Toronto Star

Boeing refuses to give cost data to U.S.

Pentagon is under pressure to assure lawmakers it’s getting the best price from suppliers

- TONY CAPACCIO

Boeing Co. refused to give the Pentagon cost data for almost 11,000 replacemen­t parts over the course of a year, according to a U.S. congressio­nally mandated report intended to shine a light on some military contractor­s’ opaque pricing data.

The data denials for 10,659 items under a single contract accounted for 97 per cent of such refusals by contractor­s during negotiatio­ns from October 2020 through September 2021, according to a previously undisclose­d Pentagon assessment submitted to U.S. House and Senate defence committees.

Boeing’s “refusal to provide basic transparen­cy on cost and pricing informatio­n represents a breach of the company’s duty to government, taxpayers and our service members,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Rep. John Garamendi, Democratic members of the Senate and House armed services committees, wrote in a letter to Boeing chief executive officer David Calhoun.

Boeing, one of the Pentagon’s top contractor­s, had no immediate comment on the letter or on the Defence Department report obtained by Bloomberg.

The lawmakers described Boeing as a “particular­ly bad actor,” saying it gave “absurd and unacceptab­le” reasons for not providing the data. Warren and Garamendi demanded Boeing provide answers about its policies by June 12.

“All 10,659 items reported by the Air Force were associated with Boeing Defense Space and Security and Boeing Global Services, under a single contract action,” according to the report. The contract in question wasn’t identified.

Until now, the debate over refusals to provide cost data focused on a much smaller company that specialize­s in providing spare parts to the military, TransDigm Group Inc.

It accounted for the other three per cent of such refusals in the new report. A long-running dispute over TransDigm’s resistance to providing data prompted the request for the report ordered by Congress.

The lawmakers also wrote a similar letter to TransDigm chief executive officer Kevin Stein, citing his company’s failure to provide data on 275 items. “We look forward to meeting with Sen. Warren to address her questions,” TransDigm said in a statement.

The Pentagon is under pressure to demonstrat­e it’s a good steward of tax dollars because its fiscal 2024 budget request, adjusted for inflation, is the largest in decades. The procuremen­t request is also the largest ever.

The Warren-Garamendi letters and the Pentagon report raises questions about the military’s ability to get the best prices for parts, especially when faced with solesource suppliers like Boeing and TransDigm that refuse to provide pricing data for a number of reasons. Senior military contractin­g officers approved the contracts despite the denial of data because the parts were considered vital.

The legislator­s also wrote Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin asking for informatio­n about what steps his department is taking to prevent “price-gouging when companies refuse to provide requested cost or pricing data.”

A Pentagon spokespers­on didn’t have an immediate comment.

The Pentagon report said officials believe “the problem in obtaining substantia­ting informatio­n from contractor­s to support fair and reasonable price determinat­ions may be more prevalent than what is represente­d in this report.” Acquisitio­n officials have “stressed to the military department­s and defence agencies the importance of reporting data denials,” it said.

U.S. lawmakers described Boeing as a ‘particular­ly bad actor,’ saying it gave ‘absurd and unacceptab­le’ reasons for not providing the data

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