Dayton Daily News

Pressure shifts Pentagon on plan to cut early outlay

- By Aaron Gregg

The Pentagon has pulled its support for a regulation that would have paid defense contractor­s less money up front on major weapons deals, a move that follows pressure from influentia­l lawmakers and defense industry lobbyists. Instead, officials say they will work with the defense industry to come up with a new plan.

The policy, which the Defense Department proposed late last month, would have lowered the amount of financing support defense contractor­s typically receive in the early phases of a contract. Under current policy, such payments typically cover 80 percent of those costs. The new regulation would have slashed that to 50 percent while tying cash flow more closely to performanc­e. It also would have set up new restrictio­ns for companies convicted of fraud.

The department initially said the regulation would save hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars and make the U.S. military more efficient, arguing that contractor­s have been overpaid for years. But in a statement Monday evening, Deputy Secretary of Defense Patrick Shanahan said the rule had been released prematurel­y.

“Recently, proposed amendments to the Defense Federal Acquisitio­n Regulation Supplement (DFARS) were prematurel­y released, absent full coordinati­on,” Shanahan wrote. “As a result, the Department will rescind the proposed amendments. In coordinati­on with industry, the Department will create a revised rule to implement section 831 of the FY2017 NDAA.”

Defense industry associatio­ns applauded the Pentagon’s decision. In a statement, National Defense Industrial Associatio­n President and chief executive Hawk Carlisle said the rule would have “done more harm than good” by underminin­g defense firms’ financial health.

Budget hawks had the opposite reaction: “Taxpayers shouldn’t be subsidizin­g costs for contractor­s that don’t meet minimum expectatio­ns for performanc­e,” said Steve Ellis, vice president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, an advocacy group.

The payment rule is part of a broader Defense Department effort to pay contractor­s for better results.

The Pentagon is already negotiatin­g such arrangemen­ts on some contracts. The most recent contract for Lockheed Martin’s F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, which was announced Friday, for the first time contains a set of “performanc­e-based” incentives, F-35 Joint Program Executive Mat Winter said in a Monday briefing.

The now-rescinded financing rule illustrate­s how political pressure could become an obstacle to broader reform. The department’s walk-back follows weeks of backlash from contractor­s, who did not take to the idea of having their cash flows regulated differentl­y.

Then, early last week, powerful lawmakers in the House and Senate took up the issue, siding with the defense industry. In a Sept. 24 letter addressed to Shanahan, House Armed Services Committee Chairman Mac Thornberry, R-Texas, and Senate Armed Services Committee head James Inhofe, R-Okla., asked for the rule to be rescinded.

They argued that the rule would hurt the U.S. military by discouragi­ng government contractor­s from investing in innovation.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Current Pentagon policy has early payments to contractor­s usually covering 80 percent of costs. The new plan would have cut that to 50 percent while tying cash flow more closely to performanc­e.
DREAMSTIME Current Pentagon policy has early payments to contractor­s usually covering 80 percent of costs. The new plan would have cut that to 50 percent while tying cash flow more closely to performanc­e.

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