Showing posts with label U.S. AIR FROCE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U.S. AIR FROCE. Show all posts

Monday, February 10, 2014

U.S. DEFENSE DEPARTMENT CONTRACTS FOR FEBRUARY 10, 2014

FROM:  DEFENSE DEPARTMENT 
CONTRACTORS
CONTRACTS
DEFENSE LOGISTICS AGENCY

Vermilion Valley Produce Company Inc.*, Danville, Ill., has been awarded a maximum $12,937,595 fixed-price with economic-price-adjustment contract for fresh fruit and vegetable support.  This contract is a competitive acquisition, and four offers were received.  This is an 18-month base contract with two 18-month option periods.  Locations of performance are throughout Illinois with an Aug. 9, 2018 performance completion date.  Using military services are Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, and Department of Agriculture schools.  Type of appropriation is fiscal 2014 defense working capital funds.  The contracting activity is the Defense Logistics Agency Troop Support, Philadelphia, Pa., (SPE300-14-D-P246).

Racoe, Inc.**, Celina, Tenn., has been awarded a maximum $8,709,452 modification (P00009) exercising the first option year on a one-year base contract (SPM1C1-13-D-1022) with four one-year option periods for Marine Corps combat utility uniform trousers.  This is a firm-fixed-price, indefinite-quantity contract.  Locations of performance are Tennessee and Mississippi with a Feb. 13, 2015 performance completion date.  Using military service is Marine Corps.  Type of appropriation is fiscal 2014 through fiscal 2015 defense working capital funds.  The contracting activity is the Defense Logistics Agency Troop Support, Philadelphia, Pa.

AIR FORCE

Alion Science and Technology Corp., McLean, Va., has been awarded a $12,851,147 modification (P00116) on an existing cost-plus-award-fee and cost-reimbursable contract (FA7014-07-C-0009) value estimated at $970,000,000 for technical and analytical support.  This contract provides the following acquisition support services:  programmatic analyses; policy analyses; budget analyses; administrative technical support; facilities engineering services; business reengineering analyses; database development; internet/intranet development; software application development; legislative analyses; engineering/technical consulting support; and acquisition consulting services.  Government customers include the assistant secretary of the Air Force for acquisition, Joint Strike Fighter Program Office, SAF/FML (Congressional), Air Force Program Executive Office, Aircraft & Space Launch, Air Force Life Cycle Management Center, the Air Force Scientific Advisory Board and other Headquarters Air Force organizations.  This modification rebaselines the current program for the last option period four (Jan. 1 2013 through July 31, 2015) and reinstitutes the original, intended period of performance to Jan. 1, 2001 through Dec. 31, 2015, increasing the estimate.  Option period four was exercised and announced in 2012; however, due to the period of performance extension as a result of the rebaselining effort, this announcement is reporting new work.  Work will be performed at Arlington, Va., and Washington, D.C., and is expected to be completed by Dec. 31, 2015.  The following fund types will be incrementally funded onto this contract:  Air Force research and development, procurement, operations and maintenance and foreign military sales to Israel, Japan, Korea, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, and Spain.  The Air Force District of Washington Contracting Directorate, Strategic Sourcing Division, Joint Base Andrews, Md., is the contracting activity.

ARMY

HELLFIRE SYSTEMS, LLC, Orlando, Fla., was awarded a $157,362,903 modification (P00068) to firm-fixed-price contract W31P4Q-11-C-2042, to exercise option for fiscal 2014 Hellfire II missile production requirements.  This contract involves foreign military sales to Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Indonesia.  Fiscal years 2012, 2013 and 2014 funds in the amount of $157,362,903 are being obligated on award.  The performance location is Orlando, Fla., with an estimated completion date of Nov. 30, 2016.  The U.S. Army Contracting Command – Redstone Arsenal (Missile), Redstone, Ala., is the contracting activity.

Weeks Marine, Inc., Covington, La., was awarded a $9,570,000 firm-fixed-price contract for work consisting of furnishing one fully crewed and equipped ‘cutterhead’ dredge, with a dredge discharge size of 30-inches inside diameter complete in all respects, including all attendant plant and crew.  Fiscal 2014 operations and maintenance funds in the amount of $9,570,000 are being obligated on award.  The contract was solicited via the Web with two bids received.  The performance location is Pilottown, La., with an estimated completion date of July 25, 2014.  The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers – New Orleans District, New Orleans, La., is the contracting activity (W912P8-14-C-0023).

U.S. SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND

Oregon Iron Works, Inc., of Clackamas, Oregon was one of two companies previously awarded indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract H92222-11-D-0080 in September 2011 in support of the Combatant Craft Medium Mark One (CCM Mk1). The CCM Mk I Program is an  acquisition program to develop, test, produce, field, and sustain a modern, clandestine, agile, adaptive, technically relevant, reliable, and operationally capable combatant craft system in support of U.S. Special Operations Command.  The government has tested and evaluated the test articles provided by the two Phase II CCM Mk 1 awardees during Phase III of this evaluation, evaluated final proposal revisions and has made a final down select decision awarded to Oregon Iron Works, Inc.  The total IDIQ contract ceiling, previously announced, remains $400,000,000, and the period of performance inclusive of all options and ordering periods is through December 2021.  Funds in the amount of $17,500,290 will be obligated at this time for test article refurbishment as well as support the purchase of long lead items and low rate initial production  units.  The majority of the work will be performed in Clackamas, Oregon.  This contract was originally solicited through the Web as a 100 percent set aside for small business in accordance with Federal Acquisition Regulation 19.502-2 with six proposals received.  U.S. Special Operations Command, Tampa, Fla., is the contracting activity.

*Small Business
** Small Business, In HubZone, Woman Owned

Monday, November 26, 2012

WOUNDED WARRIOR DINNER


FROM: U.S. AIR FROCE
Individual mobilization augmentees Tech. Sgt. Lacey Smith (right) and Master Sgt. Mel Reich (left) smile for a photo with Vice President of the United States Joseph Biden during the Wounded Warrior Dinner Nov. 19 in Washington, D.C. Smith received the dinner invitation from Reich due to Lacey's dogged assistance over the last year tackling the member's medical issues. The vice president and his wife, Jill, host this annual event which honors wounded warriors being treated at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center and their families who are unable to leave the DC area for Thanksgiving. (Courtesy photo)

Saturday, June 23, 2012

MODERN COMBAT TRAINING: INSTRUCTING THE INSTRUCTORS


FROM:  U.S. AIR FORCE
Lt. Col. Tim Thurston attempts to pin down Staff Sgt. Mark Velasquez during a grappling drill at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas, June 12, 2012. Soldiers taught the Modern Army Combatives Program course to instructors from Air Force Basic Military Training and the security forces technical training school in an effort to improve combatives training at Lackland. Thurston is the commander of the 322nd Training Squadron and Velasquez is a security forces technical training instructor with the 343rd TRS. (U.S. Air Force photo/Alan Boedeker) 
AF instructors learn modern Army combatives skills 
by Mike Joseph
Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland Public Affairs

6/22/2012 - JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO-LACKLAND, Texas (AFNS) -- After spending five days in a joint combatives "train the trainer" course, Air Force participants gained a valuable benefit in becoming certified to teach both Modern Army Combatives and Basic Air Force Combatives:

"Confidence," said Lt. Col. Tim Thurston, the 322nd Training Squadron commander -- This was a reaction echoed by others who participated in the Modern Army Combatives Program Level I course last week here.

Instilling self-assurance in those who teach combatives in Air Force Basic Military Training and security forces technical training was a top priority for the course instructors. They anticipate self-confidence to become a byproduct of the technique teaching process.

"It's all about confidence -- that's the end goal," said Tech. Sgt. William Rider, of the 319th TRS, who oversees the basic training combatives program. "We have a limited (three-hour)combatives program right now in BMT. We're establishing an expanded program in the future so when Airmen go to technical school or a base with a combatives program, they already have the knowledge of basic body positioning and grappling."

Army Staff Sgt. Torrey Spence, the Army III Corps combatives program assistant NCO in charge at Fort Hood, Texas, was one of two Army instructors who taught the course. He, too, emphasized the self-confidence Airmen will gain when the newly certified instructors begin implementing the program.

"The main thing we stress about the basic combatives course, whether it's Air Force or Army, is the Airman or Soldier has to have confidence to do these techniques," Spence said. "This course gives them that. We call it reality-based training -- train like you fight.

"Along with the confidence, it builds the warrior ethos," he said. "The definition of a warrior is the willingness to go the distance in a fight. We want every Airman or Soldier to have that."

A majority of the 17 participants in the course were military training instructors as basic training prepares to expand its combatives course.

"Col. (Glenn) Palmer's) intent is to have a realistic and safe combatives program," Rider said, referring the 737th Training Group commander. "He wants something for Airmen because we teach warrior ethos and because of the joint mission. We'd like a program in place to give them physical conditioning and the grappling experience, which creates unnatural and uncomfortable positions."

The Army program teaches how to control the range between fighters, gain and maintain a dominant body position, and to finish the fight when a dominant body position has been established. Participants were taught hand-to-hand techniques to create space and engage with a primary weapon, how to maintain space and employ a secondary weapon, and how to achieve a dominant clinch position.

"After taking this course, you not only have confidence in your teammates, you have self-confidence to defend yourself," Thurston said. "We are the best fighting force in the world because we believe we are. What we've learned in this training, we can pass down. It will make us a better fighting force."

Staff Sgt. Jesse Armstrong, one of three 343rd TRS instructors who took the course, said it will be beneficial to students in security forces technical training.

"It gives me the confidence to know I'm teaching students the right way, to help them not just learn the moves, but if it happens to them they will know how to react," Armstrong said. "It's given me a boost of confidence to know I can go into a hand-to-hand fight and win or come out on top.

"By starting this training at tech school, I think, as it spreads out, it's going to help every security forces squadron," she said.

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