Feral Jundi

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Industry Talk: Pentagon To Track Assault Of Contractor Employees

Filed under: Industry Talk — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Matt @ 12:27 PM

   Excellent, but my question is what took you guys so long?  This war has been cranking along for over 8 years now, and  the government is finally tracking this stuff or caring? And what about tracking contractor deaths, or do you guys care about that? The machine of progress in government can be mind numbingly slow or even absent. I guess we should be thankful for whatever they can accomplish, but how long does it really take to apply some common sense policies? pffffft

   The next step though, is to actually act on that information that you get.  What will really impress me, is if the government gives the same attention, to third country nationals working for us, as they do to expats.  When a Ugandan guard is raped, or some Filipina working at the DEFAC is assaulted, is the DoD going to care about that and hold companies accountable for how they handle those incidents? Or do we only care about U.S. contractors? I guess local nationals would fall under the laws of their country, but is there any responsibility to report that stuff too?

    Who knows, and maybe we do track and care about all of these folks.  It would be the least we could do for the service that all of these contractors have given to the war effort. –Matt

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Pentagon to track assault of contractor employees

By KIMBERLY HEFLINGFriday, February 12, 2010

WASHINGTON — The sexual assault of employees of U.S. military contractors working in Iraq and Afghanistan will be tracked by the Pentagon under a system it is setting up.

The tracking will likely begin this year, Defense official Gail McGinn said in a memo to the Pentagon’s Inspector General included in a report released Friday.

The IG evaluation was initiated by a request from congressional members concerned that not enough protections were offered to U.S. contracting employees assaulted in the war zones. One of the most high profile cases was that of a Texas woman, J. L. Jones. Jones has sued Halliburton Co. and its former subsidiary KBR, saying she was gang raped while working for KBR in Iraq in 2005.

The IG also recommended the Pentagon develop plans to provide immediate help following assaults on contractor employees, which McGinn also said the Pentagon was developing plans to do.

The IG noted it found anecdotal evidence that contractors who reported being assaulted received medical and other assistance from military personnel.

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Saturday, February 6, 2010

Kidnap And Ransom: Contractor From California Kidnapped In Iraq

   I do not know who Issa works for, but I am sure it is one of the big companies that provide linguists to the DoD. It will be interesting to hear the official statement from the DoD on this one, and it sounds like they have been kind of hush about this.  Also, if you follow the link below, they have some video on the whole thing.

   Now what would really piss me off, is if the guys that captured Issa were any of the folks recently released from detention.  Over the last year or so, Iraq has been releasing hundreds of League of the Righteous members, and it would not surprise me if the guys running this show were one of those clown shoe wearing jihadist dorks that have just gained their freedom.-Matt

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Contractor

El Cajon man kidnapped in Iraq

Friday, February 5, 2010

Officials identified an El Cajon resident Friday who went missing in Iraq while working as a civilian contractor, just as video of the man was released by his alleged abductors.

Issa Salomi, 60, went missing on Jan. 23 in Baghdad. He was working with the U.S. Forces as a civilian employee, according to the Department of Defense.

A video found on an Iraqi web site Friday showed Salomi sitting in front of a flag with what appeared to be Arabic writing on it.

In the two-minute video, Salomi details demands from his abductors, including the punishment of employees of the Blackwater company, which is accused in crimes against Iraqi citizens.

A search and recovery effort was underway to find Salomi, the DOD said.

Story here.

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Publications: DoD’s Use Of PSC’s In Afghanistan Doubles In Four Months!!

Filed under: Afghanistan,Publications — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 8:27 AM

DOD’s Use of PSCs is Iraq and Afghanistan 012010 R40835

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Industry Talk: The Cost Of Compliance Is About To Increase

   Excellent.  The government/customer has every right in the world to demand accountability from the people they are contracting with.  This is like a large scale version of my Three Strikes Principle.  First you give them a warning to clean up their act, then if they don’t do that, then take a days pay or fine them, and if they still can’t get it right, then fire them.  Just pull the trigger and end the contract, because obviously the company could care less about providing a quality service. If the government does not have the courage to at least exercise their right as the customer in this deal, then of course they are going to continue to get screwed over. It’s the tax payer’s money you are playing with, the least you can do is actually care that it is wisely spent. –Matt

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The Cost of Compliance is About to Increase

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

The Defense Department has proposed a new regulation that they say is designed to improve the effectiveness of DoD oversight of contractor business systems – Defense is going to withhold funds on cost reimbursable (and other flexibly priced) contracts until contractors fix their inadequate business systems. The withholds begins at 10 percent and could go as high as 100 percent under certain circumstances (though the higher figure seems highly unlikely). Withholds affect cash flow and disrupting cash flow will certainly get contractors’ attention.

Over the next few days, we will provide analysis and comment on what this regulation portends for Defense contractors. To state that it will represent a very significant change in the way the Government does business is a huge understatement.

Currently, contractors bear no direct consequences for inadequate business systems. When deficiencies are identified, contractors are allowed time to fix those deficiencies. There is no perscribed timetable for effecting corrections nor does the Government withhold any billings until changes are made. After corrective actions are implemented, the Government (usually the auditor) has no prescribed timeframe for determining whether the actions have been effective in correcting the deficiencies. Many times, these deficiencies are “on the books” for years without any permanent resolution. Under the proposed regulations, there are very tight timetables for implementing corrective actions.

The propsed regulations set forth certain criteria for adequate business systems. Some are very objective while others are highly subjective. For example, there are 17 criteria for an adequate accounting system. One criteria is the system must be capable of segregating preproduction costs from production costs. This functionality is built in to most moden accounting software and is easy ot audit. It is basically a yes/no answer. However, other requirements are very subjective. One such subjective requirement is the contractor must conduct periodic monitoring of the system, as appropriate. What does that mean? How often is “periodic”? What is entailed in the term “monitoring”? What does the term “as appropriate” mean? These are very subjective elements and contractors are going to experience the vagaries of auditor judgement when the auditors come in to test for compliance with this standard.

The ten business systems covered by this new regulation include

Accounting systems

Estimating systems

Purchasing systems

Earned Value Management Systems (EVMS)

Material Management and Accounting Systems (MMAS)

Property management systems (Government property held by contractors)

Story here.

Full text of new regulations here.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Medical: DoD to Require H1N1 Flu Vaccinations for All Active Duty, But What About the 243,735 Contractors?

Filed under: Medical,Military News — Tags: , , , , , , — Matt @ 12:09 AM

Hachey said he expects DOD to begin administering the vaccine in the first half of October. The department has purchased 2.7 million doses, according to Hachey.

He said the vaccine will also be available to DOD civilians and military family members who want it.

***** 

   Interesting news, but I kind of would like to hear how the DoD plans to vaccinate all the contractors in the war as well?  Because after all, there are now more contractors than troops in places like Afghanistan, and each one of those contractors could easily pick up the flu at home and bring it back to the war zone they are working at and infect others.

   Now the DoD did mention they would offer the vaccine to ‘DoD civilians’, but what does that mean?  Is that all contractors, or just the ones that directly work for DoD at the PX’s and stuff?  I think this needs to be clarified, if H1N1 is truly a concern to the government?  I would like to hear a separate statement about what the DoD plans are for contractors.

   This flu could also impact the war effort, because if a bunch of contractors pick up H1N1 because they were not protected, and then took it back to a war zone and passed it on to the local populations, then that could be bad.  Especially if it got out that the foreigners ‘killed my brother’ by infecting him with H1N1. The Taliban or Al Qaeda could have a field day with this kind of stuff for propaganda purposes.  It is something to think about for the war planners out there, that’s if H1N1 is really a concern to the DoD. –Matt

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DOD to require H1N1 flu vaccinations for all active-duty personnel

By Jennifer H. Svan, Stars and StripesFriday, September 4, 2009

Starting this fall, all active-duty personnel will be required to get vaccinated against the H1N1 flu virus, Defense Department officials announced this week.

Health care workers, deploying troops, those serving on ships and submarines, and enlistees are among those who will get the vaccination first, said Army Dr. (Lt. Col.) Wayne Hachey, director of preventive medicine for Defense Department health affairs.

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