property management jonathan landwer, fund 400 assembling order from chaos
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Property ManagementJonathan Landwer, FUND 400
Assembling Order from Chaos
GFE
CAP
Govern
ment F
urnish
ed Property
Federal Acquisition Regulation
DoD Registry
IUID
Unique Item
Construct #1
Portal
Contractor Acquired Property
TaggingLabeling
PolyesterLife Expectancy
Property Administrator
Contracting Officer
Representative
Parent-Child-
Grandchildren
Audit
Assist
Audit
Serialization
dd250
dd1149
Title
Hasten slowly
Deep Breath
Do Not Panic
Seek Cooperation
Look for a Handle
Be Consistent and Systematic
Rene Descartes
Accept nothing as true
Assess volume-
don’t panic
Split problem
into manageab
le parts
Solve problem starting
with simple to complex
Review-Reexamine solutions
Accept nothing as true
Assess volume-don’t
panic
Split problem into
manageable parts
Solve problem starting
with simple to complex
Review/Reexamin
e solutions
Assess volume-don’t
panic
Volume is not a function of complexity
Assess volume-don’t
panicCraig Venter-Celera GenomicsHuman Genome Project-2007DNA Base Pair
Alan Turing-father of artificial Intelligence/Computer ScienceBinary Code
Break the task down to its component parts.
1. Contract2. Government Equipment3. FAR/DFARS4. Inventory5. Reporting
Is this your desk? Or your Program Manager’s?
Program Manager,“I’m so glad they found someone to help with this. Welcome to the project. I think… this is the property file.”
You,“When is the last time you updated your GFE?”
Program Manager,“Huh? Updated it?”
You,“Is that a slide rule on your desk?”
Program Manager,“I know it looks like a mess but I know exactly where everything is.”
You,“Right. I just need the reconciled files for the Vector 10 project with the latest list of GFE and CAP.”
Program Manager.“Reconciled? CAP?
Audit Direction• DCAA-Defense Contract Audit Agency• Contracting Officer/Contracting Officer Representative• Accounting Policy and Procedure
• System Audits• Contract Audits• Materials Audit
• Accounting and Financial Advisory Services
Audit Direction
• DCMA-Defense Contract Management Agency• Contracting Officer/Contracting Officer
Representative• ACO/Property Administrator• CPSR (Subpart 44.3)/• PMSA (Subpart 245.105)• Perpetual Audit• Record keeping• Reporting• General Management
FAR-DFARS• Federal Acquisition Regulations• FAR Website• Part 45.1• Part 52.244
• Defense Federal Acquisition Regulations Supplement• DFARS Website• Subpart 245• Subpart 252.103-211
Definitions
Contractor-Acquired Property (CAP) is defined as property acquired or otherwise provided by the contractor for the performing of a contract and to which the Government has or will hold title
Definitions• Disposal is the disposition of any property that is no longer of any need
or value to the contract (yet may retain some intrinsic value) and is characterized as Lost, Stolen, Damaged, or Destroyed (LSDD) and shall include the following:
• Reusable-• any item of GFP previously reported that is no longer needed or required
by the contract yet retains value. Items that are reusable include items that may be inoperable but repairable.
• Scrap-• any items that have previously been reported that are of no further value
other than scrap (i.e., unused wire spools, broken items, obsolete items). • Hazardous Waste-• any previously reported tangible item, solid or liquid, that requires special
disposal due to its hazardous nature being a potential environmental or health threat.
Definitions
Government Contracting Officer is the contract’s Government-appointed individual who has authority to grant/deny any changes in GFP/CAP inventory, to include authorizing a DD250 for transfer of property to the Government, authorizing transfer of GFP to/from TSM, and/or authorizing the disposal of GFP.Property Administrator/ is an appointed DCMA individual assigned to TSM who has the authority to conduct Property System Management Review’s on a periodic basis for any and all contracts with property associated with it..
Definitions• Property in the Possession of the Contractor (PIPC) is defined as tangible personal
property, to which the Government has title, which is in the stewardship, possession, or controlled by the contractor for the performance of a contract. PIPC consists of both tangible GFP and CAP and includes:
Equipment- • A tangible article of personal property that is complete in-and-of-itself, durable,
nonexpendable, and needed for the performance of a contract. Equipment generally has an expected life of one year or more, and does not ordinarily lose its identity or become a component part of another article when put into use. It includes Special Tooling, Special Test Equipment, and other controlled internal use items (formerly classified as Industrial Plant Equipment (IPE), Other Plant Equipment (OPE) and Agency Peculiar Property (APP) furnished to a contractor for use on a contract. It does not include material or repairable items.
Material – • Property that may be consumed or expended during the performance of a contract,
component parts of a higher assembly, or items that lose their individual identity through incorporation into an end-item. Material does not include Equipment, Special Tooling, Special Test Equipment, or repairables.
Definitions• Real Property includes land and improvements to land, known
as facilities (buildings, structures, or linear structures). It includes equipment affixed and built into the facility as an integral part of the facility (such as heating systems), but does not include movable equipment (i.e., plant equipment, industrial equipment, or systems furniture).
• Repairable Item is an item of supply subject to economical repair, for which repair (accomplished under a repair contract) is considered in satisfying computed requirements at any inventory level. A major end item (aircraft, ship, combat vehicle, etc.) is not normally considered a repairable item. Examples of repairable items include, but are not limited to, aircraft engines, rotors, guidance systems, and electronic circuit boards.
Definitionshttps://www.acquisition.gov/far/
.pdf format
• All definitions are easily obtainable in • FAR 45.1• FAR 52.211• DFARS 245.
FAR/DFARS/DoD Requirements for Labeling
Figure 2. Sample MIL-STD-130 “Construct #1” Property Label
Make it Work
Senior Management Program Management
Contracts
Procurement
ACO/PA
It is said of Augustus that when he came to power, Rome was a city of sundried bricks, and when he left it was a Metropolis of Marble.
Accept nothing as true
Assess volume-don’t
panic
Split problem into manageable
parts
Solve problem starting with
simple to complex
Review/Re examine solutions
Take Ownership
• Understand your responsibility
• Limit access to records
• Maintain close contact with PM, Site Leads, Procurement and Contracts
• Updates periodically
• Keep open lines to your PA
• Conduct physical audits annually (min)
• Work your way into contract briefings
No Fear Audits
OverconfidentConcilliatoryPragmatic
Cooperation
References
1. Sandra Tompson Issa 2009 An Approach to Teaching Organizational Skills to Adults, English Teaching Forum 2009, Volume 47, Bureau of Educational and
Cultural Affairs, US Department of State.
2. Abigal Cash, Organizational Skills: Recommendations for Teachers of Students with Organizational Problems, Practical Recommendations and
Interventions, www.udel.edu/education/, obtained May 2, 2012.
3. Federal Acquistion Regulations (FAR) https://www.acquisition.gov/far/
4. Defense Aquistion Regulation Supplimnet (DFARS) http://www.acq.osd.mil/dpap/dars/dfarspgi/current/index.html
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