Air Force cancels failed $1B logistics program

Seven months after firing CSC from its Expenditionary Combat Support Systsem, Air Force shutters $1 billion program and decides to start over.

The Air Force has finally thrown in the towel, canceling a logistics contract after spending $1 billion and getting what it called “negligible” value, Federal Times is reporting.

Last March, the service fired its contractor on the project, Computer Sciences Corp., but continued to work on the project, known as the Expeditionary Combat Support System.

Now, it has come to the conclusion that it is better to start over rather than spending another $1.1 billion to meet a 2017 deadline for a system that can be audited, Federal Times reported.

The cancellation will cost the jobs of 115 contractors and the reassignment of 55 military and government employees.

A CSC spokeswoman told Washington Technology that the company’s work on the project ended in April, and that the cancellation doesn’t affect the company.

CSC won the contract in 2006 as a task order under the Enterprise Software Initiative blanket purchase agreement. The value of the task order was $628 million over eight years.

The project was to retire more than 400 legacy information systems, according to a CSC news release. The system was to support 250,000 users, managing $33 billion in assets at over 600 locations globally, according to CSC.

A CSC spokeswoman told Defense News in May that the company “demonstrated success in meeting all the major milestones and commitments for the first four years.” But she offered no explanation for problems after that.

In November 2010, the Air Force and CSC announced that the first portion of the system had been fielded successful.

“We are now at the point of putting capability into the field,” Brig. Gen. Kenneth J. Moran, Air Force program executive officer for the project, said in a CSC press release. The release came out after a pilot project had been completed at Hanscom Air Force Base.

In March 2011, the company announced that a second pilot had been successfully launched.

 

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