JV received $15,137,000 to repair building 26A at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam.

HGL Construction, Inc. received $15,000,000 for design/build and construction services in support of various military and civil works.

Hoar Construction, LLC received $30,785,045 to build a new commissary at Ft. Belvoir.

Hoar Construction, LLC received $36,994,465.00 to build a new commissary, renovate the Navy Exchange, and upgrade a pharmacy at NAS Jacksonville.

Huffman Construction LLC received $25,414,000 for Grand Prairie Pumping Station superstructure and installation of equipment and installation of discharge pipe station equipment on the White River, AR.

H & L Contracting, LLC received $25,155,385 for placing approximately 125,000 cubic yards of beach fill in the community of Sea Gate, Coney Island.

Integration Technologies Group received $48,946,859 to build a modernized digital classroom at Ft. Eustis, VA.

J. Kokolakis Contracting, Inc. received $42,770,720 to build a new marine terminal at Caven Point, NJ.

JAMCO Ventures, LLC; PentaCon, LLC; SGS, LLC; and Raass Brothers, Inc. received $63,960,000 for construction services for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Southwestern Division (SWD) and other southwestern Ft. Worth and SWD customers on a limited nationwide basis.

James Talcott Construction Co. received $20,253,013 for an additional C-130 maintenance hangar/fuel cell, corrosion control, building for the Montana Air National Guard in Great Falls, MT.

John C. Grimberg Co. Inc. received $13,100,000 for energy repairs at the U. S. Naval Academy.

John C. Grimberg Co. Inc. received $15,835,000 to build a parking garage at Naval Support Activity Bethesda.

John C. Grimberg, Co., Inc. received $17,110,000 for renovation and repair, Building C, Ft. Meade.

John C. Grimberg Co., Inc. received $17,295,000 for façade repair and fenestration replacement for Buildings 9 and 10, and repairs to Buildings 3 and 5 at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

John Deere received $17,114,488 for Type I hydraulic excavators, attachments, and ancillary support.

Johnson Machine Works, Inc. received $7,875,953 for major maintenance on the Illinois Waterway Mississippi River and replacement of the La Grange Miter Gate and Tainter Gate.

Kallidus Technologies, Inc. received $10,730,975 for renovation and construction of a Building 4554 at Ft. Meade. 

Kirkland Construction RLLP received $17,434,335 for the Rio Grande Floodway, San Acacia Phase I and II levee construction, Socorro County, NM.

Kokosing Construction Co. received $18,920,840 to repair the Oswego Harbor (NY) breakwater, which was damaged by Hurricane Sandy. This includes setting bedding stone, underlayer stone, armor stone, and dolosse structures.

Korte Construction Co. received $48,341,795 for construction of a new 200 guest-room Navy Gateway Inns and Suites hotel at Naval Station Newport. This includes building a parking area for 150 cars on the adjacent Lawrence Field.

KRSW JV received $9,584,404 to help repair primary Taxiway A at Mountain Home AFB.

KRSW JV received $22,469,577 for repairs and improvement to Mountain Home AFB Runway 12/30, Taxiway Alpha and connector taxiways, due to deteriorating pavement conditions identified in the airfield pavement evaluation. 

Leebcor Services, LLC received $99,000,000 for property maintenance and repair, minor new construction and building projects for Ft. Lee’s Department of Public Works (DPW).

Lobar Associates received $6,650,700 to build an Air National Guard combined communications, operations and training facility in Annville, PA.

Luhr Bros. Inc. received $8,039,000 for furnishing all plant, labor and materials for constructing Fair Landing Bendway (AR) Weirs 1-6 in Fair Landing, AR.

Magnum Inc. received $9,345,000 for energy conservation projects including Direct Digital Controls, Retro-Commissioning, and Building Envelope at Naval Support Activity Philadelphia.

Manson Construction Co. received $16,667,800 for repairs to the shore protection system at Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek-Fort Story.

Manson Construction, Co. received $8,749,000 to replace a fuel pier breakwater at NAS Whidbey Island.

Marathon Construction Corp. received $7,469,777 to repair graving and caisson at Naval Base San Diego.

Mason & Hanger Group; exp Federal; and AECOM Services Inc. received $42,000,000 for architect/engineering services and general designs for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Savannah District, GA.

Massman Construction Co. received $18,196,150 for final dam repairs at Illinois River Basin LD05. Work will be performed in Marseilles, IL.

Melco-EJS JV received $9,750,000 for concrete paving, asphaltic concrete paving, and incidental related work at Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany, GA.

Meltech Corporation, Inc.; Arriba Corporation; Herman/JCG CO JV; and Olgoonik Management Services, Inc. received $49,900,000 for construction projects for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Baltimore District.

MS2-Belonger Corp; Accel-Pacific JV; Doyon Management Services LLC; K and T JV; Northstar Contracting, Inc.; and PPW Builders and J & S Construction Co. JV received a combined $50,000,000 for construction projects within NAVFAC Midwest.

Northbank Civil & Marine LLC received $7,344,000 to rehabilitate five Tainter floodgates at Lookout Point Dam in Lowell, OR.

Nova Group, Inc. / Underground Construction JV received $13,407,419 for fuel island upgrades at Hunter Army Airfield. 

The Nutmeg Companies received $19,908,520 to build one 25,913 square-foot educational facility and one 32,125 square-foot billeting facility for the Massachusetts National Guard in Buzzards Bay, MA.

Oak Point Associates received $10,000,000 for engineering and design services in support of industrial projects primarily in NAVFAC Mid-Atlantic DPW. Work provides for engineering, design and construction inspection services for projects involving many types of industrial facilities.

Ohopaki General Contracting & Mechanical received $15,000,000 for construction/design-build services for the Southwestern Division boundaries, primarily the Tulsa district.

Olgoonik Diversified Services, LLC received $24,000,000 for various minor construction projects within the geographical boundaries of the Little Rock District and Southwestern Division Corps of Engineers.

Onopa Services LLC; Paul S. Akins Company Inc.; and the FutureNet Group received $25,000,000 for construction and design for the Ft. Gordon’s DPW.

Orocon-Carothers JV2 received $12,049,430.00 to replace communications building, other infrastructure, and communications equipment at the Defense Logistics Agency, New Cumberland, PA.

Orcon-Carothers JV2 received $18,046,650 for historical building renovation at Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas.

Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc. received $10,000,000 for planning, design, and construction in support of the DODEA program. Parkhill, Smith & Cooper, Inc. received $10,000,000 for help in planning, designing and building phase services in support of DODEAShenkel & Schultz, Inc. received $10,000,000 for services as required for planning, design and construction services in support of the DODEA. Zyscovich, Inc. received $10,000,000 for multidiscipline design and/or professional services as required for planning, design and construction in support of DoDEA.

Patricia I. Romero, Inc. received $7,550,386 to repair Bachelor Enlisted Quarters 62433 at Camp Pendleton.

PentaCon, LLC; K&K Industries, Inc.; Tunista Construction, LLC; Fortis Networks, Inc.; Vet Industrial, Inc.; and MILCON Construction, LLC received a combined $49,000,000 for construction work for the Kansas City District U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

PentaCon LLC received $7,306,162 for construction of a 19,174 square foot single story dormitory to include a parking lot with 34 spaces. Work will be performed in at McConnell AFB.

Performance Systems, Inc. received $11,572,670 to repair Building 1492 at Schofield Barracks.

Peter Vander Werff Construction, Inc. received $7,316,691 to repair the Air Operations Center, Building 1 at NAS Lemoore.

Pine Bluff Sand & Gravel Co. received $10,790,000 for placing approximately 378,000 tons of R-1500 riprap stone along the bank in designated areas at Oldtown Revetment in the Mississippi River.

Public Works Contractor Inc.; MCB Lighting & Electrical Inc.; Souza Construction Inc.; Ja’nus Ventilation & Mechanical Inc.; and Preferred Construction Co. Inc. received a combined $99,000,000 for construction, repair, and renovation of heating, ventilation, and AC systems and associated work within NAVFAC Southwest.

Purcell Construction Corp. received $40,036,480 to build two barracks/company operations buildings, a running track and a general-purpose storage building at Joint Base Langley-Fort Eustis.

Quincy Bag Co. Inc. received $8,393,200 for standard and large sandbags, and poly sheets in support of the National Flood Fight Center.

R.A. Burch received $10,638,758 for building and interior repair of jet engine shop building 170 at NAS Lemoore.

Renda/J Bros. JV received $147,489,050 for Southeast Louisiana (SELA) Urban Flood Control Project-26, for widening the Florida Avenue Canal (Phase IV) from St. Ferdinand Street to Peoples Avenue in New Orleans.

Reyes Construction, Inc. received $19,336,710 for construction of the North Area Waste Water Conveyance at Camp Pendleton.

Reyes Construction, Inc. received $6,830,311 to replace the sewer lines at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego.

Rochester & Associates, Inc. received $10,000,000 for architect and engineering services within NAVFAC Mid-Atlantic (50 percent), NAVFAC Washington (25 percent), and NAVFAC Southeast (25 percent). Work provide architectural and engineering services to include Phase II of the Cadastral Modernization Program (CMP) to build and update the cadastral baseline, provide a workable Geographic Information System Real Estate Summary Map platform in the GeoReadiness Explorer capable of accessing parcel internet Navy Facilities Asset Data Store records and scanned cadastral files.

RQ-BERG JV received $9,653,651 for complete restoration and repairs to fire damaged electrical and communication distribution systems on Camp Pendleton and NWS Seal Beach Detachment Fallbrook.

RQ/Filanc JV I received $21,459,903 for replacing waste drain pipes in Building 1 at Naval Medical Center San Diego.

RQ Construction, LLC received $20,995,000 for design and construction of the Tactical Operations Center (TOC) and Mobile Tactical Operations Center, P-8A at NAS Whidbey Island.

RQ Construction, LLC received $15,680,000 for seismic rehabilitation, Phase 1, of Building 1 at Naval Medical Center San Diego. The main hospital will be seismically upgraded with seismic dampers.

RQ Construction, LLC received $6,681,000 for renovation of Sterile Processing Department Building 1 at Naval Medical Center San Diego.

Sahara Palms, Inc. received $7,091,268 for paint bay equipment and renovation at Hill AFB.

Sapper Construction, LLC received $6,987,000 to repair Taxiway Mike South P1 at Offutt AFB.

Seed JV received $7,110,338 to construct range buildings and facilities at Ft. McCoy.

S & E Services received $11,087,000 for a full restoration of an organizational maintenance shop and area maintenance service activity facility, Ft. Totten.

Sauer Inc. received $6,670,000 for repair of the Naval History & Heritage Command, Buildings 44, 57, and 108 at the Washington Navy Yard. 

Senate Builders & Construction Managers Inc. received $31,939,555 to construct an eastern Army National Guard aviation training site aircraft maintenance instructional facility in Annville, PA.

SSI received $16,269,791 to build a scout reconnaissance gunnery range complex on Ft. Chaffee, AR.

St. Louis Design & Construction; Syte Corporation; Charpie Construction Company; J.W. Fuller Construction, LLC.; Valiant Construction, LLC; Abba Construction Inc.; Marcia K. Beckwith Inc.; Bartels & Missey Siding & Insulation Co.; RB Construction Co.; Hof Construction Inc.; and Ma Chis Kawv IV received a combined $60,000,000 to support Scott AFB construction.

Summit Construction, Inc. received $10,604,051 for an architectural/refrigeration project on the commissary at Schofield Barracks, HI.

Sundt Construction, Inc. received $107,899,999 to replace a runway at Little Rock AFB.

Sundt Construction Inc. received $26,311,474 to renovate Bachelor Enlisted Quarters Buildings B860, B861, B862 and B865 Plant Building at Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek-Ft Story.

Truston Technologies Inc.; Sound & Sea Technology Inc.; GPA Technologies Inc.; PCCI Inc.; and MAR Range Services LLC received a combined $99,000,000 for ocean engineering services in support of projects involving ocean cable systems, ocean work systems (such as shipboard load handling systems and undersea work systems), waterfront facilities, offshore structures, moorings, and ocean construction equipment. Work will be performed in environments ranging from arctic to tropic, and at all water depths.

Ultimate Concrete LLC received $7,198,294 for the McKinley Channel (NM) Phase VII, construction of a 4,800-foot long concrete channel with vertical walls.

Veteran’s Construction Alliance, LLC received $99,000,000 for property maintenance and repair, minor new construction work, and to design and build projects for the Ft. Lee, VA, Department of Public Works.

Walbridge Aldinger Co. received $9,982,290 for construction of an aerial target operation facility at NAS Oceana, Dam Neck Annex.

Warwick Heating & Plumbing Corp. received $7,859,868 for maintenance and repair of utility distribution systems at Norfolk Naval Shipyard.

Watts Constructors LLC received $32,275,000 for construction of an Army aviation support facility in Kapolei, HI.

Webb Electric Co. received $9,220,349 to repair airfield lighting system and to add/repair airfield lighting vault and to upgrade the existing airfield wiring and test the existing regulators for Polychlorinated Biphenyl (PCB) at Grand Forks AFB.

Weeks Marine, Inc. received $18,700,000 for Mississippi River hopper dredge disposal from Baton Rouge to the Gulf of Mexico. 

Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. received $8,164,047 for power switching equipment installation project, Building 633 at Philadelphia Navy Yard.

Wu and Associates, Inc.; A&D General Contracting Inc.; Benaka Inc.; Kisan-Pike; Nutmeg Companies Inc.; and Upstate Construction Services, Inc. received a cumulative $95,000,000 for construction primarily within NAVFAC Northeast.

DREDGING

Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Company, LLC received $9,953,434 for beach fill and initial construction at Oakwood Beach, NJ.

Norfolk Dredging Co. received $11,787,279 for dredging the inland waterway Delaware River to Chesapeake Bay, Delaware and Maryland.

North Star Magnus Pacific JV received $12,661,832 for the construction of zoned earthen embankment dikes at the California Institution for Women in Chino, CA.

Nova R M F received $9,363,000 for maintenance dredging of piers at Naval Amphibious Base Coronado.

Phillips Hardy received $11,405,261 for the majority of the Cora Island work to include dredging, land-based earthwork operations, rock placement and modifications to dike structures.

R.E. Staite Engineering, Inc. received $12,297,600 for maintenance dredging the Redwood City Harbor Channel up to 600,000 cubic yards of dredged material.

Ross Sand & Gravel received $24,000,000 for maintenance dredging on the Sacramento and Stockton Deep Water Ship Channels, CA.

Sevenson Environmental Services, Inc. received $14,308,514 for environmental dredging and dredged material handling of approximately 330,000 cubic yards of dense non-aqueous phase liquid creosote contaminated sediments at the Atlantic Wood Industries Superfund Site, Portsmouth, VA.

Staite Engineering, Inc. received $7,793,600 for dredging the Richmond Inner Harbor Channel.

Weeks Marine, Inc. received $18,383,017 for maintenance dredging at Naval Weapons Station Earle and a portion of Sandy Hook Federal Channel.

# # # #

 *See here for Part I

**Editing consolidated similar contracts. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

***Any clerical errors are the editor’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

****To avoid competitive bidding, DOD invokes 10 U.S.C. 2304, FAR 6.302, and FAR 8.405-6. DOD also invokes 15 U.S.C. 638 to avoid competitive bidding when dealing with small businesses.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.

BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for October 2014

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DOD spent $12,282,757,102+ on 171 individual contracts in October 2014

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $12,282,757,102 on 171 individual contracts during October 2014.

REMOTELY PILOTED MACHINES

AAI Corp. received $82,215,853 in additional funding on a previous contract for Shadow systems logistics, sustainment and operations. This includes some FMS to Australia. Some work will be in Afghanistan (30%); Australia (5%); and Iraq 15%).

Defense Research Associates (DRA) received $23,500,000 for the Collision Warning Using Existing Sensors (CUES) program.  Initial work will continue technology maturation of the Electro-Optical Small Sense & Avoid System, as part of a multi-spectral sensor suite.

Northrop Grumman received $306,133,056 for Global Hawk (RQ-4) logistic services and sustainment III. This includes material and services for planning, operations and maintenance support. This is a sole-source acquisition.

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES – Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations.

Boeing received $7,473,573 to provide Australia with support equipment and spares to outfit emerging squadron stand-ups of EA-18G and F/A-18 extended deployment. This includes support equipment integrated logistics.

Boeing received $25,640,000 to provide Japan with AWACS mission control unit design and production upgrades on four E-767 aircraft and three ground support facilities. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Festo Didactic Inc. received $11,099,361 to provide Oman with training devices (includes mechanical, hydraulics, pneumatics, piping, pumps, HVAC, radar, sonar) for 20 technical training laboratories.  This was non-competitive per FAR 6.302-4.

General Atomics received $16,064,628 for MQ-9 Contractor Logistics Support (CLS) Phase 2 for France. Work will be performed in Poway, CA, and Niamey, Niger.

General Dynamics received $99,000,000 for integrated logistics support to Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR), Patuxent River, MD, for all FMS of Navy aircraft. Specific countries are: Australia, Canada and Spain.

L-3 Communications received $8,490,385 to provide Australia’s Air Force with C-27J CONUS Logistics Support (program requirements for RAAF CONUS training).

L-3 Communications received $12,086,117 to provide Australia with two EA-18G Tactical Operational Flight Trainers, one brief/debrief station, two F/A-18 retrofit kits, spares, and associated technical documentation.

L-3 Communications received $68,874,672 for standardization and upgrade (communication, navigation, airworthiness, and air traffic management systems on five C-130s) of Argentina’s Air Force. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $7,730,824 to update efforts required to develop a Common F-35A Air System, including the Air Vehicle and the Autonomic Logistics Global Sustainment system, for Israel.

Lockheed Martin received $8,618,751 to provide Denmark with transmitter receivers. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $24,022,053 to provide Australia with engineering for unique development, testing, validation and verification, and retrofit modifications to MH-60R mission avionics systems.

Lockheed Martin received $30,927,881 for efforts associated with procurement of two F-35 LRIP Lot VI full mission simulators for Israel’s F-35A CTOL Air System for pilot training.

Lockheed Martin received $220,748,611 to provide Israel with continue support of F-35A CTOL air system. This includes development and demonstration of hardware and software for the Israeli F-35A CTOL air system.

Lockheed Martin received $37,129,230 for efforts associated with procurement of F-35 LRIP Lot VI training spares for Japan ($34,455,709; 92.8 percent) and Israel ($2,673,521; 7.2 percent) and two full mission simulators in support of Japan’s F-35A CTOL Air System for pilot training.

Lockheed Martin received $595,484,370 to provide Kuwait, Taiwan, Qatar, and the UAE with PAC-3 (includes 152 PAC-3 cost reduction initiative missiles, 15 PAC-3 launcher modification kits, associated ground equipment, tooling, and initial spares).

MD Helicopters, Inc. received $44,200,000 to provide Afghanistan with weapon systems for seventeen MD 530F aircraft.

Navistar Defense LLC received $9,233,219 to provide Jordan with one hundred 4-ton 4×4 cargo trucks and twenty days of operator and maintenance training.

PKL Services Inc. received $10,674,189 to provide Singapore aircraft maintenance and operation services necessary to maintain Singapore Air Force C-15SG and U.S. Air Force F-15E aircraft at the 366th Maintenance Group at Mountain Home AFB.

Raytheon/Lockheed Martin Javelin JV received $15,300,934 for 74 Javelin Block I Missiles, 318 Battery Coolant Units, 22 Outdoor Trainer Instructor Stations, 22 Javelin Weapon System-Student Stations and 44 tripods to support the U.S. Army and FMS.  Customers include: Indonesia, Ireland, Jordan, Lithuania, Oman, Qatar, and the UAE.

Textron (Bell Helicopter) received $7,637,586 to provide Taiwan with aircraft transmission masts. This was a sole-source acquisition.

USAFRICOM

B.L. Harbert International, LLC received $18,387,380 to build unaccompanied housing (65 units; 4 persons/unit; total capacity, 260) at Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti.

DARPA

Orbital Sciences Corp. received $7,174,748 for phase 1 (of three phases) work on an unnamed DARPA research project.

ACADEMIA

The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory received $8,124,147 to develop comprehensive software architecture “for extracting semantic artifacts from large software corpora and to represent these artifacts in a multi-representational database capable of answering both complex graph queries, as well as matrix-based queries.”

JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER (JSF) & RAPTOR

Lockheed Martin received $486,506,664 for F-22 sustainment activities at Fort Worth, TX.

Lockheed Martin received $110,515,999 to procure and install 281 retrofit modification kits to incorporate into F-35 aircraft and supporting subsystems.

Lockheed Martin received $33,402,219 to upgrade 220 AIM-9X Configurable Rail Launcher (CRL) on the F-22.

Lockheed Martin received $391,607,952 for recurring sustainment support for delivered air systems for the F-35. This includes, but is not limited to: ground maintenance activities; action request resolution; depot activation activities; Automatic Logistics Information System operations and maintenance; reliability, maintainability and health management implementation and support; supply chain management; and activities to provide and support pilot and maintainer initial training for the USAF, USMC, USN, and international partners. This was not competitively procured per FAR 6.302-1.

Lockheed Martin received $411,111,649 for repair and replenishment of F-35 assets, including spare parts for the USN ($69,514,030; 17%); USMC ($114,460,228; 27%); USAF ($202,698,107; 49%); and international partners ($24,439,284; 7 %). This also provides sustainment analysis and training related efforts.

United Technologies Corp. (Pratt & Whitney) received $591,919,496 for LRIP Lot VII of: nineteen F135-PW-100 CTOL for the USAF ($240,078,577; 41 percent); six F135-PW-600 STOVL for the USMC and four F135-PW-100 for the U.S. Navy (USN/USMC: $237,082,879; 40 percent). This also provides five F135-PW-100 propulsion systems, one F135-PW-100 spare propulsion system, and one F135-PW-600 propulsion system for international partners/FMS ($114,720,882 at 18% and $37,158; 1%, respectively), including admin labor, engineering on production, initial spare modules and long-lead hardware.

United Technologies (Pratt & Whitney) received $793,051,336 for LRIP Lot VIII F135 propulsion systems: nineteen F135-PW-100 CTOL engines for the USAF; six F135-PW-600 STOVL engines for the USMC; and four F135-PW-100 engines for the USN.  Funding also provides four F135-PW-100 propulsion systems and four F135-PW-600 propulsion systems for international partners, eight F135-PW-100 propulsion systems, and three F135-PW-100 spare propulsion systems for FMS countries. This includes admin labor, engineering assistance to production, and spare modules. Purchases: USAF ($264,216,520; 33%); USN ($235,894,434; 30%); international partners (150,463,904; 19%); and FMS ($142,476,478; 18%).

GALAXY, GLOBEMASTER II & HERCULES

Lockheed Martin received $32,978,097 for C-5 Reliability Enhancement and Re-engine Program Lot 6 in Marietta, GA.

OTHER FIXED WING AIRCRAFT

Boeing received $9,261,602 for the VC-25 Avionics Modernization Program.

DynCorp International received $42,527,352 for aircraft maintenance services. DynCorp will provide T-6, T-38 Unit Pilot Training and T-38 Introduction to Fighter Fundamentals aircraft maintenance services at Sheppard AFB.

DynCorp International received $81,983,360 for Contractor Operated and Maintained Base Supply non-personal services for the joint primary aircraft training system T-6A/B Texan II Aircraft.

DynCorp International received $83,373,932 to provide organizational, intermediate, depot-level maintenance and logistics services for 53 T-34, 54 T-44, and 288 T-6 aircraft in support of the Chief of Naval Air Training.

L-3 Communications received $102,888,983 for services in support of the P-3, EP-3 and NP-3 Sustainment Modification and Installation program. This includes maintenance interval, structural replacement and fabrication efforts pertaining to special structural inspection kits, center wing assemblies, zone five kits, and outer wing installations and refurbishments.

Northrop Grumman received $62,504,835 for logistic services and spares to support the KC-10 program.  Northrop Grummanreceived $55,013,843 for eight engine overhauls to support the KC-10 program.

Raytheon received $19,502,764 for initial engineering, manufacturing and development phase of the Three-Dimensional Expeditionary Long-Range Radar (3DELRR) program, which will replace the aging TPS-75 radar system and will be the principal USAF long-range, ground-based sensor for detecting, identifying, tracking, and reporting aerial targets for the Joint Force Air Component Commander through the Theater Air Control System. This includes the purchase of three radar systems.

Rockwell Collins received $101,069,955 for AN/ARC-210 [PDF] electronic protection radio equipment: maximum of 1,160 radios: 920 associated ancillary equipment; five training sessions; 15 FMS Have Quick software media downloads; 140 associated FMS license and royalty fees; 500 FMS standard commercial warranties; 250 receiver-transmitter conversions; 10 failure analyses; and one lot for data. This was not competitively procured per FAR 6.302-1

Telephonics Corp. received $19,000,000 for an IFF system “necessary to overcome the deficiencies of the current IFF Mk XII systems in regards to Interoperable Joint Combat Identification, situational awareness and command and control.”

UTC Aerospace Systems (UTAS) received $22,270,112 for main wheel and brake assemblies for the USAF at Hill AFB. 

OSPREY

Northrop Grumman received $7,926,639 for engineering in support of the MV-22 Integrated Aircraft Survivability Equipment Suite upgrade, including integration of the AN/AAQ-24(V)25 software with an electronic warfare controller and the MV-22 mission computer.

HELICOPTERS

Airbus received $82,917,199 for 17 UH-72A Lakota helicopters “with airborne radio communications 231 radios.”

Boeing received $10,223,886 for technical engineering, logistical services and support and the Corpus Christi Army Depot (CCAD) work.

Boeing received $121,166,915 to support Apache performance based logistics of the D-Unique, D/E Common and E-Unique components services and supplies.

Honeywell International received $13,910,890 for technical, engineering, and logistical services for maintenance and overhauling T-55 engines.

L-3 Communications received $8,627,576 for aircraft production labor services at Corpus Christi Army Depot (CCAD). One bid solicited, one received.

L-3 Communications received $8,212,216 for aircraft production indirect labor services (logistical, analytical, engineering, financial, data entry, admin, facilities maintenance) at CCAD. One bid solicited, one received.

Lockheed Martin received $8,034,097 for the repair of 16 items for the common cockpit for the H-60R/S helicopters.  One company was solicited for this non-competitive requirement per 10 U.S.C.2304 (c) (1).

Raytheon received $48,000,000 for technical and system integration and software maintenance in support of PM Air Warrior.

Sikorsky Aircraft received $21,757,443 to provide the FBI with two UH-60M helicopters.

FLIGHT TRAINING

L3 Communications received $12,336,919 for trainer maintenance services at Sheppard AFB.

AEGIS

Lockheed Martin received $26,237,232 for work on the Aegis Platform Systems Engineering Agent (PSEA) activities and Aegis Modernization Advanced Capability Build engineering. 

LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP (LCS)

Austal USA received $7,214,198 for post-delivery support for LCS 8. Austal will plan and implement deferred design changes that have been identified during the construction period.

Austal USA received $8,440,860 for LCS Core Class Service: assess engineering and production challenges; develop, evaluate costs and schedule risks for engineering change proposals and class baseline documentation.

Lockheed Martin received $10,919,046 for post-delivery support for LCS 7. Lockheed Martin will plan and implement deferred design changes that have been identified during the construction period.

SHIP MAINTENANCE

Detyens Shipyards, Inc. received $14,737,872 for a 170-day dry-docking and overhaul of USNS Zeus (T-ARC 7). 

SUBMARINES

Bechtel Plant Machinery Inc. received $612,758,634 and $206,657,145 for naval nuclear propulsion components.

General Dynamics received $18,863,859 for reactor plant planning yard services for nuclear-powered submarines and support yard services for the Navy’s moored training ships.

Huntington Ingalls Inc. received $7,878,466 for planning and design yard functions for standard Navy valves in support of nuclear-powered submarines.

NAVAL CONTRACTS

Airborne Tactical Advantage Co. received $12,798,915 for services in support of the Contracted Air Services program, which provides contractor owned and operated Type III High Subsonic and Type IV Supersonic aircraft to U.S. Navy Fleet customers for a wide variety of airborne threat simulation capabilities.  This also provides for training shipboard and aircraft squadron weapon systems operators and aircrew.

Atlas North America LLC received $8,022,044 for repair, maintenance, modifications, engineering and spare parts for the AN/ASQ-232 Airborne Mine Neutralization System (AMNS) used by Navy ships and helicopters.

Austal Hull 130 Chartering LLC received $14,676,250 to charter a U.S.-flagged passenger/cargo vessel supporting USMC III MEF in the Far East.

Colonna’s Shipyard Inc.; Davis Boat Works Inc.; East Coast Repair & Fabrication; Lyon Shipyard Inc.; and Tecnico Corp. received $24,000,000 to support U.S. Navy living barges and their auxiliary systems, including potential periodic docking – a full range of depot level troubleshooting, repair, renewal, refurbishment, modernization, and maintenance.

General Dynamics (Bath Iron Works) received $32,512,320 for DDG 1000 class services: technical and industrial engineering in the interpretation and application of the detail design to support construction and the maintenance of the ship design.

General Dynamics (Electric Boat) received $83,797,108 to manufacture tactical missile tubes to support the manufacture of the Common Missile Compartment for the Ohio Class Replacement program for the U.S. Navy (30%) and the UK (70%).

Jay Cashman, Inc. received $14,321,000 for USS Constitution, Berth 1 pier repairs at Charlestown Navy Yard.

ManTech received $12,113,575 for engineering, and technical support for reliability, maintainability, testability, quality assurance and diagnostic and system safety analysis during design, development, production and in-service life cycles of all naval aircraft platforms and their systems.

Orbital Sciences Corp. received $27,682,618 for seven full rate production 8 GQM-163A target base vehicles, hardware, kits and production support for the USN (3) and Japan (FMS: 4 units at $13,980,001). This was non-competitive, FAR 6.302-1.

Raytheon received $7,848,850 for integration, production and life cycle support planning and management services in support of the DDG 1000 program.

Raytheon received $16,617,837 for engineering, overhaul, repair and upgrade of the MK57 Mod 13 NATO Seasparrow Surface Missile System for USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72), equipment and other test, ancillary and support equipment.

Raytheon received $6,540,730 for FY2015 class services engineering efforts in support of the Zumwalt Class Destroyer Program, supporting the DDG 1000 Class Mission Systems Equipment (MSE). Efforts include MSE design, analysis, engineering and life cycle support, architecture, crewing, mission and requirements analyses, interoperability, mission support services, and test & evaluation.

Thales Components Corp. received $12,898,008 for between 18-120 electron tubes [PDF] (NSN 7GH 5895-01-291-3075). This was a sole-source acquisition.

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) received $35,545,211 for engineering and technical services to support the Navy in developing, assessing, upgrading and modernizing the Persistent Littoral Undersea Surveillance program, the Digital Acoustic Communications development program, the Remote Environmental Measuring Units (REMUS) Autonomous Undersea Vehicle program, the EOD “Fast Track” program, development and operational support for the REMUS Automated Submarine Launch and Recovery Capability program, and the development of new advanced ocean technologies related to these programs. This was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

SPACE

Computer Sciences Corp. (CSC) received $28,191,335 and Northrop Grumman received $36,992,663 for Service Software Support Activity (SSA) engineering services for test systems software management, development, and software support; SSA engineering services for the Common Data Link Management System, Next Generation Command & Control Processor and related programs; and software engineering, development, test, and integration support for Common Link Integration Processing software development.

Exelis Systems Corp. received $21,341,441 for launch and test range system support to the Eastern and Western Ranges, Patrick AFB and Vandenberg AFB.

CYBER, IT & COMMS

Booz Allen Hamilton received $6,643,293 to provide technical support services for DOD’s Chief Information Officer Cybersecurity and Information Assurance Support program. Work will be performed in Alexandria, VA.

Chugach Information Technology, Inc. received $13,682,761 for telecommunications and network equipment, infrastructure design, engineering, installation, testing and post installation support. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Information Systems Worldwide Corp. (i_SW) received $9,780,495 to research techniques to extract features from open source information available via various platforms, as well as mobile devices and applications.  They will also develop prototypes to correlate this data with existing mission data, and create discovery services to enable its information to be exploited in an intelligence context.

Power Ten Inc.; Innovative Decisions Inc.; ManTech Systems; Booz Allen Hamilton; Logicon FDC-Northrop Grumman; and Group W. Inc. received $70,177,521 for USMC Combat & Development Command, Operational and Analysis Division, in support of research and innovative technical analysis professional services. Work will be at the contractor facilities in Kirkland, WA; and Vienna, Fairfax, McLean, and Reston, VA.

Radiance Technologies Inc.; Integrity Applications Inc.; and Invertix Corp., received a combined $960,000,000 for services in support of the Advanced Technical Exploitation Program II – R&D, system sustainment, and intelligence production activities utilizing GEOINT and non-nuclear MASINT data at NASICWork will be primarily at Wright-Patterson AFB.

SAIC received $58,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations in New Jersey. This was a sole-source acquisition.  SAIC received $20,500,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations in New Jersey. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Sprint received $10,083,660 for continued operation and maintenance of fiber telecommunications in Europe. This was other than full and open competition per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Thunder Cat Technology LLC received $16,241,856 for virtual desktop infrastructure servers and storage.

TOTE Services, Inc. received $7,065,332 for the operation and maintenance of the Sea-Based X-Band Radar Platform (SBX-1) for the MDA in the Pacific Ocean.

MISSILES, BOMBS, ROCKETS

Boeing received $307,512,722 for JDAM tail-kits (Lot 18).  This is sole-source and includes unclassified FMS (30%) for the UAE, Morocco, and Norway. 

Jacobs Technology Inc. received $130,000,000 for additional engineering, technical and acquisition support services (on a previous contract) required for development, production, and sustainment of various complex munitions systems within the Air Armament Center (AAC) and other organizations at Eglin AFB.  This involves FMS.

Lockheed Martin received $14,724,257 for the PAC-3 and Missile Segment Enhancement, and Post Deployment Build-8 PAC-3 System and flight test support.

Raytheon received $19,024,373 for FY2015 Standard Missile (SM) maintenance; all-up-round recertification and special maintenance tasks; and FMS SM-2 repairs and maintenance. Purchases: U.S. Navy (74%), Australia (19%), and Taiwan (7%).

Raytheon received $35,000,000 for Joint Miniature Munitions Bomb Rack Unit (JMM BRU) aircraft integration and lifecycle tech support. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Raytheon received $38,826,176 for antenna element and circuit card assemblies. This was a sole-source acquisition.

VEHICLES

AM General, LLC received $37,601,570 to upgrade 300 Army National Guard M1165A1B3 High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicles (HMMWV) to the latest configuration.

BAE Systems received $141,788,689 for 18 Self-Propelled Howitzers and 18 Carrier Ammunition Tracked vehicles.

GEAR & EQUIPMENT

ATK received $16,753,366 for LUU-19B/B Infrared Illuminating Flares.

DynCorp Int. received $80,280,849 for receipt, inventory, accountability, maintenance, repair, periodic inspection and test, serviceability, marking, storage, security, shipping, and reporting of War Reserve Materials (WRM) resources at Shaw, Langley, and various locations in theater.

Federal Resources Supply received $35,313,255 for Urban Operations Squad Sets to provide military personnel with enhanced capabilities to perform complex or urban terrain missions.

Northrop Grumman received $207,291,682 for four Ground/Air Task-Oriented Radar (G/ATOR) LRIP systems, including operating spares, engineering services and support, developmental and operational test support, and transition to production.

Universal Technologies, Inc. received $8,560,000 for forgings and castings for the production of the M66 Machine Gun Ring Mount.

CLOTHING

Bremen-Bowdon Investments received $13,033,800 for men’s Army coats.

Wellco Enterprises Inc. received $14,372,625 for temperate weather boots.

EDUCATION & TRAINING

Information Sciences Consulting, Inc. received $10,430,366 for motorcycle traffic safety training courses throughout CONUS and Hawaii.  This was set aside as 100 percent small business competitive procurement via FBO.

Lockheed Martin received $48,700,000 for test instrumentation enterprise development and support for the Army Program Executive Office, Simulation, Training and Instrumentation.

The Prophet Corp.; Effective Communication Strategies, LLC; Smartbudgets USA; and Team Sports Planet, Inc. received $7,500,000 to provide Physical Education equipment in support of Pre Kindergarten – 12th grade programs located at DoDEA/Domestic Dependent Elementary and Secondary School (DDESS) locations within CONUS, Puerto Rico, Guantánamo Bay, Europe, and the Asia Pacific.

MISCELLANEOUS RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT

Stellar Science Ltd. Co. received $7,429,454 for R&D on the Directed Energy High Performance Computing Software Applications Institute. Stellar Science will develop a capability to perform end-to-end simulations of all directed energy weapon (DEW) systems by integrating laser source, target effects, ancillary system components, and propagation simulations along with directed energy (DE) platform system, engagement, and mission level models at Kirtland AFB.

FUEL & ENERGY

Associated Petroleum Products, Inc. received $7,347,232 for additional diesel fuel line items.

Champion Energy Services LLC received $7,800,000 for electrical services and electrical utilities at Sheppard AFB.

Louis Berger Group, Inc. received $95,000,000 to enable the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to assess power requirements, install diesel generators, and fuel, operate and maintain generators at critical facilities when requested by a state or territory within 24-hours of receiving emergency mission assignment.

MEDICAL & SAFETY

KaVo Dental Technologies LLC received $6,600,000 for dental and medical items and accessories. Smart Health, Inc. received $45,000,000 for general dental supplies. Tulsa Dental Products LLCreceived $15,237,110 for dental and medical items and accessories.

Mindray DS USA received $59,334,862 for patient monitoring systems, subsystems, accessories, consumables and training.

Nihon Kohden America received $27,579,330 for patient monitoring systems, subsystems, accessories, consumables, spare and repair parts, and training.

Spacelabs Medical Inc. received $13,460,681 for patient monitoring systems, subsystems, accessories, consumables, and training.

TRANSPORTATION 

For international airlift services, three teams received a total $441,000,000. Federal Express Charter Programs: American Airlines; Atlas Air; Delta Airlines; FedEx Charters; Polar Air Cargo Worldwide; and US Airways, Inc.. Miami Air International, Inc.: Miami Air International, Inc. and MN Airlines, LLC. Patriot Team: ABX Air; Air Transportation International, Inc.; JetBlue Airways; Kalitta Air, LLC; Northern Air Cargo, Inc.; Omni Air International, Inc.; Sky Lease I; Southern Air, Inc.; United Airlines, Inc.; and UPS. Individual airlines: Allegiant Air, LLC; Hawaiian Airlines, Inc.; Lynden Air Cargo; National Air Cargo Group, Inc.; Southwest Airlines Co.; and Alaska Airlines.

For domestic charter airlift services, these companies received a total $104,065,064: United Airlines; MN Airlines; Allegiant Air, LLC; Sierra Pacific Airlines, Inc.; Southwest Airlines; Miami Air International, Inc.; National Air Cargo Group; Omni Air International, Inc.; Atlas Air, Inc.; Delta Air Lines; Lynden Air Cargo; Northern Air Cargo; Tatonduk Outfitters Ltd.; UPS; Federal Express; Flightworks, Inc.; Kalitta Charters, LLC; Phoenix Air Group, Inc.; Berry Aviation, Inc.; and East Coast Flight Services.

Twenty-four transportation carriers received a cumulative $205,971,494 for transportation protective services. The carriers are: TNI (USA), Inc.; Ace Doran Hauling Rigging Co, Inc.; AAT Carriers, Inc.; Baggett Transportation Co.; Bennett Motor Express, Inc.; T. F. Boyle Transportation, Inc.; Chalich Trucking, Inc.; Cole Motorsports, Inc.; FedEx Custom Critical; Green Valley Transportation Co.; Landstar Inway, Inc.; Landstar Express America, Inc.; Landstar Ranger, Inc.; McCollisters Transportation Systems Inc.; Mercer Transportation Co.; Martin Logistics; NEI Transport LLC; Northern Neck Transfer, Inc.; Prestera Trucking Co.; PTS Worldwide Inc.; Panther II Transportation, Inc.; R & R Trucking, Inc.; Secured Land Transport; and Bedrock.

Agile Defense, Inc. received $9,851,570 to support Military Surface Deployment & Distribution Command and USTRANSCOM helpdesk and desktop customers; senior management; telephone services; IA policy and certification and accreditation; and C4 lifecycle infrastructure at Scott AFB.

Harris IT Services Corporation received $10,230,116 for customer services support: service delivery at Scott AFB.

Leidos, Inc. received $7,567,134 for business process management services in support of U.S. Transportation Command’s Agile Transportation for the 21st Century (AT21) program at Scott AFB.

Menlo Worldwide received $8,331,393 for work on the Defense Transportation Coordination Initiative for freight transportation arrangement services.

Northrop Grumman received $9,436,628 for work on the Joint Distribution Process Analysis Center (JDPAC) at Scott AFB – work for the global deployment and distribution network and infrastructure assessments, analytically driven operational courses of action, joint capability analysis to inform programmatic decisions, systems integration and data management, analysis/global distribution performance assessment, and future transformation analysis.

Paragon Technology Group, Inc. received $10,718,398 for program management office support for U.S. Transportation Command at Scott AFB.

Tapestry Solutions Inc. received $7,213,653 for work on the Integrated Computerized Deployment System (ICODES).  This also involves tasks to provide non-personal services for the Military Surface Deployment & Distribution Command and U.S. Transportation Command.

ENVIRONMENTAL

Nebraska Game & Parks Commission (Lincoln, NE) received $9,000,000 for integrated science support in Nebraska of the Missouri River Recovery Program for Pallid Sturgeon, which includes threatened and endangered species recovery work.

FOOD SERVICES

Merchants Foodservice received $210,000,000 for food and beverages.

Reinhart Foodservice received $7,684,500 for food and beverages. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Sysco received $51,384,209 for full line food service in Kansas.

U.S. Foods received $312,584,084 for food. U.S. Foods received $164,878,296 for food.

BASE SUPPORT & LOGISTICS

Accenture Federal Services LLC received $77,847,977 for Defense Enterprise Accounting Management System Development (DEAMS) Final Phase. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Arc Tech Inc. received $6,657,162 for custodial services at Naval Station Norfolk. This was a sole-source procurement per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(2) of the FAR 6.302-2.

BAE Systems received $17,295,249 for ongoing supply support services and to assist Strategic Systems Programs (SSP) as it migrates SSP-unique supply processes and automated systems to a standard Navy system using the Navy Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) application. This was sole-source per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Boeing (Tapestry Solutions) received $14,074,384 for Navy Tactical Mobile (TacMobile) Systems engineering, test and integration. TacMobile implements an evolutionary acquisition approach to meeting operational requirements through sequential integration of mature commercial-off-the-shelf and government-off-the-shelf capabilities into a functional whole.    

City of Aberdeen, MD, received $7,808,332 for water and wastewater operations at Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD.

Credence Management Solutions, LLC received $29,852,448 for advisory and assistance services for the Battle Management Directorate – Distributed Common Ground System. CMS will support all the weapon systems, platforms, cells, and capabilities managed by the C21SR Division in support of Air Force Life Cycle Management Center Battle Management. Work will be performed at Robins AFB, Hanscom AFB, and Langley AFB.

Engility Corp. received $61,251,130 for up to 907,200 man-hours of engineering services for the functional organizations supporting numerous DOD weapons acquisition programs and related R&D, test and evaluation efforts in support of the Naval Air Warfare Center Weapons Division.

Exbon Development, Inc. received $45,000,000 for various maintenance, renovation, and construction at Edwards AFB.

Exelis Services (Hellerup, Denmark) received $411,000,000 for civil engineering, airfield/water port operations, fuels management, transportation, non-secure communications, environmental management, food service, medical/public health, supply, recreation and community services at Thule Air Base, Greenland.

Helpful Hands, Inc. received $59,526,260 for housekeeping services for Madigan Army Medical Center (MAMC), Joint Base Lewis-McChord, and the multiple medical treatment facilities within the MAMC health service area.

Inspiritec Inc. received $14,147,857 for consolidated call center services for the Defense Manpower Data Center in Seaside, CA, Alexandria, VA, and Fort Knox, KY.

Jacobs Technology Inc. received $45,000,000 for support functions to Army Sustainment Command Logistics Civil Augmentation Program (LOGCAP), and Army Contracting Command-Rock Island LOGCAP and reachback divisions.

Job Options Inc. received $10,083,677 for custodial services at Naval Medical Center and various branch medical clinics/dental clinics in metro San Diego. This was awarded noncompetitively (sole-source) per FAR 6.302-5(b). 

KPMG LLP received $9,662,653 for audit readiness management, personnel, and documentation services. KPMG LLPreceived $48,083,705 for audit readiness management, personnel, and documentation services. St. Michael’s Inc. received $14,322,936 for audit readiness management, personnel, and documentation services.

Stanley Associates Inc. received $10,106,913 to sustain the Army’s prepositioned stock and maintenance management capabilities in support of the Army Force Regeneration process.

SupplyCore Inc. received $16,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations in Illinois. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Trax International Corp. received $31,580,419 for test support services to the U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground, AZ.

Wolf Creek Federal Services, Inc. received $28,300,296 for housing operations and maintenance services and change of occupancy maintenance for various military installations in Santa Rita, Guam (60 percent), and Yigo, Guam (40 percent).

OVERSEAS CONSTRUCTION

B.L. Harbert International LLC received $33,266,360 to build a 14,500 square foot secure facility containing administrative offices, an operations center, and data center in the proposed 2d ID headquarters. Work will be performed at Camp Humphreys, South Korea.

P&S Construction, Inc. received $17,907,700 to build hardened structures around existing and new petroleum, oil and lubricants structures in Yigo, Guam.

CONSTRUCTION

Austin Brockenbrough & Assoc., LLP received $20,000,000 for new construction, repair and renovation of petroleum, oil and lubricant systems and support facilities in NAVFAC Southwest.

Defense Support Services LLC received $19,420,540 for civil engineering services at Sheppard AFB.

Dutra Group received $47,906,369 to stabilize Fire Island, NY, by placing 2,500,000 cubic yards of sand for initial construction of the Smith Point County Park reach of the Fire Island Inlet to Montauk Point project area. This includes planting dune grass and creating two bird habitat areas landward of the beach placement area.

Heeter Construction received $9,236,746 to install 36 anchors at the Bluestone Dam, Hinton, WV.

HGL Construction received $17,481,119 to build an aircraft hangar at Tinker AFB for the E6-B aircraft squadron.

New South Construction Company Inc. received $10,217,696 to design and construct a roof fire alarm and fire suppression system for Dock 1, and to design and construct a fire alarm and fire suppression system for the high-bay roof of Building 125, and re-roof all existing out-buildings at Warner Robbins AFB.

Nova Group Inc. received $32,060,100 for designing and building Defense Logistics Agency distribution facilities at Tinker AFB.

Phillips Corp. received $13,375,272 for 35 lathes and 110 modified lathe assemblies, and field service representative services to modernize the Army’s machining and welding systems. Phillips Corp. received $12,233,166 for 25 mills and 110 mill assemblies, and field service representative services to modernize the Army’s machining and welding systems.

Railroad Construction Co., Inc. received $8,261,728 for the maintenance and repair of railroad trackage at Naval Weapons Station Earle.

Turner Construction Co. received $23,058,000 to design and build a computational research facility at the NASA Langley Research Center (LaRC) in Hampton, VA.

Waller, Todd & Sadler, Architects, Inc. received $10,000,000 for help planning, designing and constructing DODEA buildings.

Whitesell-Green, Inc. received $9,947,000 for repairs to Bachelor Quarters 3709 and 3710 at Corry Station, NAS Pensacola.

Wiley Wilson Burns & McDonnell JV received $75,000,000 for engineering and design services for general and administrative facilities at various administrative facilities within NAVFAC Washington.

# # # #

*Editing consolidated similar contracts. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

**Any clerical errors are the editor’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

***To avoid competitive bidding, DOD invokes 10 U.S.C. 2304, FAR 6.302, and FAR 8.405-6. DOD also invokes 15 U.S.C. 638 to avoid competitive bidding when dealing with small businesses.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.

BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for November 2014

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DOD spent $19,287,334,392+ on 198 individual contracts during November 2014

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $19,287,334,392 on 198 individual contracts during November 2014.

REMOTELY PILOTED MACHINES

Arête Associates received $11,742,120 for one AN/DVS-1 coastal battlefield reconnaissance and analysis (COBRA) Block I LRIP system.

General Atomics received $17,120,120 for sixteen universal upgrade kits to the existing dual carrier satellite communications ground data terminal and the required integration support. 

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES – Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations.

Armtec Countermeasures Co. received $9,498,687 and Kilgore Flares Co. received $10,464,773 to provide Singapore, India, Taiwan and Oman with Infrared Countermeasure (IRCM) flares M206, MJU-7 and MJU-10.

Boeing received $7,335,238 to provide Switzerland ($2,319,290; 31.6 percent); Finland ($1,678,570; 22.9 percent); Malaysia ($1,168,453; 15.8 percent); Kuwait ($1,003,647; 13.7 percent); Australia ($510,103; 7 percent); Canada ($356,677; 4.9 percent); and Spain ($298,498; 4.1 percent) with F/A-18 A-F post-production program management, logistics, engineering, incidental materials, and tech data.

Boeing received $12,255,878 for AWACS modernization planning/risk reduction. Boeing will upgrade five E-707 aircraft and ground support systems. This includes studies and analysis of mission computing (Block 40/45), next generation IFF, mission communications and navigation, and ground systems. This is 100 percent unnamed FMS. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Boeing received $82,591,000 to provide Israel with 3,000 JDAM tail kits, which have ultra-tightly coupled capability.

Conti Federal Services, Inc. received $25,871,678 to construct multiple buildings in Israel, “including an underground structure on a military installation.”

Lockheed Martin received $271,815,608 to provide Taiwan with installation of 142 aircraft kits to upgrade their F-16 fleet. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $22,014,427 to provide Romania and Thailand with digital data recorders, spares, depot lay in, ground handling equipment, digital cartridge interface units, bench stock, pylons, hand tools, portable maintenance aid, roll break release box, software development and integration support, logistics and sustainment services. In addition, Romania will receive a compact multi-band data link. This involves FMS. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Raytheon received $32,221,204 to provide Saudi Arabia with 500 Enhanced Paveway II guided bomb unit kits and a 10-year warranty for each kit. Each kit includes an enhanced computer control group and an airfoil group.

Raytheon received $75,616,553 to provide Qatar preliminary design of an Air and Missile Defense Operations System. This is a sole-source acquisition.

RECRUITMENT & RETENTION

Intelligent Decisions, Inc. received $8,038,800 for 4,350 Dell Venue 11 Pro tablets, docking stations, soft briefcases, 22-inch monitors and four-year warranties to support the USMC Recruiting Command.

AFGHANISTAN

Aegis Defense Services, LLC received $12,756,407 for private security services at Kandahar Airfield, Afghanistan.

Northrop Grumman received $12,473,373 for support and bridging efforts while processing required approvals for larger follow-on ongoing contingency operations. Work will be in Huntsville, Alabama (72 percent), and Afghanistan (28 percent).

Sierra Nevada Corp. received $15,800,000 to provide Afghan National Army Special Operations Forces contractor logistics support for fixed-wing aircraft (PC-12) sustainment. Work will be at Kabul International Airport and Kandahar, Afghanistan.

Sterlingwear of Boston, Inc. received $6,835,520 for Afghanistan uniformed police (National Police) field jackets.

USSOUTHCOM

Islands Mechanical Contractor, Inc. received $7,727,970 to refurbish the Taurman Avenue Electrical Substation at Naval Station Guantánamo Bay.

USSOCOM

Rockwell Collins received $72,500,000 for post deployment software support IV for the common architecture avionics system, cockpit management system and avionics management system for the Technology Applications Program Office to support the Army Special Operations aircraft fleet. This was non-competitive per FAR 6.302-1.

DARPA

Booz Allen Hamilton; CENTRA Technology, Inc.; ManTech; and Schafer Corp. received unspecified amounts for technical, programmatic, financial, and administrative support services for existing and future DARPA Tactical Technology Office programs. Work will be performed in Arlington, VA.

The Microelectronics Advanced Research Corporation (MARCO) received $15,549,979 for year three of the Focus Center Research Program (FCRP) – Semiconductor Technology Advanced Research Network (STARnet). The goal of this program is to create/continue a nationwide network of multi-university research centers that will keep DOD and U.S. semiconductor firms at the forefront of the global microelectronics revolution.

Northrop Grumman received $20,163,543 for Phase 2 of the “DARPA research program.”

ACADEMIA

Georgia Tech Applied Research Corp. received $44,500,000 for R&D on Electronic Warfare/Sensor Technology, Modeling, Simulation and Analysis Research (EWTA) program with the objective to increase USAF capabilities to conduct countermeasures and information warfare against current, evolving, and new threats. This is a sole-source acquisition.

JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER (JSF) & RAPTOR

Big-D Construction Corp. received $17,148,379 for F-22 paint booths – three new paint booth inserts to be designed, built, and installed in existing aircraft docks. Modifications to buildings 674 and 680 at Hill AFB will be required. Additionally, Big-D will convert existing paint booth boilers to direct fire furnaces.

Lockheed Martin received $7,011,951 for F-35 LRIP Lot VII air systems.

Lockheed Martin received $7,313,618 for F-22 sustainment training systems hardware retrofits at Tyndall AFB, Hickam AFB, and Langley AFB.

Lockheed Martin received $49,999,799 for operational and engineering support required to integrate the F-35 with the Queen Elizabeth Class carrier for the UK.

Lockheed Martin received $64,283,943 to modify F-35A for USAF (13) and the Netherlands (1), and F-35B for the USMC (11) and the UK (2).  This includes 528 modification kits, installation, and labor.  Purchases: USMC ($30,784,983; 48 percent); USAF ($25,077,651; 39 percent), and international partners ($8,421,309; 13 percent). This was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Lockheed Martin received $492,008,803 for F-35 (LRIP, Lot VII) non-air vehicle spares, support equipment, Autonomic Logistics Information System hardware and software upgrades, supply chain management, full mission simulators and non-recurring engineering services for the USAF ($180,174,049; 37 percent), the U.S. Navy ($113,797,383; 23 percent); USMC ($101,719,711; 20.5 percent); and international partners ($96,317,660; 19.5 percent).

Lockheed Martin received$4,123,746,486 for 43 LRIP Lot VIII F-35 aircraft. This includes manufacture and delivery of 29 F-35A aircraft for USAF (19), Italy (two), Norway (two), Japan (four) and Israel (two).  In addition, this provides 10 F-35B for the USMC (six) and the UK (four); and four F-35C for the USN (three) and USMC (one). This also provides LRIP Lot VIII diminishing manufacturing sources redesign and management, ancillary mission equipment, including pilot flight equipment, and concurrency changes to LRIP Lot VIII aircraft. Purchases: USAF ($1,701,415,744; 41%); USMC ($583,570,317; 14%); USN ($491,755,261; 12%); international partners ($786,460,233; 19%); and FMS ($557,151,431; 14%).

United Technologies Corp. (Pratt & Whitney) received $105,492,976 for LRIP Lot VIII F135 propulsion systems sustainment efforts and operations and maintenance services, including hardware and training course materials and equipment for USMC ($51,776,302; 49 percent); USAF ($35,093,376; 33 percent); USN ($10,542,815; 10 percent); and the international partners ($8,080,483; 8 percent).

United Technologies Corp. (Pratt & Whitney) received $11,473,337 for annualized sustainment, procurement and maintenance services for LRIP VIII F-135 propulsion systems. This includes supply chain management, inventory optimization, flight service representatives at operational sites, oversight and planning of training activities, and aircraft retrofit activities. Purchases: USAF ($6,055,099; 52 percent), USN ($5,259,301; 46 percent), and international partners ($158,937; 2 percent).

OSPREY

Hamilton Sundstrand Corp. received $7,832,935 to repair the V-22 Aircraft Constant Frequency Generator. This was non-competitive per FAR 6.302.1.

Rolls-Royce Corp. received $287,028,006 for Mission CareTM maintenance services in support of the V-22 AE1107C engines for: USN ($18,306,827; 48 percent); USAF  ($15,699,125; 43 percent); and USSOCOM ($3,478,336; 9 percent). This was non-competitive per FAR 6.302-1.

HELICOPTERS

Airbus received $71,358,549 for UH72A Lakota helicopters with ARC 231 radios.

Airbus received $18,541,542 for logistic support to include flying hours, mission equipment packages and direct labor support.

Ametek Hughes-Treitler received $8,973,770 for helicopter heat exchangers. This was a sole-source acquisition.

General Electric received $7,052,945 for supplies and services in the maintenance and overhaul of the T-700 series of engines at the Corpus Christi Army Depot.

Sikorsky Aircraft received $771,957,753 for 41 UH-60M and 24 HH-60M helicopters and associated support functions.

Sikorsky Aircraft received $535,336,328 for eight MH-60S and 29 MH-60R helicopters, and associated sustaining engineering, program management, systems engineering, provisioning, technical publications, integrated logistics support and advance procurement funding (termination liability).

Sikorsky Aircraft received $316,176,135 for H-60 technical, engineering and logistical services/supplies, and parts for the overhaul, repair and recapitalization.

Sikorsky Aircraft received $46,945,004 for special progressive aircraft rework for two VH-3D and one VH-60N presidential helicopters, including training, security, engineering, logistics and program support.

Textron (Bell Helicopter) received $58,054,000 for long lead materials for the manufacture and delivery of 13 Lot 13 UH-1Y and 14 Lot 13 AH-1Z for the USMC.

Textron (Bell Helicopter) received $14,614,573 for AH-1Z services. This includes delivery of one AH-1Z training device to MCAS New River. This also provides aircraft common operational equipment, spares, tech data required for operation and maintenance, and a 3-month initial operational evaluation period.

EAGLE, FALCON, GROWLER & HORNET

ARMTEC Defense Products, Co. received $48,540,000 for 85,208 MJU-64/B decoy devices. Work will be performed in Coachella, CA.

BAE Systems received $19,862,638 to procure 283 AN/ALE-55 fiber optic towed decoys for the Integrated Defense Electronic Countermeasures Radio Frequency Countermeasure program. This was non-competitive per FAR 6.302-1.

Boeing received $194,775,798 for 21 Lot 38 full rate production EA-18G airborne electronic attack kits.

Boeing received $25,313,512 for F/A-18A-D depot-level service life extension and remanufacturing activities, including associated maintenance support and sustainment capabilities.

General Electric received $29,252,000 for the stores management system and the control system converter for the F/A-18 A-F aircraft.

GALAXY, GLOBEMASTER II & HERCULES

Cottonwood Incorporated received $8,545,500 for aircraft tie-down cargo straps. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Kelly Aviation Center, LP received $325,835,698 for T56 engine overhaul and repair. This is a sole-source acquisition.

NOTABLE INTELLIGENCE & RECONNAISSANCE AIRCRAFT

L3 Communications received $22,354,202 for C-12 contractor logistics support. Work will be performed at Accra, Ghana; Ankara, Turkey; Bangkok, Thailand; Bogota, Colombia; Brasilia, Brazil; Budapest, Hungary; Buenos Aires, Argentina; Cairo, Egypt; Gaborone, Botswana; Islamabad, Pakistan; Manila, Philippines; Nairobi, Kenya; Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; San Angelo, Texas, USA; Tegucigalpa, Honduras; Yokota Air Base, Japan; Andrews AFB, Edwards AFB, Elmendorf AFB and Holloman AFB, USA.

OTHER FIXED WING AIRCRAFT

Boeing received $25,573,769 for E-4B sustainment, depot maintenance, modification and related support. This is a sole-source acquisition.  Boeingreceived $59,000,000 for E-4B sustainment, maintenance, modification, and related support. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Boeing received $27,231,225 for engineering, logistics, studies and analyses of the AV-8B airframe and associated subsystems for USNC, Spain, and Italy. This was not competitively procured per FAR 6.302-1.

Chromalloy Component Services Inc. received $29,145,000 to remanufacture F108 low-pressure turbine assembly module 13/15 for the KC-135.

CPI Aero received $56,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and overhaul of aircraft wings for the USN, USAF, and foreign militaries.

DRS Technologies C3 & Aviation Co. received $52,019,071 for E-6B Mercury logistics services, including procurement, storage, warehousing and inventory.

General Electric received $329,135,767 for Air Force engine repair and overhaul, including worldwide customers. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Goodyear received $24,144,737 for aircraft tires. Goodyear received $11,230,049 for aircraft tires.

Honeywell International received $67,001,544 for consumable and depot level reparable spare parts for multiple aircraft weapons systems in AZ, NC, CA, IN, OH, MI, and NM.

Michelin North America received $32,302,230 for aircraft tires.  Michelin North America received $8,931,528 for aircraft tires. 

Northrop Grumman received $10,394,167 for maintenance services for E-2C and C-2 aircraft in support of the VX-20 squadron.

Northrop Grumman received $7,774,039 for F20 sustainment in Azusa, CA, and Sunnyvale, CA, for Space & Missile SystemsCenter, Los Angeles AFB.

Rockwell Collins Inc. received $15,687,657 for KC-10 Communication Navigation Surveillance/Air Traffic Management kits – 12 kits and 15 installations.

Rockwell Collins, Inc. received $47,401,884 for manufacture and installation of two Block I modification aircraft kits, for the E-6B aircraft including Internet Protocol Bandwidth Expansion Phase III and very low frequency (VLF) transmit terminals. This also provides field support, an update to differences training, technology refresh and software licenses and agreements.

Rolls-Royce received $17,515,325 to repair T56-A-427 engines for the E-2D.

AEGIS

Lockheed Martin received $15,577,396 to fund the Aegis Platform Systems Engineering Agent (PSEA) activities and Aegis Modernization Advanced Capability Build (ACB) engineering. 

SHIP MAINTENANCE

Boston Ship Repair, LLC received $8,625,966 for 57-calendar day overhaul and dry-docking of MSC ship USNS Big Horn (T-AO 198) in Boston, MA.

Emprise Corp. received $8,905,324 for shipboard maintenance systems support services in Ledyard, CT, and worldwide.

General Dynamics (Bath Iron Works) received $78,663,955 for DDG 51 and FFG 7 class integrated planning yard services (design, planning, and material services for maintenance and modernization).

General Dynamics received $18,692,168 for repairs and alterations on USS Gunston Hall (LSD-44) in Norfolk, VA.

SUBMARINES

Kings Bay Support Services, LLC received $40,054,815 for base operations support services at Kings Bay.

Lockheed Martin received $35,884,476 for engineering that integrates the Trident II missile and reentry strategic weapon system subsystems into the common missile compartment for the Ohio replacement and UK successor programs; gas dynamic testing and high fidelity aft end fabrication for nozzle shield retention testing; program management of an integrated test facility that will be compatible with existing and new submarine fleets; and manufacture, test and delivery of missile service units. This was a sole-source acquisition per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Lockheed Martin received $127,749,917 for FY2015 acoustic rapid commercial-off-the-shelf insertion (A-RCI) system engineering and technical support for Technology Insertion 12 (TI12) through Technology Insertion 14 (TI14) for the U.S. submarine fleet and FMS.

NAVAL CONTRACTS

Drew Marine USA, Inc. received $9,553,883 for the worldwide supply, delivery, and services for shipboard chemical treatment; foam testing, supply and disposal; industrial gases; and refrigerants for all U.S. naval ships of MSC and any other vessel specifically identified by the command.

DRS Power & Control Technologies received $17,924,189 to redesign the advanced secondary propulsion unit motor controllers for USS Jimmy Carter (SSN 23).

ERAPSCO received $195,217,585 for up to 141,500 AN/SSQ series sonobuoys and 10,000 MK-84 signal underwater sound devices.

General Dynamics received $6,795,560 for the operation, maintenance and protection of the floating dry dock Shippingport (ARDM 4). This was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

General Dynamics (Electric Boat) received $12,382,993 and $12,128,328 for OBRP to be loaded onto Virginia Class boats upon delivery.

Lockheed Martin received $7,032,577 for 137 spares and 289 repair parts used in the MK-41. This was non-competitive per 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c) (1).

Sierra Nevada Corp. received $8,158,062 for up to 16 Block III receiver upgrade kits for the AN/SPN-46 automatic carrier landing system. This was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

SPACE

Lockheed Martin received $70,000,000 for advanced extremely high frequency (AEHF) system interim contractor sustainment extension. Lockheed will work on critical software development for mission planning development for initial operational capability in 2015 for Space & Missile Systems Center, Los Angeles AFB.

Lockheed Martin received $62,965,362 for Space-Based Infrared System (SBIRS) Survivable Endurable Evolution increment 2 effort. Lockheed will provide logistics support and major sustainment modification to the current SBIRS mobile ground system’s data processing for both Defense Support Program and SBIRS geosynchronous orbit (GEO) satellites.  This will provide the required operation shelters to the SBIRS mobile ground terminals to perform limited GEO satellite commanding. Work will be at Buckley, Shriever, and Peterson AFB, and Boulder, CO.

Lockheed Martin received $40,729,757 for additional logistics and sustainment support of the Defense Satellite Communications System and Milstar Military Satellite Communications Systems.

MEI Technologies Inc. received $9,700,000 for services supporting DOD’s Space Test Program manned missions that fly to the International Space Station (ISS) and their associated re-supply launch vehicles. This is a sole-source acquisition.

NMR Consulting received $14,625,498 for global classified and unclassified video conferencing services, collaboration services, customer facing business application services, and end user training.

Range Generation Next LLC received $85,608,662 for operation, maintenance, and sustainment of USAF’s Launch & Test Range System at: Patrick AFB; Cape Canaveral Air Force Station; Vandenberg AFB; Pillar Point Air Force Station; Antigua Air Station; and Ascension Auxiliary Air Field.

CYBER, IT & COMMS

AMEWAS has received $22,500,000 for continuing engineering, manufacturing and technical support services in support of the Integrated Battlespace Simulation & Test Department (IBST) at Patuxent River, MD.

Assured Space Access Technologies, Inc. received $7,982,314; Computer Science Corp. received $7,196,594; General Dynamics received $7,452,144; Kratos Technology & Training Solutions received $8,234,572; Serco, Inc. received $7,150,272; and Stanley Associates, Inc. received $6,913,851 for command, control, communications, computers and intelligence (C4I) in the areas of test and evaluation, engineering, independent verification and validation engineering, software quality assurance, configuration management, and web site maintenance for Space & Naval Warfare Systems Center Pacific, San Diego, CA.

Alpha-Omega Change Engineering; Client/Server Software Solutions, Inc.; ISYS Technologies; Joint Strategic Solutions; McCallie Associates, Inc.; Peerless Technologies Corp.; S4 Inc.; Software Engineering Services; and The Garrett Group received a cumulative $800,000,000 for USSTRATCOM systems and mission support (advisory and assistance services) III at Offutt AFB.

Crowley Technical Management Inc. received $31,875,833 for operation and maintenance of T-AGOS/T-AGM fleet, which supports USN surveillance towed array sensor system, the USAF dual-band, phased array and parabolic dish radars, and other government research missions.

Jacobs Technology Inc. received $12,000,000 for research operations support services at Edwards AFB.

ManTech received $24,802,594 for warfare analysis and assessments, modeling and simulation, advanced concept development and acquisition analysis support for the NAVAIR’s Warfare Analysis & Integration Department.

Raytheon received $15,214,843 to ensure Cobra Dane radar facility collects 100 percent of tasked data that passes through its field of view at Eareckson Air Station.

SAIC received $25,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations for the South central zone two region.  This was a sole-source acquisition.  SAICreceived $9,500,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations in New Jersey for DOD and federal civilian agencies. This was a sole-source acquisition.  SAICreceived $6,800,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations services in NJ.

Sierra Nevada Corp. received $15,247,346 for five Air Field Mobile Tower Systems, to include spares and engineering services. One bid solicited, one offer received.

SRI International received $38,013,151 to maintain, enhance, and demonstrate advanced microcircuit emulation technology capability and to continue with basic technology and production development.  This was a sole-source acquisition. 

TEST, LLC received $44,451,927 for threat systems operations and maintenance to the test and evaluation, and training communities, to maintain ground and airborne threat systems within the Threat Systems Management Office inventory.

U.S. Information Technologies Corp. received $13,335,296 for Oracle Software support services in support of MSC’s Command, Control, Communications and Computer Systems directorate.

MISSILES, BOMBS, ROCKETS

BAE Systems received $9,636,247 for installing an additional wastewater clarifier at the Holston Army Ammunition Plant (HSAAP).

BAE Systems received $8,480,150 for major production and in-service efforts such as the Evolved Seasparrow missile, NATO Seasparrow surface missile system, Stalker long-range electro-optical sensor suite and day-to-day office operation in support of the 12 nations that comprise the NATO Seasparrow Consortium. 

Balfour Beatty Construction LLC received $24,488,298 to replace the Ship, Submersible, Ballistic, Nuclear Launch Test Complex at NAWS China Lake. The Complex will support full-scale, dry launch qualification testing of a Trident II test vehicle from a missile tube.

Boeing received $64,391,684 for R&D to procure 60 long delay fuzes and development of an embedded fuze system. This is a sole-source acquisition. Kaman Precision Products, Inc. received $28,892,973 for Lot 11 production of joint programmable fuze systems. Kaman will provide an additional 7,846 state-of-the-art fuze systems.

Lockheed Martin received $52,923,105 to support critical mission operations for NORAD Command Cheyenne Mountain Complex/Integrated Tactical Warning/Attack Assessment at Colorado Springs, CO, and Vandenberg AFB.

Northrop Grumman received $10,500,000 for continued service and support to the integrated air and missile defense battle command system.

Raytheon received $85,500,000 for Griffin A and B Block II/III missiles and test/support equipment. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Raytheon received $31,657,952 to align the test program with the hardware delivery schedule for the SM-3 Block IIA program for the Missile Defense Agency.

Raytheon received $15,050,856 for 213 projectiles (Excalibur 155mm) and 24 containers for the U.S. Army. Work will be across the U.S., Sweden, and the UK.

Scientific Applications & Research Associates, Inc. (SARA) received $9,775,761 to integrate their Home-on-Jam seeker into the JDAM and SDB-I weapon platforms and support flight tests to demonstrate accuracy against radio frequency threat targets at White Sands Missile Range (WSMR).

Sentry View Systems Inc. (SVS) received $6,645,128 for logistics support on the remote visual assessment (RVA) video surveillance system. SVS will provide maintenance for physical interfaces at the launch facilities; physical interfaces at the monitoring stations, RVA surveillance system; thrust vector alignment monitoring system and RVA data transmission system. Work will be performed at F.E. Warren AFB, Hill AFB, Malmstrom AFB, Minot AFB, and Vandenberg AFB.

TRAX International, LLC received $99,846,413 for mission support services to support the testing mission.

VEHICLES

BAE Systems received $7,062,719 for system and sustainment technical support for the Bradley family of vehicles.

Cummins Central Power LLC received $11,729,400 for the Forward Repair System reset.

General Dynamics received $10,660,911 for electrical unit kits used on Abrams tanks.

Goodyear received $43,670,662 for ground vehicle tires.

L-3 (CPS) received $10,492,234 for transmission operational reliability 800 horsepower transmissions and the required ancillary hardware.

Raytheon and DRS Network & Imaging System received $28,000,000 for Horizontal Technology Integration Second Generation FLIR manufacturing, support, management, configuration management, quality assurance, test and logistics.

GEAR & EQUIPMENT

API, LLC (Orocovis, Puerto Rico) received $33,896,716 for duffel bags.

FLIR Systems, Inc. received $46,330,731 for original equipment manufacturer non-warranty repair and refurbishment of Star SAFIRE III, Star SAFIRE HD, Ranger III, and RECON III sensors, and integrated logistics support oversight.

General Dynamics received $7,461,135 for M2A1 .50 Caliber machine gun barrels.

Northrop Grumman received $7,245,956 for supplies, services, and maintenance on the counter-rocket artillery mortar (C-RAM) command and control system.

CLOTHING

Coachys & Associates, LLC received $10,281,250 and Tennier Industries, Inc. received $9,270,625 for extreme cold/wet weather parkas.

Excel Garment Manufacturing received $7,189,424 for USAF men’s and women’s coats and trousers.  

EDUCATION & TRAINING

Meggitt Training Systems received $30,575,466 for 670 indoor simulated marksmanship trainers (ISMT), a three-dimensional, simulation-based system for indoor use capable of instructing in basic and advanced marksmanship, shoot/no-shoot judgment, combat marksmanship, supporting arms and weapons employment tactics. ISMT can be installed on Navy ships and at U.S. embassies.

SUNDRY R&D

Charles F. Day & Associates have received $29,967,029 to provide weapon system and munitions life cycle services in support of the Army Research Development & Engineering Command.

FUEL & ENERGY

BP received $44,183,579 for aviation turbine fuel.

Constellation NewEnergy, Inc. received $44,731,957 for electricity and ancillary services in MD, IL, NJ, and Washington, D.C.  Constellation NewEnergy, Inc. received $167,905,405 for electricity and ancillary services in MD.  Direct Energy Businessreceived $14,633,536 for electricity service in NJ and NY.  Washington Gas Energy Services, Inc. received $28,500,495 for electricity and ancillary services in Virginia.

Graybar Electric Company received $8,900,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations services in MO.  Graybar Electric Company received $30,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations for the South central zone one region.  This was a sole-source acquisition.  Location of performance is Missouri.

Nova Group, Inc. received $23,015,000 to replace the main unit circuit breaker and instrument transformer at the Bonneville Powerhouse One, Multnomah County, OR.

SupplyCore received $15,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations for the North central region., specifically Illinois. This was a sole-source acquisition.

United Paradyne Corporation received $13,981,670 for fuel services, including operation and maintenance of government fixed fuel facilities and some aviation aircraft. Locations of performance are CA and FL.

MEDICAL & SAFETY

AmerisourceBergen Drug Corp. received $4,055,350,448 for pharmaceutical products and support for worldwide distribution.  Cardinal Health, Inc. received $95,000,000 for pharmaceutical items. This was a sole-source acquisition.  Dakota Drug, Inc. received $16,689,043 for pharmaceutical products and support for ND, SD, and MN.  DMS Pharmaceutical Group, Inc. received $92,030,006 for pharmaceutical products and support for worldwide distribution.  Pharma Logistics, LTD and EXP Pharmaceutical Services Corp. received $46,159,211 to process returns and disposals of expired and unneeded pharmaceuticals.

Biomet 31, LLC. received $27,774,800 for medical items and accessories.

Catalyst Professional Services Inc.; Donald L. Mooney Enterprises LLC; Loyal Source Government Services LLC; Magnum Opus Technologies Inc.; and Potomac Healthcare Solutions LLC received a combined $99,773,371 for various medical services at Military Treatment Facilities in the Southeastern Region of the U.S. 

Medivector Inc. (Boston, MA) received $30,000,000 for Phase 2 clinical trials for efficacy testing.  This includes associated data that may be useful for the Investigational New Drug filing of the product Favipiravir, which is directed at development of a medical countermeasure against a validated biological warfare agent (Ebola). Work will be performed in Boston, MA and in Africa.

Onsite and Dentrust Dental Texas P.C. received $30,000,000 ($15,000,000 each) for non-personal services for mobile medical/dental services for the Texas Army National Guard.  Patterson Dental received $15,000,000 for distribution of general dental supplies.

TRANSPORTATION 

Maersk Line received $9,419,949 for 122-day operation and maintenance of five T-AGOS vessels and one T-AGM ship for Military Sealift Command (MSC).

PPG Industries Inc. received $8,931,277 for worldwide supply, delivery, and services for shipboard paint, coatings, solvents, and preservation products for Military Sealift Command (MSC) ships and any other government-owned or government-chartered ships designated by MSC. 

ENVIRONMENTAL

ACS Habitat Management; Gulf South Research Corp.; and Natures Image received a cumulative $20,000,000 for natural resources, exotic pest plant species abatement services at various locations in CA, NV, and AZ.

EMC, Inc. received $9,000,000 for surveying and mapping of shallow water habitat, floodplain changes, and vegetation cover nationwide.

FOOD SERVICES

Sysco received $16,000,000 for food and beverages.  Sysco received $90,000,000 for food. Sysco received $238,000,000 for food. Location of performance is VA.

US Foods received $183,686,009 for full-line food service support.

BASE SUPPORT, ADMIN & LOGISTICS – Base operations (also known as base support services) typically consist of a combination of: facility management & investment, fire & emergency services, grounds maintenance & landscaping, janitorial services, management & admin, pavement clearance, pest control, port operations, utilities, vehicles & equipment service, and waste management.

Battelle Memorial Institute received $30,000,000 for tech support on the Range & Training Area Management Division’s range managers Toolkit at USMC facilities worldwide.

Bering Sea Environmental, LLC received $7,149,346 and TechFlow, Inc. received $12,604,480 to provide maintenance, operations, and support at ACC’s primary training ranges. Bering Sea Environmental’s contract involved unnamed FMS.

Coastal Enterprises of Jacksonville, Inc. received $7,028,608 for custodial services at Camp Lejeune.

Landscape Management Systems, Inc. received $6,549,106 for grounds maintenance and tree trimming services at Naval Base Guam and Andersen AFB.

Maccaferri, Inc. and Hesco Bastion, Inc. received $500,000,000 for force protection expeditionary barrier systems. Work will be in MD and SC.

NES Associates, LLC received $6,610,946 for software development and integration for the Defense Contract Management Agency.

Technica, LLC received $15,659,920 for logistics support services at Fort Bliss, TX.

Tech Systems, Inc. received $13,664,094 for maintenance, supply, and transportation support to the, Army Support Activity’s Logistics Readiness Center, Schofield Barracks, HI.

Unisys Corporation received $193,000,000 for continued Unisys Operating System 2200 Environment Capacity Service. Work will be performed at various Defense Information Systems Agency and DOD locations for the Defense Information Technology Contracting Organization, Scott AFB.

OVERSEAS CONSTRUCTION

AECOM Technical Services, Inc. and Jacobs Development Services, Co. received $9,900,000 for design and engineering on miscellaneous projects in the Pacific.

DOMESTIC CONSTRUCTION

APC Construction, LLC received $8,999,186 for replacing temporary pumps with permanent pumps at the Harvey Sector Gate, Louisiana, during gate construction.

Caterpillar received $12,000,000 for service life extension and reset of Caterpillar construction equipment. One bid solicited, one received.

CB&I Federal Services, LLC received $7,829,089 for demolition, including lead and asbestos abatement, of White Hall (Building 3) at the former Chanute AFB, IL.

Environet, Inc.; T&T Construction Enterprises, LLC; Tunista Construction, LLC; and PentaCon, LLC received $200,000,000 for Army and Air Force Reserve construction in support of the Army Corps of Engineers Louisville District mission boundaries.

Gulf Building & Hernandez Consultants JV received $13,528,900 to design and build a weapon storage/inspection facility at Marine Corps Logistics Base, Albany, GA.

Heeter Construction received $18,698,808 for the Pine Creek Dam Safety Project in Valliant, OK.

Howard W. Pence, Inc.; Butt Construction Company, Inc.; Custom Mechanical Systems, Corp.; A&D GC Inc.; and David Boland, Inc. received $240,000,000 for design, construction, and service projects associated with the Great Lakes and Ohio River Division mission boundaries.

The Mason & Hanger Group, Inc.; HNTB Corp.; and Polyengineering, Inc. received a cumulative $35,000,000 to design range training and land program for U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Engineering & Support Center, Huntsville, AL.

Nuvo Construction Co. received $7,434,832 to build a maintenance facility at Fort McCoy, Wisconsin. 

Old Veteran Construction received $7,993,841 to design and repair natural gas distribution at Marine Corps Logistics Base, Albany, GA.

Orion Construction Corp. received $20,747,000 for design and construction of the reclaimed water conveyance at Camp Pendleton.

Peter Vander Werff Construction received $12,741,400 to repair three Bachelor Enlisted Quarters (buildings 31612, 31603, 31613) at Camp Pendleton.

Walsh Group Ventures received $50,930,542 to construct a new high school on Ft. Campbell.

Watts Constructors LLC received $10,325,000 to build a pure water facility at Naval Base Kitsap Bangor. 

Western Marine Construction received $21,705,515 for improvements to the Valdez harbor, Alaska.

DREDGING

American Construction Co. received $6,745,150 for Ice Harbor and Lower Granite navigation channel maintenance in Clarkston, WA.

Great Lakes Dredge & Dock received $57,609,736 for construction and beach nourishment from Great Egg Harbor Inlet to Townsends Inlet in Ocean City and Sea Isle City, NJ.

Harding Enterprises, LLC received $6,759,316 for flood control on the Mississippi River/tributaries, including levee and berm work in Ferriday, LA.

Jacobs Field Services North America received $200,000,000 for dredging and disposing contaminated sediment from New Bedford Harbor Superfund Site, MA.

Mason Construction Co. received $10,573,736 to dredge the Savannah and Brunswick harbor entrance channel in Georgia.

Mason Construction Co. received $7,399,000 to dredge Oakland, CA, harbor channels, and to dispose of the dredged material.

Vigor Marine LLC received $10,000,000 for the repair, maintenance, and overhaul of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers hopper dredge Essayons.

# # # #

*Editing consolidated similar contracts. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

**Any clerical errors are the editor’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

***To avoid competitive bidding, DOD invokes 10 U.S.C. 2304, FAR 6.302, and FAR 8.405-6.  DOD uses 15 U.S.C. 638 to avoid competitive bidding when dealing with small businesses.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.

BFP Exclusive Report- A Distillation of DOD Funding Priorities for December 2014

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DOD spent $19,277,561,596+ on 322 individual contracts in December 2014

The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form.

The Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $19,277,561,596 on 322 individual contracts during December 2014.

REMOTELY PILOTED MACHINES

General Atomics received $114,598,215 to continue Warrior logistics.

General Atomics received $375,212,717 for MQ-1 and MQ-9 logistics. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Insitu, Inc. received $41,076,746 for three LRIP RQ-21A Blackjack aircraft systems. This was not competitively procured per FAR.6.302-1.

Navmar Applied Sciences Corp. received $11,831,173 to support the Copperhead Unmanned Air Systems, specifically Tigershark UAV in Afghanistan (50 percent); Patuxent River, Maryland (25 percent); and Yuma, Arizona (25 percent).

Northrop Grumman received $24,345,692 for Hunter UAS logistics support in Sierra Vista, AZ (25 percent), and in Afghanistan (75 percent).

Raytheon received $13,000,000 to support the Product Management Electro-Optic/Infrared Payloads-Force Protection Office for surveillance system supply and support for the rapid aerostat initial deployment configurations.

Raytheon received $46,646,592 for 32 multi-spectral targeting system-B (MTS-B) turrets (TU), 32 MTS-B high definition electronic units (HDEUs), one lot of MTS-B shop replaceable units spares, 32 MTS-B TU containers, 32 MTS-B HDEU containers, and one lot of MTS support equipment.  These are to be used on the MQ-1 and MQ-9.  This is a sole-source acquisition.

SGS, LLC received $32,968,419 to build a UAV launch/recovery complex at Ft. Bliss.

FOREIGN MILITARY SALES – Through Foreign Military Sales (FMS), the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations.

AM General, LLC received $9,788,413 to provide Iraq with 50 M1165A1 HMMWVs and one year of spare parts

Alliant Techsystems Inc. (ATK) received $9,949,966 for logistic support for Iraq’s Air Force's Cessna 208B Caravan.

Boeing received $171,169,232 to provide Australia a P-8A training system.

Boeing received $14,500,000 for courseware development, engineering, maintenance and aircrew academic and simulation training in St. Louis, MO, and King Khalid Air Base, Saudi Arabia. This involves some FMS. This is a continuation of an earlier contract.

Cubic Defense Applications, Inc. received $15,200,000 for hardware and weapons simulations source code software, on-site logistics, and informal operation training for Saudi Arabia’s Air Force P5 combat training system (P5 CTS) at King Abulaziz, King Faisal, King Khalid and King Fahad Air Bases.

Hellfire Systems LLC received $150,002,546 to provide Australia, Iraq, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Indonesia, Egypt, and Lebanon with 2,109 Hellfire II missile models, air-to-ground missiles models AGM-114R, AGM-114R-3, AGM-114P4-A, training guided missile TGM M36E7, and air-training-missile ATM-114Q-6. Previous funding was issued in September 2014 and October 2012.

Conti Federal Services, Inc. received $16,508,481 to upgrade Israeli military fuel stations.

General Dynamics received $99,738,476 to convert 42 M1A2 to M1A2S for Saudi Arabia.

Lockheed Martin received $97,832,182 for a financial arrangement implementing a F-35 FMS Letter of Offer for Israel.

Lockheed Martin received $308,263,249 to provide Taiwan with 144 radars (AESA) for installation on F-16 aircraft. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $91,057,794 to provide the UAE with Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) support on services and equipment.

Lockheed Martin received $31,828,753 for contractor engineering and technical services (CETS) in support of the F-16 aircraft for FMS to Bahrain, Chile, Egypt, Indonesia, Iraq, Jordan, Morocco, Oman, Pakistan, Poland, Taiwan and Turkey. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $7,536,967 to provide Qatar two Arrowhead (M-TADS/PNVS) spares.

Navistar Defense received $7,926,944 to provide Pakistan engineering, logistics, field service reps, other costs for MRAP MaxxPro Vehicle system technical services.

Northrop Grumman received $657,400,000 to provide South Korea four RQ-4B Block 30 air vehicles, two spare engines, and applicable Ground Control Environment elements.

Progeny Systems Corp. received $7,638,109 for engineering/technical services on Technology Infusion Methodology for COTS-Based Systems and COTS Approach to Information Security for the U.S. Navy (40 percent) and the UK (60 percent).

Raytheon received $30,192,917 for engineering services for calendar year 2014 for PATRIOT system. Work will be performed in Germany, Israel, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Netherlands, Spain, Taiwan, the UAE, and South Korea.

Raytheon received $2,397,211,870 to provide Qatar with 10 PATRIOT fire units with spares.  One bid was solicited with one received.

Raytheon received $56,821,547 for 15 ATFLIR for Australia ($54,837,199; 97 percent) and spare parts for Switzerland ($1,984,348; 3 percent).

Sikorsky received $56,394,775 to provide Mexico five UH-60M.

SupplyCore, Inc. received $110,571,788 to provide Saudi Arabia F-15 transportation support services.

RECRUITMENT & RETENTION

Fors Marsh Group, LLC received $9,840,981 for survey services and market research/analysis in support of the Joint Advertising and Market Research military recruiting research.

DARPA

Koniag Information Security Services, LLC received $6,767,577 for support services on DARPA’s Security & Intelligence Directorate (SID).

USCENTCOM

AAI Corporation received $8,074,256 for logistics support on one system remote video terminal deployed in Afghanistan for USA and Australia.

AAR Airlift Group, Inc. received $20,394,144 and Columbia Helicopters, Inc. received $20,069,056 for passenger and cargo air transportation service in Afghanistan.

DynCorp International received $52,145,079 to advise, train, and mentor the Afghanistan National Police for the Interior Ministry. One bid solicited, one received.

DynCorp International received $48,643,725 to advise, train, and mentor the Afghanistan National Army for the Defense Ministry. One bid solicited, one received.

DynCorp International received $42,877,839 for OEF aviation maintenance support.

G4S received $15,836,503 for base operating services at Naval Support Activity, Bahrain.

General Dynamics received $16,134,215 for supply support at Camp Arifjan, Kuwait, which includes sorting and classifying material downloaded from units and re-issuing serviceable material to deploying units or ship it to USA.

Leidos, Inc. received $25,017,625 for ammunition supply point and theater area storage support to the 1st Theater Support Command, Camp Arifjan, Kuwait.

Readiness Management Support, L.C. received $57,800,000 to provide Aviation Command and Control operations and maintenance support at current levels in Southwest Asia (primarily Afghanistan) for Space & Naval Warfare Systems Center.

SENTEL received $17,232,741 for integrated logistics support services property accountability for the 401st Army Field Support Brigade, Afghanistan.

USSOCOM

CACI-Athena Inc. received $38,408,431 for joint geospatial analytical support services in support of USSOCOM.

Combined Systems, Inc. received $42,491,200 for MK 20 MOD 0 (flash and single bang, diversionary grenades) for USSOCOM.

JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER (JSF) & RAPTOR

Lockheed Martin received $169,335,580 to provide Depot Phase I-IV services to support LRIP Lot VII F-35 for USAF ($79,738,238; 47%), U.S. Navy ($55,471,472; 33%); USMC ($24,266,766; 14%); and international partners ($9,859,104; 6%).

Lockheed Martin received $34,893,266 to modify management of deployable spares packages for F-35 LRIP Lot VI aircraft for USAF ($15,954,729; 46%); USMC ($13,712,801; 39%); U.S. Navy ($2,985,661; 8.6%) and international partners ($2,240,075; 6.4%). This also provides unit level augmentation and technical, administrative, and associated financial data.

Lockheed Martin received $67,840,245 for depot throughput, touch labor, and installation for F-22 aircraft inducting into depots Palmdale Depot, CA, and Ogden Depot, UT for maintenance/repair.

Lockheed Martin received $22,198,099 for F-22 over and above engineering services and radar cross-section turntable support.

United Technologies Corp. received $47,208,684 for sustainment efforts and operations and maintenance services on LRIP Lot VIII F135 propulsion systems for USAF ($13,830,097; 29%); the U.S. Navy ($29,185,949; 62%); and international partners ($4,192,638; 9%).

United Technologies Corp. received $270,542,568 for F119 engine sustainment.

OSPREY

Bell-Boeing JPO received $31,264,447 for on-site V-22 flight test management, engineering, and related efforts for the Naval Rotary Wing Aircraft Test Squadron.

Bell-Boeing JPO received $21,326,083 for V-22 fleet software sustainment for the flight control system and on-aircraft avionics software; flight test planning and coordination of changed configurations; avionics and flight controls upgrade planning.

Raytheon received $270,512,968 for V-22 software support activity (SSA) systems and software engineering and operations, avionics integration and testing, and software testing. This was not competitively procured per FAR 6.302-1.

Robertson Fuel Systems received $14,779,950 for two Mission Auxiliary Fuel Tank Systems to extend MV-22 flight range.

HELICOPTERS

BAE Systems received $45,098,569 for 1,601 APKWS II WGU-59/B guidance sections, shipping and storage containers, and supporting documentation.

BSC Partners received $13,679,958 to design/fabricate, install/test MH-60 naval aircrew training system and MH-60S aircrew virtual environment trainer device.

General Electric received $42,179,208 to support maintenance and overhaul of T700 engines at Corpus Christi Army Depot.

Lockheed Martin received $82,821,104 for Apache M-TADS/PNVS equipment.

Lockheed Martin received $43,400,000 for 14 AN/AAQ-30 target sight systems (TSS) and data to be integrated into USMC Cobra attack helicopters.  This was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1), as implemented by FAR 6.302-1.

Longbow LLC received $18,487,338 for management and logistics on all U.S. Apache AH-64D helicopter fire control radar units.

Northrop Grumman received $35,514,955 for fabrication, integration, test and production of airborne laser mine detection systems (ALMDS) and delivery of peculiar support equipment and engineering services to support those systems.

Raytheon received $27,594,138 for multi-spectral targeting systems (MTS) and data for the MH-60.

Textron received $11,601,939 for logistics products and services for H-1 upgrade.

Textron received $15,077,365 for systems engineering and program management support for production and delivery of AH-1Z and UH-1Y aircraft.

EAGLE, FALCON & HORNET

Boeing received $15,446,486 for Phase C1 of the F/A-18 A-D Airframe Services Life Extension Program, which includes seven flight-critical engineering change proposals for fracture and maintenance critical areas of the airframe.

Boeing received $27,497,699 for F/A-18 E/F and EA-18G automated maintenance environment (AME) – a suite of integrated software application designed to support “O” Level maintenance.

Boeing received $46,127,744 for integrated logistics and sustaining engineering for F/A-18A-D, F/A-18E/F, and EA-18G aircraft for the U.S. Navy ($38,268,396; 84 percent); Australia ($4,471,514; 10 percent); Canada ($564,639; 1 percent), Spain ($564,639; 1 percent); Finland ($564,639; 1 percent); Switzerland ($564,639; 1 percent); Kuwait ($564,639; 1 percent); and Malaysia ($564,639; 1 percent). Support includes logistics, engineering, information systems, technical data updates, training and software integration support.

General Electric received $7,064,750 for the F414 Engine Component Improvement program for U.S. Navy ($6,733,928; 95.3%) and Australia ($330,822; 4.7%).

General Electric received $459,572,000 for repair, replacement, and support for 757 F414 engine (F/A-18 E, F and EA-18G aircraft) components.  This was not competitively procured per FAR 15.002(a).

Raytheon received $64,066,288 to repair 25 weapon repairable assemblies and 35 shop replaceable assemblies of ATFLIR used on F/A-18 Aircraft. This was sole-source per 10 USC 2304 (c)(1).

GALAXY, GLOBEMASTER II & HERCULES

Cymstar Services, LLC received $20,368,605 for operations and sustainment of C-130J maintenance and aircrew training devices (includes material/travel costs).

Kilgore Flares Company received $6,971,844 for MJU 53/B countermeasure flares. FMS to Canada (1.4 percent).

Lockheed Martin received $11,661,566 for engineering and logistics on KC-130J and C-130J aircraft for USA and Kuwait. This was not competitively procured per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1).

Lockheed Martin received $16,637,643 for C-130J training system support center services, including software/hardware support, minor modifications, obsolescence monitoring, and overall system operation reporting.

Lockheed Martin received $20,556,142.28 for C-130 aircrew training system operations and maintenance.

Lockheed Martin received $26,423,812 for one C-130J Air Mobility Command (AMC) weapon systems trainer and one C-130J AMC loadmaster part task trainer at Yokota Air Base in Yokota, Japan.

Lockheed Martin received $662,032,335 for two MC-130J, two HC-130J, three KC-130J, one C-130J, two U.S. Coast Guard HC-130J aircraft, and 20 quick engine change assemblies. This includes some FMS to India, Saudi Arabia, and Norway.

Raytheon received $17,800,000 for multi-spectral targeting systems and data on C-130 for USAF.

OTHER FIXED WING AIRCRAFT

American Systems Corp. received $15,011,341 for technical and engineering services in support of the NAVAIR’s Air Vehicle Engineering Department and the Manned Flight Simulator/Air Combat Environment Test & Evaluation Facilities.

BAE Systems received $17,614,196 for the Mode 5 Capable RT-1763C/APX-111(V) Combined Interrogator Transponder. This also provides engineering analysis, design and development efforts to address pulse top ripple and obsolescence issues.

BAE Systems received $28,434,872 to support Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Division’s Integrated Communication and Information Systems Division, specifically with C4I electronic communication systems.

BAE Systems received $34,290,601 for 53 AN/APX-117A(V) IFF transponders and 10 AN/APX-118A(V) IFF transponders for the U.S. Navy; and 661 AN/APX-123A(V) IFF transponders for the U.S. Navy (500), U.S. Army (100), U.S. National Guard (4), Qatar (24), Australia (13), South Korea (7), Turkey (7), and Denmark (6). In addition, this provides 217 Mode 5 change kits and 67 integrations of mode 5 change kits for the U.S. Navy; three mode 4 remote control units for the U.S. Navy (1) and the U.S. National Guard (2); 111 mode 5 RCUs for the U.S. Navy (109) and U.S. National Guard (2). This also provides 121 IFF mounting, six receiver/transmitters, two single board computers, 20 power supplies, six signal processors, four mode 4 chassis, four mode 5 chassis, seven mode 4/5 with crypto shop replaceable assemblies, one mode 4 with crypto SRA, and five dummy receiver transmitter chassis for the U.S. Navy. This will also procure repairs for 10 AN/APX-117A(V) IFF transponders, 30 AN/APX-118A(V) IFF transponders, 30 AN/APX-123A(V) IFF transponders and five RCUs for the U.S. Navy listed above and software engineering support. This was not competitively procured per FAR.6.302-1. Purchases: U.S. Navy ($28,473,376; 83 percent); U.S. Army ($3,526,800; 10.3 percent); U.S. National Guard ($201,168; 0.6 percent); Qatar ($846,432; 2.5 percent); Australia ($503,616; 1.5 percent); South Korea ($258,159; 0.7 percent); Turkey ($246,876; 0.7 percent); and Denmark ($234,174; 0.7 percent).

Boeing received $6,901,710 for C32/C40 integrated Fleet Support at Tinker AFB.

Boeing received $7,241,633 for C/KC-135 engineering services and sustainment of C/KC-135 weapon system including its airframe and airframe components.

Boeing received $18,681,615 for engineering services on Boeing commercial derivative military aircraft. This includes minor FMS to the Netherlands.

Boeing received $34,923,512 for KC-46 interim contractor support.

Boeing received $64,247,052 for continued availability of APG-63(V)1, APG-63(V)2,  APG-63(V)3 and Talon HATE radars. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Boeing received $67,812,302 for integration of capabilities and training system upgrades for the P-8A Poseidon.

Boeing received $78,724,734 for C-32 and C-40 fleet support in Oklahoma City, OK.

Boeing received $84,500,000 for KC-46 production support equipment items (4,880) and six production spare parts.

Calspan Corp. received $15,548,549 for variable stability aircraft service at Edwards AFB. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Diversitech, Inc. received $9,370,287 for facility and equipment maintenance, repair and replacement activities in support of 88th Air Base Wing Civil Engineering Directorate and their customers. Work will be performed at Wright-Patterson AFB.

DynCorp International received $44,530,685 for maintenance and logistics services on aircraft (twenty F/A-18A-F; three EA-18G, five MH-60S, 14 F-16A/B; and two E-2C) assigned to Naval Strike & Air Warfare Center, NAS Fallon.

General Electric received $7,558,560 for engineering and technical services in support of engines: F110-GE-100/129, A-10 TF-34, KC-135F-108, TF-39/F-138, F108-CF-100/200/201, F101-GE-102, F118-GE-100, J85-21B, F110, and F-16 C/D engines. Some work will be in Bahrain; and Israel. This is a sole-source acquisition.

King Aerospace received $40,259,260 for logistics support for the De Havilland Canada Dash 7 airborne reconnaissance low EO-5 aircraft.

Lockheed Martin received $7,075,675 for engineering and technical services for AFMC and the National Guard in support of F-16s at various bases. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Lockheed Martin received $19,710,309 to design, develop, demonstrate, document, and deliver a P-8A application based architecture system.

Lockheed Martin received $244,000,000 to provide bulk purchases of materials and components that will reduce material costs or investments in productivity enhancements that will reduce labor costs for 61 C-130J aircraft.

LTM INC. received $12,929,503 for engineering and technical support of various aircraft, engines, components and support systems for USN ($2,408,551; 87 percent); USAF ($290,101; 10 percent); the U.S. National Guard and Reserves ($8,047; 1 percent); Japan ($23,765; 1 percent); and Chile ($23,765; 1 percent). This was non-competitive procured per FAR 6.302-1.

M7 Aerospace, LLC received $9,842,453 for logistics support on C-26 aircraft.

Northrop Grumman received $19,558,660 for logistics services for aircraft and spares to support the worldwide KC-10 program

Organizational Strategies, Inc. received $7,531,203 for work on Advanced Training Technology Delivery System for the Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Division.  This was not competitively procured per FAR 6.302-5.

Raytheon received $8,500,000 for aircraft parts.  This was a sole-source acquisition.

Raytheon received $11,999,825 to repair six improved multi-platform launch controllers (IMPLC), repair/retrofit an additional 48 IMPLCs, and repair/retrofit 11 primary power supplies. This was non-competitive per 10 U.S.C. 2304 (c)(1).

Raytheon received $15,494,873 to design, develop, demonstrate, document, and deliver a P-8A application based architecture system.

Raytheon received $25,405,003 for PMA-290 (MPRA), AN/APS-148 SeaVue radar system components.  This was not competitively procured per 10 USC 2304(c) (1), implemented by FAR 6.302-1.

Rockwell Collins, Inc. received $46,581,071 for improved frequency modulation power amplifiers. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Rockwell Collins, Inc. received $7,946,398 for KC-135 Block 45.1 upgrade software in Cedar Rapids, IW and Oklahoma City, OK. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Rockwell Collins, Inc. received $7,967,625 for 15 KC-10 communication navigation surveillance/air traffic management kit installations.

Sigmatech, Inc. received $57,440,905 for aviation element simulation development, operations, maintenance for Redstone Arsenal, AL.

Sikorsky received $11,708,901 for F-5 aircraft maintenance at NAS Key West, NAS Fallon, and MCAS Yuma.

Tactical Lighting Systems Inc. received $24,515,000 for a Sustainment Lighting System, which will support launch/recovery at expeditionary airfields.

AEGIS

Lockheed Martin received $82,979,141 for Aegis combat system engineering on computer program baselines and associated technology insertion hardware design support for the next/future advanced capability build.

Lockheed Martin received $54,632,457 for ship integration and test of the Aegis weapon system (AWS) for AWS baselines through advanced capability build (ACB) 12.  This will cover AWS ship integration and test efforts for five new DDG 51-class ships and the major modernization of five DDG 51 class ships. It will also cover integrated combat system modifications and upgrades for all current ships with all AWS baselines up to and including ACB 12.

Lockheed Martin received $7,223,685 to procure diminishing manufacturing sources spares for Aegis modernization and new construction requirements.

LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP (LCS)

Austal USA received $14,359,433 for class services in support of the LCS program. Austal will provide engineering and design services, as well as affordability efforts to reduce LCS acquisition and lifecycle costs.

Lockheed Martin received $24,793,980 for core class services in support of the LCS program.

Lockheed Martin received $10,416,933 for fleet maintenance sustainment support to the LCS program in San Diego, CA.

Lockheed Martin received $8,744,781 to support technical evaluation and initial operational and evaluation of the Remote Minehunting System (RMS) with the LCS.

Northrop Grumman received $19,082,605 for integration services for mission packages that will deploy from and integrate with the LCS.

Northrop Grumman received $21,619,028 for two mission modules and support containers for mission packages that will deploy from / integrate with LCS.

SHIP MAINTENANCE

BAE Systems received $7,410,168 for USS Barry (DDG-52) FY2015 emergent docking availability, which includes maintenance, repairs and modifications that will update the ship's military and technical capabilities.

BAE Systems received $8,271,799 for USS Wayne E. Meyer (DDG 108) FY2015 selected restricted availability, which includes depot-level maintenance and modifications to update ship's military and technical capabilities.

BAE Systems received $15,232,513 for 60-calendar day shipyard availability for the regular overhaul and dry docking of USNS Matthew Perry (T-AKE 9).

BAE Systems received $115,000,373 for USS Bataan (LHD 5) FY2015 dry-docking planned maintenance availability, which includes depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications to update military/technical capabilities.

Bay City Marine, Inc.; Delphinus Engineering, Inc.; Epsilon Systems Solutions, Inc.; Integrated Marine Services, Inc.; Marine Group Boat Works; Marisco, Ltd.; Pacific Ship Repair & Fabrication Inc.; Pacific Shipyards International; Propulsion Controls Engineering; Platypus Marine, Inc.; Q.E.D. Systems, Inc.; Shaka Engineering, Inc.; and Southcoast Welding & Manufacturing received $61,000,000 for general ship repair that includes providing all labor, materials, and a marine repair facility for ship repair on MSC vessels.

General Dynamics received $16,916,431 for repairs and alterations on USS Whidbey Island (LSD-41).

General Dynamics (Bath Iron Works) received $21,192,127 for DDG 51-class lead yard services (including liaising, logistics, class changes design services, and special studies). This provides class engineering and design services to shipbuilders in the interpretation and application of the Bath Iron Works design.

Lockheed Martin received $235,329,189 for MK 41 Vertical Launching System (VLS) electronic and mechanical modules and related equipment for the U.S. Navy (69.5 percent), Saudi Arabia (26.3 percent), and Norway (4.2 percent).

Marine Hydraulics International, Inc. received $7,121,874 for USS Truxtun (DDG-103) FY2015 selected restricted availability, which involves maintenance, repairs and modifications that will update the ship's military and technical capabilities.

Marine Tec received $39,827,597 for USS Mesa Verde (LPD-19) fiscal 2015 phased maintenance availability, which includes depot-level maintenance, alterations, and modifications to update military and technical capabilities.

Tyonek Services Corp. received $10,924,414 for depot maintenance support for Fleet Readiness Center SE at NAS Jacksonville; MCAS Beaufort; and NAS Oceana.

Vigor Industrial, LLC received $13,400,140 for 75-calendar-day shipyard availability for the regular overhaul and dry-docking of USNS Mercy (T-AH-19).

SUBMARINES

General Dynamics received $44,547,142 for non-nuclear submarine repair work on Groton-based submarines under the New England Maintenance Manpower Initiative (NEMMI) in support of returning mission ready submarines to the fleet.

General Dynamics received $36,490,246 for engineering and technical design services to support R&D of advanced submarine technologies.

Huntington Ingalls Inc. received $9,972,928 for R&D on advanced submarine technologies for current and future submarine platforms.

NAVAL CONTRACTS

Data Link Solutions LLC received $32,606,821 for Multi-Functional Information Distribution System (MIDS) on Ship (MOS) Lot IV production. This includes spares.

General Dynamics received $498,116,529 for detail, design and construction of the fourth Mobile Landing Platform Afloat Forward Staging Base.

General Dynamics received $8,019,628 for material and labor to repair, modify and complete work on the DDG 1001 deckhouse.

General Dynamics received $7,279,014 for USS Peleliu (LHA 5) FY2015 decommissioning.

Huntington Ingalls received $7,997,357 for nuclear propulsion and complex modernization work on CVN 75 in Portsmouth, VA. This was not competitively procured per FAR 6.302-1(a)(2)(iii).

Jacobs Technology, Inc. received $42,383,852 to develop a launch test set complex for testing and qualification of a launcher subsystem for U.S. Navy ($38,145,467; 90%) and the UK ($4,238,385; 10%). This was non-competitive per FAR.6.302-1.

L-3 (Power Paragon Inc.) received $23,845,101 for power transfer switching units.

Raytheon received $8,673,474 for dual band radar installation, integration and test support of element and integrated combat system efforts for CVN 78.

Raytheon received $12,000,000 for engineering on the DDG 1000 program.

Raytheon received $26,050,551 for life cycle engineering and support services for LPD 17 class integrated shipboard electronic systems. This was not competitively procured per FAR 6.302-1(a)(2)(iii).

Raytheon received $38,498,028 for continuing Platform Systems Engineering Agent support of the Ship Self Defense System (SSDS) MK 2 development of CVN/Amphibious Modernization Advanced Capability Build 12/Technical Insertion 12 (ACB12/TI12).

Sierra Nevada Corp. received $9,170,185 for technical and engineering services in support of the precision approach and landing system program.

Sonatech Inc. received $34,384,013 for production of TR-343 sonar transducer ship sets (part of the AN/SQS-53 sonar array assembly) for U.S. Navy (85%) and Japan (15%) to support new construction of DDG Arleigh Burke class ships.

York International Inc. received $41,973,741 for conversion kits to modify 125-, 200-, and 300-ton AC plants used on the LSD-41, DDG-51, and LHD-1 class ships to use HFC-236fa refrigerant in lieu of the current CFC–114 refrigerant.

SPACE

ASRC Federal Space & Defense received $21,725,588 for launch services mission assurance (LSMA) on excess ballistic missile solid rocket motors and independent verification and validation for Space & Missile Systems Center (SMC), Kirtland AFB.

Assured Space Access Technologies, Inc. received $19,943,982; Del Rey Systems & Technology, Inc. received $18,075,584; Forward Slope, Inc. received $19,090,075 for engineering functions on meteorological and oceanographic systems, FMS systems, and expeditionary and joint systems, projects and tasking engaged worldwide.

Boeing received $12,941,460 for logistics support, special studies, and local area network sustainment on Space-Based Space Surveillance (SBSS) Block 10 System.

Booz Allen Hamilton received $23,349,751 for systems engineering and integration support to the Launch & Test Range System at Los Angeles AFB.

Exelis, Inc. received $6,693,231 for System Engineering & Sustainment Integrator (SENSOR) Perimeter Acquisition Radar Attack Characterization System (PARCS) sustainment.

InDyne, Inc. received $16,753,743 for operations and maintenance support, training, command, control, communications, information and computer systems services, testing, modification and installation of communications, electronic and security systems at launch facilities and control centers for the 30th Space Wing at Vandenberg AFB.

Infoscitex Corp. received $98,000,000 for aerospace systems technologies and simulation based research and development capabilities.

Kratos Technology & Training Solutions received $18,475,579.00 for a command and control system, production and sustainment; upgrade and implement a data link interface between Schriever space operations centers and the Vandenberg back-up space operations center, among other tasks.

Raytheon received $6,678,321 for production, integration, test and delivery of the global broadcast service (GBS) below deck terminals.

Scitor Corp. received $6,828,303 to provide USAF’s Space & Missile Systems Center remote sensing directorate with advisory and assistance services (program management and execution, acquisition/program planning). This is a sole-source acquisition.

CYBER, IT & COMMS

Acuitus, Inc. received $44,953,535 for help desk IT training in support of the Navy’s Center for Information Dominance.

American Technology Solutions International Corp. Artlin Consulting LLC; IPT Associates LLC; Booz Allen Hamilton; CACI; Logistics Management Institute; Modern Technology Solutions Inc.; and Systems Planning & Analysis Inc. received $300,000,000 for professional and executive-level mission support services, technical support, technical studies, and research and development projects.

Boeing received $10,631,524 to support operations, maintain and sustain all on-orbit Wideband Global SATCOM satellites. This is sole-source per FAR 6.302-1.

Booz Allen Hamilton Inc.; Serco Inc.; Systems Planning & Analysis Inc.; Whitney, Bradley & Brown; and CACI Inc. received a cumulative $40,716,029 to provide professional, technical, and admin support for Deputy Chief of Naval Operations, (Manpower, Personnel, Training & Education).

Booz Allen Hamilton; Cubic Applications, Inc.; and Janus Research Group received a cumulative $240,000,000 for mission support services to the Army Capabilities Integration Center (ARCIC).

Carahsoft Technology Corp. received $17,895,793 for systems applications and products licenses and maintenance for Program Manager Global Combat Support System and Program Manager Army Enterprise Systems Integration Program.

Cray Inc. received $30,750,000 for commercially available high performance computing systems for DOD’s High Performance Computing Modernization Program at the U.S. Navy Supercomputing Resource Center (DSRC), Stennis Space Center (SSC). Silicon Graphics Federal, Inc. received $30,750,000 to acquire commercially available high performance computing systems for the DOD High Performance Computing Modernization Program in order to conduct complex calculations at the AFRL – DOD Supercomputing Resource Center (DSRC), Wright-Patterson AFB.

En Pointe Gov Inc. received $11,207,546 for Microsoft software assurance, maintenance, and support.

Harris Corporation received $9,946,851 for research of distributed embedded satellite communications on-the-move terminals.

IBM Corp. received $60,424,975 for IT services for the Computer Hardware Enterprise Software and Solutions contract which is the Army preferred website and source for the procurement of IT services and products.

Integri LLC received $22,522,012 to support Naval Air Systems Command 6.8 corporate business office. This includes engineering and technical assistance on Air Systems Command 6.0 and Fleet Readiness Center depot maintenance systems.

Lockheed Martin received $12,463,696 to provide protected key management architecture (KMA) for installation, integration and factory testing of replacement KMA system with existing AEHF system control and space segments.

Motorola Solutions, Inc. received $15,634,774 for global sustainment of enterprise land and mobile radio systems at 53 military installations worldwide.

Mythics, Inc. received $7,829,551 for continuing the Oracle Software Enterprise License Agreement in support of the Program Executive Office Enterprise Information Systems and the Army Materiel Command.

Oracle America Inc. received $7,194,280 for Oracle PeopleSoft licenses and maintenance services.

Raytheon received $344,335,000 for the Command and Control Switching System. This involves FMS to Canada. This is a sole-source acquisition.

SAIC received $23,000,000 for maintenance, repair, and operations for the northwest region. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Whitney, Bradley & Brown (WBB); SAIC; and Metron, Inc. received a collective $180,465,022 for warfare & warfare support analyses/assessments, campaign analyses, mission-level analyses, modeling/simulation, and management and documentation.

World Wide Technology, Inc. received $427,000,000 to obtain a reliable, responsive, and cost effective information storage infrastructure of "on demand" enterprise services for specified operating environments. Work at DISA locations worldwide.

MISSILES, BOMBS, ROCKETS

Boeing received $8,644,374 for integrated logistics support/engineering services for Harpoon /SLAM-ER Missile System and Harpoon Launch Systems for U.S. Navy ($2,310,523; 26.74%); Turkey ($807,597; 9.35%); Taiwan ($706,776; 8.17%); South Korea ($528,318; 6.11%); Japan ($471,056; 5.45%); Egypt ($456,647; 5.28%); Saudi Arabia ($365,656; 4.23%); the UK ($316,563; 3.66%); Pakistan ($304,113; 3.52%); Australia ($303,525; 3.51%); Chile ($237,601; 2.75%); Canada ($231,071; 2.67%); Singapore ($216,855; 2.51%); Israel ($197,868; 2.29%); Portugal ($189,145; 2.19%); India ($168,656; 1.95%); Thailand ($165,516; 1.91%); Bahrain ($129,570; 1.50%); Kuwait ($88,155; 1.02%); the UAE ($85,015; 0.98%); Malaysia ($84,819; 0.98%); Oman ($83,837; 0.97%); the Netherlands ($81,455; 0.94%); Germany ($65,164; 0.75%); and Denmark ($48,873; 0.57%).

Boeing received $39,540,071 for USA and U.K. Trident II (D5) navigation subsystem maintenance, repair, rebuilding, and technical services.  This was a sole source acquisition per Justification & Approval 15.700, dated July 15, 2014.

Caelum Research Corp. received $17,622,299 for data collection services at Aberdeen Proving Ground (APG).

Composite Engineering Inc. received $72,367,482 for Air Force Subscale Aerial Target (lots 11-13) BQM-167A, which will be used by the 53rd Weapons Evaluation Group. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Exelis, Inc. received $20,916,026 for System Engineering and Sustainment Integrator (SENSOR) Ballistic Missile Early Warning System (BMEWS)/PAVE Phased Array Warning System (PAWS) sustainment.

General Dynamics received $72,061,662 (addition to a previous contract) to provide unnamed FMS countries the Hydra-70 rocket system.

Hellfire Systems LLC received $10,594,605 for 123 Hellfire AGM-114R missiles.

Inertial Labs received $10,128,819 to complete the design, development and release of weapon orientation module (WOM) for weapon fire control and live training.

Lockheed Martin received $78,180,515 to leverage expired Army tactical missile system (ATACMS) Block I missiles into policy compliant area attack munitions.

Lockheed Martin received $49,960,000 for 66 missile round trainers, 66 empty round trainers, and one (lot) production tooling for the Patriot system.

Lockheed Martin received $32,416,755 for technical and maintenance support services for U.S. Army and USMC HIMARS fire control systems and launcher modules and M270A1 fire control systems.

Northrop Grumman received $10,234,156 to help transition G/ATOR current software from Microsoft Windows XP OS to a DISA compliant Linux OS.

Orbital Sciences Corp. received $12,454,893 for six trajectory developments and build-ups, test, and launch of 40 GQM-163A aerial target systems for U.S. Navy (32 for $10,954,893; 88 percent) and Japan (FMS: 8 for $1,500,000; 12%). This was not competitively procured per FAR.6.302-1.

Orbital Sciences Corp. received $24,500,397 for seven full rate production Lot 9 GQM-163A Coyote base vehicles, including associated hardware, kits and production support for U.S. Navy (6 for $21,058,260; 86%); Japan (1 for $3,442,137; 14%).

Raytheon received $12,001,675 for field and sustainment level maintenance supporting one Joint Land Elevated Netted System (JLENS) orbit in support of an operational exercise.

Raytheon received $12,153,846 for inventory management as well as the repair and replacement of items pertaining to PATRIOT Performance Based Logistics support.

Raytheon received $18,744,712 for HARM targeting system (HTS) contractor logistic support. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Raytheon received $21,900,000 for AMRAAM technical support. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Raytheon received $25,954,936 for 64 Tomahawk Block IV composite capsule launching systems.

Raytheon received $35,508,615 for the Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) upgraded MK-31 weapon system improvement program, in which USA and Germany cooperate under MOU. This was non-competitive per 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(4).

Raytheon received $45,237,277 for AN/TPY-2 transmit/receive integrated microwave modules (T/RIMMS) and an electronic equipment unit modification kit.

Raytheon received $49,000,000 for Evolved SeaSparrow Missile (ESSM) design agent, in-service support and technical engineering support services.

Raytheon received $54,035,547 for design agent engineering and technical support services for Phalanx, SeaRAM, and Land-based Phalanx weapon systems (LPWS).  This involves some unnamed FMS.

Raytheon received $59,398,002 for TOW missiles.

Raytheon received $491,478,068 for Advanced Medium Range Air to Air Missile (AMRAAM) production Lot 28.  This involves FMS to South Korea, Oman, Singapore, and Thailand. This is a sole-source acquisition.

The Sentient Corp. received $48,462,513 for hypersonic missile interceptors.

Thales Raytheon Systems Co. received $19,943,236 for life cycle contractor support for Sentinel radars, including maintenance, contingency operations, and overhauls.

ORDNANCE DISPOSAL

AMTEC Corp. received $16, 934,650 to manufacture 106,500 JAU-22/B initiators for the cartridge actuated device/propellant actuated device Joint Program Office, Naval Surface Warfare Center, Indian Head EOD Technical Division.

RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT

Matrix Research Inc. received $40,000,000 for R&D, modeling, analysis, simulation, development, fabrication, characterization, testing, evaluation, demonstration and conceptualization of radio frequency and electro-optical subsystem, component, device and material technologies for air and space sensor applications. Work at Wright-Patterson AFB for AFRL.

SEDNA Digital Solutions, LLC received $10,180,823 for engineering and technical services in support of high fidelity simulation/simulation and common processing system software development. This researches “High Fidelity Front End Simulation for complex Physics Based Processing System.”

VEHICLES

AM General LLC received $245,594,857 for 2,200 HMMWV and spare parts. AM General, LLC received $21,058,014 for HMMWV spare parts. This was a sole-source acquisition.

BAE Systems received $34,241,842 to modify 49 Bradley Fighting Vehicles from the M3A2 version to the M2A2 version and 49 final inspection records.

BAE Systems received $382,654,403 for the AMPV program (five variants: general purpose, mission command, mortar carrier, medical evaluation, medical treatment).

General Dynamics received $9,280,639 for turret assemblies. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Honeywell International, Inc. received $17,883,813 for repair and overhaul of AGT1500 engines used in the Abrams family of vehicles.

Michelin received $35,208,626 for ground vehicle tires.  Michelin received $9,398,494 for ground vehicle tires.

MTU America Inc. received $20,704,870 for two-cycle engine spare parts.  This was a sole-source acquisition.

Oshkosh received $32,329,430 for the upgrade and reset of 300 MRAP All Terrain Vehicles (M-ATV).

Oshkosh Defense LLC received $7,250,000 for 300 Check 6 camera kits, which give MRAP all-terrain vehicle driver/commander a rear field of vision.

GEAR & EQUIPMENT

AEROFAB LLC; Major Tool & Machine Inc.; Chesapeake Machining & Fabrication Inc.; and Advex Corp. received a cumulative $45,000,000 to support machining and fabrication for various items supporting Strategic Systems programs.

Carolina Growler, Inc. received $37,000,000 to procure 179 Marine Corps tactical weld shops.

Federal Resource Supply Co. received $36,703,480 for urban operation platoon sets (PDF) with enhanced capabilities for missions in complex or urbanized terrain.

FN Manufacturing, LLC received $84,600,000 for fabrication and delivery of M240 machine guns and spare receivers.

Mahaffey Tent & Awning Co. Inc. received $18,013,964 for life support services and equipment (generators, tents, lights, hand-wash stations, shower trailer) to support rotation-training units at JRTC and tenant unit training events at Fort Polk, LA.

Thomas Scientific, Inc. received $48,000,000 for laboratory supplies.

Utilis USA received $200,000,000 for commercial shelters.

Wegmann USA Inc. received $8,519,817 for ammunition stowage racks. This was a sole-source acquisition.  Wegmann USA Inc. received $8,050,882 for ammunition stowage racks. This was a sole-source acquisition.

CLOTHING

Altama Delta Corporation received $10,148,631 for Army hot weather combat boots. Rocky Brand, Inc. received $15,329,386 for hot weather combat boots.

Bethel Industries Inc. received $14,253,665 for USMC combat utility uniform (MCCUU) trousers.

Kandor Manufacturing, Inc. (Arecibo, Puerto Rico) received $6,788,486 and Short Bark Industries, Inc. received $11,011,544 for USMC combat utility uniform blouses.

Excel Manufacturing received $40,000,000 for flame resistant, type II, class I, utility coveralls.

EDUCATION & TRAINING

Lockheed Martin received $23,785,208 for one KC-130J weapon systems trainer.

Northrop Grumman received $23,800,000 for logistics (transportation, maintenance, and supply) at JRTC and Ft. Polk.

Raytheon received $12,280,367 to purchase Ships Mission Center shore trainer, crew training and support and prerequisite training materials.

Woolpert, Inc. received $10,000,000 for multidiscipline design and/or professional services for planning, design and construction in support of the DODEA program.

CBRNE

Battelle Memorial Institute received $13,048,856 for support services for CBRN detection, reconnaissance, protection and decontamination systems, and logistics.

FUEL & ENERGY

Dayton Power & Light Company received $27,331,546 for base-wide electricity service at Wright-Patterson AFB. This is a sole-source acquisition.

Entergy Arkansas Inc. received $9,667,141 to construct a distribution line, a distribution metering point for step-down transformers, and increase capacity at DeWitt substation by adding a 12/16/20 MVA step-up transformer to supply power to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Memphis District for Little Bayou Meto Pump Station.

Phillips 66 received $93,603,982 for aviation turbine fuel in Oklahoma and TX.

TXU Energy Retail Company received $53,280,484 for electricity in Texas.

MEDICAL & SAFETY

Barr Laboratories Inc. received $29,299,919 to supply Adenovirus vaccine type four and type seven. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Birmingham Industrial Construction and Robins & Morton JV; D Square Construction, LLC; ELA Group Inc.; Herman Construction Group, Inc.; Patriot Construction, LLC; Total Team Construction Services, Inc.; and Terra Construction, Inc. received $49,000,000 for healthcare facility repair/construction for U.S. Medical Command’s Western region.

BTL Technologies, Inc.; Loyal Source Government Services, LLC; MD Consulting, LLC; Vysnova Partners; Washington Harris Group, Inc.; and Wisestaff, LLC received a cumulative $96,732,599 for physician services at military treatment facilities in northeast USA.

BTL Technologies Inc.; Donald L. Mooney Enterprises LLC; Loyal Source Government Services LLC; Magnum Opus Technologies Inc.; Matrix Providers Inc.; and Vesa Health & Technology Inc. received $193,605,129.45 for ancillary services at military treatment facilities in northeast USA.

Computer Sciences Corp. received $11,688,190 for U.S. Army Reserve special medical training, equipment and site maintenance, and admin support associated with combat support hospitals.

CONMED Corporation received $9,500,000 for dental and medical equipment.

Diversified Technical Systems received $31,000,000 for engineering on the Warrior Injury Assessment Manikin (WIAMAN) program.

GE Healthcare received $43,200,000 for patient monitoring systems, subsystems, accessories, consumables, parts, and training.

IAP Worldwide Services, Inc.; General Dynamics; BTF Solutions JV; and Military Healthcare Outfitting & Transition received $30,000,000 for project support for planning, outfitting, and transitioning staff and patients associated with healthcare construction projects from 2010-2015.

Meridian Medical Technologies received $129,537,132 for nerve agent antidotes in auto-injectors.

The Resource Center received $10,000,000 for individualized first aid kits. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Skyline ULTD, Round Rock, Texas received $17,700,000 for case management medical support for the National Guard Bureau in Arlington, VA.

Sodexo Management, Inc. received $6,944,234 for qualified nutrition care management at Ft. Leonard Wood; Ft. Knox; Ft. Stewart; Ft. Sill; Ft. Riley; Ft. Jackson; West Point; Ft. Irwin; Ft. Sam Houston.

Veteran's Health received $45,000,000 for medical items and accessories. This was a sole-source acquisition.

TRANSPORTATION

American Technical Coatings, Inc. received $12,500,000 for insensitive munitions transportation protection systems.

Berg Manufacturing, Inc.; Sea Box, Inc.; and Maloy Mobile Storage, Inc. received $12,637,500 for shipping and storage containers.

Maersk Line, Ltd received $14,460,128 to provide MSC with 12-month charter of one U.S. flag, ice-class certified, double-hull product tanker, which provides bulk fuel support, including one delivery/year to Antarctica for the NSF and one/year to Greenland for DOD’s DLA-Energy.

Miramar Transportation, Inc. received $10,092,196 for the Navy Advanced Traceability & Control program, which provides freight transportation of repairable parts and items from point of failure to a repair facility (for USTRANSCOM Directorate of Acquisition).

ENVIRONMENTAL

Missouri Dept. of Conservation received $9,000,000 for work with the Missouri River Recovery Program. One bid solicited, one received.

Summit-TLI JV, LLC received $70,000,000 for environmental remediation with military munitions response program, for the Pueblo Chemical Depot. This is part of DOD’s Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) program.

FOOD SERVICES

Jianas Brothers Packaging Company received $14,278,245 for beverage base component items.

Northeast Military Sales, Inc. received $7,034,370 for in-store specialty delicatessen and bakery resale operations at 10 commissary stores in GA, FL, and Puerto Rico.

Roby's Country Gardens, Inc. received $12,201,175 for fruit and vegetables.

Reinhart Foodservice received $284,040,000 for food and beverages.

State Licensing Agency, Missouri Department of Social Services received $14,856,186 for food service in dining facilities at Ft. Leonard Wood.

Sysco received $17,500,000 for food and beverages in Virginia. Sysco received $8,250,000 for food and beverages. This was a sole-source acquisition.

U.S. Foods received $245,716,983 for prime vendor subsistence support.  U.S. Foods received $23,750,000 for prime vendor subsistence support. US Foods, Inc. received $11,250,000 for food and beverages. This was a sole-source acquisition.

Hata & Co., Ltd. received $12,296,477 and $6,778,151 for food and beverages in HI. Y. Hata & Co., Ltd. received $201,000,000 and $141,000,000 for food in HI.

BUDGET

Cotton & Company received $9,945,932 to conduct an audit of the U. S. Navy General Fund Schedule of Budgetary Activity for FY2015.

Ernst & Young LLP received $14,402,567 to help DOD Office of Inspector General to audit the Department of the Air Force General Fund Schedule of Budgetary Activity.

KPMG LLP received $13,011,077 for audit services for DOD Office of Inspector General, to audit the U.S. Army General Fund Schedule of Budgetary Activity.

KPMG LLP received $14,000,766 to provide management services, personnel, and documentation in support of agency financial audit for “federal civilian agencies.”

BASE SUPPORT, ADMIN & LOGISTICS - Base operations (also known as base support services) usually consist of a combination of: facility management & investment, fire & emergency services, grounds maintenance & landscaping, janitorial services, management & admin, pavement clearance, pest control, port operations, utilities, vehicles & equipment service, and waste management.

BAE Systems received $10,224,630 for providing Diminishing Manufacturing Sources and Material Shortages (DMSMS) predictive tool capability to help determine the state of program managed systems’ bill of material, identified items status, and their life cycle procurement efforts. This is a sole-source acquisition.

CACI-ISS, Inc. received $32,176,357 to procure a system integrator to develop and implement Increment II of the Integrated Personnel and Pay System - Army.

DZSP 21 LLC received $27,935,302 for base operations support services at Joint Region Marianas.

EMCOR Government Services, Inc. received $32,889,626 for regional base operating support services at facilities within a 100-mile radius of the Washington Navy Yard.

Fox RPM Corp. received $45,191,280 for furniture, fixtures, and equipment and services support at DISA locations worldwide.

PAE-Applied Technologies LLC received $43,490,040 for base operating support services at Vance AFB. This is a sole-source acquisition.

SAP National Security Services received $10,989,757 for maintenance of MSC’s current Sybase software license portfolio, as well as 5 years’ unlimited right to copy existing and new software licenses, and maintenance for these licenses.

Tapestry Solutions, Inc. received $48,388,243 for Global Decision Support System (GDSS) application support services.

Tinker Support Services JV received $49,999,999 for civil engineer services at Tinker AFB.

OVERSEAS CONSTRUCTION

Core Tech-AMEC-SKEC, LLC received $96,616,619 to build a reinforced concrete hangar at Andersen AFB, Guam.

DOMESTIC CONSTRUCTION

Alcan Builders received $12,374,710 to construct a battalion HQ at Ft. Wainwright.

Bell Contracting Inc. received $7,616,256 to repair the northwest end of the keel and non-keel sections of Runway 13/31 at Tinker AFB.

Brothers Body & Equipment received $35,452,994 for portable concrete mixers.

Bis Services LLC; Circle LLC; and Shavers-Whittle Construction LLC received $200,000,000 for armoring levees in greater New Orleans, LA.

Caterpillar received $12,385,700 for 40 Type I T-9 dozers with a kit and five D7R support tools and test equipment.

Cutter Enterprises received $10,488,500 to repair the aircraft maintenance hangar and construct an F-15 shop at Barnes ANG Base, Westfield, MA.

Elkins Constructors, Inc. received $35,704,700 for construction of the Bolden Elementary-Middle School at MCAS Beaufort.

Forest Products Distributors Inc. and S&S Forest Products LLC received $115,965,122 for wood products.

The Haskell Co. received $21,754,670 for design and construction of a helicopter operations facility at Joint Base Andrews.

  1. Fletcher Creamer & Son, Inc. received $29,314,441 for coastal storm damage reduction structures in Atlantic County, NJ.

Mississippi Limestone Corp. received $11,414,455 for Mississippi River and tributaries flood control employing articulated concrete mattress casting.

Norfolk Southern Railway Corp. received $7,735,000 for engineering and construction on the NT connection track (part of the Southeast Louisiana Flood Control Project -- SELA 26 Florida Avenue Phase IV project). One bid solicited, one received.

PentaCon, LLC received $14,909,900 to build waterfront operations facility at Naval Base Kitsap Bangor.

Reliable Contracting Group LLC received $8,417,693 for replacing the fuel pipeline at Tyndall AFB.

RQ Construction, LLC received $7,493,650 to repair G1-1A/1B supply and return system at Building 1H, Naval Medical Center San Diego.

Rore Inc. received $75,000,000 for construction projects in NAVFAC Northwest.

SC Engineers Inc. received $30,000,000 for mechanical, electrical and plumbing engineering related services in NAVFAC Southwest.

Speegle Construction, Inc. received $7,740,000 to construct a satellite dining facility at Cannon AFB.

Thalle Construction Company, Inc. received $24,187,735 for demolition and removal of existing Herbert Hoover Dike Culverts HP-2 and HP-3, and construction of new water control Structures S-286 and S-287 to replace the culverts in Moorehaven, FL.

Woodcrest Ace Hardware Inc. received $14,000,000 for consignment of industrial supplies for the Consolidated Material Service Center at Camp Pendleton.

Zieson Construction Co. received $8,344,501 to install a main sewer line to cover new construction/renovation in Ft. Leonard Wood.

DREDGING

Great Lakes Dredge & Dock received $128,169,974 for beachfill and completion of initial construction, from Barnegat Inlet to Little Egg Inlet, Long Beach Island, NJ.

Great Lakes Dredge & Dock received $25,637,000 for the Arthur Kill Channel Navigation project (includes dredging, blasting and disposal of rock in NJ and NY).

Great Lakes Dredge & Dock received $12,739,000 for maintenance dredging of the Wilmington Harbor inner ocean bar in NC.

Marinex Construction, Inc. received $18,389,996 for dredging of maintenance material from the Savannah and Brunswick Georgia inner harbors.

Manson Construction Co. received $19,228,000 for screening of dredge spoils for discarded munitions and radiological debris from Pier 12 demolition, replacement and dredging project at Naval Base San Diego.

Weeks Marine, Inc. received $7,537,000 to furnish one fully crewed and equipped cutterhead dredge to help maintain the Southwest Pass, LA.

Zieson Construction Co. received $14,313,443 to construct the AIT Complex II dining facility at Fort Leonard Wood.

# # # #

*Editing consolidated similar contracts. Italics indicate notes from the editor.

**Any clerical errors are the editor’s alone. Each month, Boiling Frogs Post presents a distillation of the previous month’s DOD Contracts. Check back regularly.

***To avoid competitive bidding, DOD invokes 10 U.S.C. 2304, FAR 6.302, and FAR 8.405-6. DOD also invokes 15 U.S.C. 638 to avoid competitive bidding when dealing with small businesses.

Christian Sorensen, a BFP Contributing Author & Analyst, is a U.S. military veteran. His writing has been featured in CounterPunch and Media Roots.

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