The Government Accountability
Office's stinging rebuke of the Air Force tanker competition last week was so
sweeping that some observers say a new award may not be made for years.
That would be very unfortunate, because the 500 Eisenhower-era tankers in the
force comprise the oldest large fleet of jets in the world. There's no
way of knowing how long they will last, and the joint force depends on having
aerial refueling capabilities around the globe on a daily (indeed hourly)
basis. So instead of engaging in an extended post-mortem, policymakers
need to fix the problem fast. Looking at the five evaluation factors used
in the competition, it is clear what changes need to be made.
Mission capability was
the factor weighed most heavily in comparing the two proposals, and it should
continue to occupy center stage. But GAO says evaluators did not apply
capability measures as stated in the original request for proposals, and thus
misled offerors as to what features would elicit the best scores.
This is a simple problem to fix -- not by developing new capability
metrics, but by finding competent evaluators to apply the existing ones.
If re-competition is used as a pretext for drafting revised metrics,
it will introduce new uncertainty into a process that must be brought to
closure.
Proposal risk was the second most highly ranked metric in the
competition. The Air Force found the two proposals had equal risk, but
only after forcing Boeing to raise the cost of developing its
tanker. GAO says that insisting on such an increase was unwarranted
because there was no evidence Boeing's cost estimates were unrealistic.
That finding seems to suggest that the Air Force assesses lower risk when
companies spend more money on a project, even if there is no demonstrable need
to spend the additional funds. The service will need to recalibrate how
it measures risk.
Past performance was the third evaluation factor used, and it has proven to
be a useful indicator of contractor competence in other competitions.
Boeing was judged inferior to the Northrop Grumman team even though it
built all the tankers in the current fleet, based on a comparison of more
recent programs with characteristics similar to the envisioned future
tanker. GAO did not question the application of this factor in
its press release, implying that only minor adjustments may be
needed. The offerors can propose that different past programs be
used to rate their performance in the re-competition.
Cost/price was the fourth evaluation factor employed, although the Air
Force always insisted it was less important than the previous three. The
Air Force conceded errors in calculating the ownership
costs of the competing planes prior to the GAO report, and the report
found additional basis for doubt in the service's estimate of what development
and construction expenditures would be required by the two
proposals. These problems can be corrected through more rigorous application
of cost methodology.
Integrated Fleet Air
Refueling Assessment was a complex
computer simulation of operational performance used as the final evaluation
factor, and it appears to have been the most flawed. Like other
analytic tools employed by the military to model operational outcomes, it is
only as good as the assumptions made at the outset, and in the case of the
tanker competition those assumptions were not realistic. GAO did not
attempt to assess the intricacies of how the model was applied, but
if the Air Force wants to avoid another protest in the future, it needs to make
the model conform more closely to real-world conditions, such as the actual
characteristics and likely availability of wartime bases.