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SUBPART 207.1--ACQUISITION PLANS
(Revised October 25, 2000)
207.102 Policy.
When a class justification for other
than full and open competition has been approved, planning for competition
shall be accomplished consistent with the terms of that approval.
207.103 Agency-head responsibilities.
(B) Acquisitions for production or services when the total cost of all contracts for the acquisition program is estimated at $30 million or more for all years or $15 million or more for any fiscal year; and
(C) Any other acquisition considered appropriate by the department or agency.
(f) The program manager, or other official responsible for the program, has overall responsibility for acquisition planning.
(h)(i) Apply design-to-cost principles-
(B) To the acquisition of systems, subsystems, and components below the thresholds for major defense acquisition programs, to the extent prescribed by DoDD 5000.1.
(B) The date approval for operational use has been or will be obtained. If waivers are requested, describe the need for the waivers.
(C) A milestone chart depicting the acquisition objectives.
(D) Milestones for updating the acquisition plan. Indicate when the plan will be updated. Program managers should schedule updates to coincide with DAB reviews and the transition from one phase to another (e.g., engineering and manufacturing development to production and deployment).
(6) Product descriptions. For development acquisitions, describe the market research undertaken to identify commercial items, commercial items with modifications, or nondevelopmental items (see FAR Part 10) that could satisfy the acquisition objectives.
(13) Logistics considerations.
(ii) Discuss the mission profile, reliability, and maintainability (R&M) program plan, R&M predictions, redundancy, qualified parts lists, parts and material qualification, R&M requirements imposed on vendors, failure analysis, corrective action and feedback, and R&M design reviews and trade-off studies.
(iv) See DoDD 5000.1, Defense Acquisition, and DoD 5000.2-R, Mandatory Procedures for Major Defense Acquisition Programs (MDAPs) and Major Automated Information System (MAIS) Acquisition Programs, for procedures on standardization and on the DoD Parts Control Program. Also see DoD 4120.24-M, Defense Standardization Program (DSP) Policies and Procedures.
(S-70) Describe the extent of Computer-Aided Acquisition and Logistics Support (CALS) implementation (see MIL-HDBK 59, Department of Defense Computer-Aided Logistics Support (CALS) Program Guide, and MIL-STD-1840A, Automated Interchange of Technical Information.
(19) Other considerations.
(ii) The identification of items specified in paragraph (b)(18)(A)(1)(i) of this section that are available only from sources outside the national technology and industrial base.
(iii) The availability of alternatives for obtaining such items from within the national technology and industrial base if such items become unavailable from sources outside the national technology industrial base; and an analysis of any military vulnerability that could result from the lack of reasonable alternatives.
(iv) The effects on the national technology and industrial base that result from foreign acquisition of firms in the United States.
(3) The use of advanced manufacturing technology, processes, and systems during the research and development phase and the production phase of the program.
(4) To the maximum extent practicable, the use of contract solicitations that encourage competing offerors to acquire, for use in the performance of the contract, modern technology, production equipment, and production systems (including hardware and software) that increase the productivity of the offerors and reduce the life-cycle costs.
(5) Methods to encourage investment by U.S. domestic sources in advanced manufacturing technology production equipment and processes through-
(ii) Increased emphasis in source selection on the efficiency of production.
(7) Elimination of barriers to, and facilitation of, the integrated manufacture of commercial items and items being produced under DoD contracts.
(8) Expanded use of commercial items, commercial items with modifications, or to the extent commercial items are not available, nondevelopmental items (see FAR Part 10).
(2) If in the IP strategy, the development of a detailed IP plan was determined to be applicable, include the plan by text or by reference. If the development of the IP plan was determined not to be applicable, summarize the details of the analysis forming the basis of this decision.
(3) If the program involves peacetime and wartime hardware configurations which are supported by logistics support plans, identify their impact on the IP plan.
(D) Contract Administration. Discuss the level of Government administration anticipated or currently performed and any change proposed by the contract administration office.
(2) Proposals by the original supplier of the item or component to meet mobilization requirements are insufficient to meet the agency's mobilization needs; or
(3) The Government is otherwise entitled to unlimited rights in technical data.
