US military contracting announcements
alphabetized – fiscal 2023, first quarter (Oct-Dec 2022):
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381
Constructors, Omaha, Nebraska, $14,532,579 (brings total cumulative contract
value to $1,838,390,963) for
provision and operation of a bubble curtain system to protect marine mammals
during in-water construction re: ongoing P381 Multi-Mission Dry Dock #1
Extension at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery Maine.
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5 corporations [Jacobs, Arlington, Virginia (W912DS-23-D-0001);
AECOM-HDR JV Design Team JV, Clifton, New Jersey (W912DS-23-D-0002);
Dewberry-GF USACE NAN Riverine JV Partners, Fairfax, Virginia
(W912DS-23-D-0003); CDM Smith-Arcadis-Wsp Triventure, New York, New York (W912DS-23-D-0004); GEI
Consultants, Woburn, Massachusetts (W912DS-23-D-0005)] $80,000,000 for
general architect-engineering services for USACE New York, New York.
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5 corporations [Richard Manufacturing Co., Ogden, Utah
(FA8232-23-D-0002); Interconnect Wiring LLP, Fort Worth, Texas
(FA8232-23-D-0003); Cherokee Nation Aerospace and Defense LLC, Stilwell,
Oklahoma (FA8232-23-D-0004); Parts Life Inc., Moorestown, New Jersey
(FA8232-23-D-0005); KIHOMAC, Inc, Reston, Virginia (FA8232-23-D-0006)]
$900,000,000 for
F-16 harness parts and kit assemblies. Work in Ogden, Utah; Fort Worth, Texas;
Stilwell, Oklahoma; Moorestown, New Jersey; and Reston, Virginia.
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9 corporations [AECOM, Los Angeles, California (W912WJ-23-D-0001);
Arcadis U.S. Inc., Highland Ranch, Colorado (W912WJ-23-D-0002); Wood
Environmental & Infrastructure Solutions Inc., Blue Bell, Pennsylvania
(W912WJ-23-D-0003); Seres-Arcadis SB JV2 LLC,
Charleston, South Carolina (W912WJ-23-D-0004); Hana-Bay West 8a II JV LLC,
North Chesterfield, Virginia (W912WJ-23-D-0005); SRS Battelle JV LLC,
Milwaukee, Wisconsin (W912WJ-23-D-0006); EAS E&E JV LLC, Richland,
Washington (W912WJ-23-D-0007); Mabbett &
Associates Inc., Stoneham, Massachusetts (W912WJ-23-D-0008); Bluestone
Environmental Group Inc., Malvern, Pennsylvania (W912WJ-23-D-0009)] $90,000,000
for
hazardous, toxic and radioactive waste services for USACE Concord, Massachusetts.
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AAR
Government Services, Wood Dale, Illinois, $114,476,783 for
Boeing P-8A Poseidon aircraft depot maintenance (scheduled and unscheduled),
depot in-service repair / planner and estimator requirements, technical
directive incorporation, airframe modifications, aircraft on ground support,
and removal and replacement of engines for U.S. Navy, Australia, and FMS. Work
in Indianapolis, Indiana.
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ABX Air Inc., Wilmington, Ohio (HTC71119DC002); Air Transport
International Inc., Wilmington, Ohio (HTC71119DC003); Alaska Airlines Inc.,
Seattle, Washington (HTC71119DC004); American Airlines, Fort Worth, Texas
(HTC71119DC006); Amerijet International Inc., Miami,
Florida (HTC71119DC007); Atlas Air Inc., Purchase, New York (HTC71119DC008;)
Delta Air Lines Inc., Atlanta, Georgia (HTC71119DC009); Eastern Airlines,
Wayne, Pennsylvania (HTC71121DC001); Federal Express Corp., Memphis, Tennessee
(HTC71119DC010); Hawaiian Airlines, Honolulu, Hawaii (HTC71119DC011); Jet Blue,
Long Island City, New York (HTC71119DC012); Kalitta
Air LLC, Ypsilanti, Michigan (HTC71119DC013); Lynden Air Cargo LLC, Anchorage,
Alaska (HTC71119DC014); Sun Country Airlines, Minneapolis, Minnesota
(HTC71119DC016); National Air Cargo Group Inc., Orlando, Florida
(HTC71119DC017); Northern Air Cargo Inc., Anchorage, Alaska (HTC71119DC018);
Omni Air International LLC, Tulsa, Oklahoma (HTC71119DC019); Polar Air Cargo
Worldwide Inc., Purchase, New York (HTC71119DC020); Southwest Airlines, Dallas,
Texas (HTC71119DC021); Everts Air Cargo, Fairbanks, Alaska (HTC71119DC022);
United Airlines Inc., Chicago, Illinois (HTC71119DC023); United Parcel Service
Co. (UPS), Louisville, Kentucky (HTC71119DC024); Western Global Airlines (WGA),
Estero, Florida (HTC71119DC026); estimated $67,198,500 (to $415,623,690 from
$348,425,190) for
one month (January 2023) of heavyweight delivery, domestic and international
shipments, for US military, other federal government agencies, and corporate
contractors. Services include door-to-door, time-definite, pick-up and
delivery, transportation, timely and accurate shipment tracking, government
Third Party Payment System participation, customs clearance processing (if
applicable) and shipment data reporting.
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ABX Air Inc., Wilmington, Ohio (HTC71123DC001); Alaska Airlines Inc.,
Seattle, Washington (HTC71123DC002); American Airlines Inc., Fort Worth, Texas
(HTC71123DC003); Amerijet International Inc., Miami,
Florida (HTC71123DC004); Air Transport International Inc. (ATI), Wilmington,
Ohio (HTC71123DC005); Atlas Air Inc., Purchase, New York (HTC71123DC006); Delta
Air Lines Inc., Atlanta, Georgia (HTC71123DC007); Eastern Airlines LLC, Wayne
Pennsylvania (HTC71123DC008); Tatonduk Outfitters
Ltd., d.b.a. Everts Air Cargo, Fairbanks, Alaska (HTC71123DC009); Hawaiian
Airlines Inc., Honolulu, Hawaii (HTC71123DC010); JetBlue Airways Corp., Long
Island City, New York (HTC71123DC011); Kalitta Air LLC,
Ypsilanti, Michigan (HTC71123DC012); Lynden Air Cargo LLC, Anchorage, Alaska
(HTC71123DC013); National Air Cargo Group Inc., Orlando, Florida
(HTC71123DC014); Northern Air Cargo LLC, Anchorage, Alaska (HTC71123DC015);
Omni Air International LLC, Tulsa, Oklahoma (HTC71123DC016); Polar Air Cargo
Worldwide Inc., Purchase, New York (HTC71123DC017); Sun Country Airlines Inc.,
Minneapolis, Minnesota (HTC71123DC018); Swift Air LLC, d.b.a. iAERO Airways, Greensboro, North Carolina (HTC71123DC019);
United Airlines Inc., Chicago, Illinois (HTC71123DC020); United Parcel Service
Co. (UPS), Louisville, Kentucky (HTC71123DC021); Western Global Airlines Inc.,
Estero, Florida (HTC71123DC022); estimated total face value of $1,503,340,118 for
heavyweight delivery services (1 Feb 2023 to 30 Sept 2032) for domestic and
international shipments.
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Accelerated Business Strategies LLC, Dumfries, Virginia
(HQ003423D0004); Eagle Harbor Solutions LLC, Anchorage, Alaska (HQ003423D0005);
MDW Associates LLC, Tysons, Virginia (HQ003423D0006); The Red Gate Group Ltd.,
Chantilly, Virginia (HQ003423D0007); Booz Allen Hamilton Inc., McLean, Virginia
(HQ003423D0008); Logistics Management Institute, Tysons, Virginia
(HQ003423D0009); Redhorse Corp., San Diego, California (HQ003423D0010); SAIC,
Reston, Virginia (HQ003423D0011); Whitney, Bradley, & Brown Inc., Reston,
Virginia (HQ003423D0012); up to $1,500,000,000 for
work at the Pentagon and within the National Capital Region: acquisition and
sustainment oversight support, capability portfolio management, engineering and
agile methodologies, acquisition intelligence, policy analysis and support,
business and financial support, international programs and security,
legislative analysis and support, data science, data analytics, data
governance, and technical support.
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Accenture, Arlington, Virginia (FA868423DB018); Ad hoc Research
Associates, Havre De Grace, Maryland (FA868423DB019); Aegis Aerospace Inc.,
Houston, Texas (FA868423DB020); Aero Simulation, Tampa, Florida
(FA868423DB021); Alion Science and Technology Corp.,
McLean, Virginia (FA868423DB022); American Systems, Chantilly, Virginia (FA868423DB023);
ANSYS, Exton, Pennsylvania (FA868423DB024); Apogee Engineering, LLC, Colorado
Springs, Colorado (FA868423DB025); Applied Information Sciences, Orlando,
Florida (FA868423DB026); Applied Research Solutions Inc., Reston, Virginia
(FA868423DB027); Applied Visual Technology Inc., Orlando, Florida
(FA868423DB028); Assured Information Security Inc., Rome, New York
(FA868423DB029); Aviation Training Consulting LLC, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
(FA868423DB030); BGI LLC, Akron, Ohio (FA868423DB031); NuWave
Solutions LLC, McLean, Virginia (FA868423DB032); Black Sage Technologies Inc.,
Boise, Idaho (FA868423DB033); Boecore, LLC, Colorado
Springs, Colorado (FA868423DB034); The Boeing Co., Saint Louis, Missouri
(FA868423DB035); Booz Allen Hamilton Inc., Chantilly, Virginia (FA868423DB036);
CAE USA Inc., Arlington, Texas (FA868423DB037); Capability Analysis &
Measurement Organization LLC, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio (FA868423DB038);
Carley Corp., Orlando, Florida (FA868423DB039); Clear Creek Applied Technologies
Inc., Fairborn, Ohio (FA868423DB040); Cole Engineering Services Inc.,
Melbourne, Florida (FA868423DB041); CFD Research Corp., Huntsville, Alabama
(FA868423DB042); CIYIS LLC, Atlanta, Georgia (FA868423DB043); CORASCloud Inc., Chantilly, Virginia (FA868423DB044); CymSTAR LLC, Dallas, Texas (FA868423DB045); deciBel Research Inc., Madison, Alabama (FA868423DB046);
Dell Federal Systems LP, Irving, Texas (FA868423DB047); Dignitas Technologies
LLC, Orlando, Florida (FA868423DB048); Discovery Machine Inc., Williamsport,
Pennsylvania (FA868423DB049); Dynepic Inc., Reno, NV
(FA868423DB050); Equinox Innovative Systems, Inc., Columbia, Maryland
(FA868423DB051); Engineering Research and Consulting Inc., Madison, Alabama
(FA868423DB052); Expansia Group LLC, Andover,
Massachusetts (FA868423DB053); Expeditionary Engineering Inc., San Diego,
California (FA868423DB054); FAAC Inc., Ann Arbor, Michigan (FA868423DB055);
Falconry Training Solutions JV, Lakewood, Colorado (FA868423DB056); ASES LLC,
d.b.a. Field Aerospace, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma (FA868423DB057); FlightSafety International Defense, Englewood, Colorado
(FA868423DB058); Fusion Constructive LLC, Austin, Texas (FA868423DB059); Hill
Technical Solutions, Huntsville, Alabama (FA868423DB060); Hyperion Technology
Group Inc., Tupelo, Mississippi (FA868423DB061); Infinity Labs LLC, Beavercreek
Township, Ohio (FA868423DB063); Infoscitex Corp.,
Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio (FA868423DB064); Intrinsic Enterprises Inc.,
Bellevue, Washington (FA868423DB065); Roundarch
Isobar Inc., Chicago, Illinois (FA868423DB066); JANUS Research Group LLC,
Smyrna, Georgia (FA868423DB067); KIHOMAC Inc., Reston, Virginia
(FA868423DB068); KPMG LLP, Fort Belvoir, Virginia (FA868423DB069); Leidos,
Reston, Virginia (FA868423DB070); Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control,
Grand Prairie, Texas (FA868423DB071); MAK Technologies Inc., Cambridge,
Massachusetts (FA868423DB072); Maxar Mission
Solutions Inc., Herndon, Virginia (FA868423DB073); MetroStar
Systems Inc., Reston, Virginia (FA868423DB074); n-ask Inc., Reston, Virginia
(FA868423DB076); Nexagen Networks Inc., Old Bridge,
New Jersey (FA868423DB077); NextGen Federal Systems LLC, Rocket Center, West
Virginia (FA868423DB078); Northrop Grumman Systems Corp., McLean, Virginia
(FA868423DB079); Omni Fed LLC, Gainesville, Virginia (FA868423DB080); Parry
Labs LLC, Alexandria, Virginia (FA868423DB081); Parsons Government Services
Inc., Centreville, Virginia (FA868423DB082); Peerless Technologies Corp.,
Fairborn, Ohio (FA868423DB083); PeopleTec Inc.,
Madison, Alabama (FA868423DB084); Phoenix Defense Ventures LLC, Luke AFB,
Arizona (FA868423DB085); Picture Clean Consulting LLC, Las Vegas, Nevada
(FA868423DB086); PLEXSYS Interface Products, Bellevue, Washington
(FA868423DB087); ProActive Technologies Inc., Oviedo,
Florida (FA868423DB088); Rackner Inc., Silver Spring,
Maryland (FA868423DB089); Radiance Technologies Inc., Huntsville, Alabama
(FA868423DB090); RAFT LLC, Reston, Virginia (FA868423DB091); Raytheon Co.,
Woburn, Massachusetts (FA868423DB092); Real-Time Innovations Inc., Campbell,
California (FA868423DB093); Rockwell Collins Inc., Cedar Rapids, Iowa
(FA868423DB094); Sabel Systems Technology Solutions
LLC, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio (FA868423DB095); Science Applications
International Corp., Reston, Virginia (FA868423DB096); SNA Software LLC,
Orlando, Florida (FA868423DB097); Soar Technology Inc., Sterling Heights,
Michigan (FA868423DB098); Specialty Systems Inc., Toms River, Virgnia (FA868423DB099); Systems & Technology Research
LLC, Woburn, Massachusetts (FA868423DB100); Systems Planning and Analysis,
Chantilly, Virginia (FA868423DB101); Tangram Flex Inc., Dayton, Ohio
(FA868423DB102); TDMK Digital, Reston, Virginia (FA868423DB103); Troy7 Inc.,
Huntsville, Alabama (FA868423DB104); Unity Technologies, San Francisco, California
(FA868423DB105); Vertex, Madison, Mississippi (FA868423DB106); XL Scientific
LLC, Albuquerque, New Mexico (FA868423DB107); Virtualistics
Inc, Pasadena, California (FA868423DB108); Wingbrace
LLC, Boston, Massachusetts (FA868423DB109); Yotta
Navigation Corp., Campbell, California (FA868423DB110); Zel
Technologies LLC, Hampton, Virginia (FA868423DB111); $900,000,000 ceiling
(each) contract for
the development of innovative approaches that bring multi-domain systems
capabilities, the characterization of new technologies and systems through
studies, recurrent demonstration and rapid development to enable rapid
prototyping, and test and capability transition.
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Accenture,
McLean, Virginia, $9,691,132 for
more full time equivalents to support the fences engineering services being
produced under the basic contract (Sentinel Fences Continuous Engineering
Services) at Hill AFB, Utah.
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Actualized
Business Solutions, California, Maryland, $18,200,500, to
support curriculum development and execution for U.S. Air Force Test Pilot
School.
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Adams
Communication and Engineering Technology Inc., Reston, Virginia, $37,470,104 for
efforts required to fabricate, assemble, and support prototyping, system
integration, and installation of depot modifications associated with
engineering changes to H-53 aircraft for U.S. Navy, Marine Corps, and FMS. Work
in New River, North Carolina (40%); Miramar, California (35%); Patuxent River,
Maryland (5%); Norfolk, Virginia (5%); McGuire, New Jersey (5%); Yuma, Arizona
(3%); Okinawa, Japan (3%); Pohang, Korea (2%); and Manama, Bahrain (2%).
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Advanced
Technology Systems Company, McLean, Virginia, $8,625,783 (to $11,597,026 from
$3,978,661) for
FMS (Egypt): spares, an additional training course, and continued repair
and return, re: the Egypt Mobile Surveillance Sensor Security System. Work in
Cairo.
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AECOM, Los
Angeles, California (N62470-23-D-0003); HDR Engineering Inc., Colorado Springs,
Colorado (N62470-23-D-0004); Michael Baker Makers Cardno
NAVFAC Planning JV, Alexandria, Virginia (N62470-23-D-0005); Parsons Government
Services, D.C. (N62470-23-D-0006); Tetra Tech / Mason & Hanger JV, Ann
Arbor, Michigan (N62470-23-D-0007); $95,000,000 for
multi-discipline architect-engineer services for preparation of Navy and Marine
Corps planning and engineering services. Most work on this contract is
anticipated to occur in the continental U.S., but an order could be issued for
any location worldwide.
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AECOM, Los Angles, California (W912UM-23-D-0001); HDR Engineering Inc.,
Honolulu, Hawaii (W912UM-23-D-0002); Jacobs, Arlington, Virginia
(W912UM-23-D-0003); Leo A. Daly/Burns & McDonnell Far East JV, Los Angeles,
California (W912UM-23-D-0004); Stanley-WSP JV, Muscatine, Iowa
(W912UM-23-D-0005); Tetra Tech Inc., Marlborough, Massachusetts (W912UM-23-D-0006);
$200,000,000 for
architect-engineering services for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in the Far
East.
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AECOM, Los Angles, California, $15,000,000 for
architect-engineer design related services for NAVFAC Southeast.
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Aero Turbine Inc., Stockton, California, estimated $84,786,547 for
technical, logistics management, and repair re: returning unserviceable J85
engine components to serviceable condition. Inspection and repair at various
Air Force Jet Engine Intermediate Maintenance facilities. Individual components
on the J85 engine will also be replaced at several T-38 operating bases.
Contract (22 Dec 2022) later corrected to be issued on 27 Dec 2022.
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Aerojet Rocketdyne’s Coleman Aerospace, Orlando, Florida, $239,683,096
(from $839,085,423 to $1,078,768,519) for
program management office support for calendar year 2023 and six launch
vehicles and 6 Enhanced Solid Rocket-19 motors re: Medium Range Ballistic
Missile Type 1/Type 2, lot 3. Work in Orlando and Cape Canaveral Space Force
Station, Florida.
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AeroVironment
Inc., Simi Valley, California, $86,424,635 for
drones: the RQ-20B All Environment 3 and the Long Endurance Puma.
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AgustaWestland Philadelphia Corp., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
$110,590,500 for
production and delivery of 26 TH-73A (lot 4) aircraft and related data in
support of the Advanced Helicopter Training System program for US Navy. Work in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (80%); Mineral Wells, Texas (5%); and various
locations outside the continental U.S. (15%).
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Airborne
Systems North America, Pennsauken, New Jersey, $10,075,637 for
the Multi-Mission Parachute 2 Course (training and technical support for all
military free-fall training to ensure compliance with all FAAA regulations and
Marine Corps orders to safely meet the Marine Corps training input
requirements). Work in Eloy, Arizona.
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Airbus
U.S. Space & Defense, Arlington, Virginia, $297,480,728 for
UH-72 Lakota contractor logistics support and engineering services in Grand Prairie,
Texas
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Airbus
U.S. Space & Defense, Arlington, Virginia, $42,588,842 to
increase flying hours. Work in Grand Prairie, Texas.
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AJ Wholesales Produce, Sheboygan, Wisconsin, maximum $49,971,000 for
fresh fruits and vegetables. Work in Michigan for Department of Agriculture
schools and reservations.
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Ajanta
Consulting LLC, San Antonio, Texas, $29,617,180 for
inspection, operation, maintenance, repair, reconstruction, and rehabilitation
of project facilities and features managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
in Enid, Granada, Hernando, and Sardis, Mississippi.
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Aktarius
LLC, Panama City, Florida (W911SR-23-D-0020); Applied Training Solutions LLC,
Greensburg, Pennsylvania (W911SR-23-D-0021); Carter-Lambert Divisions LLC,
Waldorf, Maryland (W911SR-23-D-0022); Chimera Enterprises International Inc.,
Edgewood, Maryland (W911SR-23-D-0023); Global Systems Technologies Inc.,
Morrisville, Pennsylvania (W911SR-23-D-0024); Hythe
Research LLC, Havre de Grace, Maryland (W911SR-23-D-0025); L2 Defense Inc.,
Baltimore, Maryland (W911SR-23-D-0026); MLT Systems LLC, Stafford, Virginia
(W911SR-23-D-0027); Murtech Inc., Glen Burnie,
Maryland (W911SR-23-D-0028); Strategic Technology Institute Inc., Rockville,
Maryland (W911SR-23-D-0029); The Lockwood Group LLC, Belcamp, Maryland
(W911SR-23-D-0030); CSMI LLC, Salem, New Hampshire (W911SR-23-D-0031); Culmen
International LLC, Alexandria, Virginia (W911SR-23-D-0032); Gryphon
Technologies L.C., Washington, D.C. (W911SR-23-D-0033); HII Defense and Federal
Solutions Inc., Huntsville, Alabama (W911SR-23-D-0034); IAP Worldwide Services
Inc., Cape Canaveral, Florida (W911SR-23-D-0035); Interfuze
Corp., Huntsville, Alabama (W911SR-23-D-0036); K.D. Analytical Consulting LLC,
Lexington, Kentucky (W911SR-23-D-0037); MAG DS Corp., Fairfax, Virginia
(W911SR-23-D-0038); Patricio Enterprises Inc., Stafford, Virginia
(W911SR-23-D-0039); SciTech Services Inc., Havre de Grace, Maryland
(W911SR-23-D-0040); STS International Inc., Berkeley Springs, West Virginia
(W911SR-23-D-0041); The Logistics Company Inc., Fayetteville, North Carolina
(W911SR-23-D-0042); Clark Creative Solutions LLC, Baltimore, Maryland
(W911SR-23-D-0043); DMAERO LLC, Byron, Georgia (W911SR-23-D-0044); Integrity
Consulting Engineering & Security Solutions LLC, Purcellville, Virginia
(W911SR-23-D-0045); NetSea Technologies LLC, Bel Air,
Maryland (W911SR-23-D-0046); Semper Valens Solutions Inc., Canyon Lake, Texas
(W911SR-23-D-0047); SkyBridge Tactical LLC, Tampa,
Florida (W911SR-23-D-0048); Tier Tech International Inc., Delray Beach, Florida
(W911SR-23-D-0049); $906,570,000 to
support systems and government entities that provide force protection against
chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear and explosive (CBRNE) threats.
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Aldridge Electric Inc., Libertyville, Illinois, $7,680,304 for
the P-828 Smart Energy Project at Naval Station Great Lakes, Illinois.
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Allegient
Inc., Arlington, Virginia, $31,851,343 for
non-technical administrative contractor support for F-35 development and
demonstration, follow-on development, low rate initial and full rate
production, as well as sustainment efforts for US Air Force, Navy, non-DOD
participants, and FMS. Work in Arlington, Virginia (81.27%); Wright-Patterson,
Ohio (14.05%); and Fort Worth, Texas (4.68%).
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Allied
Technologies Group, Huntsville, Alabama, $9,146,194 for
logistic support services for the Utility Helicopters Project Office,
Huntsville, Alabama.
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Allison
Transmission Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana, $51,097,224 for
transmission upgrades for the General Dynamics Abrams Main Battle Tank. Some
FMS (Australia).
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Alltech
Engineering Corporation, Saint Paul, Minnesota (W911WN-23-D-0001); G&G
Steel Inc., Russellville, Alabama (W911WN-23-D-0002); Hohl
Industrial Services Inc., Tonawanda, New York (W911WN-23-D-0003); J. F. Brennan
Company Inc., La Crosse, Wisconsin (W911WN-23-D-0004); Marine Diving Solutions
LLC, Centennial, Colorado (W911WN-23-D-0005); Precision Build Solutions LLC,
Gibsonton, Florida (W911WN-23-D-0006); Steward Machine Co. Inc., Birmingham,
Alabama (W911WN-23-D-0007) $160,000,000 for
metal fabrication, refurbishment and installation for USACE Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania.
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Amazon Web Services (AWS), Seattle, Washington, $723,878,930, for
“access to AWS's commercial cloud environment, AWS Professional Services, and
AWS training and certification courses.” This is a five-year Navy enterprise
software license (ESL) blanket purchase agreement (BPA).
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Amentum
(credited as DynCorp), Fort Worth, Texas, $68,398,134 for
another year of Air Forces Central War Reserve Materiel support in USA (Shaw
AFB, South Carolina), Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, and the UAE.
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Amentum
(Dyncorp), Fort Worth, Texas, $25,320,805 for
aviation maintenance services at Fort Worth, Texas; Fort Bragg, North Carolina;
Fort Drum, New York; Fort Campbell, Kentucky; West Point, New York; Fort Polk,
Louisiana; Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland; Hunter Army Airfield, Georgia;
Soto Cano, Honduras; Germany; Kosovo and Kuwait.
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Amentum (Dyncorp), Fort Worth, Texas, $30,256,041 for
aviation maintenance in Fort Worth, Texas; Fort Bragg, North Carolina; Fort
Campbell, Kentucky; Fort Drum, New York; and Hunter Army Airfield, Georgia;
Kuwait; and Georgia
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Amentum,
Germantown, Maryland, $10,000,000 for
aviation maintenance services in Iraq.
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Amentum,
Germantown, Maryland, $13,632,420 for
maintenance, supply, and transportation logistics support services at Camp Arifjan, Kuwait.
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Amentum,
Germantown, Maryland, $15,940,346 for
helicopter maintenance on aircraft assigned to the 316th Wing at Joint Base Andrews-Naval
Air Facility Washington.
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Amentum,
Germantown, Maryland, $25,200,000 for
contractor logistics support.
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Amentum,
Germantown, Maryland, $27,072,000 (brings contract to $186,070,367) for
ongoing services to DOD components in NAVFAC Pacific: Papua New Guinea (19%);
Timor (18%); Palau (18%); Northern Mariana Islands (16%); Philippines (14%);
Micronesia (12%), and other locations in South Asia, Southeast Asia, and
Oceania (3%).
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Amentum,
Germantown, Maryland, $49,461,406 for
Initial Entry Rotary Wing flight training, Fort Rucker, Alabama.
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American Ordnance LLC, Middletown, Iowa, $75,542,332 for
M795 TNT (trinitrotoluene) load assemble and pack. Some FMS (Brazil and Lebanon).
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American Petroleum
Tankers LLC, Blue Bell, Pennsylvania, $25,367,500 for
time charter of one U.S.-flagged Jones Act compliant, double hull tanker
Evergreen State to provide support for DOD/DLA Energy requirements worldwide.
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American
Systems Corp., Chantilly, Virginia, ceiling $1,010,000,000 (ordering period 2
Dec 2022 to 1 Dec 2026) for
test, evaluation, and certification services.
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AOC
Solutions Inc., Fairfax, Virginia (SP4704-23-A-0500); Blake Willson
Group LLC, d.b.a. BWG, Arlington, Virginia (SP4704-23-A-0501); Integrated
Finance and Accounting Solutions LLC, Woodbridge, Virginia (SP4704-23-A-0502);
Lynch Consultants LLC, Arlington, Virginia (SP4704-23-A-0503); MDC Global
Solutions LLC, Manassas, Virginia (SP4704-23-A-0504); and New River Systems
Corp., Ashburn, Virginia (SP4704-23-A-0505); estimated $181,125,713 blanket
purchase agreement for
financial improvement and audit readiness support services for DLA.
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Applied
Physical Sciences Corp., Groton, Connecticut, $8,037,005 to
refine communications capabilities and test a “dynamically reconfigurable
undersea architecture” re: autonomous ocean system prototypes. Work in
Pawcatuck (25%) and Groton (20%), Connecticut; Woods Hole (20%) and Concord
(10%), Massachusetts; De Leon Springs, Florida (10%); Arlington (10%) and
Reston (5%), Virginia; and test locations to be determined.
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APTIM
Federal Services, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, $12,921,740 for
maintenance and minor repair of petroleum systems in Tamuning,
Guam.
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Archer
Western Federal JV, Chicago, Illinois (N69450-19-D-0907); B.L. Harbert
International, Birmingham, Alabama (N69450-19-D-0908); The Haskell Co., Jacksonville,
Florida (N69450-19-D-0909); The Korte Co., St. Louis, Missouri
(N69450-19-D-0910); Mortenson Construction, Minneapolis, Minnesota
(N69450-19-D-0911); $15,000,000 for
construction, including general building projects, mostly in Florida (15%),
Georgia (15%), Louisiana (14%), Mississippi (14%), South Carolina (14%),
Tennessee (14%), and Texas (14%).
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Archer Western Federal JV, Chicago, Illinois, $15,609,230 for
construction at MCAS New River, North Carolina, re: Hurricane Florence Recovery
Package 7.
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Aspen
Construction Co., Hackensack, Minnesota, $10,882,619 for
construction re: the Johnson County Phase II Paintsville East Levee and West
Floodwall in Paintsville, Kentucky.
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AT2 LLC,
Severn, Maryland, $8,192,222 for
operations, maintenance, and support services of Air Combat Command and Air
Force Global Strike Command primary training ranges. Services include range
threat, scoring, and feedback systems at Dare County Range, North Carolina;
Poinsett Range, South Carolina; Grand Bay Range, Georgia; Avon Park Range,
Georgia; Snyder Range, Texas; Belle Fourche Range, South Dakota; Holloman
Ranges, New Mexico; Mountain Home Ranges, Idaho.
-
Atlantic Diving Supply (ADS),
Virginia Beach, Virginia, $150,000,000 for
equipment that repairs damaged airfield pavement.
-
Aurora
Flight Sciences, Manassas, Virginia, $42,177,014 for
work on DARPA’s Control of Revolutionary Aircraft with Novel Effectors (CRANE)
program, phase 2-3. Work in Manassas, Virginia (20%); Cambridge, Massachusetts
(14%); Charleston, South Carolina (6%); Bridgeport, Connecticut (6%);
Huntsville, Mississippi (6%); St. Louis, Missouri (6%); Huntington Beach,
California (6%); Mesa, Arizona (6%); Fort Worth, Texas (6%); National Harbor,
Maryland (6%); and Salt Lake City, Utah (18%).
-
Avfuel
Corp., Ann Arbor, Michigan (SPE607-23-D-0006, $12,129,647), has been added (21 Nov
2022) as an awardee to the multiple award contract for fuel support at St.
George Municipal Airport, Utah, issued against solicitation SPE607-22-R-0200
and awarded May 4, 2022.
-
Aviation
Ground Equipment Corp., Melville, New York, $482,000,000 for
testing and production of 72- kilowatt ground power units, 144 kilowatt ground
power units, and 144 kilowatt Universal Load Banks, along with associated data
deliverables including test reports, provisioning, and technical manuals.
-
B. L. Harbert International, Birmingham, Alabama, $122,441,345 for
building a 91,300 square-foot material exploitation center (MEC) at Redstone
Arsenal, Alabama. The MEC will be “a hub for enterprise logistics management
building, a vehicle maintenance facility, and a central plant expansion,” according
to B.L. Harbert.
-
BAE Systems – Jacksonville Ship Repair LLC, Jacksonville, Florida,
$119,261,837 for
maintenance, modernization, and repair of USS Lassen (DDG 82) fiscal
2023 Depot Modernization Period in Mayport, Florida.
-
BAE
Systems Information & Electronic Systems Integration, Merrimack, New
Hampshire, $10,068,222 for
research and development seeker integration and testing.
-
BAE Systems Information and Electronic Systems Integration, Greenlawn,
New York, $33,406,275 to
redesign the AN/UPX-50(C) digital interrogator assemblies in order to “resolve
parts obsolescence and implement solutions to achieve compliance” with the
latest specifications, qualification, and certification standards for US Navy.
Work in Green Lawn, New York (95%), and Hudson, New Hampshire (5%), which is
just east of Nashua.
-
BAE
Systems Jacksonville Ship Repair LLC, Jacksonville, Florida, $29,380,891 for
the alteration, overhaul, and repair, including performance of dry-docking,
pier-side overhaul and maintenance, repairs, and alterations that requires
certification by American Bureau of Shipping onboard Vindicator (TSV 5). Work
in Jacksonville, Florida.
-
BAE Systems Land & Armaments LP, San Jose, California, $10,407,827 for
integration of upgrades (officially called “Handheld, Manpack, and Small Form
Fit Next Generation Radio and Mounted Assured Position Navigation and Timing
Solution Generation 2”) into M2A3 and M3A3 [Bradley Fighting Vehicle] Fire
Support Team with Fire Support Sensor System platforms.
-
BAE
Systems Land & Armaments LP, San Jose, California, $13,093,714 for
integration of the Upgraded Improved Bradley Acquisition Subsystem (Block 2.8),
phase 3.
-
BAE Systems Land & Armaments LP, Sterling Heights, Michigan,
$13,253,941 for
adjustment to the Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle, to include an additional work
station in all mission-command vehicles and dual-path communications in all
vehicles. Work in York, Pennsylvania.
-
BAE Systems
Land & Armaments LP, Sterling Heights, Michigan, $153,735,465 for
30 full rate production Amphibious Combat Vehicles (ACV) and associated
production, and fielding and support costs. Work in York, Pennsylvania (60%);
Aiken, South Carolina (15%); San Jose, California (15%); Sterling Heights,
Michigan (5%); and Stafford, Virginia (5%).
-
BAE
Systems Land & Armaments, York, Pennsylvania, $128,210,929 for
FMS (Poland): production of M88A2 vehicles.
-
BAE Systems OSI, Kingsport, Tennessee, $23,845,457 for
definitization of an unpriced change order under the
Holston Army Ammunition Plant facility contract. Work in Kingsport, Tennessee.
-
BAE Systems OSI, Kingsport, Tennessee, $7,823,127 for
process improvements at the Holston Army Ammunition Plant, Kingsport, Tennessee
-
BAE Systems OSI, Radford, Virginia, $39,477,134 to
finalize design, construct, commission/startup and transition a new chemical
grind facility to support operations at Radford Army Ammunition Plant. Estimated
date of completion is 28 Nov 2025.
-
BAE
Systems San Diego Ship Repair Inc., San Diego, California, $13,926,928 for
post shakedown availability (PSA) for USS Lenah Sutcliffe Higbee (DDG
123) in San Diego, California.
-
BAE Systems Technology Solutions & Services Inc., Rockville,
Maryland (N00039-23-D-9001); DRS Laurel Technologies, Johnstown, Pennsylvania
(N00039-23-D-9002); Management Services Group, d.b.a. Global Technical Systems,
Virginia Beach, Virginia (N00039-23-D-9003); L3Harris, Camden, New Jersey
(N00039-23-D-9004); Leidos, Reston, Virginia (N00039-23-D-9005); Peraton, Herndon, Virginia (N00039-23-D-9006); Serco,
Herndon, Virginia (N00039-23-D-9007); VT Milcom,
Virginia Beach, Virginia (N00039-23-D-9008); $4,098,600,000 for
Consolidated Afloat Networks and Enterprise Services (CANES) production units,
software–initial, renewals and maintenance, spares and system components, and
lab equipment. CANES consolidates and replaces existing afloat networks
“providing the necessary infrastructure for applications, systems and services
required to dominate the cyber warfare tactical domain.” CANES upgrades
“cybersecurity, command and control, communications and intelligence systems
afloat, and by replacing unaffordable and obsolete networks.” The primary goals
of the CANES program of record, according to the contracting announcement, are
to: 1) provide a secure afloat network required for Naval and Joint Operations;
2) consolidate and reduce the number of afloat networks through the use of
Common Computing Environment and mature cross domain technologies; 3) reduce
the infrastructure footprint and associated Logistics, Sustainment, and
Training costs; and 4) increase reliability, security, interoperability and
application hosting to meet current and projected warfighter requirements. Work
in Huntsville, Alabama; San Diego, California; Largo, Florida; Ayer,
Massachusetts; Long Beach, Mississippi; Camden, New Jersey; Johnstown,
Pennsylvania; Summerville, South Carolina; Clarksville, Virginia; Gainesville,
Virginia; Sterling, Virginia; and Virginia Beach, Virginia.
-
BAE
Systems Technology Solutions and Services, Rockville, Maryland, $21,782,635 for
engineering and technical services in support of the Command, Control,
Communications, Computer, and Intelligence electronic radio communication
systems integration for Navy ships. Work in St. Inigoes,
Maryland.
-
BAE Systems, Information and Electronic Systems Integration Inc.,
Greenlawn, New York, $15,355,636 for
production, delivery, and integration of Mode 5 capable Common Identification
Friend or Foe (IFF) Digital Transponder Systems and associated Shop Replaceable
Assemblies (SRA) for fixed and rotary winged aircraft, USA and Foreign Military
Sales. Work in Greenlawn, New York (85%), and Austin, Texas (15%).
-
BAE
Systems, Kingsport, Tennessee, $63,631,145 for
a new filtration and wash facility in Kingsport, Tennessee.
-
BAE
Systems, Rockville, Maryland, $11,170,561 for
systems engineering and integration for Trident II (D5) Life Extension 2
Strategic Systems Programs Alteration. Tasks include technical planning,
requirements management and integration of Strategic Systems Programs
subsystems including interface with the Columbia common missile compartment;
configuration management, system security engineering, safety engineering support
and infrastructure operations model-based engineering and information systems
program acquisition. Work in Rockville, Maryland (68.9%); D.C. (6.8%); Wexford,
Pennsylvania (6.6%); Albuquerque, New Mexico (2.8%); Hagerstown, Maryland
(5.4%); Cape Canaveral, Florida (5.2%); and various other locations (less than
1% each, totaling 4.3%).
-
BAE
Systems, Rockville, Maryland, $17,607,780 (bringing the estimated value of the
contract to $81,223,098) for
operation and maintenance of Navy communication, electronic, and computer
systems in Oahu, Hawaii (94%), and Geraldton, Australia (6%).
-
BAE
Systems, Rockville, Maryland, $20,126,303 for
fiscal 2023 support services on Trident II (D5) program, Attack Weapon System
program, and the Nuclear Weapon Security program. Work in Rockville, Maryland
(59.9 %); D.C. (23.8%); Saint Marys, Georgia (3.3%);
Cape Canaveral, Florida (2.3%); Bremerton, Washington (1.3%); Portsmouth,
Virginia (1.0%); and various other locations (less than 1% each; 8.4% total).
-
BAE
Systems, Rockville, Maryland, $8,577,568 to
provide engineering and technical services to support the Integrated
Communications and Information Systems radio communications for Navy ships.
Work in St. Inigoes, Maryland.
-
BAE
Systems, York, Pennsylvania, $31,917,256 for
M2A4 and M7A4 Bradley Fighting Vehicles.
-
BAE Systems’ Norfolk Ship Repair, Norfolk, Virginia, $294,786,804 for
maintenance, modernization, and repair of USS Kearsarge (LHD 3) fiscal
2023 docking selected restricted availability in Norfolk, Virginia.
-
Ball
Aerospace & Technologies Corp., Boulder, Colorado, $78,298,370 to
develop and fabricate the weather system follow-on microwave Space Vehicle 2.
-
Battelle Memorial Institute, Columbus, Ohio, $49,102,007 for
R&D: “evaluate current and future state-of-the-art microelectronics
security technology, integrity in microelectronics and embedded systems against
current and emerging nation-state adversaries working to exploit the
chip-package interaction using non-invasive, semi-invasive, and invasive
reverse engineering techniques.” Work at Wright-Patterson AFB and Columbus,
Ohio.
-
Battelle Memorial Institute, Columbus, Ohio, $7,500,000 for
the Map Based Mission Planning Program.
-
Bay West LLC SB, St. Paul, Minnesota (W91278-23-D-0008); SERES-Arcadis
JV SB, Charleston, South Carolina (W91278-23-D-0010); SERES-Arcadis JV 8(a),
Charleston, South Carolina (W91278-23-D-0011); FPM-AECOM JV1 8(a), St.
Petersburg, Florida (W91278-23-D-0014); EA- Engineering, Science &
Technology, Hunt Valley, Maryland (W91278-23-D-0001); Auxilio
Plexus JV, Denver, Colorado (W91278-23-D-0013); Plexus-Ayuda
JV SB, Alexandria, Virginia (W91278-23-D-0006); Cape-Weston JV2 SB, Norcross,
Georgia (W91278-23-D-0007); E2-ASL JV 8(a), Fort Walton Beach, Florida
(W91278-23-D-0012); QRI-Tetra Tech JV SB, Baton Rouge, Louisiana
(W91278-23-D-0027); M&A Environmental Solutions, Melbourne, Florida
(W91278-23-D-0015); M&A Environmental Solutions, Melbourne, Florida
(W91278-23-D-0005); Aerostar SES LLC, Mobile, Alabama (W91278-23-D-0002); HGL-Aptim Applied Science & Technology JV LLC, Reston,
Virginia (W91278-23-D-0003); CES-Insight LLC, Brea, California
(W91278-23-D-0009); Hana-Bay West 8A JV LLC, North Chesterfield, Virginia
(W91278-23-D-0016); $249,000,000 for
environmental remediation services for USACE Mobile, Alabama.
-
BBIX LLC,
Boston, Massachusetts, $29,807,000 for
repair and sustainment of the Central Plant at Hanscom AFB, Massachusetts.
-
Beacon
Training Services Inc., Richardson, Texas (N39430-23-A-0051); Coley &
Associates Inc., Spring Branch, Texas (N39430-23-A-0052); Elevate USA Inc.,
Ridgeland, South Carolina (N39430-23-A-0053); Gotham Government Services LLC,
Haymarket, Virginia (N39430-23-A-0054); Horizon Strategies LLC, Winston Salem,
North Carolina (N39430-23-A-0055); Phoenix Technology Solutions LLC, Columbia,
Maryland (N39430-23-A-0056); combined $9,500,000 for
in-person and virtual synchronous / instructor-led
non-technical-competency-based training for NAVFAC within and outside the
continental U.S. This is a blanket purchase agreement under the General
Services Administration's multiple award schedule 611430 (professional and
management development training).
-
Bechtel
Plant Machinery Inc., Monroeville, Pennsylvania, $20,109,110 for
naval nuclear propulsion components. Work in Monroeville, Pennsylvania (91%),
and Schenectady, New York (9%).
-
Bechtel
Plant Machinery Inc., Monroeville, Pennsylvania, $576,360,793 for
naval nuclear propulsion components. Work in Monroeville, Pennsylvania (75%),
and Schenectady, New York (25%).
-
Bechtel
Plant Machinery Inc., Monroeville, Pennsylvania, $768,485,104 for
naval nuclear propulsion components. Work in Monroeville, Pennsylvania (70%),
and Schenectady, New York (30%).
-
Bell
Boeing Joint Project Office, Amarillo, Texas, $75,015,996 for
12 Nacelle improvements kits, rotable pool
components, and interim spares. Also installs 29 kits in conjunction with
conversion area harness, electrical wiring interconnect system assessments,
sustaining engineering, and over and above requirements for CV-22 aircraft.
Work in Amarillo (53%) and Fort Worth (46%), Texas; Ridley Park, Pennsylvania
(1%).
-
Bell-Boeing Joint Project Office, Amarillo, Texas, $18,000,000 (max.) for
technical analysis, engineering, and integration support for the V-22 aircraft
program. Work in Fort Worth, Texas (50%), and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (50%).
-
Belleville
Shoe Manufacturing, Co., Belleville, Illinois, $10,401,507 for
Air Force combat temperate weather boots. Work in Arkansas.
-
Bionetics
Corp., Yorktown, Virginia, $185,762,242 for
the operation of the Air Force Primary Standards Laboratory (AFPSL).
Work in Heath, Ohio.
-
Black
Construction-Tutor Perini JV, Harmon, Guam, $26,077,777 for
ongoing construction of a communications facility in Joint Region Marianas,
Anderson AFB, Guam.
-
Boeing
Digital Solutions, Englewood, Colorado, $18,919,575 for
annual navigation database software subscriptions with monthly updates to
calculate aircraft performance. Software includes MilPlanner,
FliteDeck Pro, On-board Performance Tool (OPT)
database, OPT software, and Aeronautical Radio, Incorporated 424 navigational
database tools.
-
Boeing Insitu, Bingen,
Washington, $19,279,611 for
production and delivery of ten RQ-21A Blackjack air vehicles, two RQ-21A
turrets, support equipment, spares, tools, and training in support of RQ-21A
Blackjack and ScanEagle drones for US Navy/Marine Corps, and international
partners. Work in Bingen, Washington (88%), and
locations outside continental U.S. (12%).
-
Boeing,
Colorado Springs, Colorado, $9,724,331 for
the Wideband Global SATCOM (WGS) systems engineering and sustainment support in
Colorado Springs, Colorado.
-
Boeing, El
Segundo, California, $36,689,916 for
launch and mission operations for Wideband Global Satellite Communications
(WGS) Space Vehicle 11.
-
Boeing, Hill AFB, Utah, $15,511,239 for
the Performance Assessment Data System (PADS) Communication Equipment Interface
Unit (CEIU) production and deployment re: Minuteman III nuclear
weapon. PADS shall collect weapon system assessment data from CEIU and report
to missile wings, ICBM Systems Directorate, and corporate contractors.
-
Boeing, Huntington Beach, California, $99,038,610 for
Combat Survivor Evader Locator (CSEL)
contractor logistics support, including program management, logistics support,
systems engineering, software maintenance and cybersecurity, technical order
sustainment, government furnished property management, transition planning, and
contract data requirements list deliverables.
-
Boeing, Huntsville, Alabama, is being awarded a $109,101,801 (from
$5,058,764,537 to $5,167,866,338) for
another 12 months of work, allowing for completion of the Ground Test (GT)-08
test campaign; fielding of the Launch Management System software version 8D and
Increment 6B.2 of the Missile Defense System; and installation of new Launch
System Components and Launch Support Systems. Work in Huntsville, Alabama; Fort
Greely, Alaska; and Vandenberg Space Force Base, California.
-
Boeing, Jacksonville, Florida, $117,572,634 for
inspections, modifications, and repairs on F/A-18 E/F and EA-18G aircraft in
Jacksonville, Florida (82%); El Segundo (8.2%) and Lemoore (2.9%), California;
St. Louis, Missouri (3.9%); Whidbey Island, Washington (3%).
-
Boeing, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, $234,576,664, for
E4B program management, field service representatives, system integration
laboratory support, emergency support, spare procurement, spare repair and
overhaul, engine sustainment, and depot maintenance. Work in Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma; Offutt AFB, Nebraska; and San Antonio, Texas.
-
Boeing,
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, $28,099,828 for
FMS (Saudi Arabia): Saudi Air Force Airborne Warning and Control System
(AWACS) modernization, phase 2: additional hardware and non-recurring
engineering to support production kitting, training, installation, and
checkout. Work in Oklahoma City, USA, and Al Kharj, Saudi Arabia.
-
Boeing, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, $38,716,952 for
B-1 and B-52 bomber engineering services at Tinker AFB, Oklahoma; Edwards AFB,
California; Barksdale AFB, Louisiana; and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
-
Boeing,
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, $8,956,476 for
Japan E-767 Airborne Warning and Control System post
delivery support. Work in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; San Antonio, Texas;
Seattle, Washington; and Japan. Involves FMS to Japan.
-
Boeing, Ridley Park, Pennsylvania, $497,094,402 for
CH-47F helicopters.
-
Boeing,
Seattle, Washington, $11,349,469 for
installation of 25 previously procured A-kits in support of the Increment 3
Block 1 retrofit requirements for the P-8A Poseidon aircraft. Work in
Jacksonville, Florida.
-
Boeing,
Seattle, Washington, $84,526,041 for
P-8A Poseidon engine (CFM56-7B27A/3 and CFM56-7B27AE) depot-level maintenance
and repair for U.S. Navy, Australia, and FMS. Work in Atlanta, Georgia (97%),
and Seattle, Washington (3%).
-
Boeing, St. Louis, Missouri, $12,807,900 for
performance-based support for the Global Material Support Program regarding
F-18 “Hornet” jets, AH-64 “Apache” helicopters, and CH-47 “Chinook”
helicopters.
-
Boeing,
St. Louis, Missouri, $13,254,327 for
FMS (unnamed): spares in support of Harpoon Weapon System sustainment
for FMS. Work in Black Mountain, North Carolina (34.04%); Fairfield, California
(11.98%); Joplin, Missouri (11.12%); Galena, Kansas (4.62%); Fort Worth, Texas
(4.49%); Beverly, Massachusetts (3.99%); Chandler, Arizona (3.00%); McKinney,
Texas (2.45%); Lititz, Pennsylvania (2.03%); Lancaster, Pennsylvania (1.92%);
Newtown, Pennsylvania (1.38%); O Fallon, Missouri (1.12%); Grove, Oklahoma
(1.09%); Springfield, Ohio (1%); and various locations within the continental
U.S. (15.77%).
-
Boeing, St. Louis, Missouri, $2,020,956,832 for
system upgrades to F/A-18 and EA-18G aircraft for US Navy and FMS customers.
Work in St. Louis, Missouri (86%); El Segundo, California (11%); and China
Lake, California (3%).
-
Boeing, St. Louis, Missouri, $255,000,000 for
the F-15 depot program.
-
Boeing, St. Louis, Missouri, $35,360,982 for
the Next Generation Automated Test System for the Army.
-
Boeing, St. Louis, Missouri, $8,460,885 for
continued design, development, integration, and test in support of the Infrared
Search and Track System (IRST) block II, phase II, engineering change replacing
the IRST Block I system on F/A-18E/F aircraft.
-
Boeing,
St. Louis, Missouri, $8,719,447 for
continued integrated logistics support and engineering services in support of
Harpoon and Standoff Land-Attack Missile-Expanded Response (SLAM-ER) missile
systems and Harpoon Launch Systems for US Navy and FMS customers ($6,639,561).
Work in Missouri [St. Charles (91.89%); St. Louis (5.47%)] and Yorktown,
Virginia (2.64%).
-
Boeing,
St. Louis, Missouri, $9,391,406 for
10 Infrared Search and Track System (IRST) pods, 10 fuel tank assemblies, 10
sensor assembly structures, as well as non-recurring engineering, sustainment,
and data in support of IRST pod assemblies for US Navy.
-
Boeing, Tukwila, Washington, $398,244,094 for
FMS (Japan): for two KC-46A aircraft. Work in Everett, Washington.
-
Booz Allen
Hamilton, McLean, Virginia, $14,705,256 for
R&D on the application of advanced data processing, artificial
intelligence, and machine learning to aid platform cognitive capability and
next sortie reprogramming. Work at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio.
-
Brayman
Construction Corp., Saxonburg, Pennsylvania, $8,126,694 for
wall rebar change at Bluestone Dam in Hinton, West Virginia.
-
Brice
Engineering, Anchorage, Alaska, $27,631,569 for
per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) soil-washing treatment at Eielson
AFB, Alaska.
-
Bristol Prime Contractors LLC, Anchorage, Alaska, $7,658,069 to
construct civil site improvements at the Chena River Lakes Flood Control
Project near North Pole, Alaska.
-
Brothers Produce Inc., Houston, Texas, $285,150,000 for
fresh fruit and vegetables.
-
Bryan
Construction, Colorado Springs, Colorado, $39,953,050 to
construct an addition to Building 8205, Ellsworth AFB, South Dakota.
-
Cabras
Marine Corp., Piti, Guam (N4044623D0001); Guam
Industrial Services Inc., d.b.a. Guam Shipyard, Tamuning,
Guam (N4044623D0002); Seafix Inc., Tamuning, Guam (N4044623D0003) $249,000,000 for
general repair of Military Sealift Command vessels on Guam.
-
CACI, Chantilly, Virginia, $68,780,625 for
a 12-month extension of training, deployment, and sustainment support of
Integrated Personnel and Pay System-Army, Increment II Program.
-
CAE USA Inc., Arlington, Texas, and Tinker AFB, Oklahoma, $9,870,216 for
another year of Airborne Warning and Control System Flight Crew Trainer at
Tinker AFB.
-
CAE USA Inc., Tampa, Florida, $27,656,384 for
flight training services, single engine aircraft, flight simulators, real
property facilities and supporting equipment. Work in Dothan, Alabama.
-
Callan Marine Ltd., Galveston, Texas, $13,845,450 for
pipeline deep-draft dredging of the Houston Ship Channel, Houston, Texas.
-
Carahsoft,
Reston, Virginia, $32,585,216 for
software support and maintenance to Program Executive Office, Enterprise
Information Systems.
-
Carahsoft, Reston, Virginia, $431,999,156 for
ServiceNow products.
-
Cardno
TEC-AECOM Atlantic JV, Charlottesville, Virginia, $75,000,000 for
environmental planning and engineering services in Virginia, California,
Florida, Hawaii, North Carolina, and Washington.
-
Caterpillar
Inc., Peoria, Illinois, $1,284,062,023 for
construction equipment.
-
CCI Group,
Shalimar, Florida, $12,285,857 for
repairs to utility transmission and distribution electrical grid at Naval
Submarine Base Kings Bay, Georgia.
-
Centurum
Information Technology, Marlton, New Jersey, $50,885,129 for
maintenance and operation of a restoration depot in San Diego (for fabrication,
restoration, repair, overhaul, and calibration of electro-mechanical and
mechanical shipboard, ground, and airborne assemblies, subassemblies, and test
equipment) for worldwide technical support to government agencies, fleet and
shore facilities.
-
Change
Healthcare Technologies, Alpharetta, Georgia, $328,279,472 for
digital imaging network-picture archive communication systems, components,
training, maintenance service and incidental services.
-
Chemring
Australia Pty Ltd., Lara, Victoria, Australia, $30,601,989 for
manufacture and production of MJU-68/B Flare Infrared Countermeasures (8,655 for
U.S. Navy; 792 for U.S. Air Force; 1,392 for Norway; 1,200 for Australia; 528
for Italy; 312 for Japan; 312 for Netherlands; 120 for Denmark) to be used on
F-35 aircraft. Work in Australia [Lara (47%) and Braeside (1%), Victoria] and
USA [San Diego, California (28%); Toone, Tennessee
(24%)]. Foreign Military Sales funds of $8,883,336 obligated.
-
Chenega
Infinity, Chantilly, Virginia, $9,575,934 for
physical security support at DARPA in Arlington, Virginia.
-
Chenega
Systems, Lorton, Virginia, $10,141,461 to
continue to operate and manage a software environment for 175 people (estimated
43,000 square feet) for 402nd Software Engineering Group regarding the Synergy
Innovation Project. Work at Warner Robins, Georgia.
-
Cherokee
Nation Aerospace and Defense LLC, Tulsa, Oklahoma (FA8517-23-D-0002); Ciqima Federal Services, Charleston, South Carolina (FA8517-23-D-0003);
and S&K Federal Services LLC, St. Ignatius, Montana (FA8517-23-D-0004);
$72,800,000 for
the sourcing, acquiring and delivery of a broad range of ground and aircraft
support equipment items.
-
Cherokee
Nation Operational Solutions LLC, Tulsa, Oklahoma, $33,691,944 for
site-specific activities necessary to implement the Electronic Health Record
System, MHS (Military Health System) GENESIS at military treatment facilities
located outside the continental U.S.
-
Clayton
International, Peachtree City, Georgia, $7,905,026 for
FMS (Egypt): depot level maintenance on one VH-3A Helicopter.
-
Client/Server Software Solutions Inc., Vienna, Virginia, $84,876,060 for
advisory and assistance services in support of Strategic Command's Nuclear
Command, Control, and Communication (NC3) Enterprise Center operations and
system performance risks, trends, and development. Work primarily at Offutt
AFB, Nebraska.
-
Coastal
Helicopters Inc., Panama City, Florida, $17,648,526 for
flight test support of suitable airborne platforms for ongoing testing of
sensor systems. Work in Panama City, Florida (70%); Fort Walton, Florida (25%);
and outside the continental U.S. (5%).
-
Coffman
Specialties Inc., San Diego, California, $15,835,000 for
repair of Echo Taxiway and the airfield warm-up pad at Marine Corps Air Station
Miramar in San Diego, California
-
Continental
Maritime of San Diego LLC, San Diego, California, $29,199,899 for
maintenance, modernization and repair of USS Tripoli (LHA 7) in San Diego,
California.
-
Continental
Maritime of San Diego LLC, San Diego, California, $88,249,407 for
USS Chafee (DDG 90) fiscal 2023 depot modernization period and the USS Momsen (DDG 92) fiscal 2024 depot modernization
period: a combination of maintenance, modernization, and repair in in the San
Diego, California, area.
-
Continental
Maritime San Diego, San Diego, California, $14,963,483 for
maintenance, repair, and modernization of USS Portland (LPD-27) in San
Diego.
-
Continental Maritime San Diego, San Diego, California, $8,512,648 for
USS Portland (LPD-27) fiscal 2023 selected restricted availability in
San Diego, California.
-
Copper
River Cyber Solutions, Anchorage, Alaska, $10,364,858, for
Background Investigation Enterprise System (BIES) Dashboard Management
Reporting System (DMRS) support services for Defense Counterintelligence and
Security Agency (DCSA). Work in Anchorage, Alaska; Chantilly, Virginia;
Quantico, Virginia.
-
CORE Engineering & Construction Inc., Winter Park, Florida
(N69450-23-D-0005); Healtheon Inc., New Orleans,
Louisiana (N69450-23-D-0008); Howard W. Pence Inc., Elizabethtown, Kentucky
(N69450-23-D-0006); Sergent Mechanical Systems,
d.b.a. Sergent Construction, Oxnard, California
(N69450-23-D-0007); Wright Bros LLC, Fort Walton Beach, Florida
(N69450-23-D-0009); $99,000,000 for
construction projects at DOD installations in Florida.
-
Core
Engineering & Construction Inc., Winter Park, Florida (W9127Q-23-D-0001);
Flagstar Construction Co Inc., Brandon, Mississippi (W9127Q-23-D-0002); J &
J Contractors Inc., Collinsville, Mississippi (W9127Q-23-D-0003); D&H
Construction and Cabinetry Inc., Meridian, Mississippi (W9127Q-23-D-0004); Tony
Watson Electric Inc., Brandon, Mississippi (W9127Q-23-D-0005); Orocon Construction LLC, Biloxi, Mississippi
(W9127Q-23-D-0006); Gottfried Contracting LLC, Covington, Louisiana
(W9127Q-23-D-0007); Drace Construction Corp., Ocean
Springs, Mississippi (W9127Q-23-D-0008); Southeast Cherokee Construction Inc.,
Montgomery, Alabama (W9127Q-23-D-0009); J.W. Puckett & Company Inc.,
Gulfport, Mississippi (W9127Q-23-D-0010) $40,000,000 for
five years of construction services for the National Guard.
-
Corman
Kokosing Construction Co., Annapolis, Maryland, $12,412,816 to
adjust the cubic-yard quantities of the government conditional surveys. Work in
Chesapeake City, Maryland.
-
Cox
Construction Co., Vista, California, $18,541,000 to
renovate Dorm B1332 at Travis AFB.
-
Creighton
AB Inc., Reidsville, North Carolina, $8,102,438 for
broadfall dress trousers for the Navy.
-
Crew
Training International (CTI), Memphis, Tennessee, $49,550,268 for
another year of MQ-9 aircrew training and courseware development. Work at
Creech AFB, Nevada, Holloman AFB, New Mexico, March Air Reserve Base,
California, and Hancock Air National Guard Base, New York.
-
Crowley
Government Services, Jacksonville, Florida, $45,850,402 for
operation and maintenance of six government-owned Transportation Auxiliary
General Ocean Surveillance (T-AGOS) and Transportation Auxiliary General
Missile Range instrument (T-AGM) vessels: USNS Victorious (T-AGOS 19); USNS
Able (T-AGOS 20); USNS Effective (T-AGOS 21); USNS Loyal (T-AGOS 22); USNS
Impeccable (T-AGOS 23); USNS Howard O. Lorenzen (T-AGM 25).
-
Crown Clothing Co., Vineland, New Jersey, maximum $8,682,401 for
men's Marine Corps green dress coats, belts and keepers.
-
Cubic, San
Diego, California, $35,289,602 for
FMS (Georgia): upgrade, procure, produce, integrate, test, deliver,
install, train and sustain a multitude of equipment and training. Work in San
Diego, California, USA, and Tbilisi, Georgia.
-
DCS Corp.,
Alexandria, Virginia, $28,078,107 for
continued technical support services, including full systems integration to all
Naval Air Warfare Center Weapons Division (NAWCWD) aircraft integrated product
teams and their associated aircraft weapons and support systems, to include FMS
versions of aircraft or system. Work in China Lake (87%); Ridgecrest, (5%),
Point Mugu, (1%), California; and Eglin, Florida (7%).
-
DCS Corp.,
Alexandria, Virginia, $9,608,036 for
research, development, and application-oriented activities in the generation,
propagation, detection, and use of radiation in the wavelength region between
near-ultraviolet and far-infrared wavelengths. Work D.C.
-
Defense Engineering Corp., Beavercreek, Ohio, $9,959,974 for
R&D of antennas, front-end and back-end hardware for multifunction radio
frequency systems and to evaluate the performance of innovative antenna
concepts identified by Air Force Research Laboratory with traditional and
non-traditional experimentation and measurement techniques capable of comparing
the innovative antennas with equivalent reference antennas. Includes systems
engineering, R&D, experimentation, and demonstration of sensor system
technologies covering a large portion of the radio frequency spectrum allowing
for waveform agility and advanced signal processing techniques and coordination
with agencies operating unmanned / attritable
platforms. Work at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio.
-
Deloitte
Consulting LLP, Falls Church, Virginia ($134,150,836; HT001122F4011) and Irving
Burton Associates, Falls Church, Virginia ($101,234,731; HT001122F4012) working
together to perform requirements for
Solution Delivery Division (SDD) Program Management Support. These blanked
purchase agreements perform a variety of functions, such as configuration
management, requirements management, assistance with acquisition planning
processes and services, financial service support, deployment activities and
other business, technical and administration activities, all of which support
SDD product-lines.
-
Detyens
Shipyards Inc., North Charleston, South Carolina, $21,007,304 for
a 91-calendar day shipyard availability for the regular overhaul / dry-docking
availability of fleet replenishment oiler USNS Kanawha (T-AO 196).
-
Detyens
Shipyards, North Charleston, South Carolina, $10,051,547 for
a 75-calendar day shipyard availability for fleet replenishment oiler USNS Laramie
(T-AO 203).
-
DFA Dairy
Brands Fluid LLC, d.b.a. PET Dairy, High Point, North Carolina, $27,375,000 for
milk and dairy items.
-
Dine
Construction Services LLC, d.b.a. DDC 4C, Scottsdale, Arizona, $33,066,680 for
environmental management of fire protection services at Camp Lejeune and MCAS
New River.
-
DirectViz
Solutions Inc., Chantilly, Virginia, $18,823,578 for
management, administrative and technical support services in Fort Huachuca,
Arizona.
-
Donley
Construction LLC, Aberdeen, Maryland, $11,759,218 for
paving within Maryland (35%), Virginia (35%), and D.C. (30%).
-
Draper
Laboratory, Cambridge, Massachusetts, $202,511,235 for
technical and engineering services necessary to maintain and sustain MK 6
Guidance subsystem in the Lockheed Martin Trident II (D5) submarine-launched
ballistic missile. Also, research and develop concepts and technologies
(guidance, navigation, and control) to enable the second life extension of the
Trident II. Also includes R&D of new and alternate guidance, navigation,
and control technologies for Strategic Systems Programs missions, integration
support for Columbia/Dreadnought ship construction, reentry subsystem support,
and support for the Conventional Prompt Strike/Hypersonic development. Work in
Cambridge, Massachusetts (81%), and El Segundo, California (19%).
-
DRS Network & Imaging Systems, Melbourne, Florida, $26,667,763 for
FMS (Poland): reconfigure, install, integrate, and test a combat network
system in Biedrusko, Poland.
-
DRS
Sustainment Systems Inc., Bridgeton, Missouri, $20,266,145 for
the Joint Assault Bridge program.
-
DS Government Solutions Corp., Waltham, Massachusetts, $8,987,955 for
software development and training services in support of the 3DExperience
Digital Environment Platform.
-
DY4 Inc.,
Ashburn, Virginia, $8,777,675 for
600 Versa Module Eurocard Single Board Computers in support of the AN/UPX-24(V)
Interrogator Set Technical refreshes that occur when Navy ships are docked and
overhauled.
-
Dynamic
Systems, El Segundo, California, $8,857,211 to
upgrade existing Dell servers for Virtual Machine Ware Hyper Converged
Infrastructure. Work in Camp Humphreys, South Korea.
-
EA Engineering, Science, and Technology Inc. PBC, Hunt Valley,
Maryland, $8,052,894 for
removal of munitions and explosives of concern and closure of munitions
response sites at the former Camp Howze, Cooke
County, Texas.
-
East Coast
Repair & Fabrication, Newport News, Virginia, $10,023,222 for
a 90-calendar day shipyard availability of cable laying USNS Zeus (T-ARC
7) in Newport News, Virginia.
-
Elbit America Inc., Fort Worth, Texas, $99,100,000 for
production, kitting, delivery, fielding, testing, and training of mortar
fire-control systems.
-
Emcor
Government Services, Arlington, Virginia (W91278-23-D-0028); Facility Services
Management, Clarksville, Tennessee (W91278-23-D-0029); Hospital Housekeeping
Services, Dripping Springs, Texas (W91278-23-D-0030); J&J Worldwide
Services, Austin, Texas (W91278-23-D-0031); LFG Services LLC JV, Fort worth,
Texas (W91278-23-D-0032); Tunista Valiant JV LLC,
Anchorage, Alaska (W91278-23-D-0033); Valiant Government Services,
Hopkinsville, Kentucky (W91278-23-D-0034); VW International Inc., Alexandria,
Virginia (W91278-23-D-0035) $99,000,000 for
operation and maintenance, incidental repairs, and minor construction for U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, Mobile, Alabama.
-
Engineering
Research and Consulting Inc., Huntsville, Alabama, $640,512,703 to
support planning, conducting, analyzing and reporting the results of
developmental tests, production tests and other tests conducted by the U.S.
Army Aberdeen Test Center.
-
Enlighten
IT Consulting, Linthicum Heights, Maryland, $29,939,470 for
contractor support of the Cyberspace Analytics program for Program Executive
Office, Enterprise Information Systems.
-
Eolian VR
Inc., Nutley, New Jersey, $9,999,980 for
an enterprise-level augmented reality and virtual reality production system for
SOCOM.
-
EOS Inc.,
Charleston, South Carolina, $9,292,787 for
crank case dampers for U.S. Army.
-
Epsilon Systems Solutions Inc., Portsmouth, Virginia (N5005423D0001);
Gulf Copper and Manufacturing Corp., Port Arthur, Texas (N5005423D0002); Tecnico Corp., Chesapeake, Virginia (N5005423D0003); Walashek Industrial and Marine Inc., Norfolk, Virginia
(N5005423D0004); Wilson Pipe and Fabrication, Norfolk, Virginia (N5005423D0005)
$41,253,350 for
five years of repair, maintenance, and modernization availability support for
Landing Craft Air Cushion (LCAC) and Ship to Shore Connector (SSC), the new
version of LCAC located at Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek (JEBLC),
Virginia Beach, Virginia.
-
Epsilon
Systems Solutions, San Diego, California, $22,016,373 for
technical and repair support services for the Southwest Regional Maintenance
Center’s Product Family divisions. Work in San Diego, California.
-
ERAPSCO, Columbia City, Indiana (N0001919D0012 P00017) and Lockheed
Martin, Manassas, Virginia (N0001919D0013 P00022) aggregate ceiling
$222,459,840 (funds will be obligated on individual orders as they’re issued) for
up to 36,000 AN/SSQ-125A sonobuoys for US Navy.
ERAPSCO work in De Leon Springs, Florida (69%), and Columbia City, Indiana
(31%), with Lockheed Martin work in Manassas, Virginia (90%), and Clearwater,
Florida (10%).
-
Erickson Helicopters Inc., Portland, Oregon, $8,662,677 (bringing
contract from $128,303,018 to $136,965,695) for
another three months of fixed-wing and rotary-wing air services at Edwin
Andrews Air Base, Philippines.
-
Ernst & Young LLP, New York, New York, $20,484,705 (to $59,641,603
from $39,156,898), for
financial statement audit services for Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) at DLA
headquarters (Fairfax, Virginia), other federal locations in Virginia and Ohio,
and beyond.
-
Ernst & Young LLP, New York, New York, $42,559,951 (to $154,880,685
from $112,320,734) for
financial statement audit services for the Navy in Alexandria, Virginia.
-
Ernst & Young LLP, Washington, D.C., $36,610,514, for
audit services of the Department of the Air Force General Fund and Working
Capital Fund financial statements and examination. Work in Washington, D.C.
-
Escal
Institute of Advanced Technologies Inc., North Bethesda, Maryland, $9,824,000 for
cybersecurity training and certifications.
-
Fairbanks Morse Defense, Beloit, Wisconsin, $89,894,734 for
engineering and technical support of littoral combat ship (LCS) Freedom-variant
Colt-Pielstick 16PA6B main propulsion diesel engines.
Work worldwide.
-
Family and Social Services Administration, Indiana, Indianapolis,
Indiana, $22,499,993 for
operation of a military dining facility, location unspecified.
-
FCN Inc., Rockville, Maryland, $15,218,715 for
the Elastic License Bundle, which includes unlimited Enterprise resource unit
software licenses, consulting services, professional annual training
subscriptions, monthly training courses, and warranty coverage in support of
the Cyberspace Vulnerability Assessment / Hunter weapon system. Work at Joint
Base San Antonio-Lackland and Chapman Annex, San Antonio, Texas; Scott AFB,
Illinois; and Hurlburt Field, Florida.
-
Federal Contracting Inc., Colorado Springs, Colorado, $77,157,410 for
construction of a wash rack and maintenance hangar, Ellsworth AFB, South
Dakota.
-
Federal Express Corp., Memphis, Tennessee (HTC711-23-D-C023); Polar Air
Cargo Worldwide Inc., Purchase, New York (HTC711-23-D-C024); United Parcel
Service (UPS), Louisville, Kentucky (HTC711-23-D-C025); estimated total
$2,241,838,846 (1 Apr 2023 to 30 Sep 2026) for
international and domestic small package delivery services under the Next
Generation Delivery Service-2 program.
-
Federal
Prison Industries (UNICOR), D.C., $20,748,291 for
the modular lightweight load carrying equipment hand grenade pouch, flash bang
grenade pouch, canteen/general purpose pouch and the M4 two magazine pouch.
Work in Indiana, Louisiana, and North Carolina
-
Federal
Strategies LLC, Fredericksburg, Virginia, $15,500,000 for
software maintenance, database development, engineering support, integration
services, functionality and range safety parameter updates within the
multi-service Range Managers Toolkit (RMTK) tools. Provides RMTK integration
services and functionality updates within the Marine Corps Range and Training
Area Management Systems. Also provides integration of the Explosive Training
Range Tool, Surface Danger Zone, and Weapons Danger Zone into a mobile
environment.
-
Food
Services, Inc., Mount Vernon, Washington, $255,000,000 for
full-line food distribution in Okinawa, Japan.
-
Four
separate contracts (each with a ceiling of $9 billion) were issued on 7
Dec 2022. Funds will be obligated on individual orders as they are issued. The
contracts are for
“enterprise-wide, globally available cloud services across all security domains
and classification levels, from the strategic level to the tactical edge.” This
“Joint Warfighting Cloud Capability will allow mission owners to acquire
authorized commercial cloud offerings directly from the Cloud Service Providers
contract awardees.” Estimated completion date 8 Jun 2028. The four recipients
of these contracts were Google Support Services, Reston, Virginia
(HQ003423D0017), Oracle America, Redwood City, California (HQ003423D0018),
Amazon Web Services (AWS), Seattle, Washington (HQ003423D0019), and Microsoft,
Redmond, Washington (HQ003423D0020).
-
Fury
Solutions JV, Xenia, Ohio, $44,700,000 for
a Multilateral Administrative Requirements Vehicle. This contract provides for
commercial administrative services for day-to-day administrative and data entry
requirements to support the Phillips Research Site, AFRL space vehicles, AFRL
directed energy and geographically separated units or locations with an AFRL
presence. Work primarily at Kirtland AFB, New Mexico
-
Geiger Brothers Inc., Jackson, Ohio (W91237-23-D-0003); Massillon
Construction and Supply LLC, Massillon, Ohio (W91237-23-D-0004); Mi-De-Con
Inc., Ironton, Ohio (W91237-23-D-0005); Aleut Flood Management LLC, Oak Ridge,
Tennessee (W91237-23-D-0006); Brannon Contracting and Maintenance Services LLC,
Zanesville, Ohio (W91237-23-D-0007); C.J. Mahan Construction Company LLC, Grove
City, Ohio (W91237-23-D-0008); and Shimmick
Construction Company Inc., Irvine, California (W91237-23-D-0009); $98,000,000 for
design-bid-build construction projects for U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
Huntington, West Virginia.
-
General
Atomics, Poway, California, $46,939,334 for
spares necessary for the successful operational capability of MQ-9A Block 5
Reaper air vehicles, ground control stations, and ancillary equipment. Work in
Poway, California (52%); San Diego, California (15%); Walpole, Massachusetts
(5.1%); Carlsbad, California (5%); St. Charles, Missouri (2.7%); El Cajon,
California (2.5%); Oxnard, California (1.5%); Farmingdale, New York (1.3%);
Herndon, Virginia (1.3%); Aurora, Ohio (1.05%); Ontario, California (1%);
Nevada City, California (1%); Tulare, California (1%); Huntsville, Arkansas
(1%); Miami, Florida (1%); Newberry, South Carolina (1%); various locations
within the continental U.S. (5.8%); and Toronto, Canada (.75%).
-
General Atomics, Poway, California, $65,507,036 for
procurement, transportation, and installation of Ground Control Stations (GCS),
materials, support equipment, as well as associated training, engineering,
non-recurring engineering, and integrated logistics support. Also procures 18
mission kits, spares, ground support equipment, and communications gear for
site setup re: Marine Air Ground Task Force MQ-9A Block 5 Reaper air vehicles
and GCS for US Navy. Work in California: Poway (60%), Saber Springs (20%), and
Grey Butte (20%). 25 miles east of Palmdale, Grey Butte Field is a former
World War II airfield now owned by General Atomics.
-
General
Atomics, Poway, California, $7,967,144 for
work on DARPA’s Liberty Lifter program.
-
General Atomics, Poway, California, $75,074,676 for
contractor logistics support for MQ-1C Gray Eagle
Block 0.
-
General Atomics, Poway, California, $8,499,969 for
MQ-9 drone launch and recovery services.
-
General Atomics, San Diego, California, $43,822,792 for
programmatic, engineering, logistics, configuration management, diminishing
manufacturing sources and material shortages, technical support, logistics
product updates, data calls and meeting support, and program planning support
for the Electromagnetic Aircraft Launch System (EMALS) and Advanced Arresting
Gear sustainment. Work in San Diego, California (83%); Lakehurst, New Jersey
(15%); and Tupelo, Mississippi (2%).
-
General Dynamic Information Technology, Falls Church, Virginia,
$17,839,932 for
the Distributed Common Ground System network weapon system and all supporting
activities (e.g., development, integration, maintenance, administration,
management, documentation, assessment, disposal, and troubleshooting of 480 ISR
Wing IT assets from the network and enterprise level) at Joint Base
Langley-Eustis, Virginia; and Beale AFB, California. Could expand to Fort
Smith, Arkansas; McConnell AFB, Kansas; Birmingham, Alabama; Otis Air National
Guard Base, Massachusetts; Reno, Nevada; JB Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii; Terra
Haute, Indiana; Ogden, Utah; South Korea; Ramstein Air Base, Germany.
-
General
Dynamics Bath Iron Works, Bath, Maine, $181,983,583 for
continuation of integrated planning yard services and long lead-time material
for the (DDG-51) Arleigh Burke-class ships in Bath, Maine.
-
General
Dynamics Bath Iron Works, Bath, Maine, $19,683,882 for
long-lead time material for the Large Missile Vertical Launch System launch
module fabrication on DDG-1002. Work in Spring Grove, Illinois (48%); Houston,
Texas (25%); Alma (20%) and Merrill (7%), Michigan.
-
General Dynamics Bath Iron Works, Bath, Maine, $37,368,385 for
planning yard efforts (engineering, technical, planning, ship configuration,
data and logistics efforts) for DDG 1000- class destroyers post-delivery and in-service
life-cycle support, and other direct costs. Work in Bath, Maine (95%), and San
Diego, California (5%).
-
General
Dynamics Bath Iron Works, Bath, Maine, $8,000,905 for
long-lead time material for the Large Missile Vertical Launch System (LMVLS)
Launch Module Environmental Barrier. Work in Riverside (75%), Lodi (18%), and
San Jose (3%), California; and Merrill, Michigan (4%).
-
General
Dynamics Electric Boat, Groton, Connecticut, $122,781,126 for
lead yard support and development studies and design efforts related to
Virginia-class submarines.
-
General
Dynamics Electric Boat, Groton, Connecticut, $18,106,451 for
Trident II (D5) Kings Bay Trident Trainer Facility kit and engineering support.
Work at Groton, Connecticut (66%); Kings Bay, Georgia (25%); and Cape Canaveral,
Florida (9%).
-
General
Dynamics Electric Boat, Groton, Connecticut, $37,349,809 for
Reactor Plant Planning Yard support for nuclear-powered submarines and Support
Yard for the Navy's moored training ships. Work in Groton, Connecticut (89%);
and Charleston, South Carolina (11%).
-
General Dynamics Electric Boat, Groton, Connecticut, $5,134,324,189 for
missile tube long-lead-time material; missile tube manufacturing; additional
advance procurement, including advance construction and multi-program
material-procurement, and production backup units; planned program equipment
replacement and spare material for follow-on Columbia-class submarines; and
logistics/sustainment support for the US and UK programs. Also includes
additional Submarine Industrial Base (SIB) enhancements as part of the
Integrated Enterprise Plan and multi-program material procurement supporting
Columbia-class ballistic missile submarines and the nuclear shipbuilding
enterprise (Virginia-class and Ford-class). The industrial base development
work furthers US Navy’s plan of serial production of Columbia and Virginia
submarines. Pursuant to the president’s budget for fiscal 2023, the
requirements are included for SIB investment for strategic sourcing, supplier
development, workforce development, and technology opportunities. Funding is
pursuant to the president’s budget for fiscal 2023 and the Further Continuing
Appropriations and Extensions Act, 2023 (Public Law 117-229). Work in Groton,
Connecticut (70%); Newport News, Virginia (25%); and Quonset Point, Rhode
Island (5%).
-
General Dynamics Electric Boat, Groton, Connecticut, $50,089,615 for
USS Montana (SSN 794) post-delivery work in Newport News, Virginia (96%), and
Groton, Connecticut (4%).
-
General
Dynamics Electric Boat, Groton, Connecticut, $532,921,125 for
one year of Lead Yard Support and Development Studies and Design efforts
related to Virginia-class submarines. Work in Groton, Connecticut (99%) and
Newport News, Virginia (1%).
-
General
Dynamics Electric Boat, Groton, Connecticut, $63,653,671 for
engineering and technical design effort to support R&D concept formulation
for current and future submarine platforms.
-
General Dynamics Electric Boat, Groton, Connecticut, $7,767,550 for
Trident II (D5) Trainer Facility kits and engineering support services. Work at
Groton, Connecticut (66%); Kings Bay, Georgia (25%); and Cape Canaveral,
Florida (9%).
-
General
Dynamics Land Systems, Sterling Heights, Michigan, $10,965,532 for
FMS (Kuwait): maintenance training and procedural technical assistance
to the Kuwait Land Force. Work in Kuwait.
-
General
Dynamics Land Systems, Sterling Heights, Michigan, $14,885,334 for
Abrams Systems technical support. Some FMS to Australia.
-
General
Dynamics Land Systems, Sterling Heights, Michigan, $146,725,463 for
flat-bottom hull Stryker vehicles.
-
General Dynamics Land Systems, Sterling Heights, Michigan, $16,488,103
for contractor logistics support re: M1A1SA Abrams tanks and M88A1/A2 recovery
vehicles in Camp Taji, Iraq. Fiscal 2022 Iraq
Train and Equip Funds obligated.
-
General Dynamics Land Systems, Sterling Heights, Michigan, $7,830,093 for
Abrams System technical support.
-
General
Dynamics NASSCO-Norfolk (Metro Machine Corp.) Norfolk, Virginia, $76,698,633 for
the fiscal 2023 dry-docking selected restricted availability for the USS Bainbridge
(DDG-96) in Norfolk, Virginia.
-
General Electric Aviation, Cincinnati, Ohio, $29,293,008 for
contractor engineering and technical services (CETS). CETS personnel to assist
in improving the skills and abilities of Air Force military and civilian
personnel with the aim to become self-sufficient in the maintenance of aircraft
systems. Work at U.S. military (Air Force, Air National Guard, Navy) sites and
various FMS locations. Involves unclassified FMS to Bahrain, Egypt, Israel,
Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and South Korea.
-
General
Electric Aviation, Cincinnati, Ohio, $8,976,280 for
engine (F110-GE-129) test cell support equipment and installation of the
equipment. Involves FMS to Taiwan.
-
General Electric Aviation, Lynn, Massachusetts, $16,398,986 for
engineering and engine system improvement support for the F414 Component
Improvement Program.
-
General Electric Aviation, Lynn, Massachusetts, $24,104,653 for
engineering and engine system improvement support for the T408 Component
Improvement Program.
-
General Electric Aviation, Sterling, Virginia, $157,183,240 for
propeller engineering reliability and logistics support for the KC-130J R391
propeller system utilized by U.S. Navy, Marine Corps, and FMS. Work in
Sterling, Virginia (31.18%); Iwakuni, Japan (13.95%);
Cherry Point, North Carolina (13.95%); Miramar, California (13.95%);
Gloucester, UK (8.85%); Fort Worth, Texas (8.63%); Kaneohe, Hawaii
(5.18%); Kuwait City, Kuwait (2.59%); and various locations within the
continental U.S. (1.72%).
-
General Electric, Cincinnati, Ohio, $29,047,285, for
FMS (Bulgaria and Taiwan): engine (F110-GE-129) spare components
and consumables.
-
General Electric, Cincinnati, Ohio, $9,769,995, for
FMS (multiple unnamed countries): spare components and consumables for
engines (F110-GE-129, used on Boeing F-15 aircraft).
-
General Electric, Cincinnati, Ohio, undefinitized
contract action (ceiling of $203,000,000) for
technology maturation and risk reduction, and a contract ($99,470,000) for
R&D maturing “fuel-efficient adaptive engine component technologies” and
reducing “associated risk” in preparation for next-generation propulsion system
development for combat aircraft.
-
General
Electric, Lynn, Massachusetts, $1,085,106,892 (5 years) for
repair, replacement, and program support of 784 F414 engine components for
F/A-18 aircraft.
-
General Electric, Lynn, Massachusetts, maximum $18,384,724 for
J85 aircraft engine compressor rotors for Air Force.
-
General
Electric, Niskayuna, New York (NW of Albany), $12,832,460 for
R&D aimed at developing a mobile automated manufacturing platform to provide
just-in-time manufacturing of nucleic acid countermeasures to rapidly produce,
formulate, and package doses of nucleic acid therapeutics and prophylactics.
Work in Niskayuna, New York; Le Kremlin-Bicêtre,
France; New Milford, Connecticut; Cambridge, Massachusetts; and Seattle,
Washington.
-
General
Electric, Niskayuna, New York, $10,931,388 for
the Measuring Biological Aptitude program. GE Research “developed a
generalizable computational platform to assess warfighter aptitude and
performance based on expression circuits that link macroscopic phenotypes to
the underlying molecular biology of the individual.”
-
General
Microwave Corp., Syosset, New York, $12,883,118 for
fabrication, test, and delivery of modulator, signal generators (radio
frequency module) … to modify or develop variants that will significantly
improve and maintain the [NAWCWD] airborne threat simulation organization's
capabilities as a leader in electronic attack and active emitter systems for
the simulation of threats against U. S. forces.
-
Gentex
Corp., Simpson, Pennsylvania, $40,481,189 for
second generation advanced combat helmets.
-
Georgia
Tech Research Corp., Atlanta, Georgia, $22,704,951 for
research under the Signature Management using Operational Knowledge and
Environments (SMOKE) program. SMOKE aims to “develop data-driven tools to
automate the planning and execution of threat-emulated cyber infrastructure
needed for network security assessments.” Work in Atlanta (95%) and Athens
(5%), Georgia.
-
Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) / Georgia Tech Applied Research
Corp., Atlanta, Georgia, $22,692,757 for
R&D of multi-spectral sensing technologies as part of the GTRI Autonomous
Technology Exploratory Research effort.
-
GHD Setiadi Kaula AE JV, Honolulu,
Hawaii, $30,000,000 (increasing the total ordering capacity of the IDIQ
contract to $70,000,000) for
architect-engineer services on base infrastructure and other projects within
Australia (77%), Virginia (13%), Guam (7%), and Philippines (3%).
-
Gideon
Contacting LLC, San Antonio, Texas (W912BV-23-D-0001); B&H Contracting
Company d.b.a. as Dawson BH Co., Fort Bragg, North Carolina (W912BV-23-D-0002);
Red Eagle JV, Coweta, Oklahoma (W912BV-23-D-0003); Vazquez Reasbeck
Construction LLC, Kansas City, Missouri (W912BV-23-D-0004); $49,000,000 for
construction services in support of various military and civil works projects
for USACE Tulsa, Oklahoma.
-
Gideon
Contracting LLC, San Antonio, Texas, $9,999,604 to
design and construct approximately 9,500 linear feet of raw waterline on Tinker
AFB.
-
Gilbane
Building Co., Providence, Rhode Island, $26,396,962 to
renovate Building 2814 at Camp Hansen, Okinawa, Japan.
-
Gilbane Federal, Concord, California, $118,368,220 for
construction of reinforced concrete pads and foundations in support of the
installation of the Tactical Mobile Over-the-Horizon Radar equipment in the
Republic of Palau.
-
Global Connections To Employment Inc., Pensacola, Florida, $15,478,108 for
dining facility attendants services likely at Fort Sam Houston, Texas.
-
Golden
Manufacturing, Golden, Mississippi, $10,800,320 for
various types of trousers for Navy and Army. Work in North Carolina.
-
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co., Houston, Texas, $28,825,075 to
place approximately 231,000 cubic yards of beach fill along the Atlantic Ocean
coastline in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
-
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co., Houston, Texas, $8,473,720 for
maintenance dredging in Palm Beach, Florida.
-
GTP
Consulting Engineers Inc., Duluth, Georgia (W9128F-23-D-0001); Robert and Co.,
Atlanta, Georgia (W9128F-23-D-0002); Argus Consulting Inc., Overland Park,
Kansas (W9128F-23-D-0003); Enterprise Engineering Group Inc., Anchorage, Alaska
(W9128F-23-D-0004); Austin Brockenbrough and
Associates LLC, Richmond, Virginia (W9128F-23-D-0005); Pond and Co., Peachtree
Corners, Georgia (W9128F-23-D-0006); Burns & McDonnell Engineering Company
Inc., Kansas City, Kansas (W9128F-23-D-0007); AECOM-GTP USACE Omaha Fuels JV,
Atlanta, Georgia (W9128F-23-D-0008); $98,000,000 for
architect-engineering services.
-
Guidon
MES JV II LLC, Indianapolis, Indiana, $47,000,000 for
architect-engineering design services, mostly in support of the Veterans'
Affairs Medical Center in Puerto Rico.
-
H.V.
Collins Co., Providence, Rhode Island, $24,481,285 to
complete a "gut" renovation of the northeast end of Building 1614,
AFLCMC, Hanscom AFB, Massachusetts.
-
Harper Construction Company Inc., San Diego, California, $65,798,783 for
design and construction of a high-bay depot maintenance hangar, Tinker AFB,
Oklahoma.
-
HCI
Systems Inc., Ontario, California, $10,865,000 to
upgrade fire alarm and mass notification systems at Naval Medical Center San
Diego.
-
Health Net Federal Services, Sacramento, California, $70,560,961 for
expanding TRICARE services to beneficiaries diagnosed with Autism and their
families. Health Net Federal Services provides ACD services within its network
in the western region of continental U.S. More details in contract
announcement.
-
Hensel
Phelps Construction Co., Honolulu, Hawaii, $15,809,872 for repair of
administrative spaces at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii.
-
Hensel Phelps Construction, Honolulu, Hawaii, $18,467,000 for
fiscal 2023 RM20-0677 Repair Wastewater Treatment Plant Effluent Pump Station
Building 1357, Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii.
-
Heritage-M2C1 JV, Delta, Alaska, $75,000,000 for
minor, non-complex construction at Eielson AFB and Clear Space Force Station,
Alaska.
-
Herve
Cody Contractor LLC, Robbinsville, North Carolina, $42,342,917 for
installation of levee structures, degrading existing spoil piles, and
constructing earthen plugs in Miami, Florida.
-
Honeywell International, Tempe, Arizona, $8,021,667 for
highly specialized repair, overhaul, and engineering services for line
replacement units, shop replaceable units, test equipment and individual
components. Includes requirements from Robins AFB, Georgia; Hill AFB, Utah; and
Tinker AFB, Oklahoma.
-
Humana Government Business (HT940223C0001), Louisville, Kentucky, for
managed care support to DOD, Defense Health Agency (DHA), TRICARE program in
the East Region. The total potential contract value, including all transition
and options periods, is estimated at $70,846,618,321. The contractor will
assist the Defense Health Agency in operating an integrated health care
delivery system combining the resources of the contractor and the military’s
direct medical care system to provide health, medical and administrative
support services to eligible members of the uniformed services, retirees and
their eligible family members. TriWest Healthcare Alliance Corp.
(HT940223C0002), Phoenix, Arizona, for
managed care support to DOD, DHA, TRICARE program in the West Region. The total
potential contract value, including all transition and options periods, is
estimated at $65,140,149,682. See announcement for more details about these two
contracts.
-
Huntington
Ingalls Inc. Newport News Shipbuilding, Newport News, Virginia, $16,611,034 for
engineering and technical design effort to support research and development
concept formulation for current and future submarine platforms.
-
Huntington
Ingalls Inc. Newport News Shipbuilding, Newport News, Virginia, $8,467,608 for
planning and design yard activities for Standard Navy Valves installed in
commissioned nuclear-powered submarines, submersibles, and aircraft carriers.
Work in Newport News, Virginia.
-
Huntington Ingalls Industries, Ingalls Shipbuilding Division,
Pascagoula, Mississippi, $36,024,953 for
life cycle engineering and support for the LPD 17-class Amphibious Transport
Dock Ship Program. Work in Pascagoula, Mississippi (95%), and Norfolk, Virginia
(5%).
-
Huntington Ingalls Industries, Ingalls Shipbuilding, Pascagoula,
Mississippi, $10,132,041 for
program management, advanced planning, engineering, and design in support of
post shakedown availability for DDG 125. Work in Pascagoula, Mississippi
(70%), and San Diego, California (30%).
-
Huntington
Ingalls Industries, Newport News Shipbuilding, Newport News, Virginia,
$36,180,137 for
work previously authorized and completed — related to the various warfare
system installations and testing necessary to support the completed
construction for USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) in Newport News, Virginia
-
Huntington
Ingalls Industries, Newport News Shipbuilding, Newport News, Virginia,
$10,208,247 definitizing the previously authorized installation of Consolidated
Afloat Networks and Enterprise Services (CANES) on
USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) in Newport News, Virginia.
-
Huntington
Ingalls Industries, Pascagoula, Mississippi, $2,414,000,000 for
construction in support of one Amphibious Assault Ship (General Purpose)
Replacement (LHA(R)) Flight 1 Ship (LHA 9). Work in Pascagoula, Mississippi
(72%); Milwaukee, Wisconsin (2%); Baltimore, Maryland (2%); Beloit, Wisconsin
(2%); Brunswick, Georgia (2%); Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1%); Cincinnati,
Ohio (1%); Kingsford, Michigan (1%); Hueytown, Alabama (1%); York, Pennsylvania
(1%); Cranberry Township, Pennsylvania (1%); and others individually less than
1% each (14%).
-
Huntington
Ingalls Industries, Pascagoula, Mississippi, $35,744,707 for
follow-on CG 47 class integrated planning yard services in Pascagoula,
Mississippi.
-
Huntsville Rehabilitation Foundation Inc., Huntsville, Alabama,
$10,624,558 for
the Molle 4000 Harness Single Point Release, buckle
strap and safety strap dispatcher.
-
Hyster-Yale
Group Inc., Greenville, North Carolina (SPE8EC-23-D-0001, $255,000,000) has
been added (26 Oct
2022) as an awardee to the multiple award contract for material handling
equipment, issued against solicitation SPE8EC-21-R-0001 and awarded July 22,
2022.
-
HZA
Engineering LLC, Anchorage, Alaska (W911KB-23-D-0009); Design Alaska Inc.,
Fairbanks, Alaska (W911KB-23-D-0010); CRW Engineering Group, Anchorage, Alaska
(W911KB-23-D-0011); $9,750,000 for
architect-engineer services for USACE Anchorage, Alaska.
-
IAP Worldwide Services (meet the IAP board of
directors), Cape Canaveral, Florida, $8,383,327 (brings total cumulative
contract value to $46,580,312) for
ongoing base operations support at Naval Support Activity Souda
Bay, Greece.
-
IES
Downstream LLC, Kapolei, Hawaii, $170,240,000 for
services and related contractor‐owned, contractor‐operated fuel storage
facilities with capabilities to receive, store, protect and ship two grades of
government-owned aviation turbine fuel (JAA/F24 and JP5) and one grade of naval
distillate (F76) within the Oahu, Hawaii, area. For the Defense Logistics
Agency.
-
IMT
Defense Corp., Westerville, Ohio, $391,015,040 to
increase the industrial base to manufacture, assemble, inspect, package and
deliver 155 mm artillery M795 projectile metal parts assemblies.
-
Industries for the Blind and Visually Impaired, Milwaukee, Wisconsin,
$31,056,653 for
the Vertical Skills Engineering Construction Kit.
-
Indyne
Inc., Lexington Park, Maryland, $24,165,123 for
Long Range Discrimination Radar Space Support Facilities’ operations and
maintenance at Clear Space Force Station, Alaska. Contract line items align
with the Solid-State Phase Array Radar System contract FA2618-22-C-0001 period
of performance.
-
Innovative
Defense Technologies, Arlington, Virginia, $15,935,955 for
engineering labor and support requirements for automated test and analysis
capability supporting Navy surface combatant combat system development. Work in
Arlington, Virginia (40%); Mount Laurel, New Jersey (39%); Kauai, Hawaii (10%);
White Sands, New Mexico (9%); and at sea (2%).
-
Innovative Defense Technologies, Arlington, Virginia, $8,668,931 for
Navy engineering design and development and supporting material procurements.
Work in Fall River, Massachusetts.
-
InSynergy
Engineering Inc., Honolulu, Hawaii (W9128A-23-D-0003); Mechanical Engineers of
Hawaii Corp, Honolulu, Hawaii (W9128A-23-D-0004); Mechanical Enterprises Inc.,
Honolulu, Hawaii (W9128A-23-D-0005); Robert and Co., Atlanta, Georgia
(W9128A-23-D-0006); $9,900,000 for
architect-engineer services.
-
IntelliDyne
LLC, Falls Church, Virginia, $29,072,756, to
continue network support services at Defense Health Agency (DHA) headquarters.
IT support includes operating and maintaining, and the transition to a fully
integrated site, and enterprise IT support model for all current DHA HQ sites,
network domains currently referred to as the DHA Network (DHAN), as well as all
respective IT network, systems support services, associated infrastructures,
and enclaves. Continued support includes desk side support, remote or onsite
troubleshooting, onsite IT touch labor, local IT support activity
program/project management support, network security and infrastructure
assurance activities. Work primarily at Headquarters in Falls Church, Virginia,
along with other locations in Virginia; San Antonio, Texas; Aurora, Colorado;
San Diego, California; Great Lakes, Illinois; and Silver Spring and Fort
Detrick, Maryland.
-
Inuksuk A/S, Nuuk, Greenland, maximum $3,950,000,000 to
operate and maintain Thule Air Base, Greenland (civil engineering,
airfield/water port operations, fuels management, transportation, non-secure
communications, environmental management, food service, medical/public health,
supply, recreation, and community services).
-
iWorks
Corp., Reston, Virginia, $12,467,558 for
continued services for “seamlessly” vetting personnel for access, preserving
the adjudicative decision, and identifying and mitigating insider threat risk
for the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency (DCSA). Work in and
around Fort George G. Meade, Maryland.
-
J P
Industries Inc., Tucson, Arizona, ceiling $9,800,000 for
custodial services (facility and restroom cleaning) at Davis-Monthan AFB,
Arizona.
-
Jacobs EwingCole JV, Pasadena, California, $25,000,000 for
architect-engineering services on large projects under the military
construction program in California (87%), Arizona (5%), Nevada (5%), Colorado
(1%), New Mexico (1%), and Utah (1%).
-
Jacobs,
Fort Walton Beach, Florida, $36,542,735 for
about two years of site activation, test and evaluation, and sustainment of
Underwater Launch Test Capability Program. Work in Crane, Indiana (90%);
Ridgecrest, California (5%); Morristown, New Jersey (5%).
-
Jacobs, Tullahoma, Tennessee, $25,817,299 for
Aberdeen test support services.
-
Jacobs, Tullahoma, Tennessee, $30,633,270 for
base operations support at Naval Station Mayport, Florida; Marine Corps Support
Facility Blount Island, Florida; and outlying areas.
-
Javelin JV (Raytheon/Lockheed Martin), Tucson, Arizona, $25,224,984 for
Engineering Services Memorandum 23.04.02 Javelin Outdoor Trainer System
Qualification.
-
JLL-Midnight Sun IFMS LLC, Vienna, Virginia, $32,704,431 for
base operations support at NAS Jacksonville, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery
Jacksonville, Florida, and outlying areas.
-
John
Hopkins University, Laurel, Maryland, $150,001,000, for
services for advanced development, acquisition, and test and evaluation of
aerospace systems, to include munitions, cyber warfare and electronic warfare
elements.
-
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (JHU APL). Laurel,
Maryland, $49,900,000 for
specifically designed models, software routines, hardware sub-systems, systems,
platforms, and tools that enable weapon development and analysis for
sensor/payload/subsystem performance.
-
Johnson
& Johnson Health Care Systems DePuy Synthes Mitek, Piscataway, New Jersey, $244,308,143 for
orthopedic procedural packages and supplies.
-
Joyce
& Associates Construction Inc., Newport, North Carolina, $10,801,446 for
repairs to a wastewater treatment plant, Havelock, North Carolina.
-
Kako'o
Services LLC, Honolulu, Hawaii, maximum $25,000,000 for
dental services outside the continental U.S., primarily in Okinawa, Japan.
-
KBR, Houston, Texas, $12,299,655 for
ongoing base operating support at Naval Support Facility Redzikowo,
Slupsk, Poland.
-
KBR,
Houston, Texas, $24,763,860 (brings contract total to $139,198,905) for
base operations support at Naval Support Activity (NSA) Bahrain.
-
KBR,
Houston, Texas, $66,497,640 for
base operations support aboard Naval Support Facility Diego Garcia.
-
KBR, Lexington Park, Maryland, $42,999,089 to
increase the scope by merging F/A-18 contractor support services for Australia
and Switzerland. Work in Patuxent River, Maryland (78.4%); Dusseldorf,
Switzerland (13%); Amberley, Australia (4.4%); and Kuwait City, Kuwait (4.2%).
FMS of $10,314,309.
-
Kearney & Co., Alexandria, Virginia, $11,609,199 for
financial statement audit services for the Defense Health Program (DHP),
Medicare Eligible Retiree Care Fund, and Defense Health Agency Contract
Resource Management. Work in various locations, including DHP headquarters in
Falls Church, Virginia, as well as other federal locations in Texas, Ohio,
Indiana, Maryland, Colorado, New York, and Maine.
-
Kearney
& Co., Alexandria, Virginia, $49,238,991 for
audit of financial statement of USACE civil works, and the financial statements
for the agencies owning the funds sub-allotted to USACE military programs for
fiscal years 2023-2027. Work in D.C., and other locations inside and outside
the U.S.
-
Kegman
Inc., Melbourne, Florida, $8,957,714 for
operation and maintenance, R&D, and limited purchase order services re:
day-to-day operations of the Air Force Technical Applications Center. Work at
Patrick Space Force Base, Florida, and alternate locations.
-
Keysight Technologies Inc., Colorado Springs, Colorado, $15,329,600 to
acquire microwave measuring receivers.
-
Kiewit
Infrastructure West Company, Honolulu, Hawaii, $53,148,000 to
construct a concrete rotary-wing aircraft parking apron, concrete taxiways with
helipads and a concrete parallel taxiway at Wheeler Army Airfield, Wahiawa,
Hawaii.
-
Knox
County Association for Remarkable Citizens, Vincennes, Indiana, $12,572,578 for
GEN III, Layer II, mid-weight undershirts for Army.
-
KPMG LLP,
McLean, Virginia, $45,291,305 for
audit services of the Army general fund and working capital fund financial statements.
-
Kratos,
Sacramento, California, $15,515,343 for
two XQ-58A unmanned aerial systems (UAS) with sensor and weapon system payloads
“to accomplish the penetrating affordable autonomous collaborative killer –
portfolio objectives,” including technical services non-recurring engineering,
system/subsystem integration, installation, testing, ground and flight
operations, logistics, and maintenance for the UAS as well as government-owned,
contractor-operated operations for flight test and demonstration events at
government test ranges.
-
Kratos,
San Diego, California, $22,767,869 for
control system consolidated production and sustainment services in Colorado Springs,
Colorado.
-
KRI at Northeastern University LLC, Burlington, Massachusetts,
$45,456,910 to
develop an analysis and assessment methodology for complex systems and
technologies.
-
L-J Inc.,
Cayce, South Carolina, $8,547,380 for
raising dikes and berms, and installation of new spillway systems in
Charleston, South Carolina.
-
L3Harris (acquired
ForceX in 2015) Nashville, Tennessee, $45,716,059.00 for
Brimstone Software, which includes the mission execution that assists the
pilots and sensor operators in a myriad of mission tasks such as sensor
management, situational awareness, map and video displays, tactical area
navigation and video/audio recording.
-
L3Harris Communication Integrated Systems, Greenville, Texas,
$12,687,331 for
FMS (unnamed): management support services in Greenville, Texas.
-
L3Harris
Communication Integrated Systems, Greenville, Texas, $42,748,575 for
FMS (unnamed): a Joint Airborne Multi-Mission Multi-Sensor System
Integration Lab, Ground, and Training System. Work in Greenville, Texas.
-
L3Harris Communications Vertex Aerospace, Madison, Mississippi,
$93,995,000 for
contractor-operated and -maintained base supply of the Air Education and
Training Command (AETC) fleet of 177 T-1A trainer aircraft. Work at Randolph
AFB, Texas; Laughlin AFB, Texas; Vance AFB, Oklahoma; Columbus AFB, Mississippi;
and NAS Pensacola, Florida.
-
L3Harris, Amityville, New York, $14,298,819 for
production and delivery of 17 BRU-75A and BRU-76A Bomb Rack Unit ship sets
(nine for US Navy, five for Germany, two for Australia, and one
for South Korea) for the P-8A aircraft (lots 12-13). FMS customer funds
of $5,046,642, and Foreign Cooperative Project funds of $1,682,214 obligated.
-
L3Harris,
Amityville, New York, $60,742,580 for
Bomb Rack Unit 57B replacement parts for F-16 aircraft. Later corrected to be
awarded 14 Oct.
-
L3Harris,
Camden, New Jersey, $40,965,044 for
Cooperative Engagement Capability (CEC) system spares, signal data processors,
AN/USG-3B systems, stock point operation and program support, engineering
studies and analyses, configuration, obsolescence, and tech data management,
and technical data package. Work in Largo, Florida (48%); Melo Park, California
(19%); Lititz, Pennsylvania (17%); and Salt Lake City, Utah (16%).
-
L3Harris, Northampton, Massachusetts, $13,749,894 to
procure additional MK 20 electro-optical sensor systems, radar cross-section
kits, shock isolation assembly kits, heat shield kits, thermal image sensors,
and eye-safe laser range finders.
-
L3Harris,
Salt Lake City, Utah, $20,717,731 for
the Manned/Unmanned Teaming hardware and technical and engineering support for
the Boeing AH-64 “Apache” attack helicopter.
-
L3Harris,
Williston, Vermont, $60,742,580 for
Bomb Rack Unit 57B Replacement Parts for the Lockheed Martin F-16 aircraft.
Work at Clifton, New Jersey. Involves some Foreign Military Sales.
-
L3Harris’ Interstate Electronics Corp., Anaheim, California,
$59,545,560 for
services and support for flight test instrumentation systems. Work in Anaheim,
California (55%); Cape Canaveral, Florida (29%); D.C. (6%); Bremerton,
Washington (3%); Kings Bay, Georgia (2%); Laurel, Maryland (1%); Silverdale,
Washington (1%); and Barrow-in-Furness, UK (3%).
-
L3Harris’ MariPro, Goleta, California,
$46,600,299 for
production, test, and technical review of two shallow-water training ranges and
production, test, and technical review of three deep-water training ranges.
Includes provisions at the Atlantic Undersea Test and Evaluation Center:
internode cable and assemblies for various modules, internode cable
terminations, and repair kits for US Navy training and assessment in shallow
and deep water. Work in California [Tanner Bank (30%), San Clemente Island
(23%), Goleta (21%)]; Kauai, Hawaii (14%); Andros Island, Bahamas (12%).
-
L3Harris’ Telemetry and Radio Frequency Products, San Diego,
California, $21,908,546 for
374 modernized radios: 335 for US Navy ($19,623,965) and 39 for the UK
($2,284,581).
-
L3Harris’ Unidyne, Norfolk, Virginia,
$28,246,984 for
production of outboard cable spares.
-
Leidos, Reston, Virginia, $102,214,375 for
support of strategic planning, vision setting, programmatic review evaluation,
and other programmatic support to the congressionally directed medical research
programs and other subordinate organizations within the U.S. Army Medical
Research and Development Command, Fort Detrick, Maryland (1 Feb 2023 to 31 Jan
2028). Encompasses meeting support, programmatic support, administrative
support, and publicity and public affairs support to collaborate the inputs and
outcomes of strategic planning, vision setting, and programmatic review. “It is
anticipated this contract will provide support services for 120-150 program
announcements and at least 10 broad agency announcements per fiscal year.”
-
Leidos, Reston, Virginia, $334,000,000 for
R&D for the Mayhem program, which aims to create
a large air-breathing hypersonic system. Work at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio,
and other potential testing sites to be determined.
-
Leidos, Reston, Virginia, $39,176,064 for
R&D of electro-optic sensing defensive electronic warfare: develop and
demonstrate prototype integrated threat warning systems while advancing
multi-spectral test and developmental risk reduction methodologies.
-
Leidos,
Reston, Virginia, $48,603,195 to
research, develop, and demonstrate advanced component prototypes to expand
emerging open architecture standards and approaches for current and
next-generation weapon systems.
-
Leidos, Reston, Virginia, $8,062,880 for
electromagnetics weapon R&D at Kirtland AFB, New Mexico: develop devices,
including suitable user interfaces, embedded controls, and diagnostics using an
nonlinear transmission line (NLTL) or alternative solid-state high-power
microwave source.
-
Lemoine-Frazier JV LLC, Lafayette, Louisiana, $9,351,590 for
road construction, excavation of drainage canals, placing culverts, and other
incidental work, Garyville, Louisiana.
-
Lightforce
USA, Inc., Orofino, Idaho, $17,674,500 for
Squad-Variable Powered Scopes (S-VPS) and Precision-Variable Power Scopes
(P-VPS); both standard and long range. SOCOM will be able to procure parts
along with these scopes. Contract “fulfills the full operational capability
(FOC) requirements for all SOCOM components.”
-
Lockheed
Martin Aculight Corp., Bothell, Washington,
$12,796,190 for
the Modular Efficient Laser Technology (MELT) program. MELT aims to “develop a
laser tile as the building block for compact, scalable, panelized high-energy
laser sources.” Work in Bothell, Washington (81%); Moorestown, New Jersey (17%);
Sunnyvale, California (2%).
-
Lockheed
Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas $35,834,613 adding scope and increasing
the contract ceiling for
F-35 aircraft (lot 15-16, batch 2) Ancillary Mission Equipment for USA, FMS
$4,809,862, and non-U.S. DOD participants $12,117,124.
-
Lockheed Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas not-to-exceed
$245,745,216 for
program management support, non-recurring engineering, F-35B/C laser shock
peening, depot site support, contractor field and regional depot modification
installations in support of retrofit and modification of F-35 aircraft for the
U.S. Air Force, Marine Corps, Navy, FMS ($15,612,217), and non-U.S. DOD
partners ($22,095,154). Work in Fort Worth, Texas (29.2%); Nagoya, Japan
(14.4%); Cameri, Italy (12.6%); Williamtown,
Australia (7.9%) Samlesbury, UK (6.2%); Ogden, Utah
(6.1%); Cherry Point, North Carolina (5.4%); Iwakuni,
Japan (2.7%); Luke AFB, Arizona (2.5%); Cheongju, South Korea (2.1%); El
Segundo, California (1.9%); McLean, Virginia (1.6%); Miramar, California
(1.5%); Lemoore, California (1%); Yuma, Arizona (1.5%); Eglin AFB, Florida
(1.4%); Nevatim, Israel (0.8%); various locations
within the continental United States (1.2%).
-
Lockheed Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $1,051,400,000 for
long lead time materials, parts, components, and efforts “necessary to maintain
on-time production and delivery” of 118 F-35 aircraft (lot 18) for USA, non-U.S
DOD ($163,200,000), and FMS ($427,200,000). Work in Fort Worth, Texas (57%); El
Segundo (14%) and San Diego (2%), California; Warton, UK (9%); Cameri, Italy (4%); Orlando, Florida (4%); Nashua, New
Hampshire (3%); Baltimore, Maryland (3%); Nagoya, Japan (2%); various locations
outside continental U.S. (2%).
-
Lockheed Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $10,451,554 for
engineering, maintenance, logistics manpower and material support to continue
to develop, sustain and produce software builds as well as carryout
developmental flight tests in support of F-35 aircraft for USA and non-U.S. DOD
partners ($858,606). Work in Fort Worth, Texas (80%); Orlando, Florida (7%);
Linthicum, Maryland (3%); Nashua, New Hampshire (3%); San Diego, California
(2%); El Segundo, California (2%); Samlesbury, UK
(1%); locations within continental U.S. (1%) and outside (1%).
-
Lockheed
Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $11,506,002 to
extend services providing an ongoing sustainment services and outcomes, to
include supporting daily flight operations with the Freedom of Action specific
capabilities required at various F-35 operating sites for the United Kingdom.
Non-U.S. DOD participant funds $11,506,002 allocated.
-
Lockheed
Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $111,107,767 to
develop a Common Reprogramming Tool (CRT) minimum viable product and establish
network connections “required to establish the CRT development network and
selection of a service-oriented architecture needed to commence development of
enhanced reprogramming tools in support of efforts to replace legacy
programming tools utilized by reprogramming labs to modernize and revolutionize
F-35 reprogramming.” Some non-U.S. DOD partner funds ($1,595,546) obligated.
-
Lockheed
Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $12,052,847 to
procure gun pod containers (lot 15-16) for F-35 aircraft ancillary mission
equipment for FMS customers ($457,865), non-U.S. DOD participants ($376,037),
and USA.
-
Lockheed
Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $14,909,400 for
country-specific program support for F-35 production, modifications, logistics,
and sustainment, as well as standup for a security operations center in support
of integration for an unnamed FMS country into the F-35 enterprise. Work
in Nagoya, Japan (76%); Fort Worth, Texas (13%); and Tokyo, Japan (11%).
-
Lockheed
Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $15,634,052 for
non-recurring engineering in support of F-35 Joint Program Office complying
with the Item Unique Identification clause, Defense Federal Acquisition
Regulation Supplement 252.211-7003, for delivered items of which the
government’s unit acquisition cost is $5,000 or more, barring exemptions. Work
at Samlesbury, United Kingdom.
-
Lockheed Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $16,586,820
(definitizes a modification worth $2,435,635 and adds scope of $14,151,185) for
delivery and installation of special tooling and test equipment (STATE). Also
provides program management support for completing F-35 Phase 2.2B STATE unique
software requirements and the on-time break in of critical block 4 capabilities
for USA, FMS ($6,036,096), and non-U.S. DOD participants ($1,440,657). Notice
how many different categories LMT can bill the military for. Work in Fort
Worth, Texas (44%); Detroit, Michigan (23%); Palmdale, California (15%); El
Segundo, California (7%); Burnsville, Minnesota (6%); San Diego, California
(2%); Marietta, Georgia (1%); Fanborough, UK (1%);
Cedar Rapids, Iowa (0.5%); and Cisterna di Latina, Italy (0.5%).
-
Lockheed
Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $2,218,242,426 for
logistics support, to include ground maintenance activities, action request
solution, depot activities, automatic logistics information system (ALIS)
operations and maintenance, reliability and maintainability, supply chain
management, pilot training, maintainer training, and training system
sustainment in support of delivered F-35 aircraft for US Air Force, Marine
Corps, Navy, FMS customers, and non-DOD participants. Work in Fort Worth, Texas
(57%); Orlando, Florida (26%); Greeneville, South Carolina (11%); Samlesbury, United Kingdom (4%); and El Segundo, California
(2%). FMS customer funds of $121,551,361, and non-DOD participant funds of
$293,723,889 obligated.
-
Lockheed Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $24,432,476 for
maintenance and support of F-35 chase aircraft necessary to support F-35
aircraft acceptance and delivery, including all pre and post-flight activities,
the removal and replacement of failed components, and return the aircraft to a
clean and compliant condition suitable for first-time delivery.
-
Lockheed
Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $24,980,078 for
Diminishing Manufacturing Sources (DMS) management. Includes review and
identification of actual and potential DMS issues of components, parts,
materials, assemblies, subassemblies, and software items, and recommendations
to mitigate issues in support of the F-35 aircraft. Non-DOD participant funds
were $4,693,651. Sorensen note: In other words, Lockheed Martin gets paid
millions to tell the Pentagon whether it has enough parts for its overbudget
underperforming aircraft.
-
Lockheed
Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $27,584,830 for
production and delivery of long-lead material in support of Band 2/5 Radar
Warning Receiver integration from preliminary design review to development test
complete, and associated mission data file development for the Common
Reprogramming Tool for the F-35 Program. Work in Baltimore, Maryland (99%); and
Fort Worth, Texas (1%). The non-U.S. DOD partner funds are $1,462,160.
-
Lockheed Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $382,125,578 for
initial spares in support of F-35 aircraft (lot 17) deliveries. Also procures
the global spares pool and afloat spares package / deployment spares packages
for USA, FMS, and non-U.S. DOD participants.
-
Lockheed
Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $47,345,839 for
Ancillary Mission Equipment in support of F-35 lot 17 aircraft for USA,
non-U.S. DOD participants, and FMS.
-
Lockheed Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $62,147,178 for
additional diminishing manufacturing sources parts for F-35 for US military,
FMS customers, and non-U.S. DOD participants.
-
Lockheed Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $7,842,191,056 for
127 F-35 aircraft (lot 16): 89 F-35A aircraft, 23 F-35B aircraft, and 15 F-35C.
It also definitizes a modification (P00016) for F-35 aircraft (lot 15)
procurements and associated auxiliary equipment for USA, non-U.S. DOD
participants ($1,721,016,615), and FMS customers ($1,488,017,560). Work in Fort
Worth, Texas (57%); El Segundo, California (14%); Warton, UK (9%); Cameri, Italy (4%); Orlando, Florida (4%); Nashua, New
Hampshire (3%); Baltimore, Maryland (3%); San Diego, California (2%); Nagoya,
Japan (2%); and locations outside continental U.S. (2%).
-
Lockheed
Martin Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $765,158,560 for
site activation/hardware requirements in support of first aircraft arrival,
initial operation capability, and full operational capability milestone events,
to include site activation events, support equipment, pilot flight equipment,
and post ejection survival training material, as well as contract management,
planning and readiness reviews and associated non-recurring introduction to
service activities in support of F-35 aircraft initial sustainment for USA,
non-DOD participants, and FMS. Work in El Segundo, California (52%); Orlando,
Florida (44%); Fort Worth, Texas (3%); and Lancashire, United Kingdom (1%).
-
Lockheed
Martin MFC, Grand Prairie, Texas, $97,135,912 for
technical support for the PAC-3 Missile Field Surveillance Program and missile
post-production activities.
-
Lockheed Martin RMS Moorestown, New Jersey, $527,740,864 (an initial
obligation of $11,394,512) to
implement Integrated Air and Missile Defense capabilities into an Aegis Guam
System.
-
Lockheed Martin RMS Moorestown, New Jersey, $64,089,885 for
Ship Self-Defense System combat system engineering support in Moorestown, New
Jersey (85%), and San Diego, California (15%).
-
Lockheed
Martin RMS, Liverpool, New York, $13,961,922 for
AN/SLQ-32(V)6 design agent support. Work in Syracuse, New York.
-
Lockheed
Martin RMS, Liverpool, New York, $14,823,612 for
engineering and travel re: Advanced Off-Board Electronic Warfare (AOEW) program
in Syracuse, New York.
-
Lockheed Martin RMS, Liverpool, New York, $302,243,035 for
the proof of manufacture, production, spares, production support material, and
engineering support for components related to the MK 48 heavyweight torpedo.
For US Navy (61%) and the Australian Navy $50,616,994 (39%). Work in Liverpool,
New York (72%); Clearwater, Florida (22%); and Braintree, Massachusetts (6%).
-
Lockheed
Martin RMS, Manassas, Virginia, $29,673,779 for
systems engineering and integration on Navy submarines. Work in Manassas,
Virginia (68%); Waterford, Connecticut (10%); Groton, Connecticut (10%);
Middletown, Rhode Island (7%); and Newport, Rhode Island (5%). Fiscal 2023
National Sea-Based Deterrence funds ($3,965,178) obligated.
-
Lockheed
Martin RMS, Mitchel Field, New York, $328,533,513 for
Trident Fleet support, Trident II (D5) Shipboard Integration Increment 8, and
navigation subsystem development efforts. Also benefits a foreign military sale
to the UK. Work in Mitchel Field, New York (64%); Huntington Beach, California
(24%); Clearwater, Florida (9%); Cambridge, Massachusetts (2%); and Manassas,
Virginia (1%).
-
Lockheed Martin RMS, Moorestown, New Jersey, $139,690,707 (from
$415,501,443 to $555,192,150) for
end items and associated materials, and continue performance on development,
program management, engineering, logistics, and radar integration.
-
Lockheed Martin RMS, Moorestown, New Jersey, $14,931,368 for
AEGIS Combat System Engineering Agent efforts: design, development,
integration, test and delivery of Advanced Capability Build 20.
-
Lockheed Martin RMS, Moorestown, New Jersey, $15,995,634 for
ship integration and test of the AEGIS Weapon System (AWS) for AWS baselines
through Advanced Capability Build 16. Work in Moorestown, New Jersey (49%);
Norfolk, Virginia (15%); San Diego, California (8%); D.C. (7%); Pascagoula,
Mississippi (6%); Mayport, Florida (4%); Bath, Maine (3%); various locations
each below (1%) for a total of (8%).
-
Lockheed
Martin RMS, Moorestown, New Jersey, $22,947,125 for
FMS (Canada): Canadian Surface Combatant (CSC) Batch 1 Radar Engineering
Development Material (EDM) and subassemblies. Work in Moorestown, New Jersey
(98%); Owego, New York (1%); Clearwater, Florida (1%).
-
Lockheed
Martin Sikorsky, Stratford, Connecticut, $14,117,552 for
non-recurring engineering, supplies, and support necessary for deployable
configuration updates (low rate initial production, lot 1) for CH-53K heavy
lift replacement helicopter for U.S. Navy. Work in West Palm Beach, Florida.
-
Lockheed
Martin Sikorsky, Stratford, Connecticut, $14,280,171 for
supplies / support of efforts re: Production Rate Tooling Procurement 3 for
full rate production CH-53K helicopter.
-
Lockheed
Martin Sikorsky, Stratford, Connecticut, $21,354,094 for
one CH-53K containerized flight training device (2F243-3) and associated
technical data (based on low-rate initial production lot 4 configuration). Work
in Chantilly, Virginia (67%); Stratford, Connecticut (18%); and Orlando,
Florida (15%).
-
Lockheed
Martin Sikorsky, Stratford, Connecticut, $26,985,285 adding scope for
the initial and final technical directive to install the data transfer unit and
Defensive Electronic Countermeasure System Replacement Phase III ARC-210
components into the CH-53K aircraft, support flight planning and testing of the
components and supportability products for U.S. Navy. Work in Stratford,
Connecticut (37%); Patuxent River, Maryland (28%); Cedar Rapids, Iowa (15%);
Bohemia, New York (11%); Fort Worth, Texas (5%); West Palm Beach, Florida (2%);
Owego, New York (2%).
-
Lockheed Martin Sikorsky, Stratford, Connecticut, $28,841,002 for
integrated logistics support, sustaining engineering, spares procurement,
material management, component overhaul, and training activities in support of
VH Presidential Helicopter sustainment. Work in Stratford (53%) and Shelton
(18%), Connecticut; Quantico, Virginia (11%); Peachtree City, Georgia (2%);
Baltimore, Maryland (2%); Fort Worth, Texas (1.5%); Akron, Ohio (1.5%); and
various locations within the continental U.S. (11%).
-
Lockheed
Martin Sikorsky, Stratford, Connecticut, $280,946,361 for
long lead items re: CH-53K aircraft (full rate production Lot 8). FMS portion
is $50,946,361.
-
Lockheed
Martin Sikorsky, Stratford, Connecticut, $30,193,995 for
technical publications, logistics support analysis, and logistics product data
resulting from production engineering changes, diminishing manufacturing
sources, and material shortages re: CH-53K aircraft production and fielding.
Work in Stratford, Connecticut (84.23%); Bohemia, New York (7.03%); locations
within continental U.S. (8.02%); locations outside continental U.S. (0.72%).
-
Lockheed Martin Sikorsky, Stratford, Connecticut, $676,702,069 for
five years of supply chain management, including 196 weapon replaceable
assemblies / shop replaceable assemblies re: CH-53E and MH-53E helicopters at
Cherry Point, North Carolina (77%), and Stratford, Connecticut (23%).
-
Lockheed
Martin Sikorsky, Stratford, Connecticut, $98,932,185 for
UH-60M Black Hawk aircraft.
-
Lockheed Martin Space, Titusville, Florida, $49,942,303 for
Trident II (D5) missile production and deployed systems support. Also benefits
FMS to the United Kingdom. Work in Camden, Arkansas (35.4%); El Segundo,
California (20.6%); Pittsfield, Massachusetts (11.3%); Cape Canaveral, Florida
(11%); Morris Plains, New Jersey (3.1%); Valley Forge, Pennsylvania (2.2%);
Milpitas, California (2%); Denver, Colorado (1.5%); Vista, California (1%);
Silver Spring, Maryland (1%); and locations less than 1% each, with 10.9%
total.
-
Lockheed
Martin Space, Titusville, Florida, $581,181,943 for
Trident II (D5) missile production and deployed systems support. Also benefits
a foreign military sale to the United Kingdom. Work in Kings Bay, Georgia
(17.5%); Orlando, Florida (15.1%); Magna, Utah (11.3%); Bangor, Washington
(8.6%); Titusville, Florida (5.5%); Morris Plains, New Jersey (3%); Cape
Canaveral, Florida (2.9%); Arlington, Washington (2.6%); Santa Rosa, California
(2.4%); Jacksonville, Florida (2.2%); Chandler, Arizona (2.1%); Norcross,
Georgia (1.8%); Milwaukee, Wisconsin (1.5%); Campbell, California (1.4%); Oak
Ridge, Tennessee (1.2%), and locations less than 1% each, (19.8% total).
-
Lockheed
Martin, Baltimore, Maryland, $44,992,225 for
procurement and engineering re: small combatant propulsion system sparing. Work
in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania.
-
Lockheed
Martin, Fort Worth, Texas, and Greenville, South Carolina, $10,355,720 for
FMS (Bahrain): install Joint Helmet Mounted Cueing System (JHMCS) II
Line Replaceable Units on fourteen non-flight test F-16 aircraft, update
existing Country Standard Technical Order Manuals and Country Standard Time
Compliance Technical Orders. Also provides additional Peculiar Support
Equipment and Alternate Mission Equipment for F-16 aircraft.
-
Lockheed Martin, Grand Prairie, Texas, $25,000,000 for
R&D on advanced missile subsystem components supporting the compact
air-to-air missile and extended range air to air missile systems (re: broad
agency announcement FA8651-20-S-0008).
-
Lockheed Martin, Grand Prairie, Texas, $31,817,000 to
increase the annual award of PAC-3 missiles. Work in Huntsville, Alabama;
Rocket Center, West Virginia; Camden, Arkansas; Chelmsford, Massachusetts; and
Grand Prairie, Texas. FMS (Bahrain, Kuwait, Netherlands, Poland, Qatar)
funds of $15,590,330 obligated.
-
Lockheed
Martin, Grand Prairie, Texas, $37,749,997 for
recapitalization of the Multiple Launch Rocket System into the M270A2 configuration.
Work in Camden, Arkansas; New Boston, Texas; and Grand Prairie, Texas
-
Lockheed
Martin, Grand Prairie, Texas, $430,930,711 for
full-rate production of High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) and
support services “to satisfy an urgent need to support the Army and various
Foreign Military Sales partners.” Work in Brownsboro, Alabama; Camden,
Arkansas; Boca Raton, Clearwater and Palm Bay, Florida; Whippany, New Jersey; Archbald and York, Pennsylvania; and Dallas and Grand
Prairie, Texas.
-
Lockheed
Martin, Grand Prairie, Texas, $476,814,000 for
the Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System (GMLRS).
-
Lockheed
Martin, Littleton, Colorado, $16,749,836 for
Space Based Infrared System contractor logistics support and product support
integration at Peterson Space Force Base, Buckley SFB, Greeley Air National
Guard Station, and Boulder, Colorado.
-
Lockheed
Martin, Liverpool, New York, $84,503,257 for
FMS (Kuwait): the Kuwait Ground Based Radar Systems: four standalone
radar systems, ancillary equipment, spares, training, warranty, and contractor
logistic support. Work in Kuwait and Liverpool, New York.
-
Lockheed
Martin, Manassas, Virginia (N0001922D0017 P00001); Undersea Sensor Systems
Inc., Columbia City, Indiana (N0001922D0018 P00001); Sparton
De Leon Springs LLC, De Leon Springs, Florida (N0001922D0019 P00001) estimated aggregate
ceiling $5,100,000,000 for
production and delivery of the following sonobuoy
categories: bathythermograph, passive, active/passive combo, multistatic source, multistatic
receiver, and special mission in support of annual training, peacetime
operations and testing expenditures, as well as, to maintain sufficient
inventory to support the execution of Major Combat Operations based on Naval
Munitions Requirements Process.
-
Lockheed
Martin, Moorestown, New Jersey, $9,630,112 for
enterprise engineering and technical expertise to the Land Based Test and
Training Sites.
-
Lockheed
Martin, Orlando, Florida, $13,090,263 for
FMS (Egypt): refurbish Modernized Target Acquisition Designation
Sight/Pilot Night Vision System (MTADS/PNVS) in Orlando, Florida.
-
Lockheed
Martin, Orlando, Florida, $15,055,417 for
non-recurring engineering for the design, development, and fabrication of the
Infrared Search and Track (IRST) Block II Integrated Detector Assembly (IDA)
obsolescence redesign. Also procures material to build three (3) of the
redesigned IDA for the F/A-18 IRST program. Work in Santa Barbara, California
(51.3%); Orlando, Florida (48.2%); and Ocala, Florida (0.5%).
-
Lockheed Martin, Orlando, Florida, $225,772,240 for
management, engineering, production, fabrication, integration, configuration
management, test, test support, and logistics support of the Sniper® Advanced
Targeting Pod (ATP) “to
ensure system availability rate and reliability mean time between maintenance
events.”
-
Lockheed Martin, Orlando, Florida, $67,921,965 for
Modernized Target Acquisition Designation Sight/Pilot Night Vision Sensor (MTADS/PNVS)
performance based logistics program. MTADS/PNVS is used on Boeing “Apache”
AH-64 helicopters.
-
Lockheed Martin, Orlando, Florida, $95,803,289 for
Modernized Target Acquisition Designation Sight/Pilot Night Vision System
(MTADS/PNVS).
-
Lockheed
Martin, Orlando, Florida, $97,013,794 for
38 full rate production electronic Consolidated Automated Support System units
and associated equipment, to include one self-maintenance and test/calibration
operational test program set, one calibration equipment suite/kit, 40 rack rail
kits, 23 shore installation kits, and 28 ship installation kits in support of
repair of avionics and weapon systems for AV-8B, C-2, E-2D, EA-6B, EA-18G, E-2,
F/A-18A/B/C/D/E/F, H-60R/S, T-45 and V-22 for US Navy.
-
Lockheed Martin, Owego, New York, $43,420,087 for
FMS (Australia): production and delivery of one MH-60R helicopter and
procurement of one kit to modify the MH-60R helicopter from a standard FMS
configuration to a unique configuration for Australia. Work in Owego, New York
(52%); Stratford, Connecticut (40%); and Troy, Alabama (8%).
-
Lockheed
Martin, Owego, New York, $49,664,990 for
non-recurring engineering and add/delete efforts to bring twelve (12) MH-60R
helicopters from standard FMS configuration to a unique configuration for
Australia. Also procures 12 unique modification one kits and 10 embedded GPS
Inertial Navigation Systems spares. Work in Owego, New York (87%); Stratford,
Connecticut (12%); and Troy, Alabama (1%).
-
Lockheed Martin, Owego, New York, $9,894,964 for
FMS (Denmark): non-recurring engineering re: modifications and
integration of upgrades into the Automated Radar Periscope Detection and
Discrimination and Anti-Submarine Warfare systems for the Danish [Ministry of
Defense] Acquisition and Logistics Organization MH-60R helicopter. Work in
Owego, New York (48%); Farmingdale, New York (25%); Columbus, Mississippi
(14.5%); Stratford, Connecticut (11.5%); Oldsmar, Florida (1%).
-
Lockheed
Martin, Syracuse, New York, $10,258,510 for
design, prototyping, and qualification testing of submarine electronic warfare
equipment.
-
Longbow LLC (a joint venture between Lockheed Martin and Northrop
Grumman), Orlando, Florida, $11,038,543 for
contractor support services and supplies for the Boeing AH-64D/E “Apache”
helicopter’s Fire Control Radar.
-
Loughmiller
Machine, Tool & Design, Loogootee, Indiana, $10,366,400 for
manufacturing and testing of AN/SPS-48 antenna system arrays in support of
AN/SPS-48E antenna and pedestal radar restoration repair.
-
Louis Berger Hawthorne Services, Greenville, South Carolina, $7,783,692
for
maintaining and repairing federally funded and DLA-Energy capitalized petroleum
systems and facilities in Nevada (Fallon) and California (Coronado, El Centro,
Lemoore, Coronado, Oxnard, Port Hueneme, Ridgecrest, San Diego, San Clemente
Island, San Nicolas Island).
-
Louise W. Eggleston Center Inc., Norfolk, Virginia, $19,019,941 for
laundry support services for Navy Medical Center Portsmouth, Naval Dental
Clinic Norfolk, and Norfolk Branch Health Clinics (BHC) to include Naval
Station Norfolk BHC, Oceana BHC, Dam Neck BHC, Northwest BHC, Boone BHC and
Norfolk Naval Shipyard BHC. Work in Virginia: Norfolk (77%), Portsmouth (17%),
Virginia Beach (4%), and Chesapeake (2%).
-
LVI,
Pendergrass, Georgia, $9,229,839 for
warehousing, storage, logistics, and distribution for Army and Defense
Logistics Agency (DLA).
-
M&M
Manufacturing LLC, Lajas, Puerto Rico, $9,969,600 for
Army and Air Force coats and trousers.
-
M1 Support Services LP, Denton, Texas, $535,391,051, for
aviation maintenance at Fort Rucker, Alabama.
-
MAGA
Mechanical Contractors, Prince Frederick, Maryland, $8,000,000 for
engineering and construction for USACE, Baltimore, Maryland.
-
MAGA
Mechanical Contractors, Prince Frederick, Maryland, $8,000,000 for
repair or upgrade of mechanical equipment and infrastructure related to a water
treatment facility for USACE Baltimore, Maryland.
-
ManTech
Advanced Systems International, Herndon, Virginia, $43,456,733 for
specialized acquisition and operations security for Space Force in California
(Los Angeles AFB and Vandenberg Space Force Base) and Peterson Space Force
Base, Colorado.
-
Mare
Island Dry Dock, Vallejo, California, $11,454,396 for
a 60-calendar day shipyard availability for a mid-term availability of the
fleet replenishment oiler USNS Henry J. Kaiser (T-AO 187).
-
Mare
Island Dry Dock, Vallejo, California, $11,630,023 for
a 61-calendar day shipyard availability for the mid-term availability for
rescue and salvage ship USNS Grasp (T-ARS 51) in Vallejo, California.
-
Matrix
Research Inc., Dayton, Ohio, $12,327,270 to
assist in the development, integration, experimentation, and validation
capabilities of sensors (Multi-Spectral Sensing Technologies) for enhanced
lethality. Work at Dayton and Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio.
-
MCP
Computer Products Inc., San Marcos, California, $10,252,144 for
Dell laptops and associated equipment with a delivery of 60 days after the date
of the order.
-
Medvolt
Tepa DC JV, Colorado Springs, Colorado, $34,943,000 to design and build the
Operations Support Squadron - Aircrew Flight Equipment / Survival Evasion
Resistance Escape facility at Offutt AFB, Nebraska.
-
Melwood
Horticultural Training Center Inc., Upper Marlboro, Maryland, $13,833,794 for
custodial services at the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland.
-
Mercury Mission Systems, Torrance, California, $18,391,509 for
35 data transfer units, 15 Secret Serial Advanced Technology Attachment
Encryption Module cables, 157 High Definition Video Recorders (HDVR), and 72
HDVR data transfer devices for retrofit on F/A-18C-F aircraft. FMS portion is
$3,703,128.
-
Merrick-RS&H
JV LLP, Greenwood Village, Colorado, $15,000,000 (brings contract to
$60,000,000) for
professional architectural and engineering services in NAVFAC Southeast.
-
Messer
Construction Co., Cincinnati, Ohio, $70,755,002 for
interior and exterior modernization, renovation, and repair of 29 government
owned houses of residential/commercial type construction at Wright-Patterson
AFB, Ohio
-
Metron
Inc., Reston, Virginia, $7,806,349 for
applied research investigations, technical expertise, and software development
effort consistent with overall objectives of Algorithm and Simulation Research
in Advanced Undersea Mission Autonomy. Research and technical elements include
model development, algorithm R&D, objective planning and system-level
performance assessments. Metron's work will include
ashore and embedded sensor fusion, human-machine planning algorithms and
software, autonomous controllers, and advanced control algorithms.
-
Michels
Construction Inc., Brownsville, Wisconsin, $39,848,304 for
flood repair of structures in Waverly, Missouri.
-
Microsoft, Redmond, Washington (FA868423DB075), has been added (19 Dec
2022) as an awardee to the multiple award contract with a $900,000,000 ceiling
announced 9 Dec 2022, for development of innovative approaches that bring
multi-domain systems capabilities, the characterization of new technologies and
systems through studies, recurrent demonstration and rapid development to
enable rapid prototyping, and test and capability transition.
-
Mid-Atlantic Computer Services, Cerritos, California, $37,295,550 (over
three years) for
commercial-off-the-shelf electronic maintenance devices to meet the
requirements of the Electronic Maintenance Support System.
-
Mid-Atlantic
Regional Maintenance Center, Norfolk, Virginia (N5005423C0002)
-
Mike Hooks
LLC, Westlake, Louisiana, $49,000,000 for
rental of a cutterhead pipeline dredge for dredging projects in Alabama,
Mississippi, and Florida.
-
Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, Mississippi,
$9,258,441 for
R&D “that will provide significant scientific and technical advancements
around the areas of computational science and engineering.”
-
Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, Mississippi,
$9,143,736 for
R&D that will “provide significant scientific and technical advancements
around advanced and additive manufacturing.”
-
Mitchell
Brothers Inc., Seabrook, South Carolina, $53,170,000 to
repair airfield infrastructure at Hunter Army Airfield, Georgia.
-
MNDPI
Pacific JV, Honolulu, Hawaii, $16,960,148 for
“architecture-engineering services to develop the design primarily for the
construction of a new concrete fixed single deck submarine repair pier” at
Polaris Point Submarine Base, Guam.
-
Mnemonics
Inc., Melbourne, Florida, $49,953,129 for
specific radio frequency and infrared engineering, analytical, and technical
efforts to support evolving timing technology. Work in the D.C. area.
-
Modern Technology Solutions Inc., Alexandria, Virginia, $420,000,000
(from $496,000,000 to $916,000,000); American Systems Corp., Chantilly,
Virginia, $420,000,000 (from $496,000,000 to $916,000,000); Applied Research
Associates Inc., Alexandria, Virginia, $420,000,000 (from $496,000,000 to
$916,000,000) for
work for the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and
Engineering: modeling and simulation, operations research, mission engineering,
development test and evaluation, prototyping, experimentation, and
demonstration, research and assessment, and data management analysis. Work in
Virginia: Modern Technology Solutions in Alexandria, American Systems Corp. in
Chantilly, Applied Research Associates in Alexandria, and government facilities
in Falls Church and Alexandria.
-
Montana
State University, Bozeman, Montana, $9,182,692 for
R&D of complex-shaped fiber-reinforced composites.
-
Nan Inc., Honolulu, Hawaii, $19,112,594 to
repair Ammunition Wharf W2 by replacing it with a reinforced concrete wharf on
concrete piles built to current standards, Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam,
Hawaii.
-
Nan Inc.,
Honolulu, Hawaii, $44,698,307 to
construct a child development center building, Schofield Barracks, Hawaii.
-
Nan Inc.,
Honolulu, Hawaii, $53,164,515 for
construction of a child development center in Honolulu, Hawaii.
-
National Aerospace Solutions LLC, Arnold AFB, Tennessee, $176,387,091 for
test operations, technology development, equipment and facility sustainment,
capital improvements and some support services for Arnold Engineering
Development Complex.
-
National
Industries for the Blind, Alexandria, Virginia, $15,897,000 for
Army physical fitness uniform jackets. Work in Maryland, North Carolina, and
Arkansas.
-
National
Industries for the Blind, Alexandria, Virginia, $9,074,847 for
moisture wicking t-shirts for Army. Work in North Carolina and Arkansas.
-
National
Industries for the Blind, Alexandria, Virginia, estimated $13,860,000 for
Advanced Combat Helmet suspension system pad sets. Performance in Pennsylvania
and North Carolina.
-
Native
Maine Operations Inc., Westbrook, Maine (SPE300-22-D-S758, $31,835,745) and
Hartford Provision Co., South Windsor, Connecticut (SPE300-22-D-P402,
$15,974,250) for
fresh fruits and vegetables.
-
Navarro Research and Engineering Inc., Oak Ridge, Tennessee, $8,012,986
for
continuity of operations and maintenance services in support of the
environmental remediation effort at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal until the
competitive follow-on contract is awarded.
-
NewView
Oklahoma Inc., Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, estimated $8,528,356 for
Type II nonmetallic hose assemblies for the Department of Agriculture Forest
Service, under the Wildlands Fire Protection Program.
-
NewView
Oklahoma Inc., Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, estimated $8,587,783 for
Type I nonmetallic hose assemblies for the Department of Agriculture Forest
Service, under the Wildlands Fire Protection Program.
-
Noble
Supply and Logistics, Rockland, Massachusetts, $90,000,000 for
facilities maintenance, repair and operations supplies. Locations of
performance are Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New
York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
-
Noblis
MSD, San Diego, California, $14,882,579 (increases the value of the basic
contract by $14,882,579 to $84,676,418) for
engineering services and support to the Consolidated Afloat Networks and
Enterprise Services (CANES) program. Work in San Diego, California (86%);
Norfolk, Virginia (3%); Charleston, South Carolina (3%); Yokosuka, Japan (5%);
and Forward Deployed Naval Forces (3%).
-
Norfolk
Dredging Co., Chesapeake, Virginia, $19,713,950 for
maintenance dredging at Naval Station Mayport, Florida.
-
North State Mechanical Inc., Jacksonville, North Carolina, $13,355,084 for
replacement of the exhaust fans and infrared heaters at building AS890 at MCAS
New River, North Carolina.
-
Northrop
Grumman (Alliant Techsystems Operations), Northridge, California, $35,587,641 for
FMS (Australia): AGM-88E2 Advanced Anti-Radiation Guided Missile (AARGM)
full rate production, lot 11: production and delivery of AGM-88E2 AARGM All Up
Round (AUR) tactical missiles; AGM-88E AARGM Captive Air Training Missiles
(CATM); AARGM guidance sections and control sections; High-Speed Anti-Radiation
Missiles (HARM) rocket motors, warheads, and control sections; HARM G-Code AUR
and CATM; and M-Code GPS receivers, as well as test equipment, containers,
spare and repair parts, software, and logistical and program support. Work in
Northridge (60%) and Ridgecrest (40%), California.
-
Northrop Grumman, Baltimore, Maryland, $26,373,756 for
continued electronic protection enhancements: non-recurring engineering
required to establish the hardware baseline for the technical refresh for MQ-4C
Triton drone’s Multi-Function Active Sensor (MFAS) Radar Signal Processor (RSP)
on the AN/ZPY-3(v) 2 Mercury Power Stream 7000 Signal Processor, 272K300G01,
implementing new capabilities developed by the Office of Naval Research. NG
shall build a prototype commercially available off-the-shelf RSP that is
representative of the hardware baseline, including a Scalable Node / Open
System Architecture and can be used for additional development and flight
testing.
-
Northrop Grumman, Chandler, Arizona, $10,542,244 (from $343,945,282 to
$354,487,526) for
pre-test analysis to predict standard motor performance parameters such as
pressures, temperatures, thrust, and thrust vector control. NG will also design
and fabricate the test tooling, incorporate instrumentation, conduct a test
readiness review, conduct the test, and provide a final report detailing the
motor performance. The motor used will be a Castor IV-B rocket motor, which is
owned and produced by Northrop Grumman. Work in Chandler, Arizona, and
Promontory, Utah.
-
Northrop
Grumman, Chandler, Arizona, $17,821,784 (increasing value of agreement to
$78,106,432) to
continue to develop and refine its [hypersonic] Glide Phase Interceptor concept
during the “materiel solutions analysis phase.”
-
Northrop Grumman,
Chandler, Arizona, $79,278,808 to
procure 28 GQM-163A Coyote supersonic sea-skimming targets and associated
technical and administrative data in support of full rate production lot 16
deliveries for U.S. Navy. Work in Camden, Arkansas (43%); Chandler, Arizona
(35%); Vergennes, Vermont (8%); Cincinnati, Ohio (4%); Oconomowoc, Wisconsin
(4%); Lancaster, Pennsylvania (4%); and various locations within the
continental U.S. (2%).
-
Northrop
Grumman, Elkton, Maryland, $8,997,210 for
manufacture of initiating propellant used on the MK48 heavyweight torpedo.
-
Northrop
Grumman, Herndon, Virginia, $69,818,701 for
mission support of (planning, coordination, and execution) exercises conducted
by the Army's Mission Command Training Program, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
-
Northrop Grumman, Linthicum Heights, Maryland, $15,877,526 for
Active Electronically Scanned Array radars of Air Force F-16 aircraft. Includes
production radars, an initial spare kit, antenna lifting fixtures, and polyalphaolefin pumps.
-
Northrop
Grumman, Linthicum Heights, Maryland, $99,365,970 for
Active Electronically Scanned Array radars of Air Force F-16 aircraft: 42
radars, one initial spare kit, and two readiness spare kits.
-
Northrop
Grumman, Linthicum Heights, Maryland, $99,365,970 for
Active Electronically Scanned Array radars of Air Force F-16 aircraft.
-
Northrop
Grumman, McLean, Virginia, $405,708,901 for
full spectrum lifecycle engineering, technical, and operational support for
intelligence activities at DOD and “intelligence community” customer centers
and satellite locations. Work in Rome, New York.
-
Northrop
Grumman, Melbourne, Florida, $12,696,010 for
non-recurring engineering re: E-2D Advanced Hawkeye cockpit redesign:
requirements development, systems engineering technical reviews, certification
planning, initial requirements change requests, procurement strategy source
selection packages, performance based navigation certification plan, initial
system safety, cyber, program protection and exportability analysis, integrated
master schedule, and other associated technical deliverables. Work in
Melbourne, Florida (99.76%), and Patuxent River, Maryland (0.24%).
-
Northrop Grumman, Melbourne, Florida, $17,970,406 for
FMS (Japan): various spare components for Japan's configuration of the
E-2D aircraft. Work in Melbourne, Florida (24%); Liverpool, New York (17%);
Greenlawn, New York (14%); Torrance, California (9%); Irvine, California (7%);
Owego, New York (5%); Elyria, Ohio (4%); Wichita, Kansas (2%); Garden City, New
York (2%); New Port Richey, Florida (2%); Windsor Locks, Connecticut (2%);
Hayward, California (2%); Rolling Meadows, Illinois (1%); and various locations
within the continental U.S. (9%).
-
Northrop
Grumman, Melbourne, Florida, $24,955,241 for
fabrication and installation support to retrofit Delta System Software
Configuration 4.0, to include tactical targeting network technology and the
beyond line of sight in E-2D Advanced Hawkeye aircraft. Work in Dallas, Texas
(57%); Melbourne, Florida (11%); Boulder, Colorado (9%); Norfolk, Virginia
(8%); Salisbury, Maryland (5%); Ronkonkoma, New York (3%); and various
locations within continental U.S. (7%).
-
Northrop
Grumman, Melbourne, Florida, $29,852,860 for
five aerial refueling retrofit kits including installation onboard E-2D
Advanced Hawkeye aircraft for U.S. Navy. Work in St. Augustine, Florida.
-
Northrop
Grumman, Melbourne, Florida, $31,622,092 for
inspection and teardown of the E-2D Advanced Hawkeye fatigue test article to
identify fatigue critical locations and demonstrate that the E-2D aircraft
structure satisfy the program's service life requirement. Work in Melbourne,
Florida (45%); Bethpage, New York (40%); and El Segundo, California (15%).
-
Northrop
Grumman, Melbourne, Florida, $32,458,804 for
FMS (Japan): spare Wet Outer Wing Panels for Japan's configuration of
E-2D Advanced Hawkeye aircraft. Work in St. Augustine, Florida (38%);
Melbourne, Florida (10%); Gardena, California (7%); Clemmons, North Carolina
(5%); Ronkonkoma, New York (3%); Rancho Cucamonga, California (2%); Edgewood,
New York, (1%); Tulsa, Oklahoma (1%); Hauppauge, New York (1%); Merritt Island,
Florida (1%); Cedar City, Utah (1%); Carson, California (1%); Irvine,
California (1%); Crestview, Florida (1%); and various locations within the
continental U.S. (27%).
-
Northrop
Grumman, Melbourne, Florida, $87,800,000 for
support and sustainment of E-8C Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System
(JSTARS). Involves program management, system engineering, system sustainment,
JSTARS unique asset management, Joint Integrated Maintenance Information System
“JIMIS” hardware and software infrastructure sustainment, weapon system
interoperability certification, IC system sustainment, flight crew training,
mission crew training, mission support training, training sustainment, field
service representatives, and cybersecurity.
-
Northrop Grumman, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, $45,070,783 for
the B-2 aircraft rudder and elevon. Performance in Ohio.
-
Northrop Grumman, Redondo Beach, California, $15,504,612 for
Enhanced Polar System-Recapitalization, increasing the period of performance by
15 months for launch schedule delay. Work in El Segundo, California.
-
Northrop
Grumman, Redondo Beach, California, $7,755,736 for
DARPA’s Modular Efficient Laser Technology (MELT) program. MELT aims to
“develop a laser tile as the building block for compact, scalable, panelized
high-energy laser (HEL) sources.” Work in Redondo Beach (85%) and Goleta (15%),
California.
-
Northrop Grumman, Rolling Meadows, Illinois, $12,398,352 for
non-recurring engineering to correct software problems on Large Aircraft
Infrared Countermeasures AN/AAQ-24 system used by US military.
-
Northrop Grumman, San Diego, California, $16,220,882 for
engineering investigations, fleet operations, issues surrounding supportability
/ reliability, cyber security activities and capabilities, software design and
system integration, qualification testing, logistical support as well as
training services in support of the MQ-8 Fire Scout System.
-
Oakes
Farms Food and Distribution Services, Naples, Florida, $238,500,000 (max. over
5 years) for
fresh fruit and vegetables.
-
Ocean
Ships, Inc. of Houston, Texas, $8,172,595 for
six months of operation and maintenance of six Oceanographic Survey ships
(T-AGS) and Navigation Test Support ship USNS Waters (T-AGS 45) at sea.
-
Oceanetics
Inc., Annapolis, Maryland, $99,989,368 for
support to NAVFAC Engineering and Expeditionary Warfare Center (EXWC) Oceans
Technical Department at Naval Base Ventura County, Port Hueneme, California.
Work at various locations worldwide.
-
Offshore
Service Vessels, Cut Off, Louisiana, $11,301,130 to
support launch and recovery of U.S. Navy submersibles, divers, and small craft
via one U.S. flag Jones Act, West Coast-based service support vessel, MV Alyssa
Chouest. Work in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and at
sea.
-
Optex
Systems Inc., d.b.a. Applied Optics Center, Dallas, Texas, $7,500,000 for
production of spare parts used on various night vision devices.
-
OptumServe
Health Services, La Crosse, Wisconsin, $93,237,054 for
work on the Reserve Health Readiness Program. Provide health readiness support
services “to meet medical and dental standards essential in maintaining a
deployable force.” Services include immunizations, physical examinations,
periodic health assessments, post-deployment health reassessments, mental
health assessments, dental examinations, dental treatment, laboratory services,
and other services as required to satisfy military service component health
readiness needs. Services are delivered at military service component
designated sites during group events, through the contractor's call center, and
within an integrated network. Work in every U.S. state, U.S. territory, D.C.,
and Germany
-
Oshkosh Defense, Oshkosh, Wisconsin, $102,961,926 for
FMS (Brazil, Lithuania, Macedonia, Montenegro, Romania):
bilateral modification to Joint Light Tactical Vehicles.
-
Oshkosh
Defense, Oshkosh, Wisconsin, $44,485,826 for
various heavy truck weapon systems replacement parts.
-
Oshkosh Defense, Oshkosh, Wisconsin, $543,478,661 to
support the fielding of the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle Family of Vehicles.
Funding includes but is not limited to European Deterrence funds and Foreign
Military Sales (Slovenia).
-
Outdoor Venture Corp., Stearns, Kentucky, maximum $76,701,761 for
tents and components.
-
P&R JV, Elizabethtown, Kentucky, $26,096,467 to
build a target training structure at Fort Knox, Kentucky.
-
Pacific
Defense Strategies, El Segundo, California, $9,078,430 for
the Sensor Open Systems Architecture Radio Frequency Payload for “enhanced
space domain awareness.” Work in El Segundo, California, and Kirtland AFB, New
Mexico.
-
Pacific
Federal Management Inc., Tumon, Guam, $10,866,804 for
base operations support at Naval Base Guam and Andersen AFB, Guam.
-
Pacific
Ship Repair and Fabrication Inc., Everett, Washington, $43,699,417 for
maintenance and Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) availabilities on surface ships
in Everett, Washington.
-
Palantir USG Inc., Palo Alto, California, $10,123,008 for
R&D in the area of artificial intelligence and machine learning.
-
PCC
Ventures, Columbus, Ohio, $32,432,466 to
repair airfield taxiways and aprons at Pope Army Airfield, North Carolina.
-
PD Power
Systems LLC, Springfield, Virginia, $482,000,000 for
testing and production of 72-kilowatt ground power units, along with associated
data deliverables including, test reports, provisioning, and technical manuals.
-
Peckham
Vocational Industries, Lansing, Michigan, $11,483,880 for
GEN III, Layer II, mid-weight drawers for Army.
-
Pennsylvania State University’s Applied Research Laboratory (ARL/PSU),
University Park, Pennsylvania, $734,972,174 for
research, development, engineering, and test and evaluation of (1) guidance,
navigation and control of undersea systems; (2) thermal propulsion concepts and
systems for undersea vehicles; (3) propulsors and other fluid machinery for
marine systems; (4) materials technology and manufacturing technology of Naval
systems and components; (5) atmosphere and military communications systems; (6)
mission related and public service oriented research, technology developments,
test evaluation and systems analysis “to provide a quick response to rapidly
evolving” military and “other government agency” requirements. Work in
University Park, Pennsylvania.
-
Peraton
Risk Decision Inc., Loveland, Colorado (HS002123D0001) and CACI, Reston,
Virginia (HS002123D0002) awarded parallel contracts for
nationwide background investigation fieldwork for Defense Counterintelligence
and Security Agency (DCSA). Each multi-year contract (five-year ordering
period) max value of $2,250,000,000; minimum guaranteed $50,000,000.
-
Peraton/Arcfield, Chantilly, Virginia, $15,694,715 for
program support services for US Navy's Strategic Weapons Systems [Trident II
nuclear weapon] Reentry Subsystem. Work in Colorado Springs, Colorado (75%);
D.C. (15%); Albuquerque, New Mexico (8%); Cape Canaveral, Florida (1%); and
Omaha, Nebraska (1%).
-
Peska
Construction, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, $10,967,000 to
construct a training center in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
-
Pfizer Inc., New York, New York, $1,959,999,848 for
the oral therapeutic Paxlovid.
-
Point
Blank Enterprises Inc., d.b.a. Protective Group, Pompano Beach, Florida,
$83,309,200 for
enhanced small arms protective inserts for Army and Air Force.
-
Point Blank Protective Apparel & Uniform, Guánica,
Puerto Rico, $235,987,870 for
rifleman sets and related components for Army and Air Force.
-
Pole/Zero Acquisition Inc., West Chester,
Ohio, $53,544,462 for up to 346 antenna interface units and
communications trays (190 for U.S. Navy, 132 for FMS, 24 for Australia) and
required technical data, assemblies, subassemblies, and spares for the P-8A
Poseidon communications suite.
-
PPI Technical Services LLC, Kent, Washington, $16,327,732 for
FMS (Philippines): development and training associated with setting up a
C-130 propeller repair shop for Philippine Air Force in the Philippines.
-
Pride
Industries, Roseville, California, $20,997,437 for
base operations and maintenance at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, New
Jersey.
-
Prime
Response Inc., Accokeek, Maryland, $15,475,703 for
research and development logistics support services: material control, material
handling, transportation, maintenance programs, hazardous materials, lab gases
and cryogenics, lab safety programs, facility management and lab supply and
stock needs of R&D programs at Phillips Research Site, Kirtland AFB, New
Mexico.
-
Progeny Systems Corp., Manassas, Virginia, $27,625,288 for
Navy engineering design and development and supporting material procurements.
Work in Manassas, Virginia (85%), and Charleroi, Pennsylvania (15%).
-
Propper International Inc., Cabo Rojo, Puerto
Rico (SPE1C1-23-C-0008, $49,082,165) and Eagle Industries Unlimited, Virginia
Beach, Virginia (SPE1C1-23-C-0006, $23,564,800) for
the Modular Lightweight Load-carrying Equipment (MOLLE) 4000 rucksack set for
Army and Air Force.
-
Propulsion
Controls Engineering, Everett, Washington, $32,846,262 for
maintenance and availabilities on surface ships in Everett, Washington.
-
PTC Inc.,
Boston, Massachusetts, $8,163,409 for
model-based production support.
-
Q.E.D.
Systems Inc., Virginia Beach, Virginia, $78,945,441 for
the Specification Development and Availability Execution Support for CG, DDG,
LHA, LHD, LPD, and LSD-class vessels. Work in Virginia Beach, Virginia, (45%);
San Diego, California (45%); and Bremerton, Washington (10%).
-
Quidel
Corp., San Diego, California (SPE2DE-23-D-0009); Access Bio Inc., Somerset, New
Jersey (SPE2DE-23-D-0011); iHealth Labs, Sunnydale,
California (SPE2DE-23-D-0012); and Orasure
Technologies, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania (SPE2DE-23-D-0010); $803,000,000 for
over-the-counter rapid antigen COVID-19 test kits for Department of Health and
Human Services.
-
R A Burch
Construction Co. Inc., Ramona, California, $18,862,766 for
repair of Bachelor Enlisted Quarters 210705 at Camp Pendleton, California.
-
RAM-System
GmbH (RAMSYS), Ottobrunn, Germany, €277,836,839 and
$206,568,496 for
fiscal 2023 procurements for Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) Guided Missile
Round Pack (block 2B) and spare replacement components re: German Navy RAM
Block 2 recertification. Work in (Tucson, Arizona, 40%) and Germany: Ueberlingen (30%); Ulm (11%); Schrobenhausen
(7%); Ottobrunn (7%); and Roethenbach
(5%). Raytheon works with Germany’s RAM-System
GmbH (RAMSYS) on the U.S.-German Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) program, which is
marketed as self-defense for naval ships. RAM-System GmbH is owned by MBDA
Deutschland (50%), Diehl Stiftung (25%) and Diehl BGT Defence
(25%), according to U.S. military contracting announcements.
As prime contractors on the RAM
program, Raytheon and RAMSYS get contracts together and in turn for U.S. and
German purchases.
-
Raytheon
(Collins Aerospace) Cedar Rapids, Iowa, $11,959,490, for
ongoing development, implementation, test, and certification in support of
advanced waveform integration capabilities integrated into AN/ARC-210 (V) Gen5A
and Gen6 radios formally released operational flight program and crypto
sub-systems software for U.S. Navy.
-
Raytheon (Collins Aerospace), Cedar Rapids, Iowa, $17,135,026 for
ongoing sustaining engineering support, diminishing manufacturing sources and
material shortages management in support of the E-6B Take Charge and Move Out
(TACAMO) and airborne command post aircraft. Work in Richardson, Texas (70%);
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma (20%); and Patuxent River, Maryland (10%).
-
Raytheon (Collins Aerospace), Cedar Rapids, Iowa, $7,875,200 for
manufacture of MT06 cartridge actuated devices. Work in Fairfield, California.
FMS includes Saudi Arabia, Israel, and UAE.
-
Raytheon (Collins Aerospace), Richardson, Texas, $99,500,000 for
Very Low Frequency modernization production/interim contractor support and
sustainment for bombers: B-2, B-52, and potential future platforms.
-
Raytheon Pratt & Whitney, East Hartford, Connecticut, $114,500,000 for
supplies or services for design engineering, program management support,
technology maturation, risk reduction, long lead material and hardware, and weapons
system integration to support F135 engine enhancement efforts for the F-35
program. Work in East Hartford, Connecticut (85%); and Indianapolis, Indiana
(15%).
-
Raytheon Pratt & Whitney, East Hartford, Connecticut, $18,655,090 for
long-lead materials, parts and components for propulsion systems for F-35
aircraft (lot 17) for non-U.S. DOD partners ($17,394,887) and FMS ($1,260,203).
Work in Indianapolis, Indiana (44%); Windsor Locks, Connecticut (33%); Bristol,
UK (16%); and Phoenix, Arizona (7%).
-
Raytheon Pratt & Whitney, East Hartford, Connecticut, $511,589,719 for
F-35 propulsion system annual sustainment, including recurring sustainment
support, program management, financial and administrative activities,
propulsion integration, replenishment spare part buys, engineering support,
material management, configuration management, product management support,
software sustainment, security management, joint technical data updates,
support equipment management, depot level maintenance and repair for all
fielded propulsion systems at the F-35 production sites and operational
locations, as well as training. For USA; non-U.S. DOD participant $23,125,291;
and FMS $12,102,937. Work in East Hartford, Connecticut (40%); Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma (21%); Indianapolis, Indiana (12%); Windsor Locks, Connecticut (6%);
West Palm Beach, Florida (6%); Brekstad, Norway (4%);
Leeuwarden, Netherlands (3%); Iwakuni, Japan (3%); Williamtown, Australia (2%); Cameri,
Italy (1%); Marham, UK (1%); and Fort Worth, Texas
(1%).
-
Raytheon Pratt & Whitney, East Hartford, Connecticut, $619,068,244
for
long-lead materials, parts, and components for propulsion systems (lot 17) for
F-35 aircraft for US military, non-U.S. DOD partners, and FMS. Also adds scope
for the production and delivery of four propulsion systems (F135-PW-600) in
support of lots 15 and 16 for non-U.S. DOD partners and FMS customers. Also
provides integration for an unnamed FMS customer into the F-35 program. Work in
Windsor Locks, Connecticut (23%); Indianapolis, Indiana (19%); Houston, Texas
(4%); Phoenix, Arizona (3%); West Palm Beach, Florida (3%); Southington,
Connecticut (3%); labor surplus areas to include East Hartford, Connecticut
(15%); Rockford, Illinois (5%); and New Britain, Connecticut (2%); various
locations within the continental U.S. (3%); and locations outside the continental
U.S. (20%). Funding includes non-U.S. DOD partners ($134,569,274) and FMS
($339,131,605).
-
Raytheon
Pratt & Whitney, East Hartford, Connecticut, $9,831,952 to
procure one F-35 Convectional Take-off and Landing (CTOL) variant, full scale,
high fidelity, main engine mock-up, and engine maintenance training package.
Work in Williamtown, Australia. Foreign Cooperative
Project funds of $9,831,952 obligated.
-
Raytheon,
Andover, Massachusetts, $10,150,046 for
FMS (Romania): PATRIOT technical publications, new equipment training,
and logistics management information.
-
Raytheon,
Andover, Massachusetts, $122,000,000 for
the Lower Tier Air and Missile Defense Sensor pre-planned product improvement
Increment III effort. Work in Huntsville and Redstone Arsenal, Alabama; Tucson,
Arizona; Anaheim Hills, El Segundo and San Diego, California; Fort Walton
Beach, Indialantic and St. Petersburg, Florida; Fort Wayne and Indianapolis,
Indiana; Andover, Burlington, Cambridge, Marlborough, Tewksbury, Waltham and
Woburn, Massachusetts; Aberdeen Proving Ground and Fulton, Maryland; Saginaw,
Michigan; Nashua and Pelham, New Hampshire; White Sands Missile Range, New
Mexico; Lawton, Oklahoma; Chambersburg, Pennsylvania; Portsmouth, Rhode Island;
El Paso and San Antonio, Texas; and Arlington and Sterling, Virginia.
-
Raytheon, Andover, Massachusetts, $30,145,170, for
FMS (South Korea): PATRIOT post deployment build hardware updates and
Multifunctional Distribution System block upgrade 2.
-
Raytheon,
Dulles, Virginia, $12,120,150 for
services (non-personal and non-commercial) for operations and maintenance
services of the Cobra King radar system at Patrick Space Force Base, Florida,
and various overseas locations on board the U.S. Naval Ship Howard O. Lorenzen.
-
Raytheon, El Segundo, California, $10,300,000, for
the mid-band expansion trade study in support of Next Generation Jammer engineering
and manufacturing for US Navy and Australia. Work in El Segundo, California
(42%); Dallas, Texas (28%); Andover, Massachusetts (13%); Wexford, Pennsylvania
(9%); and Fort Wayne, Indiana (8%). Foreign cooperative project funds
($10,300,000) obligated.
-
Raytheon,
El Segundo, California, $73,447,380 (increasing contract value to $135,769,336)
to
increase Link Level Communication Security 7M encryptor
procurement and sustainment, including warranty provisions and training
courses. Supports the NATO Improved Link Eleven program. Some unspecified FMS.
-
Raytheon, Fullerton, California, $8,600,955 for
FMS (Japan): one Joint Precision Approach and Landing System, one set of
on board repair parts, and one installation and checkout kit. Work in
Fullerton, California (70%); and Largo, Florida (30%).
-
Raytheon,
Indianapolis, Indiana, $34,196,644 for
engineering, development, management, technical, and acquisition support of
development and integration of the ethernet expansion devices and the platform
data server in support of integration of the MV-22 Helmet Mounted Display /
Degraded Visual Environment program aboard V-22, and establish a baseline for a
common software interface for integration of future capabilities on all V-22
aircraft. Work in Indianapolis, Indiana (75%); and El Segundo, California
(25%).
-
Raytheon,
Indianapolis, Indiana, $8,356,194 for
software product updates and qualification testing re: the CV-22 helicopter’s
Silent Knight Radar (SKR) Joint Services Vertical Lift Aircraft Experimental
(JVX) Avionics System Software (JASS) instrumentation build, the SKR JASS
Functional Requirements Document (FRD) 8 port forward, and the SKR JASS FRD 9
port forward.
-
Raytheon,
Marlborough, Massachusetts, $23,345,867 for
AEGIS Modernization kits for U.S. Navy (57%), Japan ($9,703,613; 42%), and
Australia ($205,663; 1%). Work in Andover, Massachusetts (77%); and Chesapeake,
Virginia (23%).
-
Raytheon,
Marlborough, Massachusetts, $8,100,000 for
one Enterprise Air Surveillance Radar emulator. Work in Cerritos, California
(93%); and Marlborough, Massachusetts (7%).
-
Raytheon, McKinney, Texas, $9,033,623 for
ten CH-53K helicopter Night Vision System AN/AAQ-44 forward looking infrared
kits (lot 7) for US Navy.
-
Raytheon,
San Diego, California, $13,392,678 (from $12,008,811 to $25,401,489) for
ongoing engineering services re: life-cycle sustainment of government-owned
Raytheon Multi-Spectral Targeting System (MTS) sensors, and for obtaining the
technical capability and necessary resources to operate, maintain, repair, and
upgrade these units. Anticipated engineering services include spare parts
support, platform integration support, test equipment support and fielding, and
software / firmware updates.
-
Raytheon, Tewksbury, Massachusetts, $1,216,207,829 for
National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile Systems, associated equipment,
services and spares in support of the efforts in Ukraine. Fiscal 2023
Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative funds obligated.
-
Raytheon,
Tucson, Arizona, $113,938,855 for
production and delivery of additional AIM-9X missile production (lot 22) to
include all up round tactical missiles, training missiles, containers, spare
advanced optical target detectors and containers, guidance units and
containers, and more. Some FMS ($11,690,150). See contract announcement for
full details. Work in Tucson, Arizona (21.64%); North Logan, Utah (28.09%);
Linthicum Heights, Maryland (18.88%); Minneapolis, Minnesota (11.46%);
Murrieta, California (8.42%); Saint Albans, Vermont (7.75%); Ann Arbor,
Michigan (1.44%); Warrington, Pennsylvania (1.22%); and various locations
within the continental U.S. (1.10%).
-
Raytheon, Tucson, Arizona, $171,187,894 for
111 Tactical Tomahawk All Up Round Vertical Launch System missiles (full rate
production, Block V): 50 for US Army, 48 for US Navy and 13 for US Marine
Corps. Work in Ogden, Utah (21.76%); Camden, Arkansas (15.44%); Huntsville,
Alabama (10.68%); Clearwater, Florida (6.36%); Glenrothes,
Fife, UK (4.21%); Spanish Fork, Utah (4.16%); Joplin, Missouri (3.93%); El
Segundo, California (3.77%); Ontario, Middletown, Connecticut (3.43%); Midland,
Ontario, Canada (3.04%); California (2.87%); Vergennes, Vermont (2.55%);
Anniston, Alabama (2.44%); Minneapolis, Minnesota (1.59%); Moorpark, California
(1.38%); Westminster, Colorado (1.20%); Chandler, Arizona (1.04%); and various
location within the continental U.S. (10.15%).
-
Raytheon, Tucson, Arizona, $20,838,954 for
fiscal 2022 Egyptian Navy Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) Mod 5 Guided
Missile Launching System (GMLS) requirements and German Navy power
supply spares. Work in Ottobrunn, Germany (46%);
Tucson, Arizona (13%); Louisville, Kentucky (13%); Tempe, Arizona (8%);
Huntsville, Alabama (4%); Berryville, Arkansas (2%); San Diego, California
(2%); Denison, Texas (2%); and various other U.S. locations each under 1% (10%
total). FMS (Egypt) funds of $20,655,139 (99%), and memorandum of
understanding (Germany) funds $183,185 (1%) obligated.
-
Raytheon,
Tucson, Arizona, $29,485,046 (increasing value of agreement to $91,856,780) to
continue to develop and refine its [hypersonic] Glide Phase Interceptor concept
during the “materiel solutions analysis phase.” Work in Tucson, Arizona; El
Dorado Hills, California; Tewksbury and Woburn, Massachusetts; and Huntsville,
Alabama.
-
Raytheon, Tucson, Arizona, $317,415,034 for
AIM-9X missiles and related equipment (lot 23) through August 2026. FMS portion
is $203,877,920. Also provides non-recurring engineering associated with the
Systems Improvement Program III transition to production activities. See contracting
announcement for full details. Work in North Logan, Utah (28.09%); Tucson,
Arizona (21.64%); Linthincum Heights, Maryland
(18.88%); Minneapolis, Minnesota (11.46%); Murrieta, California (8.42%); Saint
Albans, Vermont (7.75%); Ann Arbor, Michigan (1.44%); Warrington, Pennsylvania
(1.22%) and various locations within the continental U.S. (1.10%).
-
Raytheon, Tucson, Arizona, $397,679,384 for
fiscal 2023 guided missile assemblies, shipping containers, and spare parts in
support of the fiscal 2021-2023 Evolved Seasparrow
Missile Block 2 full-rate production requirements. Work in Tucson, Arizona
(46%); Edinburgh, Australia (8%); San Jose, California (7%); Raufoss, Norway (7%); Mississauga, Canada (6%); Ottobrunn, Germany (4%); Cambridge, Canada (3%); Nashua,
New Hampshire (3%); Hengelo, Netherlands (2%); Koropi
Attica, Greece (2%); Torrance, California (2%); Canton, New York (2%); Ankara
Turkey (1%), Grenaa, Denmark (1%); West Lake Village,
California (1%); and various other locations each less than 1%.
-
Raytheon,
Tucson, Arizona, $59,350,949 for
engineering and technical support on Phalanx Close-In Weapon System (CIWS), SeaRAM, and Land-based Phalanx. Work in Tucson, Arizona
(46%); Yuma, Arizona (15%); El Segundo, California (5%); Louisville, Kentucky
(3%); China Lake, California (2%); Forest, Mississippi (1%); Dallas, Texas
(1%); Picatinny, New Jersey (1%); and various other locations each under 1%
(26% total). Some FMS to South Korea $966,901 (29%); the UK $807,511 (24%);
Saudi Arabia $382,418 (12%); Taiwan $375,000 (11%); Japan $315,000 (9%);
Australia $100,000 (3%); New Zealand $75,000 (2%).
-
Raytheon,
Tucson, Arizona, $60,423,838 for
fiscal 2023 U.S. Navy and Germany procurements of Rolling Airframe Missile
(RAM) block 2B guided missile round pack requirements. Work in Ottobrunn, Germany (62%); Bedford, New Hampshire (12%); Glenrothes Fife, Scotland (9%); Middletown, Pennsylvania
(7%); Tucson, Arizona (5%); Keyser, West Virginia (2%); and various other
locations each under 1% (3%). Some Memorandum of Understanding funds ($7,734,900;
13%) obligated.
-
Raytheon, Tucson, Arizona, $84,087,924 for
155mm Excalibur Increment Ib projectiles. Work in
Healdsburg, California; Karlskoga, Sweden; East
Camden, Arizona; Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Plymouth, United Kingdom; Cincinnati,
Ohio; Glenrothes, Scotland; Salt Lake, City Utah;
Joplin, Missouri; Gilbert, Arizona; Lansdale, Pennsylvania; Santa Clara,
California; Santa Ana, California; Trenton, Texas; Valencia, California;
Cookstown, New Jersey; Tucson, Arizona; Phoenix, Arizona; Anniston, Alabama;
Chino, California; Inglewood, California; McAlester, Oklahoma; and Farmington,
New Mexico.
-
Raytheon,
Tucson, Arizona, $9,491,491 for
fiscal 2023 High-Speed Anti-Radiation Missile Targeting System contractor
logistics support services.
-
Raytheon, Tucson, Arizona, estimated $21,000,000 to
develop critical subsystem technologies that support the Compact Air to Air
Missile and Extended Range Air to Air Missile systems.
-
Raytheon, Woburn, Massachusetts, $412,601,063 for
FMS (Taiwan): follow-on sustainment: contractor logistics support,
engineering services, technical updates, spare parts, and other related
elements of logistical and program support under the Taiwan Surveillance Radar
Program.
-
Rhinestahl
Corp., Mason, Ohio, $140,279,237 for
General Electric F110 support equipment: Initial lay in of engine support
equipment at the organizational and intermediate levels. Involves FMS
($6,406,174 obligated) to multiple countries.
-
Riverside
Research Institute, Arlington, Virginia, $30,591,985 to
research, develop, and demonstrate advanced component prototypes to expand
emerging open architecture standards and approaches for current and
next-generation weapon systems.
-
Riverside
Research Institute, Arlington, Virginia, $49,468,966 for
Microelectronics and Embedded System Assurance (MESA) II R&D at
Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, and Arlington, Virginia.
-
Rogers, Lovelock, & Fritz Inc., Orlando, Florida, $30,000,000 for
architect and engineering services.
-
Rolls-Royce Corp., Indianapolis, Indiana, $228,092,989 for
sustaining engineering and logistics support services for the KC-130J aircraft
propulsion system for USA and FMS. Work in Indianapolis, Indiana (92.8%); Iwakuni, Japan (1.6%); Kuwait City, Kuwait (1.6%); Cherry
Point, North Carolina (1%); Miramar, California (1%); Kaneohe, Hawaii (1%); and
Fort Worth, Texas (1%).
-
Rolls-Royce
Corp., Indianapolis, Indiana, $24,380,916 for
the T108 engine sustainment (technical, logistics, engineering, maintenance,
repair, and overhaul services) on the C-130J aircraft R391 propeller, nacelle,
the powerplant assembly, whole engines, and line replaceable units.
-
Rolls-Royce Corp., Indianapolis, Indiana, $31,070,678 for
depot repair of T56-A-427A engines (used on US Navy’s E-2D Advanced Hawkeye
aircraft). Includes repairing the power section, torque meter, gearbox,
accessories, and all related over and above and material support. Work in San
Antonio, Texas (70%); Winnipeg, Canada (25%); and Indianapolis, Indiana (5%).
-
Rolls-Royce Corp., Indianapolis, Indiana, $74,695,424 for
twenty-eight (28) AE1107C engines (24 for production aircraft; 4 spares) for US
Navy and Marine Corps V-22 Osprey tiltrotor aircraft.
-
Rolls-Royce Marine North America, Walpole, Massachusetts, $12,870,313 for
support services for the Product Improvement Program: Provide all
maintainability and availability and technical data programs for Rolls-Royce
Marine North America products. Work at the contractor's facility located in
Walpole, Massachusetts (82%) and at government sites as required (18%).
-
SAAB, Syracuse, New York, $13,232,215 for
R&D of automatic target recognition and autonomous sensor resource
management, and prototype counter-unmanned aircraft system concepts for surface
vehicle protection and airport security. Effort is titled “Threat and
Situational Understanding with Networked-Online Machine Intelligence.” Work in
Syracuse, New York (63%), and West Lafayette, Indiana (37%).
-
Sabre Systems Inc., Warminster, Pennsylvania, $9,431,206 for
continued engineering and technical services in support of software
development, test and acquisition that includes software program generation,
software and hardware integration, along with development of test devices and
systems such as weapon system simulators and trainers. Work in Patuxent River,
Maryland (90%); China Lake, California (2%); Point Mugu, California (2%);
Jacksonville, Florida (2%); Orlando, Florida (2%); various locations in
continental U.S. (1%); locations outside continental U.S. (1%).
-
SAIC, Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, $50,213,909, for
Unisys Operating System 2200 capacity services at current Defense Information
Systems Agency data centers. Chambersburg is home to Letterkenny Army Depot.
-
SAIC,
Fairfield, New Jersey, $19,475,130 for
integrated product support for line-side delivery of bench stock items for
maintenance / production lines at Anniston Army Depot, Alabama.
-
SAIC,
Fairfield, New Jersey, $90,000,000 for
facilities maintenance, repair and operations supplies. Performance in
Colorado, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Kansas
-
SAIC,
Fairfield, New Jersey, $99,000,000 for
facilities maintenance, repair and operations supplies. Work in California,
Utah, Arizona, and Nevada.
-
SAIC,
Reston, Virginia (N0003923A1000); SERCO Inc., Herndon, Virginia (N0003923A1001);
DRS Laurel Technologies Partnership, Johnstown, Pennsylvania (N0003921A1002);
Micro USA Inc., Poway, California (N0003923A1003); $52,000,000 for
production of the C2P hardware system. The BPA (total potential value
$52,000,000, per vendor; ordering period 48 months) covers the production of up
to 74 units per contractor along with the associated program management,
testing and logistics support to deliver the units.
-
SAIC,
Reston, Virginia, $151,000,000 (dollars will be obligated on individual task
orders during 1 Dec 2022-30 Nov 2027) for
strategic, technical, and program management guidance and support at Scott AFB,
Illinois, “to facilitate the operations and modernization of Transportation
Command's infrastructure, systems, and applications.” Supports “classified and
unclassified programs on multiple networks and security domains.”
-
SAIC, Reston, Virginia, $349,500,982 for
five years of work for Naval Information Warfare Center Pacific: in-service
engineering agent (ISEA) support, technical and engineering assistance, design
analysis, network information assurance accreditation, installation,
integration, sustainment, and life cycle support for afloat and ashore tactical
networks (TACNET) and command, control, communications, computers, and
intelligence systems, including the sustainment of fielded systems through
end-of-life replacement, system upgrades, follow-on, or interrelated system,
distant support, onsite repair, installations, and system analysis “to ensure
networks are performing within designed specifications and peak capabilities.”
Work in San Diego, California (70%), and ashore and afloat facilities (30%, if
applicable) outside continental U.S.
-
SAIC, Reston, Virginia, $63,451,488 for
operational, logistics, planning, electronic warfare, IT, and security
disciplines supporting Air Combat Command HQ, Advanced Programs Division at
Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Virginia; Eglin AFB, Florida, Joint Base Pearl
Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii, Ramstein Air Base, Germany, Nellis
AFB, Nevada; and Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska.
-
Sauer Construction LLC, Jacksonville, Florida, $16,715,000 for
repairs and improvements to Bachelor Enlisted Quarters 4197 at MCAS Cherry
Point. Sauer Construction LLC, Jacksonville, Florida, $16,190,000 for
repairs and improvements to Bachelor Enlisted Quarters 4198, MCAS Cherry Point.
-
Sauer Construction, Jacksonville, Florida, $63,895,000 for
design and construction of a non-standard battalion operations facility in Fort
Benning, Georgia
-
Sawasawa
LLC, Los Angeles, California, $8,332,500 for
moisture wicking t-shirts for Army.
-
Schuyler
Line Navigation Co., Annapolis, Maryland, $10,103,500 for
operation and maintenance of the tanker SLNC Goodwill to transport
petroleum products for DLA Energy.
-
SeaLandAire
Technologies Inc., Jackson, Michigan, $19,698,504 for
continued technology research, development, and engineering (to include systems
engineering, modeling and analyses, measurement of target and environment data,
architecture, fabrication, installation, test, maintenance, aircrew training,
and procurement activities) in support of prototyping a Digital Directional
Frequency Analysis and Reporting Vertical Line Array sonobuoy
in order to transfer this technology to the UnderSea
Advantage / Next Generation Multistatic Active
Coherent program. Also provides verification in ocean environments through
collection, modeling, processing, and measurement of target and environment
data, in support of improving the airborne Anti-Submarine Warfare mission.
-
SecuriGence
LLC, Leesburg, Virginia, $17,786,941 (to $907,699,503 from $889,912,562) for
information technology multi-network support services. Work in Arlington,
Virginia, for DARPA.
-
Sedna Digital Solutions, Manassas, Virginia, $29,695,637 for
engineering-design development, Navy equipment and supporting material
procurements.
-
Serco
Inc., Herndon, Virginia, $6,835,818 to
maintain and operate a Satellite Communication Capability-Based In-Service Engineering
Activity Antenna refurbishment effort for NAVWAR Pacific. Work in Ludlow,
Massachusetts.
-
Seventh
Dimension LLC, Mocksville, North Carolina, $137,117,875 to
support the Army’s John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and 1st Special
Warfare Training Group, Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Work in the vicinity of
Camp MacKall.
-
SGL Composites, Gardena, California, $9,343,506 for
Submarine Launched Ballistic Missile heatshields and thermal protection system
materials and components. Some FMS (United Kingdom) of $2,958,218 (32%).
-
Sierra
Lobo Inc., Fremont, Ohio, $42,009,032 for
on-site advisory and assistance services with the capability to support R&D
of rocket propulsion components and systems of systems. Work at Edwards AFB,
California
-
Sierra Nevada Corp. (SNC) Sparks, Nevada, $8,854,602 for
research, design, and prototype experiment into cybersecurity, with a primary
focus on applications for US Navy’s Internet of Military Things (IoMT), machine-to-machine (M2M) and systems operating on a
5G network.
-
Silver Oak Leaf Inc., Alpharetta, Georgia, maximum $50,395,200 for
coats and trousers for Army, Air Force, and Navy. Work in Puerto Rico.
-
SilverStar
Consulting Inc., Falls Church, Virginia, $38,306,813 for
Army Transition Assistance Program services at Fort Knox, Kentucky.
-
Sodexo
Management Inc., Gaithersburg, Maryland, $119,557,517 for
management and operation of mess halls in Washington, D.C.; Indian Head,
Maryland; Quantico, Virginia; North Carolina (Camp Lejeune, Cherry Point,
Bogue, New River), South Carolina (Beaufort, Parris Island).
-
Sodexo
Management Inc., Gaithersburg, Maryland, $122,914,575 for
management and operation of mess halls in California (e.g., Camp Pendleton,
Twentynine Palms, Miramar, Bridgeport) and Arizona (Yuma).
-
Sopackco
Inc., d.b.a. Sopacko Packaging, Mullins, South
Carolina, $13,004,582 (max.) for
unitized group rations snack items for Army and Marine Corps.
-
Southeast
Regional Maintenance Center, Mayport, Florida (N40027-23-C-0001)
-
SpecPro
Environmental Services, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, $8,540,456 to
maintain and repair federally funded and DLA-Energy capitalized petroleum
systems and facilities in Latham, New York; Aberdeen, Maryland; Fort A.P. Hill,
Virginia; Ft. Belvoir, Virginia; Bangor, Maine; Richmond, Virginia; Concord,
New Hampshire; Kingwood, West Virginia; Watertown, New York; Redhouse, West Virginia; Ronkonkoma, New York;
Lebanon, Pennsylvania; Augusta, Maine; Fort Lee, Virginia; Chambersburg,
Pennsylvania; Fort Meade, Maryland; Fort Meyer, Virginia; Parkersburg, West
Virginia; Blackstone, Virginia; Picatinny Arsenal, New Jersey; Rochester, New
York; New Cumberland, Pennsylvania; East Lyme, Connecticut; Tobyhanna,
Pennsylvania; Aberdeen, Maryland; Wheeling, West Virginia; and West Point, New
York.
-
SRI
International, Menlo Park, California, $12,493,751 for
ISING Hardware and software prototype: a prototype solver system demonstrating increased
computational efficiency “than current state of the art solvers.”
-
StandardAero
Inc., San Antonio, Texas, $133,488,026 for
P-8A Poseidon CFM56-7B27A/3 and CFM56-7B27AE engine depot-level maintenance and
repair for U.S. Navy, Australia, and FMS. Work in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
(86%); Cincinnati, Ohio (11%); and San Antonio, Texas (3%).
-
Sterling
Computer Corp., North Sioux City, South Dakota, $16,753,698 to
update hardware and software for the Virtual Imagery Processing-Capability for
the Relay Ground Station and Distributed Common Ground System.
-
Stratascorp
Technologies, Chesapeake, Virginia $32,953,444 for
ongoing command, control, communications, and computers (C4) operations and
sustainment support aboard Military Sealift Command (MSC) ships, MSC Network
Operations Centers (MNOC), and future C4 capabilities hosted at US Navy Fleet
Network Operation Centers (FLTNOC). Support includes knowledge management,
cybersecurity, maintenance and sustainment, modernization, equipment, and asset
management, MSC MNOC, future FLTNOC, and training.
-
SupplyCore,
Rockford, Illinois, $60,000,000 for
facilities maintenance, repair and operations supplies. Performance in
California, Washington, Oregon, Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho.
-
SupplyCore,
Rockford, Illinois, $60,000,000 for
facilities maintenance, repair and operations supplies in Alaska
-
SupplyCore,
Rockford, Illinois, $60,000,000 for
facilities maintenance, repair and operations supplies in Ohio, Kentucky,
Indiana, Nebraska, Wisconsin, Iowa, Missouri, Minnesota, Michigan, North Dakota
and South Dakota.
-
SupplyCore,
Rockford, Illinois, $90,000,000 for
facilities maintenance, repair and operations supplies. Performance in
California.
-
SupplyCore,
Rockford, Illinois, $90,000,000 for
facilities maintenance, repair and operations supplies. Performance in North
Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Tennessee.
-
Sysco Baraboo LLC, Baraboo, Wisconsin, $42,000,000 for
full-line food distribution.
-
Systems
Application and Technologies Inc., Upper Marlboro, Maryland, $17,939,039 for
engineering, technical, project analyst, and administrative support services in
support of research, development, test, and evaluation of aircraft
instrumentation flight test for DOD and other government agencies. Work in
Patuxent River, Maryland.
-
Systems
Planning and Analysis Inc. (SPA),
Alexandria, Virginia, $9,583,018 for
program management and financial support of the Trident II (D5) Life Extension
program and future concepts, including the Common Missile Compartment. Work in
Alexandria, Virginia (82%); Strategic Systems Programs HQ at Washington Navy
Yard, D.C. (15%); Greensville, South Carolina (2%); and Orlando, Florida (1%).
-
T.J. Clark International LLC, Delaware, Ohio, maximum $7,592,507 for
fuel pump assembly units for Army.
-
T&H Services LLC, Juneau, Alaska, $35,724,037 for
base operations support for Fort Carson, Colorado
-
Technology
Management Group Inc., King George, Virginia, $16,800,000 to
provide technical and analytical services for combat and material development;
project/program management; science and technology; networking and
communication; research, development, test and evaluation; technical and
analytical; and stakeholder liaison support to the DOD Non-Lethal Weapons
Program. Also provides technical and analytical services that support requirements
generation; research, development, testing and evaluation; acquisition program
management, strategic analysis and planning, Joint Operation Concept reviews,
and technical analysis related to nonlethal weapons intermediate force
capabilities for both counter-personnel and counter-materiel efforts, and human
effects characterization. Work in San Antonio, Texas (25%); Virginia Beach,
Virginia (25%); Quantico, Virginia (12.5%); Fort Eustis, Virginia (12.5%); D.C.
(12.5%); and MacDill AFB, Florida (12.5%).
-
Telos Corp., Ashburn, Virginia, $32,526,076 for
mission defense teams support for defensive cyber operations (DCO) weapons
systems and unique mission areas. DCO WhiteSpace
provides contractor support to perform aspects of plans and programs support,
client systems, cyber transport, and cyber operations to augment base personnel
in the performance of core IT services. Work across multiple contiguous U.S.
and outside the contiguous U.S. locations.
-
Tetra Tech Inc., San Diego, California, $12,864,258 for
recurring maintenance and minor repair of petroleum systems. Work in Joint Base
Andrews, Maryland; Atlantic City, New Jersey; Bangor, Maine; Westfield,
Massachusetts; Windsor Locks, Connecticut; Burlington, Vermont; Dover,
Delaware; Martinsburg, West Virginia; Fort Dix, New Jersey; Hampton, Virginia;
Annville, Pennsylvania; Westhampton, New York; Mattydale, New York; Hanscom,
Massachusetts; Middletown, Pennsylvania; Horsham, Pennsylvania; Washington,
D.C.; Lakehurst, New Jersey; Hampton, Virginia; Middle River, Maryland; McGuire
AFB, New Jersey; Wilmington, Delaware; Niagara Falls, New York; Cape Cod,
Massachusetts; Pease Air National Guard, Base New Hampshire; Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania; Coraopolis, Pennsylvania; North Kingstown, Rhode Island; Scotia,
New York; New Windsor, New York; Barnegat, New Jersey; Chicopee, Massachusetts;
and Charleston, West Virginia
-
Textron Aviation, Wichita, Kansas, $12,466,347 for
AT-6 components (ones not included in the original Thailand AT-6 direct
commercial sale contract). Involves FMS to Thailand, with some Building
Partner Capacity funds ($5,465,932) obligated.
-
Textron
Bell, Fort Worth, Texas, $1,361,723,332 for
development of the Future Long Range Assault Aircraft weapon system.
-
Textron Bell, Fort Worth, Texas, $134,592,912 for logistics services in
Iraq.
-
Textron
Bell, Fort Worth, Texas, $15,236,598 for
FMS (Czech Republic): courseware/curriculum development, electronic
classrooms, and in-country pilot, crew and maintainer training on the UH-1Y and
AH-1Z production helicopters. Work in Czech Republic (65%); Fort Worth, Texas
(25%); Huntsville, Alabama (9%); and Brno, Czech Republic (1%).
-
Textron Bell, Fort Worth, Texas, $19,593,371 for
engineering and logistics support: UH-1Y and AH-1Z helicopter sustainment for
US Marine Corps and UH-1Y and AH-1Z production aircraft for Czech Republic.
Work in Fort Worth, Texas (80%); and Patuxent River, Maryland (20%).
-
Textron Bell, Fort Worth, Texas, $48,256,328 for
installation of Structural Improvements and Electrical Power Upgrades Phase II
Part 3 kits, as well as ground and flight test for one AH-1Z and one UH-1Y
aircraft for US Navy. Work in Patuxent River, Maryland (50%); Fort Worth, Texas
(25%); and Amarillo, Texas (25%).
-
Textron, New Orleans, Louisiana, $9,021,994 for
Major Shore Based Spares (MSBS) to support Landing Craft Air Cushion 100 class
vessels at Assault Craft Unit-4. Work in Cincinnati, Ohio (83%), and
Indianapolis, Indiana (17%).
-
The MITRE
Corp., Bedford, Massachusetts, $486,106,810 for
continuing to administer the National Security Engineering Center Federally
Funded Research and Development Center (FFRDC) for the Air Force. Work in
Bedford, Massachusetts, McLean, Virginia, and various locations in and out of
the continental U.S. FMS of $20,272,479 obligated.
-
The Morganti Group Inc., Danbury, Connecticut, $48,500,000 for
sustainment, restoration and modernization projects at various installations in
Jordan.
-
Thomas
Instrument, Brookshire, Texas, $13,590,419 for
depot-level overhaul services of the C-5 dual-powered winch (National Stock
Number 1680-01-593-5680 / Part Number 200413780-20).
-
to include
42 production radars, one initial spare kit, and two readiness spare kits.
-
Top Aces
Corp., Mesa, Arizona, $21,450,370 for
contractor-owned, contractor-operated adversary air services at Eglin AFB,
Florida, and Luke AFB, Arizona.
-
Torch Technologies Inc., Huntsville, Alabama, $10,668,279 for
various types of simulation support to the Systems Simulation Software and
Integration Directorate, Army Combat Capabilities Development Command Aviation
and Missile Center.
-
Trident
Systems Inc., Fairfax, Virginia, $16,004,207 for
follow on sustainment support for the Enhanced Regional Situational Awareness
system and the custom developed software. Work in and around D.C. re: National
Capital Region – Integrated Air Defense Systems.
-
TyBe-Garney
Federal JV LLC, Newbern, Tennessee, $21,395,660 for
design and installation of a potable water distribution system at Naval Support
Facility Indian Head, South Potomac, Maryland.
-
UD
Contracting, Leitchfield, Kentucky, $11,864,428 for
HVAC facility maintenance, likely at Fort Knox.
-
University
of Alabama in Huntsville, Huntsville, Alabama, $52,109,492 for
information technology and related systems and services.
-
University
of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, Ohio, $8,044,206 for
Proficient Research of Onboard Subsystems Technology: research, develop, test,
and evaluate electro-optical, hyperspectral, radiofrequency, and electronic
warfare subsystems.
-
University
of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina, $9,964,825 for
research into digital twin (DT) and advanced control system technologies that
have the potential to improve resiliency of shipboard Navy power and energy
systems (NPES). “DT technology will be leveraged to rapidly and automatically
"look ahead" to predict the interactions between system components
and the consequences of alternative control actions in order to improve the
speed and capability for recovery from unplanned events or disruptions, and to
improve coordination between components during routine operations.”
-
USA Environmental Inc., Oldsmar, Florida (N62473-23-D-2211);
Engineering/Remediation Resources Group Inc., Martinez, California
(N62473-23-D-2212); EA-Relyant JV, Hunt Valley,
Maryland (N62473-23-D-2213); HL/VRH Federal Services LLC, Maxton, North Carolina
(N62473-23-D-2214); PIKA-Insight JV LLC, Stafford, Texas (N62473-23-D-2215);
Bering Sea Eccotech LLC, Anchorage, Alaska
(N62473-23-D-2216); $95,000,000 for
range sustainment and remediation services for NAVFAC Southwest, specifically
California (93%); Arizona (6%); and various locations within the U.S. (less
than 1%).
-
USA Environmental Inc., Oldsmar, Florida, maximum-value $95,000,000 for
munitions response services for projects within NAVFAC Atlantic, primarily Vieques,
Puerto Rico (70%); Hawaii (20%); Washington (5%); North Carolina (2%);
Virginia (2%); and Florida (1%).
-
Valiant/ALCA JV LLC, Clarksville, Tennessee, $7,528,791 for
ongoing base operating support at Naval Air Station Sigonella, Sicily.
-
Vectrus,
Colorado Springs, Colorado, $31,406,601 for
facilities support services at Isa Air Base and other locations in Bahrain.
-
Vectrus, Colorado Springs, Colorado, $48,888,974 for
base operations support services at Naval Station Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.
-
Vertex Aerospace, Madison, Mississippi, $27,238,527 for
contractor logistic support services for the Air Force’s C-12 fleet, which is
utilized by the Air Force Materiel Command, Pacific Air Command, Defense
Intelligence Agency (DIA), and the Defense Security Cooperation Agency. Work at
Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska; Edwards AFB, California; Joint Base
Andrews, Maryland; Madison, Mississippi; Holloman AFB, New Mexico; Okmulgee,
Oklahoma; San Angelo, Texas; Buenos Ares, Argentina; Gaborone, Botswana;
Brasilia, Brazil; Bogota, Columbia; Cairo, Egypt; Accra, Ghana; Tegucigalpa,
Honduras; Budapest, Hungary; Yokota Air Base, Japan; Nairobi, Kenya; Rabat,
Morocco; Manila, Philippines; Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; Bangkok, Thailand; Ankara,
Turkey; and Oslo, Norway.
-
Viasat,
Inc., Carlsbad, California, $325,000,000 (max.) for
PEO-Command, Control, Communications and Computers (C4) Tactical Communications
Systems: Primary Mission Equipment (PME), ancillary equipment, interoperable
accessories, support services, repairs, and training in support of PEO-C4 Radio
Integration Systems (RIS), Standard CMMI Appraisal Method for Process
Improvement (SCAMPI), Airborne, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance
Transport (AISR-T), and Satellite Deployable Nodes (SDN) Programs of Record
(POR).
-
Vigor
Marine LLC, Portland, Oregon, $23,564,259 for
a 90-calendar day shipyard availability for regular overhaul and dry docking of
the dry cargo and ammunition ship USNS Richard E. Byrd (T-AKE 4) in
Portland, Oregon.
-
Vigor
Marine LLC., Portland, Oregon, $20,187,816 for
a 90-calendar day shipyard availability for a mid-term availability hospital
ship USNS Mercy (T-AH 19) in Portland, Oregon.
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Vitol
Aviation Co., Houston, Texas, $261,327,102 for
various types of fuel for Defense Logistics Agency in Asia and Middle East.
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Vysnova
Partners Inc., Landover, Maryland $9,299,506 for
biomedical research support at Center for Military Psychiatry and Neuroscience
Research, Walter Reed Army Institute Research, Silver Spring, Maryland:
scientific and technical development; program and administrative management;
clinical trials; veterinarian and animal care; statistical analysis; and
research in the fields of the physiological and psychological, penetrating
ballistic-like brain injury, polytrauma, mitochondria, non-convulsive seizures,
field [research], projectile concussive impact brain injury, traumatic brain
injury (TBI) neuroprotection and neurorestoration,
anti-neuroinflammatory drug therapies for blast neurotrauma, and molecular
mechanisms, biomarkers identification, and therapeutic intervention.
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Washington
Business Dynamics LLC, D.C., $66,906,179 for
supporting fiscal-year financial planning, budget reporting, budget analysis,
execution and out-year resourcing to include development and preparation of
necessary documentation for the program budget decisions, the future years
defense program, program objective memorandums, audits and budget estimate
submissions, risk management and internal control / performance metrics,
contracts database support, cost estimating, evaluation support, technical
writing support, and administrative support for DHA Deputy Assistant Director
for Information Operations, Portfolio and Resource Management Division.
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Weeks
Marine Inc. Covington, Louisiana, $31,197,575 for
beach renourishment in Fenwick, Delaware.
-
Weeks
Marine Inc., Covington, Louisiana, $33,112,700 for
beach renourishment, Monmouth Beach, New Jersey.
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Weston Solutions Inc., Peachtree Corners, Georgia, $8,882,730 to
maintain and repair federally funded and DLA-Energy capitalized petroleum
systems and facilities in Anniston, Alabama; Fort Rucker, Alabama; Starke,
Florida; Columbus, Georgia; Dahlonega, Georgia; Savannah, Georgia; Palmerola, Honduras; Grenada, Mississippi; Hattiesburg,
Mississippi; Morrisville, North Carolina; Salisbury, North Carolina; Pope Army
Airfield, North Carolina; Southport, North Carolina; San Juan, Puerto Rico;
Salinas, Puerto Rico; Guaynabo, Puerto Rico; and Peachtree Corners, Georgia.
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WGL Energy
Services Inc., Vienna, Virginia (SPE604-23-D-7500, $81,846,848); Enspire Energy LLC, Chesapeake, Virginia (SPE604-23-D-7501,
$32,760,506); Direct Energy Business Marketing LLC, Iselin, New Jersey
(SPE604-23-D-7502, $26,754,291); for
natural gas. Performance in Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, and D.C.
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WGL Energy
Services, Vienna, Virginia, (SPE604-23-D-8003, $291,252,291); Constellation NewEnergy, Baltimore, Maryland, (SPE604-23-D-8000,
$89,242,032); MP2 Energy NE LLC, Woodlands, Texas, (SPE604-23-D-8002,
$70,361,108); Direct Energy Business, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
(SPE604-23-D-8001, $16,308,321); for
supply and delivery of retail electricity and ancillary / incidental services
for Departments of Defense, Agriculture, Energy, Health and Human Services, and
Homeland Security.
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Willow
Environmental Inc., Coraopolis, Pennsylvania, $30,017,208 for
hazardous waste removal and disposal in Virginia and North Carolina for U.S.
Navy, Coast Guard, Fleet Industrial Supply Center, Air National Guard, and Army
Transportation Center.
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Winston-Salem
Industries for the Blind Inc., Winston Salem, North Carolina, maximum
$7,761,285 for
fire-resistant environment ensemble, operational camouflage pattern,
intermediate weather outer layer jackets for the Navy. Performance in Georgia,
Arizona, Mississippi, and D.C.
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WMEM JV
LLC, Tamuning, Guam, $20,000,000 for
mechanical, electrical, and fire protection architect-engineer services for
projects located primarily within NAVFAC Marianas.
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Woodward
HRT, Santa Clarita, California, $27,170,000 for
repair of 418 components of the drive unit used in support of the V-22 aircraft
hydraulic system.
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Wunderman
Thompson, Atlanta, Georgia, $116,400,429 for
enhancing Marine Corps' recruiting. Includes development of a tactical
advertising strategy and production of a wide range of advertising formats
(e.g., TV, radio, print media, internet, and direct marketing).
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Yang Enterprise Inc. (YEI),
Oviedo, Florida, $184,467,915 for
ten years of base operations support at Ascension Island Auxiliary Airfield.