Team Sequestered At Wright-Patterson AFB
The US Air Force tells ANN the jury
is still out on which aircraft will win a lucrative contract for a
new tanker. The Air Force source selection evaluation team is hard
at work pouring over industry proposals for the KC-X program, the
replacement for the Air Force's aging KC-135 strategic refueling
aircraft.
The evaluation team, comprised of a broad spectrum of
acquisition and operational professionals, is currently sequestered
at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH... carefully evaluating the
proposals submitted in April 2007. As ANN reported, a team led
by Northrop Grumman and EADS submitted a tanker variant of the
Airbus A330 commercial airliner; Boeing submitted a variant of its own 767 for
bid.
"I have an Air Force-wide, hand-picked team of more than 150
experts reviewing every aspect of these proposals," said Mr. Terry
Kasten, Director, 653rd Aeronautical Systems Squadron (AESS),
WPAFB. "When the dust settles, we'll have spent many tens of
thousands of man-hours scrubbing the content of these proposals,
conducting a legal review and preparing summary information for
both an independent advisory council assessment and ultimately a
source selection authority decision. The depth and breadth of this
team is very impressive: our 13 evaluation team leaders have nearly
200 years of combined acquisition experience."
Stressing the importance of this program to the Air Force,
Kasten says he also has a full-time, dedicated legal staff to
ensure every "i" is dotted and every "t" is crossed.
"I also have a direct line to Senior Air Force legal and
contracting advisors to answer questions, capture lessons from
other programs, including the recent experience with the CSAR-X
source selection, and ensure we do everything by the book," Kasten
said.

The source selection process is rigorous, requiring months of
preparation and several more months of evaluation in a tightly
controlled environment. Prior to official source selection start,
the KC-X program had continuous dialogue with industry. This
dialogue continues through the evaluation process.
"We have transitioned to a very formal and structured process
governing dialog with our industry partners in this stage of the
process," said Mr. Joe Leising, Contracts Chief for the 653rd AESS,
"but that doesn't mean that we cut off all contact. We have a
structured feedback channel with industry and they receive periodic
proposal specific updates of our evaluation progress."
Ever mindful of the possibility of a protest given the size of
the KC-X program, "The program office is being extra cautious in
ensuring that each step of the source selection process is
thoroughly documented," Leising said.

"This acquisition program has been extremely thoroughly vetted
within the Air Force and the Department of Defense," said Lt. Gen.
Jack Hudson, Air Force Program Executive Officer for Aircraft,
WPAFB. "We have the full support of Air Force and DoD senior
leadership. Our leadership is very aware of our efforts and they
have ensured we proceed in a deliberate and transparent manner,
every step of the way, so that at the end of the day we have a
program in which we all have high confidence that we can execute
successfully."