FY2023 Q2 (January-March 2023) contracting
announcements, alphabetized
· 10 corporations (see contracting
announcement for details) $1,000,000,000 (over 8 years) for
construction, renovation, and repair of heavy horizontal and civil engineering
projects (e.g., outdoor shooting or combat training ranges and terrains;
canals, channels, dams, or embankments; erosion control or storm drainage
retention and detention basins; earthwork and grading; landfills; ammunition
magazines; irrigation, landscaping, and recreational fields and parks;
tunneling and horizontal direction drilling) at government installations in California
(87%), Arizona (5%), Nevada (3%), Utah (2%), Colorado (2%), and New Mexico (1%).
· 17 corporations [Agility
Consulting LLC, Indianapolis, Indiana; August Schell Enterprises Inc.,
Rockville, Maryland; Avantus Federal LLC, McLean, Virginia; BAE Systems
Information and Electronic Systems Integration, San Diego, California; Bluestaq
LLC, Colorado Springs, Colorado; C3. AI Inc., Redwood City, California; Enlighten
IT Consulting LLC, Linthicum Heights, Maryland; Ernst & Young LLP, New
York, New York; Kinetica DB Inc., Arlington, Virginia; Mags DS Corp., Fairfax,
Virginia; Map Large Inc., Atlanta, Georgia; Meroxa Inc., San Jose, California; Next
Tier Concepts Inc., Vienna, Virginia; Oracle, Redwoord City, California; Palantir,
Palo Alto, California; Raft LLC, Reston, Virginia; Royce Geospatial Consultants
Inc., Arlington, Virginia; World Wide Technology LLC, St. Louis, Missouri] $900,000,000
for commercial licenses and product deliverables
for Data Software Services support. Includes application development. Work in El
Segundo, California, for Space Systems Command.
· 18 corporations [Next
Evolution Logistics Solutions, Durham, New Hampshire; Resicum International,
LLC, Warrenton, Virginia; Cambridge International Systems Inc., Arlington, Virginia;
Culmen International LLC, Alexandria, Virginia; Fluor, Greenville, South
Carolina; Patriot Group International Inc., Warrenton, Virginia; Amentum
(d.b.a. PAE), Arlington, Virginia; Obera LLC, Herndon,
Virginia; Advanced Engineering Solutions and Services LLC, Bel Air, Maryland; AOC
Program Solutions LLC, Chantilly, Virginia; Chimera Enterprises International,
Edgewood, Maryland; HTGS-Culmen JV, Herndon, Virginia; BFS Solutions LLC JV,
Hume, Virginia; BL-ACADEMI JV LLC, Lakeside, Montana; LRG Service LLC JV,
Anchorage, Alaska; Commonwealth Trading Partners Inc., Alexandria, Virginia; SGI
Global LLC, Alexandria, Virginia; Weaponize LLC JV, Austin, Texas] to compete
for $960,000,000 over 10 years for “services, equipment, material, training
support, products, minor construction, repair services, and other items … to
meet national security objectives and improve the capability of the United
States and partner nation agencies' endeavors to detect, deter, disrupt,
degrade and defeat national security threats, including those posed by illegal
drugs, trafficking, piracy, transnational organized crime, threat finance
networks.” Most work on this “Counter-Narcotics and Global Threats, Operations,
Logistics and Training Support program” is to occur overseas and “may include
dangerous areas including theaters of operations, combat zones, and partner
nations.”
· 381 Constructors, Omaha,
Nebraska, $34,000,000 for
work at Multi-Mission Dry Dock 1 at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery, Maine:
remove additional bedrock; remove exfiltration measures; change from secant to
tangent pile construction, and project phasing changes to support post award
delays and updated fleet schedules.
· 7 construction firms [Vedant Construction
Inc., Dracut, Massachusetts; Swan Contracting LLC, Peterborough, New Hampshire;
Cornerstone Construction Services LLC, Woburn, Massachusetts; Maron
Construction Co., Providence, Rhode Island; Veterans Construction LLC, Milton,
Massachusetts; Monument Construction LLC, Nashua, New Hampshir; Drizos
Contracting LLC, Burlington, Massachusetts] $20,000,000 for
commercial services, supplies, and maintenance, repair, alteration, and minor construction
projects at locations for Hanscom AFB, Massachusetts, units.
· 7 corporations [Black
Construction–Tutor Perini JV, Harmon, Guam; Core Tech-HDCC-Kajima LLC,
Tamuning, Guam; Gilbane Federal JV, Concord, California; Granite-Obayashi 2 JV,
Watsonville, California; Hensel Phelps Construction Co., Honolulu, Hawaii; Nan
Inc., Honolulu, Hawaii; RQ Construction LLC, Carlsbad, California] combined
$2,500,000,000 for construction projects in Guam (80%), Northern
Marianas (10%), Hawaii (5%), other areas in the Pacific and Indian Oceans (5%).
For example, Granite-Obayashi 2 JV gets a task order ($126,132,400) for building
facilities (an auto shop, an electrical / communications building, a vehicle
wash facility, vehicle laydown areas, roadway construction, etc.) for Ground
Combat Element Infantry Battalions 1 and 2 aboard Naval Support Activity Guam.
· 7 corporations [Rolls-Royce
North American Technologies (d.b.a. Liberty Works), Indianapolis, Indiana; General Atomics,
San Diego, California; Leidos’ Dynetics, Huntsville, Alabama; II-VI Aerospace
& Defense, Murrieta, California; Lockheed Martin Aculight, Bothell,
Washington; nLIGHT Nutronics Inc., Longmont, Colorado; NUBURU Inc., Englewood,
Colorado] $75,000,000 (five years) for fabrication and delivery of prototypes and
equipment in support of solid-state high energy laser (HEL) weapon systems for U.S. Navy.
· 9 corporations [Chad
Pody Construction Company LLC, Ruston, Louisiana; Acumen Enterprises Inc,
Desoto, Texas; Wright Bros. LLC, d.b.a. WB Construction, Andalusia, Alabama; Reasor
Building Group, Pensacola, Florida; Stampede Ventures Inc., Nome, Alaska; Frazier
Investments Inc., d.b.a. Optimum Construction, Lafayette, Louisiana; ERS-CYE JV
II LLC, Jacksonville, Florida; D7 LLC, d.b.a. Dawson D7, San Antonio, Texas; MCA-DOT
Engineering and Construction, Baton Rouge, Louisiana] $360,000,000 for construction at Barksdale AFB.
· 9 corporations [Valiant Global Defense
Services Inc., San Diego, California; Booz Allen Hamilton, McLean, Virginia; Decypher
Technologies Ltd., San Antonio, Texas; HII Defense and Federal Solutions Inc.,
Huntsville, Alabama; The Mission Essential Group, New Albany, Ohio; ITility
LLC, Chantilly, Virginia; Systems Planning and Analysis Inc., Alexandria,
Virginia; SOS International, Reston, Virginia; Aeyon LLC, Vienna, Virginia] $995,000,000
for
advisory and assistance services (technical and analytical services to support
and improve policy development, decision making, management,
administration, and system operations) for U.S. Air Forces Europe-Air Forces
Africa in Germany, Italy, the UK, and other locations throughout Europe and
Africa.
· Aboda Inc., Woodinville,
Washington, $11,702,400 for
300 lodging units to be provided from 1 March 2023 to 31 Aug 2023, re Puget
Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility, Bremerton,
Washington.
· ACC Construction Co., Augusta,
Georgia, $99,612,848 to
construct a hangar complex for Advanced Battle Management Systems at Robins Air
Force Base, Georgia.
· ACE Maintenance & Service
Inc., Austin, Texas, $21,278,230 for
janitorial services at Naval Support Activity Bethesda.
· ACT II Services, Columbia,
Maryland (W91278-23-D-0023); Accura Engineering and Consulting Services,
Atlanta, Georgia (W91278-23-D-0022); Thompson Engineering, Mobile, Alabama
(W91278-23-D-0021); APSI Construction Management, Irvine, California
(W91278-23-D-0024); Resilient LLC JV, New Orleans, Louisiana
(W91278-23-D-0025); AECOM, Los Angeles, California (W91278-23-D-0017); HDR
Environmental, Operations and Construction, Englewood, Colorado
(W91278-23-D-0018); Jacobs, Arlington, Virginia (W91278-23-D-0019); Parsons,
Centreville, Virginia (W91278-23-D-0020) $99,000,000 for
architect and engineering services for USACE Mobile, Alabama.
· Acuity-PT&C, Atlanta, Georgia
(W912EF-23-D-0001); MOCA Systems Inc., Newton, Massachusetts
(W912EF-23-D-0002); Professional Project Services, Oak Ridge, Tennessee
(W912EF-23-D-0004); AECOM, Seattle, Washington (W912EF-23-D-0003) $226,000,000 for
architect-engineering cost estimating services for U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, Walla Walla, Washington.
· Advanced Computer Concepts, McLean, Virginia,
$8,192,548 for
the Next Generation Electronic Warfare Environment Generator (NEWEG) for Navy
and Air Force electromagnetic warfare test & evaluation and experimentation.
Work in Buffalo, New York.
· AECOM Arcadis
PFAS JV, Germantown, Maryland, $99,000,000 for remedial investigations, feasibility studies,
time-critical and non-time-critical removal action, and decision documents at
Army National Guard facilities.
· AECOM, Los Angeles, California,
$14,751,481 for
monitoring of drinking
water at Red Hill Pumping Station, Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam.
· AECOM, Los Angeles, California,
$239,000,000 for
technical and engineering services, field investigations, and lab testing for
all Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act
(CERCLA) stages. Work at various locations, mostly in NAVFAC Pacific.
· AECOM, Los
Angeles, California; APTIM Geosyntec JV LLC, Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Arcadis,
Highlands Ranch, Colorado; Cardno-EA Partners JV, Hunt Valley, Maryland; HDR,
Englewood, Colorado; Leidos, Reston, Virginia; Tetra Tech Inc., Mobile, Alabama;
WSP Versar JV UR, D.C.; ACT Services LLC JV, Columbia, Maryland; QRI Tetra Tech
JV, Baton Rouge, Louisiana; SERES-Arcadis SB JV2, Charleston, South Carolina; $99,000,000
for architect-engineer services for USACE,
Mobile, Alabama.
· AECOM, Los
Angeles, California; APTIM, Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Argus Consulting Inc,
Overland Park, Kansas; Austin Brockenbrough & Associates, Richmond,
Virginia; Burns & McDonnell Engineering Company Inc, Kansas City, Missouri;
CJT Joint Ventures LP, Linden Virginia; Enterprise Engineering Inc, Anchorage, Alaska;
GTP Consulting Engineers Inc., Duluth, Georgia; HDR Engineering Inc., San
Antonio, Texas; Pond & Co., Peachtree Corners, Georgia; Robert and Co., Atlanta,
Georgia; Stanley Consultants Inc., Austin, Texas; Tetra Tech Inc.,
Collinsville, Illinois; Weston Solutions Inc., West Chester, Pennsylvania; $500,000,000
for DOD fuels infrastructure
architect-engineering (A-E) services to include Title I, Title II, and other
related A-E services. Work worldwide.
· Aerojet Ordnance of Tennessee,
Jonesborough, Tennessee, $75,310,023 for
depleted uranium (DU)
penetrators.
· Agile Defense Inc., Reston,
Virginia, $11,427,210 for
technology support services at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama.
· Agile-Bot II LLC,
Reston, Virginia, $14,595,470 for cyber support for Marine Corps Cyberspace
Operations Group, Quantico, Virginia.
· AgustaWestland Philadelphia
Corp., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, $20,974,757 for
production and delivery of spare parts for TH-73A aircraft (lot 4) for US Navy.
Work in Italy (Cascina Costa 30%, Anagni 10%); Mineral Wells, Texas (20%);
Prescott, Arizona (10%); Westminster, Colorado (8%); Grand Rapids, Michigan
(7%); Sarasota, Florida (5%); California (Camarillo 8%, West Covina 2%).
· AH Environmental Consultants
Inc., Newport News, Virginia; Delon Hampton & Associates, Chartered, D.C.; Dhillon
Engineering Inc., Owings Mills, Maryland; R2T Inc., Atlanta, Georgia; $35,000,000
for
architect-engineer services for U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Baltimore,
Maryland.
· AIMS-U.S. Got People JV, Aldie,
Virginia, $45,000,000 to
support Advanced Medical Administrative Technician support services at Joint
Base San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas.
· Alabama Shipyard LLC, Mobile,
Alabama, $21,192,959 for
overhaul and dry docking of the dry cargo and ammunition ship USNS Robert E.
Peary (T-AKE 5).
· Alliance Consulting Group, Alexandria,
Virginia, $15,000,000 for cost engineering and preparation of detailed cost
estimates for
projects throughout NAVFAC Atlantic.
· Allied Systems Co., Sherwood,
Oregon, $27,934,305 for
support (re: engineering services, integrated logistics, software, installation,
and obsolescence) of the Knuckleboom Crane System. Work in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania (70%), and Sherwood, Oregon (30%).
· Allison
Transmission Inc, Indianapolis, Indiana, $8,095,670 for procurement and installation of a heat-treat
furnace.
· Alpha Marine
Services LLC, Cut Off, Louisiana, $70,285,321 for long-term charter of one U.S. flagged
offshore support ship, Kellie Chouest, supporting U.S. Southern Command
special missions at sea.
· Alta Via
Consulting LLC, Loudon, Tennessee, $15,000,000 for cost-management services.
· Alutiiq Solutions LLC, Anchorage,
Alaska, $8,003,045 for
research and analysis, strategic initiative, executive leadership management,
administrative, operational, and technical program support for the Command
Strategic Leadership Service Team in support of the Commander, Naval Air
Systems Command (NAVAIR) and direct reporting teams, the NAVAIR Corporate
Operations Group Business Financial Management Competency, the F-35 Joint
Strike Fighter front office, and the NAVAIR Washington Liaison Office. Work in
Patuxent River, Maryland (60%), and Arlington, Virginia (40%).
· AM General LLC, South Bend,
Indiana, $230,874,512 for
Joint Light Tactical Vehicle Family of Vehicles. AM General, South Bend,
Indiana, $19,992,898 for
108 pre-priced packaged kits under the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle Family of
Vehicles.
· Amentum (owned by private equity
and contracting here as PAE)
Arlington, Virginia, $99,986,778 for
maintenance and logistics support of F-5 aircraft. Work in Yuma, Arizona (32%);
Key West, Florida (31%); New Orleans, Louisiana (28%); Fallon, Nevada (6%);
Beaufort, South Carolina (3%).
· Amentum, Germantown, Maryland, $28,529,683 for
BOSS at Navy and Defense Intelligence Agency facilities in D.C. (89%) and
Maryland (11%).
· Amentum, Germantown, Maryland,
$34,817,407 for
contractor logistics support. Work in Germantown, Maryland, for US Army.
· Amentum, Germantown, Maryland,
$4,639,525,813 for
Parts and Repair Ordering System VI: “commercial buying services … providing
supply, maintenance and task order support services” for Air Force Security
Assistance and Cooperation Directorate. This contract “anticipates FMS to more
than 105 foreign partner countries.”
· Amentum, Germantown, Maryland,
$45,381,681 for
contractor logistics support. As shown on 12 May 2022, this contract deals with
“government-owned fixed-wing fleets performing transport aircraft missions.”
· Amentum, Germantown, Maryland,
$7,628,711 for
aviation maintenance in South Korea (Camp Humphreys) and USA (Wahiawa,
Hawaii).
· Amentum, Germantown,
Maryland; Booz Allen Hamilton, San Diego, California; CGW Technologies Inc.,
Great Mills, Maryland; Raytheon’s Collins Aerospace, Cedar Rapids, Iowa; DRS
Training & Control Systems LLC, Fort Walton Beach, Florida; Electronic
Warfare Associates Triad, Herndon, Virginia; Kranze Technology Solutions, Des
Plaines, Illinois; New Directions Technologies, Ridgecrest, California; Nu
Waves LTD, Middletown, Ohio; SAIC, Reston, Virginia; $249,869,545 estimated
total ceiling for goods and services for Test and Training
(T&T) range instrumentation, such as airborne and ground-based elements,
interfaces, and auxiliary equipment: remote ground stations, data collection
systems, data processing and display systems, host range interface equipment,
and testing and troubleshooting hardware. Relevant services include long-term
sustainment support for existing T&T range systems, onsite and in-plant
engineering and technical support, and studies, analyses, and site surveys for
Navy. Work in Ridgecrest, California (38%); Des Plaines, Illinois (38%); Cedar
Rapids, Iowa (12%); Fort Walton Beach, Florida (4%); Great Mills, Maryland
(2%); San Diego, California (2%); Middletown, Ohio (2%); Germantown, Maryland
(1%); locations in continental U.S. (1%).
· American Bureau
of Shipping (ABS), Spring, Texas, $15,922,961 for continuous supportive engineering and
technical services to audit ships and conduct plan reviews to verify, confirm
and document that Military Sealift Command’s government-owned,
government-operated fleet and government-owned, contract-operated fleet of are
maintained in class or can be placed in class with ABS.
· American Fuel
Cell and Coated Fabrics Co., Magnolia, Arkansas, $18,264,775 for aircraft fuel tanks for Air Force.
· American Ordnance
LLC, Middletown, Iowa, $24,957,696 for design and construction of the energetics
facility at the Iowa Army Ammunition Plant, Middletown, Iowa.
· American Ordnance, Middletown,
Iowa, $17,971,895 for
site preparation of the Future Artillery Complex at the Iowa Army Ammunition
Plant, Middletown, Iowa.
· American Water
Military Services LLC, Camden, New Jersey, $12,015,000 for additional utility services for the
wastewater system at Naval Station Mayport, Florida. American Water
Operations and Maintenance LLC, Camden, New Jersey, $31,842,720 for
the ownership, operation, and maintenance of the electric utility system at
Fort Polk, Louisiana.
· Analytic Services Inc. (ANSER),
Falls Church, Virginia, $13,958,382 for
administrative, management, and general consulting services for the Office of
the Director of Administration & Management (ODA&M), Director of
Administration and Organizational Policy (DA&OP).
· Andritz Hydro Corp., Charlotte,
North Carolina, $81,623,642 to
rehabilitate four turbine generators at the Old Hickory Hydro Power Plant in
Hendersonville, Tennessee.
· Apogee Engineering LLC, Colorado
Springs, Colorado, $84,497,683 for
system engineering and integration support (program and mission management,
configuration management, technical standardization, mission engineering
analysis, evolution and architecture support) of Strategic Command’s Nuclear
Command, Control and Communications (NC3) Enterprise Center. Work at Offutt Air
Force Base, Nebraska; Fort Meade, Maryland; Peterson Space Force Base,
Colorado; and National Capital Region locations.
· Aptim Federal
Services LLC, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, $12,440,388 for more environmental services, including
operation and maintenance of government-owned facilities for processing and
disposition of industrial and/or oily wastes, containerized solid waste
services, professional services for environmental compliance projects at Navy/Marine
Corps installations within NAVFAC Southwest, California in particular.
· APTIM Federal, Alexandria,
Virginia, $8,183,019 for
maintenance and minor repair of petroleum systems in Alabama (Birmingham,
Montgomery), Florida (Avon Park, Fort Walton, Homestead, Panama City, Tampa),
Mississippi (Biloxi, Columbus, Gulfport, Jackson, Meridian), and Puerto Rico
(Carolina). Corrected to be awarded on 22 Feb
2023.
· Arcticom LLC.,
Anchorage, Alaska, $63,400,000 for providing “flexibility to accommodate the
broad enterprise of activities associated with the” Direct Mission Support
Subject Matter Expert (DMS SME) program, AFLCMC’s Business Enterprise Systems
Directorate. Work at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio; Maxwell AFB-Gunter Annex,
Alabama; and Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph, Texas.
· Armed Forces Services Corp., d.b.a.
Magellan Federal, Arlington, Virginia, $10,944,982, for
Recovery Coordination Program services. The Recovery Coordination Program
provides “services in the areas of strategic, programmatic, and operations” to
support DOD’s “Recovery Care Coordinator program; the Recovery Coordination
Program-Support Solution; Education and Employment Initiative; Military
Adaptive Sports Program; Operation Warfighter Internships; the National
Resource Directory, and Warrior Games.”
· ASM Research LLC, Fairfax,
Virginia, $11,408,675 for
operation and maintenance of the Army Training Requirements and Resources
System (ATTRS) in Washington, D.C.
· Astin Aviation CLL, LLC, College Station,
Texas ($24,859,595), was added
to the contract for fuel support at Easterwood Field, Texas. Alliance Aviation,
Fort Worth, Texas ($82,271,650) was added
on 13 Mar to the contract for fuel support at Fort Worth Alliance Airport,
Texas, issued against solicitation SPE607-23-R-0202 and awarded 6 Mar 2023. Avfuel Corp., Ann Arbor, Michigan
($7,622,005) was added on 30 Mar 2023 to the contract for fuel
support at East Texas Regional Airport, Texas, issued against solicitation
SPE607-23-R-0202 and awarded 6 Mar 2023. Epic Aviation, Salem, Oregon ($7,684,916)
was added on 28 Mar 2023 to the contract for fuel
support at Victoria Regional Airport, Texas, issued against solicitation
SPE607-23-R-0202 and awarded 6 Mar 2023. Signature Flight Support LLC, Orlando,
Florida ($24,681,138) was added to the contract for fuel support at Rick
Husband Amarillo International Airport, Texas, issued against solicitation
SPE607-23-R-0202 and awarded 6 Mar 2023. Trajen Flight Support, Plano, Texas
($19,025,287), was added to the contract for fuel support at Kelly
Field Airport, Texas, issued against solicitation SPE607-23-R-0202 and awarded 6
Mar 2023.
· ATAP Inc., Eastaboga, Alabama,
$19,531,210 for
Reconfigurable Test Shapes. Work at various contractor sites.
· Atheeb Intergraph Saudi Co.,
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, $11,934,458 for
FMS (Saudi Arabia): hardware and software maintenance, training, and
on-site engineering and contractor logistical support re: an intelligence
analysis system for “day-to-day operations and image processing…” Work at
multiple locations in Saudi Arabia.
· Atlantic Diving Supply (ADS),
Virginia Beach, Virginia $98,615,757, was added
(24 Jan 2023) to the multiple award contract (10 Feb 2022) for medical
equipment and accessories for DLA Electronic Catalog (SPE2D1-23-D-0001).
· Atlantic Diving Supply Inc.,
Virginia Beach, Virginia (SPE2DE-23-D-0014, $49,000,000) was added (19 Jan
2023) to the multiple award contract (issued against solicitation
SPE2DE-18-R-0001 and awarded 10 May 2019) for medical and surgical supplies for
DLA Electronics Catalog.
· Aviation Devices
and Electronic Components LLC, Fort Worth, Texas, $8,741,910 for electronic shielding gaskets and similar
items.
· Aviation Training
Consulting LLC, Altus, Oklahoma, $28,549,056 for continued KC-130J training (pilot, enlisted
aircrew, maintenance) support as well as program management and admin support
for Kuwait. Work in USA (Altus, Oklahoma (13%)); and Kuwait (87%).
· AVM Construction LLC, South St.
Paul, Minnesota; Cheroenhaka Nottoway Enterprises LLC, Courtland, Virginia; Hamline
Construction Inc., St. Paul, Minnesota; Bruce Kreofsky & Sons Inc.,
Plainview, Minnesota; Loeffler Construction Consulting LLC, Lakeville,
Minnesota; Max Gray Construction Inc., Hibbing, Minnesota; Preferred Electric Inc.,
Minneapolis, Minnesota; Versacon Inc., Minneapolis, Minnesota $49,000,000 for
maintenance, repair, and construction for Army National Guard.
· Avon Protection Ceradyne LLC,
Irvin, California, maximum $38,747,625 for
second generation advanced combat helmets. Work in New Hampshire for the Army.
· B.L. Harbert
International, Birmingham, Alabama, $94,675,599 for design and construction of four igloos, a parking
area, an aircraft support equipment storage facility, an aircraft support
equipment yard, and a missile assembly shop at Tyndall AFB, Florida.
· B&K
Construction, Mandeville, Louisiana, $25,467,475 for levee berm maintenance, construction of an
access road, and excavation of drainage canals in Reserve, Louisiana. Luhr Crosby
LLC, Columbia, Illinois, $7,985,700 to construct a stone core on the west end of
Grand Isle, Louisiana.
· BAE Systems – San Diego Ship
Repair, San Diego, California (N00024-18-D-4325); Vigor Marine LLC, Portland,
Oregon (N00024-18-D-4326); General Dynamics – National Steel and Shipbuilding
Co. (NASSCO), San Diego, California (N00024-18-D-4327); Marine Group Boat Works
LLC, Chula Vista, California (N00024-18-D-4328); Pacific Ship Repair and
Fabrication Inc., San Diego, California (N00024-18-D-4329); East Coast Repair
and Fabrication, Norfolk, Virginia (N00024-18-D-4330); Austal USA LLC, Mobile,
Alabama (N00024-21-D-4443); Epsilon Systems Solutions Inc., Portsmouth,
Virginia (N00024-21-D-4444); Continental Marine of San Diego LLC, San Diego,
California (N00024-21-D-4445); $389,000,000 for
maintenance, modernization and repair requirements for littoral combat ships
(LCS) homeported in San Diego, California. 5% work in Singapore.
· BAE Systems Information and
Electronic Systems, Nashua, New Hampshire, $66,050,305 for
radio frequency countermeasures for US Navy, Air Force, and FMS customer
(FMS portion $15,644,624) fighter aircraft.
· BAE Systems Land & Armaments
L.P., Minneapolis, Minnesota, $71,909,045 for
five components for Columbia-class submarines. Work in Louisville, Kentucky
(100%). Fiscal 2023 National Sea-Based Deterrence Fund funds ($7,075,000)
obligated.
· BAE Systems Land & Armaments LP, Sterling
Heights, Michigan, $256,885,866 for
27 Amphibious Combat Vehicles (ACV) personnel variants, 17 ACV command
variants, 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, Minneapolis, Minnesota, $132,485,525 for MK 41 vertical launching system (VLS)
canister production and ancillary hardware. Work in Aberdeen, South Dakota
(90%), and Minneapolis, Minnesota (10%). Small portion is FMS (Japan)
$325,413 (1%).
· BAE Systems Land & Armaments, York,
Pennsylvania, $245,645,904 for
early-order material re: future purchase of Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicles
(AMPV) and facility-capacity-expansion efforts. BAE Systems Land &
Armaments, York, Pennsylvania, $245,645,904 for
early order material in support of AMPV production.
· BAE Systems Norfolk Ship Repair,
Norfolk, Virginia, $145,264,056 for
maintenance, modernization and repair of USS Nitze (DDG 94) in Norfolk,
Virginia.
· BAE Systems Technology Solutions
& Services, Rockville, Maryland, $651,593,380 for
services support on both Minuteman III and Sentinel Systems [Air Force Nuclear
Weapon Center, Hill AFB] Directorates
re: integration of hardware, software, testing, and modifications of
Intercontinental Ballistic Missile [nuclear weapons].
· BAE Systems, Greenlawn, New York,
$14,751,916 to
repair the APX-111 system for Boeing F-18 aircraft.
· BAE Systems,
Radford, Virginia, $46,425,270 to address workplace safety issues, including
process safety actions, equipment replacement, equipment enhancement, process
improvements, environmental improvements, and infrastructure improvements at
Radford Army Ammunition Plant, Radford, Virginia. BAE Systems, Radford,
Virginia, $12,377,686 to develop the specification, selection, and
procurement of a new hammer mill and associated ancillary equipment for the
processing of sheeted wood pulp or sheeted cotton linters in Radford, Virginia.
· BAE Systems, Rockville, Maryland,
$7,631,454 for
engineering and technical support (to include engineering analysis, technical
documentation review and production, system assessment, and technical services)
to analyze, evaluate, and produce design change documentation and proposal for
system upgrades re: Navy ships’ communications. Work in St. Inigoes, Maryland.
· BAE Systems, Rockville,
Maryland; Serco, Herndon, Virginia; Scientific Research Corp., South Atlanta,
Georgia; $536,700,000 for engineering services that provide
integration, test, and installation of command, control, communications,
computers, and intelligence (C4I) on surface ships. Work in Charleston, South
Carolina; Marinette, Wisconsin; Seattle, Washington; San Diego, California;
Pascagoula, Mississippi; Lockport, Louisiana; Bath, Maine; Morgan City,
Louisiana; Mobile, Alabama.
· BAE Systems, York, Pennsylvania,
$466,413,360 for
M109A7 Self-Propelled Howitzers and M992A3 Carrier, Ammunition, Tracked (CAT) vehicles;
Total Package Fielding support hardware kits, and support. Work in York,
Pennsylvania; Sterling Heights, Michigan; Aiken, South Carolina; Elgin, Oklahoma;
and Anniston, Alabama.
· Balfour Beatty Construction,
Falls Church, Virginia, $9,650,000 for
a battalion complex operations building and hangar facility in Newport News,
Virginia.
· Base Utilities Inc., Minot AFB,
North Dakota, $26,046,639 for
two water and two wastewater systems at Grand Forks AFB and Cavalier Space
Force Station, North Dakota. Part of a 50-year utilities contract
(SP0600-18-C-8322).
· BCI Construction USA, Pace,
Florida, $10,781,573 for
a new hydraulic system at Pike Island Locks and Dam, Wheeling, West Virginia.
· Bechtel Plant Machinery Inc.,
Monroeville, Pennsylvania, $140,225,056 for
Naval Nuclear Propulsion Components. Work in Monroeville, Pennsylvania (91%),
and Schenectady, New York (9%).
· Bechtel Plant Machinery, Monroeville,
Pennsylvania, $49,276,064 for
naval nuclear propulsion components. Work in Monroeville, Pennsylvania (75%),
and Schenectady, New York (25%).
· Bell Boeing Joint Program Office, Amarillo,
Texas, $53,600,000 for
engineering to qualify a V-22 Gearbox Vibration Monitoring / Osprey Drive
System safety and health information system “in support of providing earlier
detection of degrading gearbox components…” Work in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
(44%); Bell Fort Worth, Texas (39%); Santa Clara, California (2.2%); and
various locations within continental U.S. (14.8%).
· Bell Boeing Joint Project Office,
Amarillo, Texas, $23,397,661 for
continued flight test support of V-22 aircraft for US Navy, Air Force, and FMS
customers. Work in Patuxent River, Maryland (70%); Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
(15%); Fort Worth, Texas (10%); Hurlburt Field, Florida (5%). Some FMS funds
($1,655,353) obligated.
· Bell Boeing JPO,
Amarillo, Texas, $12,700,000 for non-recurring engineering for integration,
qualification, documentation, and testing re: improved proprotor gearbox input
quill and clutch design on V-22 “Osprey” aircraft for US Air Force and Navy.
Work in Fort Worth, Texas.
· Bemsco Inc., Salt
Lake City, Utah, $29,655,660 for fixed landing gear for Army.
· Bering Straits Technical Services
LLC, Anchorage, Alaska, $12,541,120 for
base operation support at Fort Wainwright, Alaska.
· Bernard Cap LLC, Hialeah, Florida,
maximum $9,152,179 for
men’s and women’s white jumpers for US Navy.
· BestWork
Industries for the Blind, Cherry Hill, New Jersey, $12,638,208 for fleece liners for Navy.
· BKM Office Environments Inc.,
Camarillo, California, $15,921,492 for
moving, relocating, disassembling and reassembling, detaching and mounting, and
special event set up services (to include office furniture, cubicles, tables,
chairs, lab equipment, televisions, whiteboards, safes, refrigerators,
microwaves, and other items and equipment) for Naval Air Warfare Center Weapons
Division (NAWCWD). Work in California: China Lake (80%) and Point Mugu (20%).
· BlackHorse Solutions Inc., Herndon, Virginia,
$13,965,702 for
more development and demonstration of Capabilities Development and Integration
in the Information Environment (CDI2E) software and hardware prototype.
· Blind Industries and Services of
Maryland, Baltimore, Maryland, $9,202,500 for
wind and cold weather jackets for the Army.
· Blue Ivy Partners LLC, Arlington,
Virginia, $148,591,972 for
Software as a Service 2.0. This contract “provides for licensing for the
Sentinel systems from the cradle to the grave.” GovConWire reports in laymen
terms that this contract involves licensing
and deploying software applications for Sentinel, the intercontinental ballistic
missile (a nuclear weapon) currently in development. Work at Hill Air Force
Base, Utah; and Arlington, Virginia.
· Boeing (Argon ST
Inc.), Fairfax, Virginia, $463,023,379 for various Multi-Intelligence Sensor Development
Sensor Suite components for eventual use in aircraft (manned and unmanned), as
well as associated engineering support for US Navy, Foreign Cooperative
Partners, and FMS. Work in Fairfax, Virginia (75%), and Germantown, Maryland
(25%).
· Boeing (Tapestry Solutions Inc.),
San Diego, California, $8,376,510 for
executive airlift flight dispatch services, Joint Base Andrews-Naval Air
Facility Washington.
· Boeing, Mesa,
Arizona, $1,946,212,323 for AH-64E “Apache” helicopter full-rate
production. Some FMS (Australia and Egypt).
· Boeing, Oklahoma
City, Oklahoma, $72,730,148 for engineering support on commercial-derivative
aircraft in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska; Warner
Robins AFB, Georgia; and San Antonio, Texas.
· Boeing, Oklahoma
City, Oklahoma, $994,000,000 for contractor logistics support services (e.g., program
management, aircraft base and depot maintenance, engine maintenance,
modifications, modification support) on C-32A and C-40B/C aircraft at Scott AFB,
Illinois, and Joint Base Andrews, Maryland.
· Boeing, Ridley Park, Pennsylvania, $18,749,000
for
long lead components and parts for MH-47G helicopters.
· Boeing, Ridley Park,
Pennsylvania, $24,350,211 to
remanufacture/recapitalize some CH-47F components to the Block II
configuration, and to “remanufacture CH-47F aircraft to the CH-47F
configuration for Ordering Periods I and II to satisfy the congressional
requirement.”
· Boeing, Seattle, Washington,
$1,200,000,000 for
initiation of the development activities for the E-7A Rapid Prototype program.
· Boeing, Seattle, Washington,
$2,255,625,408 for
fifteen KC-46A aircraft (lot 9), subscriptions, and licenses.
· Boeing, Seattle,
Washington, $30,374,048 for eight P-8A aircraft mechanisms as ancillary
equipment.
· Boeing, Seattle, Washington,
$50,815,986 for
eight P-8A Increment 3 retrofit A-kits, to include associated special tooling re:
anti-submarine warfare upgrades for US Navy. Work in Jacksonville, Florida
(92.6%), and St. Louis, Missouri (7.4%).
· Boeing, St. Louis, Missouri,
$24,535,422 for
non-recurring engineering to help address product baseline “obsolescence” to
support MQ-25 “Stingray” drone low rate initial production (LRIP). Work in St.
Louis, Missouri (38%); Endicott, New York (13%); Goleta (11%) and San Diego (15%),
California; Cedar Rapids, Iowa (10%); and Palm Bay (9%) and Clearwater (4%),
Florida.
· Boeing, St.
Louis, Missouri, $29,556,460 for aircraft concurrency enhancements and
hardware & software improvements.
· Boeing, St. Louis, Missouri,
$33,884,719 for
Distributed Targeting Processor - Networked (DTP-N) B-kits, A1-kits, A2-kits,
and cyber security and data support for DTP-N full rate production re:
anti-surface warfare products in F/A-18E/F and EA-18G aircraft for US Navy. See
announcement for precise numbers.
· Boeing, St. Louis,
Missouri, $40,514,815, for Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM) wing kits.
· Boeing, St. Louis, Missouri, $70,704,608 for
support for Kuwait re: preparing Kuwaiti pilots for delivery of
F/A-18E/F “Super Hornet” aircraft: general logistics support; logistics program
management; logistics support to aircraft during pilot training within the
continental U.S. (CONUS); maintenance of aircraft, aircraft armament equipment,
F414 engines, and Sniper pods; logistics representative support within the
CONUS, as well as both within the CONUS and outside the CONUS ferry support;
packaging, handling, storage, and transportation; and program security tasks.
Work in New Orleans, Louisiana (90%); St. Louis, Missouri (8%); various
locations within CONUS (1%); and various locations outside CONUS (1%).
· Boeing, St.
Louis, Missouri, maximum $13,099,627 for support of the B-1 fuselage kitting program.
· Boeing, Tukwila,
Washington, $10,000,000 for two VC-25B aircraft. Work in San Antonio,
Texas.
· BOH Solutions,
Covington, Louisiana, $22,662,730 for containers for special tools and test
equipment.
· Booz Allen Hamilton Inc., McLean,
Virginia (HR0011-18-D-0001); Centra Technology Inc., Arlington, Virginia
(HR0011-18-D-0002); Avantus Federal/E3 Federal Solutions LLC, McLean, Virginia
(HR0011-18-D-0003); ECS Federal, Fairfax, Virginia (HR0011-18-D-0004); ManTech
SRS Technologies Inc., Herndon, Virginia (HR0011-18-D-0005); Schafer Corp.,
Arlington, Virginia (HR0011-18-D-0006); Strategic Analysis Inc., Arlington,
Virginia (HR0011-18-D-0007); combined $183,000,000 (contract goes from
$850,000,000 to $1,033,000,000) for
high-level advisory and assistance services to all DARPA technical and support
offices. Work in Arlington, Virginia.
· Booz Allen Hamilton, McLean,
Virginia, $8,010,513 for
one year of work for DOD’s chief information officer: cybersecurity reporting
and scorecards; cybersecurity research and analysis; cybersecurity policies,
guidance, strategies, and procedures; risk assessment and operational
integration; supply chain; public key infrastructure; mobility and wireless
networking; defense cyber workforce framework; cyber phishing analyses; network
penetration and vulnerability analyses; acquisition systems support; and
network vulnerability support.
· Bowhead Program
Management & Operations LLC, Springfield, Virginia, $24,919,651 for expert enterprise data management consulting,
assisting the Portfolio Manager, Command Element Systems, in “determining a
modern viable data strategy and data architecture.”
· BRZ Investment
& Consulting, Boynton Beach, Florida, $10,773,167 for fuel throughout Japan for Army Air Force
Exchange Services.
· Burns & McDonnell, Kansas
City, Missouri (W91238-23-D-0001); Benham-Stanley LLC, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
(W91238-23-D-0002); HDR Engineering Inc., Folsom, California
(W91238-23-D-0003); Jacobs, Irvine, California (W91238-23-D-0004); $99,000,000 for
architectural engineering services for U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
Sacramento, California.
· C.E. Niehoff & Co., Evanston,
Illinois, $11,161,127 for
engine accessory generators that support Medium Tactical Vehicles (A1, A1R,
A1P2).
· C&C Environmental Inc., Milwaukee,
Wisconsin, estimated $12,236,559 to
remove, transport, and dispose of hazardous wastes in Minnesota, Iowa,
Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Missouri.
· CACI, Chantilly, Virginia,
$11,012,897 for
FMS (Canada): technical engineering services and program support for the
Canadian Surface Combatant (CSC) program. Work in Washington, D.C.
· CACI, Chantilly, Virginia, $146,410,200
for
nationwide background investigations for Defense Counterintelligence and
Security Agency (DCSA).
· CACI, Chantilly,
Virginia, $18,158,338 for engineering, technical, administrative, and
managerial support services re: ship availability planning and engineering
center, non-nuclear waterfront and deep submergence systems programs,
Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, Kittery, Maine.
· CACI, Chantilly, Virginia,
$29,700,625 for
another year assisting, managing, operating, and maintaining Military Sealift
Command (MSC) business systems, and interfacing with Navy “enterprise defense
business systems.” Contract allows MSC to integrate all of its business systems
into a single, integrated business system for “financial improvement and audit
readiness, growing cybersecurity concerns, cloud migration, and interoperability
and integration with Navy and federal programs of records.”
· CACI, Florham Park, New Jersey,
$10,594,388 (brings contract to $22,137,673) for
work on DARPA’s Wideband Secure and Protected Emitter and Receiver (WiSPER)
in Florham Park, New Jersey (81%); San Diego, California (15%); and Boston,
Massachusetts (4%). WiSPER aims to “develop secure radio frequency transmitter
and receiver technologies” for secure military tactical radio systems.
· CAE USA Inc., Arlington, Texas,
$49,709,615 for
FMS (Taiwan): hardware, hardware and software development, integration,
testing, and delivery of training devices re: F-16 aircraft training simulators
(Block 70).
· CAE USA Inc., Tampa, Florida, $35,850,474 for
FMS (South Korea): production, delivery, installation, verification
testing, and logistics support of one exportable, non-motion MH-60R flight trainer.
Work in USA [Tampa, Florida (50%); Great Mills, Maryland (20%); Orlando,
Florida (10%)] and overseas [Changwon-Si, South Korea (10%), and Montreal,
Quebec (10%)].
· Call Henry Inc., Titusville,
Florida, $79,199,684 for
management and support, maintenance and repair, operations, other services, and
minor alteration on facilities at Vandenberg Space Force Base, California.
· Camgian Corp.,
Starkville, Mississippi, $10,742,523 for Hyper-Enabled Soldier Lethality in Starkville,
Mississippi.
· Canadian Commercial Corp. (d.b.a. General
Dynamics – Canada), Repentigny, Quebec, $78,704,160 for
M67 propelling charges.
· Cape-Weston JV1, Norcross,
Georgia, $95,000,000 for
“rapid response” environmental remediation services for USACE Omaha, Nebraska.
· Carahsoft, Reston, Virginia,
$23,751,296 for
salesforce and third-party licenses and support re: “customer relationship
management software” that supports the Air Force A1 community. Work in
Arlington, Virginia.
· Carbro
Constructors Corp., Warren, New Jersey, $22,608,346 for two pump stations, an earthen levee, a
floodwall and a road closure gate for the Green Brook Flood Risk Management
Project. Work in Bridgewater Township, New Jersey.
· Carter Enterprises, Brooklyn, New
York, $21,350,000 for
the Modular Lightweight Load-carrying Equipment 4000 rucksack set for Army and
Air Force.
· Carter Enterprises, Brooklyn, New
York, $22,252,266 for
coats and trousers for Army and Air Force.
· Centerra Group, Herndon,
Virginia, $8,830,791 for BOSS at military and civilian installations
within the Pacific, specifically Singapore.
· Chenega Base
& Logistics Services, San Antonio, Texas, $110,048,629 for base operations support at Fort Wainwright
and nearby training areas.
· Cherokee Nation
Management and Consulting, Catoosa, Oklahoma, $29,966,304 for to manage, support, and operate the Marine
Corps Consolidated Storage Program warehouse network for one year. Work in
California (Barstow 23%, Camp Pendleton 13%, Miramar 9%, Twenty-nine Palms 4%,
Bridgeport 1%); North Carolina (Camp Lejeune 18%, Camp Geiger 7%, Cherry Point
4%, New River 2%); Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii (3%); Yuma, Arizona (2%); Beaufort,
South Carolina (2%); Okinawa, Japan (10%); Iwakuni, Japan (2%).
· Chesapeake
Technologies International Corp., California, Maryland, $35,772,870 for continued development of the capability to
model and visualize complex tactical Electronic Warfare (EW) environments in
support of Airborne Electronic Attack mission planning. Work in Point Mugu,
California (90%), and Denver, Colorado (10%).
· Chevron, Richmond,
California, $10,074,500 for lubricants in Japan and USA (Hawaii, Florida,
Georgia, Virginia).
· Children and Families, Kansas
Department, Topeka, Kansas, $16,345,257 for
food service at Fort Leavenworth.
· Chugach Logistics and Facility
Services JV LLC, Anchorage, Alaska, $113,909,787 for
base operations support for 47th Flying Training Wing at Laughlin AFB, Texas.
· City Light &
Power FTC LLC, Greenwood Village, Colorado, estimated $35,418,832 for the ownership, operation, and maintenance of
the electric utility system at Fort Campbell and Blue Grass Army Depot,
Kentucky.
· City Light & Power Inc.,
Greenwood Village, Colorado, $39,532,350 for
electric operation and maintenance and renewal and replacement monthly utility
service charge in Utah for the Air Force.
· Clean Harbors Environmental
Services Inc., Norwell, Massachusetts, $25,740,050 for
hazardous waste removal and disposal throughout northeastern US for DOD, Coast
Guard, Fleet Industrial Supply Center, Air National Guard, and Army
Transportation Center.
· Clean Harbors
Environmental Services Inc., Norwell, Massachusetts, $23,126,803 for hazardous waste removal and disposal in Arkansas,
Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota,
Oklahoma, and Texas. Clean Harbors
Environmental Services Inc., Norwell, Massachusetts, $10,130,703 for hazardous
waste removal and disposal in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North
Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee for DOD, Coast Guard, Fleet Industrial
Supply Center, Air National Guard, and Army Transportation Center.
· Cobham Advanced Electronic
Solutions, Lansdale, Pennsylvania, $38,500,000 for
antenna array panel assemblies (repair, spares, and engineering) to support
AN/SLQ-32(V)6 surface electronic warfare improvement program Block 2.
· Colonna's Shipyard Inc., Norfolk,
Virginia, $7,950,857 to
incorporate NAVSEA Fiscal 2022 category II Navy standard items for completion
of the Shippingport Docking Service Craft Overhaul availability.
· Commonwealth of Virginia
Department for the Blind and Vision Impaired, Richmond, Virginia, $147,934,705 for
food service at Fort Lee, Virginia.
· Computer Systems Center Inc.,
Springfield, Virginia, $49,277,717 for
systems engineering, systems architecture analysis, and data analysis for the
requirements characterization, engineering, and representation process re: mission
planning systems for F-35 aircraft.
· Concurrent Technologies Corp.,
Johnstown, Pennsylvania and Jacktool LLC, Cranbury, New Jersey $25,000,000 for
ammunition and ammunition components, engineer/design services, and testing
services and support.
· Conti Federal, Orlando, Florida,
$8,445,000 for
renovations of Air Force Building #1643 for F-35 aircraft at NAS Joint Reserve
Base Fort Worth, Texas.
· Cornerstone Engineering Inc., Louisville,
Kentucky; SES Civil and Environmental LLC, Oak Ridge, Tennessee; Underwater
Mechanix Services LLC, Jacksonville, Florida $24,000,000 for
streambank stabilization construction for USACE, Nashville, Tennessee.
· Corps Solutions
LLC, Stafford, Virginia, $43,000,000 for operational, safety, technical and
administrative support for U.S. Range Control Facilities. Work in Prince William
County, Quantico, Virginia (24%); San Diego County, California (17%); Mono
County, Bridgeport, California (11%); Okinawa, Japan (11%); Honolulu County,
Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii (9%); San Bernardino County, California (6%); Onslow
County, Lejeune, North Carolina (6%); Fuji, Japan (4%); Yuma County, Yuma,
Arizona (2%); Beaufort County, Parris Island, South Carolina (2%); Puuloa,
Hawaii (2%); Bellows AFB, Hawaii (2%); Craven County, Cherry Point, North
Carolina (2%); and Iwakuni, Japan (2%).
· Creighton AB
Inc., Reidsville, North Carolina, $8,890,772 for dress trousers for Air Force. Work in New
York.
· Crowley
Government Services Inc., Jacksonville, Florida, $13,553,111 for operation of the Ice-class tanker Stena
Polaris re: support worldwide bulk fuel requirements, to include biennial
delivery to Antarctica for the National Science Foundation, and a delivery each
year to Greenland for the DOD/DLA (DLA) Energy.
· Cubic, San Diego, California, $8,855,317
for
investigation, design, development, testing, and demonstration of Halo-Enabled
Resilient Mesh (HERMes) software and hardware prototype for Air Force Research
Lab (AFRL) in Rome, New York.
· Curtiss-Wright
Flow Control Service LLC, d.b.a. Engineered Arresting Systems Corp., Aston,
Pennsylvania, $27,715,887 for E28 Retrieve Drive Assemblies (270 maximum) and
related accessories, replacing the Retrieve Drive Assemblies “that are
unsupportable due to obsolescence issues” for Navy/Marine Corps expeditionary
airfield air stations.
· Cyber Systems & Services
Solutions, Bellevue, Nebraska, $8,307,341 for
Defensive Cyber Realization, Integration, and Operational Support (DCRIOS)
services at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas.
· Dawn Inc., Warren, Ohio,
$9,116,115 to
construct a new logistics complex in Mansfield, Ohio, for National Guard.
· Decryptor Inc.,
Richardson, Texas, $7,500,000 to develop one first article Radio Frequency
Upconverter Chassis with follow-on production of 23.
· Delaware Resource Group of
Oklahoma (DRG),
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, $19,077,956 for
the Aircrew Training Device/Aircrew Training Aid Services Program: guidance,
troubleshooting, modifications, production, and “solutions” on all education
and training matters at Luke Air Force Base, Arizona.
· Dell, Round Rock,
Texas, $90,191,103 for software virtualization support of current
and future VMware software implemented across “Army virtual infrastructure
network domains.”
· Deloitte, Falls Church, Virginia,
$13,167,914 to
continue (17 Feb—16 Oct 2023) oversight and technical management of all
Solutions Delivery Division (SDD) product activities across the system
development lifecycle (SDLC), software quality assurance across SDD products,
engineering management support, and other IT support to the Defense Health
Agency. Work primarily at Defense Health Headquarters, Falls Church, Virginia.
· Digital
Consultants LLC, Alexandria, Virginia, $8,726,215 for audio/visual and video teleconference
maintenance and repair support. Ordering period is 29 Mar 2023 to 28 Mar 2028. Work
in Virginia: Quantico, and Stafford.
· Diversified
Service Contracting, Dunn, North Carolina, $13,644,608 for facilities support services at NAS Patuxent
River.
· DLP Enterprises, d.b.a. Paige
Decking, Chesapeake, Virginia, $13,531,262; Titan Decking, Chesapeake, Virginia,
$17,970,650; AMP United, Dover, New Hampshire, $19,609,446; Coastal Marine
Services, San Diego, California, $24,572,866; International Flooring and
Protective Coatings, Norfolk, Virginia, $27,911,861; Capitol Finishes, Norfolk,
Virginia, $30,842,389; for
interior decking removal and installation in Norfolk, Virginia.
· Doyon Management Services LLC,
Federal Way, Washington, $10,077,044 for
replacement of six wooden framed screenhouses with three gutter-connected
screenhouses and a single (35-ft. x 85-ft.) screenhouse in Corvallis, Oregon.
· Dragados/Hawaiian Dredging/Orion JV, Honolulu,
Hawaii, $2,839,880,250 ($463,000,000 allocated at time of award) for
building a concrete dry dock at Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard, Hawaii. WSM Pacific SIOP JV, Honolulu, Hawaii,
$49,298,472 for building a multi-mission dry dock at Puget
Sound Naval Shipyard, Washington. Contracts are part
of the Shipyard Infrastructure Optimization Program, “a holistic plan that integrates
all infrastructure and industrial plant equipment investments at the Navy’s
four public shipyards to meet nuclear fleet maintenance requirements.”
· Draper Lab, Cambridge,
Massachusetts, $95,149,250 for
ongoing technical and engineering services to maintain and sustain the MK 6
Guidance subsystem of the Trident II nuclear weapon. Includes a “requirement
for strategic guidance, navigation, and control subject matter expertise and
resources to plan and implement an advanced development program that explores
and evaluates current and maturing concepts and technologies that will enable
follow-on, full-scale development of the second life extension” of the Trident
II. Work in Cambridge, Massachusetts (81%); and El Segundo, California (19%).
· DRS Laurel
Technologies, Largo, Florida, $9,332,776 for vertical launching system (VLS) programmable
power supply (MK 179 Mod 0), maintenance assistance module kit, onboard repair
part kit, installation and checkout spares kit, depot spares kit, and lowest
replaceable unit kit for US Navy (86%), and Australia ($1,307,101; 14%).
· DRS Systems Inc.,
Melbourne, Florida, $26,000,000 for joint urgent operation need Weapon
Replaceable Assembly Shipsets (16) associated with the AN/AAQ-45 Distributed
Aperture Infrared Countermeasures system for Navy’s MH-60S helicopters. Work in
Dallas, Texas (55%); San Diego, California (43%); Fort Walton Beach (1%) and
Melbourne (1%), Florida.
· DRS Training & Control
Systems LLC, Fort Walton, Florida, $11,280,623 for
maintenance and overhaul of the Digital Captive Boresight Harmonization Kit on
the Boeing AH-64 “Apache” helicopter.
· DSC-EMI
Maintenance Solutions LLC, Dunn, North Carolina, $19,283,066 for BOSS at Camp Lejeune.
· Dynalec Corp., Sodus, New York, $23,913,512 for
delivery of Wired Voice Network (WVN) to be installed on Guided-Missile Frigates.
Work in Sodus, New York (50%); and Marinette, Wisconsin (50%).
· EA Engineering, Science and
Technology Inc. (EA), Hunt Valley,
Maryland, $25,000,000 for
environmental remediation for USACE Concord, Massachusetts.
· EC Electric, Renton, Washington,
$17,524,792 to
upgrade the direct current system and low voltage switchgear at Little Goose
Lock and Dam, Dayton, Washington. Fiscal 2023 Bonneville Power Administration
funds ($4,000,000) obligated.
· ECC Constructors LLC, Burlingame,
California, $500,000,000 for
debris management services.
· Elbit Systems of America, Fort
Worth, Texas, $25,134,186 for
the Next Generation Hub.
·
Emax & Real Estate Advisory, New York
City, $35,000,000 for knowledge, skills, and experience in
residential and commercial real estate development, and large-scale real estate
portfolio management. Work at oversea locations (85%), Hawaii (10%), and Puerto
Rico (5%) as part of Department of Navy Public-Private Venture and Real Estate
programs.
· Enid Woodring
Regional Airport, Enid, Oklahoma ($10,096,948), was added to the contract for fuel support at Enid
Woodring Regional Airport, Oklahoma, issued against solicitation
SPE607-23-R-0202 and awarded 6 Mar 2023. Valero, San Antonio, Texas, maximum
$905,836,659 for JAA aviation fuel to Altus AFB, Oklahoma.
· Environmental Chemical Corp.,
Burlingame, California, $20,291,410 for
repair and upgrade of airfield pavement to support P-8A mission at NAS Sigonella,
Italy.
· Ernst and Young, Falls Church, Virginia,
$9,890,951 for
more (8 Mar 2023 to 7 Sep 2023) audit
sustainment, audit response, remediation of notices of findings and
recommendation, internal control oversight and management, financial reporting
compilation and analysis, and continuous risk management and internal control
training and program services for U.S. Army Medical Research Acquisition
Activity.
· Exxel Outdoors LLC, Broomfield,
Colorado, $49,976,688 for
the three-season sleep system and components. Work in Alabama.
· Facility Services Management Inc.,
Clarksville, Tennessee, $16,998,846 for
operations and maintenance, repairs and minor construction in San Diego, California,
for the Defense Health Program.
· Federal
Contracting Inc. d.b.a. Bryan Construction, Colorado Springs, Colorado,
$128,738,357 for building a helicopter maintenance unit, an
aircraft maintenance shelter, an aircraft alert hangar, and an operations
facility at Minot AFB, North Dakota.
· Federal Prison Industries
(UNICOR), D.C., $11,891,033 for
men’s and women’s white jumpers for US Navy. Work in Arizona.
· Federal Prison Industries (UNICOR),
D.C., $22,641,000 for
coats for Army and Air Force. Work in Texas, Illinois, and North Carolina.
· Federal Prison Industries (UNICOR),
D.C., $25,215,000 for
various types of trousers for Army and Air Force. Work in Texas, Alabama, and
Mississippi.
· Federal Prison
Industries (UNICOR), D.C., $99,160,500 for the Modular Lightweight Load-carrying
Equipment rucksack set for Army and Air Force. Performance in North Carolina
and South Carolina.
· Federal Prison
Industries Inc. (UNICOR), D.C., $13,749,000 for physical fitness uniform jackets for Army. SND
Manufacturing, Dallas, Texas, $9,146,497 for
running suit jackets for Navy and Marine Corps.
· Fleet JV LLC, Manassas, Virginia,
$278,178,452 for
contractor support services for life cycle logistics, engineering, technical,
and production services on various naval aircraft. Work in Jacksonville,
Florida (47.81%); Cherry Point, North Carolina (30.83%); San Diego, California
(5.16%); locations within continental U.S. (16.15%); locations outside
continental U.S. (.05%).
· Folsom Dam Contractors,
Pleasanton, California, $114,445,377 for the Folsom Dam Raise Project, Folsom, California.
· Fortbrand
Services LLC, Plainview, New York, $235,476,820 for snow removal equipment.
· Foster Miller (QinetiQ
North America), Waltham, Massachusetts, $10,597,033 for MK 2 Man Transportable Robotic System (MTRS)
and Talon systems production, engineering support and post production support.
· Frontier Technology Inc.,
Beavercreek, Ohio, $13,13,923 for
“innovative airborne systems” life cycle planning and analysis in San Diego,
California.
· G.D.O. (sometimes contracts as Gradient), Elk River, Minnesota,
$11,500,320 for
demilitarization of projectiles.
· Gannett Fleming
Inc., Camp Hill, Pennsylvania, $25,600,000 for site visits, data collection, surveys,
analyses, and simulation using government-off-the-shelf software, and
professional recommendations and development of a study report with Geographic
Information System (GIS) exhibits. Work at Camp Hill, Pennsylvania, contractor
site; and Scott AFB. Illinois. Performance through 31 March 2033.
· Geiger Bros.
Construction, Jackson, Ohio, $9,892,900 for construction at Department of Energy Oak Ridge Office of Environmental Management in
Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Paid for with environmental cleanup funds.
· General Atomics, Poway,
California, $11,586,778 for
FMS (Italy): logistics support activities (depot repair, engineering
services, field team support, software maintenance) on Italy’s MQ-9 aircraft
(block 5).
· General Atomics, Poway,
California, $34,232,310 for
mobile ground control stations (8) and ground data terminals (6) re: Marine Air
Ground Task Force’s MQ-9A “Reaper” (block 5) air vehicles and ground control
stations. Work in California: Poway (60%), Saber Springs (20%), Grey Butte (20%).
· General Atomics,
San Diego, California, $42,855,274 for ongoing installation and test support. Also
provides materials to support installation and testing of hardware and software
for Electromagnetic Aircraft Launch System (EMALS) and Advanced Arresting Gear systems aboard
aircraft carriers John F. Kennedy (CVN-79) and Enterprise
(CVN-80). Work San Diego, California (79.5%), Tupelo, Mississippi (20.5%).
· General Dynamics (Electric Boat),
Groton, Connecticut, $13,940,392 for
continued maintenance and repair support at Naval Submarine Base New London,
Connecticut.
· General Dynamics Bath
Iron Works, Bath, Maine, $9,609,633 for post-delivery availability work items for DDG
122.
· General Dynamics Gulfstream,
Savannah, Georgia, $37,000,000 (brings contract to $612,000,000) for
C-20 and C-37 engineering support at Savannah, Georgia, and Joint Base Andrews,
Maryland.
· General Dynamics Gulfstream,
Savannah, Georgia, $87,000,000 (brings contract to $594,000,000) for
C-20 and C-37 contractor logistics support at Savannah, Georgia; Joint Base
Andrews, Maryland; Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii; and Ramstein Air Base,
Germany.
· General Dynamics IT,
Falls Church, Virginia, $1,796,323,441 for flight simulation training services.
· General Dynamics IT, Falls
Church, Virginia, $16,003,611 for
Electromagnetic Environmental Effects (E3)
test, evaluation, and range services in support of command, control,
communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (C4ISR)
systems. Work in Charleston, South Carolina (70%); Norfolk, Virginia (25%); and
Bedford, New Hampshire (5%).
· General Dynamics
Land Systems, Sterling Heights, Michigan, $47,616,742 for Abrams systems technical support. Fiscal 2022
Overseas Contingency Operations Transfer funds and fiscal 2023 other
procurement ($47,616,742) obligated.
· General Dynamics
Mission Systems, Fairfax, Virginia, $33,310,492 for BYG-1 Tactical Control System engineering
support. Some Australian Navy funds $1,421,538 (14%). Lockheed
Martin, Syracuse, New York, $32,000,000 for
design and qualification testing of submarine electronic warfare equipment.
· General Dynamics NASSCO –
Norfolk, Norfolk, Virginia, $149,452,553 for
maintenance, modernization, and repair of USS Arlington (LPD 24) fiscal
2023 docking selected restricted availability in Norfolk, Virginia.
· General Dynamics NASSCO, Bremerton,
Washington, $43,066,073 for
maintenance, modernization, and repair of USS Sampson (DDG 102).
· General Dynamics
NASSCO, Norfolk, Virginia, $8,997,563 for the USS Arlington (LPD 24) fiscal 2023
docking selected restricted availability in Norfolk, Virginia.
· General Dynamics NASSCO, San Diego,
California, $68,189,805 for
maintenance, modernization, and repair of USS Anchorage (LPD 23), fiscal
year 2023 docking selected restricted availability.
· General Dynamics OTS, Garland, Texas,
$9,134,973 for
BLU-109/B tritonal bomb components. General Dynamics OTS, Wilkes Barre,
Pennsylvania, $1,476,629,900 to manufacture large-caliber metal projectiles
and mortar projectiles.
· General Dynamics OTS, Niceville,
Florida and American Ordnance LLC, Middletown, Iowa $993,790,373 to
produce 155 mm rounds.
· General Dynamics OTS,
St. Petersburg, Florida, $105,780,608 for tank-training ammunition. Northrop Grumman, Plymouth,
Minnesota, $122,612,703 for tank-training ammunition.
· General Dynamics,
Pittsfield, Massachusetts, $43,973,717 for Fire Control System and Attack Weapon Control
System support for U.S. and U.K. subs carrying Trident II (D-5). Work in
Pittsfield, Massachusetts (98%), and Rhode Island (2%).
· General Dynamics,
Pittsfield, Massachusetts, $8,832,784 for capital maintenance of equipment and
facilities at the Naval Industrial Ordnance Plant in Pittsfield, Massachusetts.
· General Dynamics, Scottsdale,
Arizona, $481,578,860 for
sustainment of the signals intelligence device
known as Prophet Enhanced.
· General Dynamics, Sterling
Heights, Michigan, $11,925,385 for
FMS (Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Egypt, Iraq): systems technical support for Abrams tanks. General Dynamics, Sterling
Heights, Michigan, $34,241,540 for
technical support on Abrams tanks. Some FMS (Kuwait, Poland, Saudi Arabia).
General Dynamics, Sterling Heights, Michigan, $27,069,515 for
M1A1 Abrams turret armor swaps. Work in Lima, Ohio. Fiscal 2022 Special Defense
Acquisition funds and 2023 Foreign Military Sales (Poland) funds of $27,069,516
obligated.
· General Dynamics, Sterling Heights, Michigan,
$15,542,933 for
the Mobile Protected Firepower program. General Dynamics, Sterling Heights, Michigan,
$15,646,601 for the Mobile Protected Firepower system. Work
in Sterling Heights, Michigan; Anniston, Alabama; and Lima, Ohio.
· General Dynamics,
Sterling Heights, Michigan, $17,718,926 for Abrams system technical support.
· General Dynamics, Sterling
Heights, Michigan, $63,688,908 for
multiple items used in Army vehicles (Abrams tank, Stryker, Light Armored Vehicle,
Cougar, Buffalo, and RG-31).
· General Dynamics, Williston,
Vermont, $32,533,827 for
production and shipping of Guided Missile MK 82 directors and MK 200 director
controls. Work in Williston, Vermont (50%), and Saco, Maine (50%).
· General Electric,
Cincinnati, Ohio, $16,748,330 for one LM2500+G4 gas turbine engine and
auxiliary systems for Navy’s DDG(X) land based test site. Work in Cincinnati,
Ohio.
· General Electric,
Cincinnati, Ohio, $17,981,800 for five gas generator high-pressure turbine kits
re: overhaul and repair of LM2500 single shank turbine engines. Work in
Erlanger, Kentucky.
· Geo-Stanley JV 2, Kevil, Kentucky; Kenall-Halff
JV LLC, Houston, Texas; MSM Huitt-Zollars JV LLC, New Orleans, Louisiana
$105,000,000 for
architect and engineering services for USACE, Fort Worth, Texas.
· Georgia Tech Applied Research
Corp., Atlanta, Georgia, $1,600,000,000 for
research, engineering, science and technology, analysis, test of
state-of-the-art systems, operations, hardware and software, and associated
technology creation and transition.
· Gibbs & Cox Inc., Arlington,
Virginia, $39,659,692 for
some ship design and engineering re: Future Surface Combatant Force, primarily
in support of the DDG(X) program, and to conduct feasibility studies as part of
supporting the US Navy fleet. Work in D.C. (60%); Arlington, Virginia (35%);
and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (5%).
· Gilbane Federal, Concord, California,
$13,418,652 to
build U.S. Forces-Korea Operations Center at Army Garrison-Humphreys, Pyeongtaek,
South Korea. Valiant, San Diego, California, $14,647,488 for Korea Battle Simulation Center Operation
Center operation at Camp Humphreys, South Korea.
· Gilbane Federal, Concord,
California, $58,479,331 for
building a littoral innovation and prototyping facility at Naval Support
Activity, Panama City, Florida.
· Glen/Mar-Hensel Phelps JV, Clackamas, Oregon,
$16,050,000 for
replacement of 24-inch water transmission line at Hospital Point, Joint
Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam. Hensel Phelps Construction Co., Honolulu, Hawaii,
$8,530,000 for
repairs to the Water Reclamation Facility secondary clarifier, Marine Corps
Base Hawaii. Integrits Corp. (HQ in San Diego),
San Diego, California, $14,918,694 for
operation and maintenance support for the Mobile At-Sea Sensor System (MATSS)
vessel at Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility,
Hawaii.
· Golden Triangle Construction Co.,
Imperial, Pennsylvania, $35,086,000 for
the Pittsburgh Air Reserve Station Repair Apron project.
· Granite Construction,
Watsonville, California, $16,309,990 for
replacement of existing hydraulic cylinders and rods for flood protection spillway
gates, Folsom, California.
· Group W Inc., Vienna, Virginia,
$12,087,919 to
support Office the Secretary of Defense, Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation
(CAPE) staff with “information and information systems software to conduct
timely, high-quality analyses” as required by CAPE’s Program Resources
Information Systems Management Division.” Such analyses will be provided to
senior DOD leadership. Work in Virginia (the Pentagon and the Mark Center) and
other CAPE offices in the National Capital Region.
· Hampton Roads Produce
Distributors, Virginia Beach, Virginia, $15,125,975 for
cross-docking and transportation re: “East Coast Export Mission,” which
involves shipping fresh fruits and vegetables, frozen meats, baked goods and
dairy products.
· Hardwire LLC, Pocomoke, Maryland,
$8,385,168 for
enhanced small arms protective inserts for use in shorts (extra-small and
small) for Marine Corps.
· HDD JV, Leesburg,
Virginia, $13,168,000 for renovation of an Army Reserve area
maintenance support activity/vehicle maintenance shop in Cross Lanes, West
Virginia.
· Head Inc., Columbus, Ohio
(W9128F-23-D-0009); MRM Construction Services Inc., Phoenix, Arizona
(W9128F-23-D-0010); AHTNA-SWCP JV, Irvine, California (W9128F-23-D-0011);
Southern-RC-JV-01 LLC, Newbern, Tennessee (W9128F-23-D-0012) $99,000,000 for
airfield paving design-bid-build and design-build construction projects for
USACE Omaha, Nebraska.
· Hensel Phelps
Construction Co., Honolulu, Hawaii, $94,720,000 for renovating Building 51, Radio Barrigada, Guam.
· Hexagon U.S.
Federal Inc., Huntsville, Alabama, $8,192,012 for technical support services for U.S. Army
Records Management Directorate and the Army Declassification Directorate, Fort
Belvoir, Virginia.
· Hexagon US Federal Inc., Huntsville, Alabama,
$16,370,119 for surface ship Situational Awareness, Boundary
Enforcement and Response (SABER) land-based site equipment.
· Hiland Dairy
Foods, Springfield, Missouri, $22,535,884 for fresh milk and dairy in Kansas for Army.
· Hologic Sales and Service LLC,
Marlborough, Massachusetts, $27,000,000 for
lab equipment, accessories, and consumables.
· Hornbeck Offshore Operators LLC,
Covington, Louisiana, $14,586,300 for
worldwide charter of one U.S. flagged offshore support ship, HOS Red Dawn (pdf), that will support
US Navy operations.
· Hornbeck Offshore
Operators LLC, Covington, Louisiana, $8,418,000 for operation of the offshore support vessel HOS Red
Rock for Navy worldwide.
· Howard University, D.C.,
$90,000,000 for
research and development. The contract will “establish a Historically Black
Colleges and Universities-led University Affiliated Research Center consortium
to execute research focused on tactical autonomy that will aid in the
transition of research into practical applications.”
· Humana Government Business Inc.,
Louisville, Kentucky, up to $16,259,562,586, for
continuity of healthcare (eastern region) delivered during the T-5 Managed Care
Service Contract (HT940223C0001) transition-in period. Health Net Federal
Services LLC, Sacramento, California, up to $7,703,234,694, for
continuity of healthcare (western region) delivered during the T-5 Managed Care
Service Contract (HT940223C0002) transition-in period. Work at military service
component sites, contractor call centers, and within healthcare provider
network.
· Huntington Ingalls Inc.,
Pascagoula, Mississippi, $10,516,400 for
the DDG 1000 and DDG 1001 modernization period planning.
· Huntington
Ingalls Inc., Pascagoula, Mississippi, $8,506,601 for the incorporation of additional work items in
support of Combat System Availability for DDG 1002. Work in Pascagoula,
Mississippi (91%); Dublin, Pennsylvania (9%); Moss Point, Mississippi (less
than 1%); Houma, Louisiana (less than 1%).
· Huntington
Ingalls Industries Fleet Support Group LLC, Virginia Beach, Virginia,
$18,607,521 for services re: planning USS John C. Stennis
(CVN 74) refueling complex overhaul (RCOH); training; equipment testing; and
more in Newport News, Virginia.
· Huntington
Ingalls Industries, Pascagoula, Mississippi, $1,295,000,013 for detail design and construction of LPD 32, the
third LPD 17 Flight II ship. Work in Pascagoula, Mississippi (82%); Crozet,
Virginia (3%); Beloit, Wisconsin (2%); New Orleans, Louisiana (2%), various
sites throughout the U.S. (11%).
· Huntington Ingalls Industries’ Alion
Science and Technology Corp. (AST)
McLean, Virginia, $70,832,989 for
program management, engineering, and other specialized support services for Air
Force Nuclear Weapons Center—Secure Storage Division programs at Kirtland Air
Force Base, New Mexico, and Lackland AFB, Texas. Some work at other
installations and contractor facilities.
· Huntington-Ingalls
Industries - Ingalls Shipbuilding, Pascagoula, Mississippi, $140,010,237 for planning yard services for LCS in-service
ships. Work in Pascagoula, Mississippi (68%); Hampton, Virginia (30%); San
Diego, California (1%); Jacksonville, Florida (1%).
· Huntington-Ingalls
Industries - Ingalls Shipbuilding, Pascagoula, Mississippi, $8,703,236 for material in support of planning yard services
for operational (in-service) amphibious transport dock (LPD-27) in San Diego, CA.
· Huntington-Ingalls
Industries - Newport News Shipbuilding, Newport News, Virginia, $16,068,211 for material and labor associated with contractor
furnished On-Board Repair Parts for the outfitting of CVN 79 in Newport News,
Virginia. Huntington-Ingalls Industries
- Newport News Shipbuilding, Newport News, Virginia, $12,228,305 for material and labor associated with contractor
furnished on-board repair parts for the outfitting of CVN 79 in Newport News,
Virginia
· Husman Environmental &
Construction LLC & RC Construction Co Inc. A JV, Jackson, Mississippi
(W912HN-23-D-3000); Relyant Global LLC, Maryville, Tennessee
(W912HN-23-D-3001); Summers Concrete Contracting Inc., Hahira, Georgia
(W912HN-23-D-3002) $45,000,000 for
airfield maintenance and construction task orders for U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, Savannah, Georgia.
· Hydrogeologic Inc., Reston,
Virginia, $15,577,663 for
environmental remediation in Cape Canaveral, Florida.
· IAP-Design Build LLC, Columbus, Ohio,
$13,873,153 for
restoration of an Army Reserve training center in Columbus, Ohio.
· InDyne Inc., Lexington Park,
Maryland, $62,968,088 for
operations and maintenance support of Perimeter Acquisition Radar Attack
Characterization System (PARCS)
at Cavalier Space Force Station, North Dakota.
· InDyne Inc.,
Lexington Park, Maryland, $80,165,175 for Solid State Phased Array Radar Systems (SSPARS) at Beale AFB, California; Cape Cod
Space Force Station, Massachusetts; Clear Space Force Station, Alaska; Thule
Air Base, Greenland; Cheyenne Mountain Space Force Station, Colorado; and RAF Fylingdales,
UK.
· Infinity Technology Services LLC,
Colorado Springs, Colorado, $40,036,771, for
five years of technical services (cybersecurity, cyber threat hunting, cyber
threat intelligence, and countermeasures identification) for Missile Defense
Agency (MDA) and “other government agencies”. Work mostly in Huntsville,
Alabama, and Colorado Springs, Colorado. The Cyber Threat Hunting program
“detects, identifies and mitigates… adversary attempts to steal, manipulate, or
otherwise alter Missile Defense Agency (MDA) classified information, controlled
unclassified information and intellectual property resident on its own networks
and those of its defense industrial base.”
· Inland Dredging Co., Dyersburg,
Tennessee, $7,996,750 for
maintenance dredging in Matagorda, Texas.
· Innovative
Defense Technologies, Arlington, Virginia, $44,299,897 for development of Naval Digital Engineering
Ecosystem (NDEE) utilizing advanced automated test and re-test enterprise
platform technologies … for developing and deploying counter-/command, control,
communications, computers, cyber, intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance
and targeting (Counter-/C5ISR-T) hardware and/or software for rapid testing and
evaluation and fielded operational demonstrations.
· Insight Pacific JV, Brea, California; Macro-Z-Technology,
Santa Ana, California; and Sealaska Constructors, Seattle, Washington $95,000,000
for
new construction, repair, and renovation (via task orders) for USACE
Seattle, Washington. Tetra Tech Inc., Seattle, Washington,
$10,000,000 for architectural and engineering services for
USACE, Seattle, Washington.
· Institute of
International Education, New York City, $35,300,000 for services designed to attract, recruit, and
train a future national security workforce through the David L. Boren National Security Education Act
of 1991.
The purpose is also to administer and provide management for additional
initiatives under the Language Flagship, to undergraduate and graduate students
who are U.S. citizens studying languages, cultures, and regions of the world
critical to national security… “In exchange for funding, Boren Scholars and
Fellows agree to work in qualifying national security positions in the U.S.
federal government.”
· Institute of
International Education, New York, New York, $187,206,766 for all critical functions in management and
administration of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC), Project Global
Officer (GO), and the Language Training Center (LTC).
· Integrated Solutions for Systems Inc.,
Huntsville, Alabama, $9,489,613 for
basic and applied scientific research for development and demonstration of
plug-and-play open architectures for positioning, navigation and timing.
· Intelligent Waves LLC, Reston
Virginia, $99,900,000 for
flight test mission instrumentation modifications, improvements, and operations
for the 53rd Wing and other operational flight-testing locations. Work mostly
at Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada. Other locations could include Yuma, Arizona;
Hill AFB, Utah; Wright Patterson AFB, Ohio; Patuxent River, Maryland; Norfolk,
Virginia.
· Intercontinental Construction
Contracting Inc., Passaic, New Jersey, $27,540,261 to
construct an “information systems node facility” in Brooklyn, New York. Ketan
Shah is CEO of this construction corporation. The small business profile is here.
· Intrepid LLC,
Huntsville, Alabama, $21,011,000 for system engineering and technical assistance. System
Studies & Simulation Inc., Huntsville, Alabama, $81,465,200 for
technical engineering support. Torch
Technologies Inc., Huntsville, Alabama, $11,025,747 for various types of
simulation support.
· Intuitive
Research and Technology Corp., Huntsville, Alabama, $56,928,794 for sensor suites for the Army.
· Inverness Technologies Inc.,
Annandale, Virginia, $20,876,549 for
Soldier for Life Transition Assistance Program support at Fort Knox, Kentucky.
· Invicta Global LLC, Fort Worth,
Texas, $13,188,331 for
facilities maintenance at Naval Support Activity (NSA) Bethesda, NSA Dahlgren,
NSA Indian Head, and other locations in Maryland (64%); Virginia (19%); and
D.C. (17%).
· ITSC Secure Solutions LLC,
Huntsville, Alabama, $415,000,000 for
“program management, contract management, financial management, engineering,
information assurance, administrative support, intelligence support, security
management support, analysis, policy support, and technical assistance services”
for Secretary of the Air Force Concepts, Development, and Management Office.
The process is called “Support for Technical, Advisory, and Resource Services
(STARS)”. Work in D.C.; Fairfax, Virginia; and Tampa, Florida.
· Ivyhill Technologies Inc.,
College Park, Maryland, $11,745,888 for
Integrated Referral Management and Appointing Center (IRMAC) National Capital
Region (NCR) Market Consolidated Call Center/Referral Management Support at
Dalecarlia Annex, Bethesda, Maryland. IRMAC is a call center for NCR Market
military medical treatment facilities. It manages referrals and appointments
for the market. The “duty location for service providing personnel may be
located at a military medical treatment facility or an authorized telework
location within the NCR Market.” Performance in Bethesda, Maryland, 21 Apr 2023
to 20 Apr 2024.
· Jacobs Engineering Group Inc.,
Arlington, Virginia (W9128F-23-D-0015); HDR Engineering Inc., Omaha, Nebraska
(W9128F-23-D-0016); Atkins - Black & Veatch - FSB JV, Denver, Colorado
(W9128F-23-D-0017); AECOM Technical Services Inc., Los Angeles, California
(W9128F-23-D-0018); and Pond-Baker JV, Norcross, Georgia (W9128F-23-D-0019);
$30,000,000 for
architect-engineer services for USACE Omaha, Nebraska.
· Jacobs, Irvine, California, $249,000,000 for
architect-engineer services re: renovation, repair, or new construction at Navy
and Marine Corps installations in California (87%), Arizona (5%), Nevada (5%),
Colorado (1%), New Mexico (1%) and Utah (1%). Includes preparation of plans and
specifications, site surveys and investigations, cost estimating, and post
construction award services.
· Jacobs, Tullahoma,
Tennessee, $52,964,937 for BOSS at installations in Washington (90%),
Alaska (1%), Idaho (1%), Iowa (1%), Minnesota (1%), Montana (1%), Nebraska
(1%), Oregon (1%), North Dakota (1%), South Dakota (1%), and Wyoming (1%).
· JAR Assets LLC,
Mandeville, Louisiana, $11,686,250, for continued transportation of bulk jet fuel by
tug and barge for DLA Energy in the Gulf of Mexico and Lower Mississippi River
and their connecting waterway and tributaries.
· Javelin JV (Raytheon & Lockheed
Martin), Tucson, Arizona, $18,946,203 for
contractor support services on Javelin. Some fiscal 2023 Overseas Contingency
Operations funds and fiscal 2023 FMS (Australia, Estonia, Indonesia, Jordan,
Norway, Oman, Poland, Taiwan) funds obligated.
· Javelin JV, Tucson, Arizona,
$13,541,544 for
engineering services for the Javelin Missile System.
· JJLL LLC, Austin
Texas, $16,904,604 for base operations support services (BOSS) in
the Philippines. Erickson Helicopters, Portland,
Oregon, $14,781,257, for continued (28 Mar–27 Aug 2023) airlift, casualty
evacuation, personnel recovery, and sling-load operations at Edwin Andrews Air
Base, Philippines.
· JKAF Logistics,
Raeford, North Carolina, $9,773,585 for transport services, Maneuver Center of Excellence,
Fort Benning, Georgia.
· Johns Hopkins University Applied
Physics Laboratory, Laurel, Maryland, $25,000,000 for
additional support in space protection, endurance, and survivability
requirements into protection strategy, policy, and threat mitigation projects,
in specific mission areas that will inform budget and program formulation at
Los Angeles AFB, California.
· Johnson Brothers
Corp., a Southland Co., Roanoke, Texas, $15,000,000 for building the Downstream Cofferdam, Grand
Rivers, Kentucky.
· Joint Technical Solutions LLC,
Huntsville, Alabama, $840,105,753 for
test and engineering services.
· Kandor Manufacturing Inc.,
Arecibo, Puerto Rico, maximum $23,095,200 for
coats and trousers for US Navy.
· Katmai Management
Services, Anchorage, Alaska, $97,548,030 for role players and “subject-matter experts” for
use in Marine Corps training.
· Kay and
Associates Inc. (KAI), Buffalo Grove, Illinois,
$115,988,393 for FMS (Kuwait): maintenance, operation,
and management support of F/A-18 aircraft and missile maintenance repair and
storage facilities at undisclosed locations in Kuwait.
· KBR, Fulton,
Maryland, $8,359,202 for services, supplies, operation, and support of
centrifuge training for aircrew (some from Navy, USMC, Air Force, and other
countries) in San Antonio, Texas. Includes resources required for
centrifuge-based, G-tolerance training procedures. Operate, maintain, and
provide security for facilities and a 14-person classroom, 14 anti-gravity
suits with torso harnesses, office equipment, and issue reports.
· KBR, Houston, Texas, $71,573,535 for
base operating support at Camp Lemonnier (81%) and Chebelley Air Field (4%),
Djibouti; Manda Bay, Kenya (15%).
· KBR, Houston, Texas, $8,960,118 for
facilities support within the United Arab Emirates (UAE): Jebel Ali, Al Minhad
Base, Al Nahkl Base, and Fujairah.
· KBR, Lexington Park, Maryland,
$29,386,496 for
installation, systems integration, test and evaluation, in-service engineering
logistics, repair and validation, training, lab maintenance, quality assurance,
and technical management services for Multi-Mission Datalink support system for
NAWCAD Webster Outlying Field Airborne Systems Integration Division. Work in St.
Inigoes, Maryland (50%); Norfolk, Virginia (11%); San Diego, California (11%);
Everett, Washington (5%); Mayport, Florida (5%); Yokosuka, Japan (5%); Pearl
Harbor, Hawaii (4%); Rota, Spain (2%); Bath, Maine (2%); Pascagoula,
Mississippi (2%); locations outside continental U.S. (CONUS) (2%); locations
within (1%).
· Keysight Technologies Inc.,
Colorado Springs, Colorado, $28,616,166 for
the CM-523/U battery-operated, handheld spectrum analyzer.
· Kiewit-Alberici
SIOP MACC JV, Vancouver, Washington, $30,925,000 for risk mitigation measures associated with
potential seismic events at Dry Docks 4 and 5 at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and
Intermediate Maintenance Facility, and the Trident Refit Facility Dry Dock at
Naval Submarine Base Bangor. Kiewit-Alberici
SIOP MACC JV, Vancouver, Washington, $70,875,137 for
installation and construction of risk mitigation measures associated with
potential seismic activity at Dry Docks 4 and 5 at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard
and Intermediate Maintenance Facility, and the Trident Refit Facility dry dock
at Naval Submarine Base Bangor. Triton Marine Construction Corp.,
Bremerton, Washington, $8,593,939 to repair saltwater distribution and compressed
air lines at Dry Docks 4 and 5, Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, WA.
· Kiewit-Alberici SIOP MACC JV, Vancouver,
Washington, $76,350,000 for
rapid implementation of “recommended courses of action based on concurrent
existing conditions assessments” at three dry docks in Puget Sound Naval
Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility, and Naval Submarine Base
Bangor. Work in Bremerton, Washington.
· King Nutronics Corp., Woodland
Hills, California, $8,286,250 for
hand pump calibrators in support of the general purpose electronic test
equipment program.
· KJS Support
Services JV LLC, Fort Worth, Texas, $8,989,080 for BOSS at Naval Air Facility El Centro.
· Knowledge Based Systems Inc. (KBSI), College Station,
Texas, $49,950,000 for
primary research re: the Avionics Systems Susceptibility and Risk Analysis
Toolkit for Air Force Research Lab: develop model-based cybersecurity and
“resiliency analysis capability,” and integrate cybersecurity models in a
digital engineering ecosystem.
· Konecranes Nuclear Equipment and Services, New
Berlin, Wisconsin, $48,476,094 to
design, fabricate, assemble, shop test, deliver, install, inspect, field test,
and make ready for use a 175-ton heavy-lift portal crane to be installed at
Norfolk Naval Shipyard, Virginia.
· KPMG LLP, McLean, Virginia,
$22,143,583 for
financial improvement and audit readiness support for Data Team and Audit
Response and Sustainment services. Work in D.C. for Defense Logistics Agency.
· KPMG LLP, McLean, Virginia; ReefPoint
Group LLC, Annapolis, Maryland; Serco, Herndon, Virginia $37,606,063 for
performance and process improvement that focus on improving patient access,
quality of care, and cost through improved efficiencies … in support o Navy
Bureau of Medicine and Surgery at its headquarters and treatment facility
locations.
· Kratos, Sacramento,
California, $11,123,211 for 15 more BQM-177A surface launched aerial
targets (lot 4, full rate production). Includes rocket-assisted takeoff
attachment kits and associated technical and administrative data re: in-development
naval combat weapon systems, fleet gunnery, and missile training exercises, and
fleet air-to-air missile and surface-to-air missile training exercises for
Navy. Work in Sacramento, California (50%); Dallas, Texas (20%); Fort Walton
Beach, Florida (5%); Blacksburg, Virginia (4%); Santa Ana, California (2%);
Newton, Kansas (2%); Concord, California (2%); Milwaukie, Oregon (2%);
Chatsworth, California (2%); and various locations within continental U.S.
(11%).
· Kratos, Sacramento, California,
$49,568,200 for
BQM-177A Surface Launched Aerial Targets (55 full rate production, lot 4),
including associated Rocket-Assisted Takeoff Attachment kits (55), mission kits
(277), and technical and administrative data for US Navy, Canada, and
Australia. Work in Dallas, Texas (20%); Fort Walton Beach, Florida (5%);
Blacksburg, Virginia (4%); California (Sacramento 50%; Santa Ana 2%, Concord
2%, Chatsworth 2%); Newton, Kansas (2%); Milwaukie, Oregon (2%); various
locations within continental U.S. (11%).
· L3Harris (Interstate
Electronics Corp.), Anaheim, California, $15,798,147 for services and support for flight test
instrumentation systems. Some FMS (UK). Work in Anaheim, California
(55%); Cape Canaveral, Florida (31%); D.C. (8%); Barrow-in-Furness, UK (3%); Groton, Connecticut (3%).
· L3Harris Applied Technologies
Inc., San Leandro, California, $8,468,429 for
the Nuclear Weapons Effect West Coast Facility Simulator Program for the
Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA)
Research and Development Department.
· L3Harris
Integrated Systems L.P., Greenville, Texas, $71,928,605 for FMS (unnamed): engineering,
procurement, and fabrication of Joint Airborne Multi-sensor Multi-mission
System (JAMMS), modifying one Gulfstream GV-SP (G550) aircraft.
· L3Harris Interstate Electronics
Corp., Anaheim, California, $7,535,296 for
services and support of flight test instrumentation systems re:
submarine-launched ballistic missiles. Work in Anaheim, California (55%); Cape
Canaveral, Florida (30%); D.C. (7%); Bremerton, Washington (2%); Kings Bay,
Georgia (2%); Laurel, Maryland (1%); Barrow-in-Furness, UK (3%). “This contract
award also benefits a foreign military sale to the United Kingdom.”
· L3Harris Mustang Technology Group
LP, Plano, Texas, $17,720,904 for
“all activities associated with the statement of objectives as well as the
contractor's proposal” for Stand-in Attack Weapon, phase 1.3.
· L3Harris, Cincinnati,
Ohio, and Action Manufacturing Co., Bristol, Pennsylvania; $412,755,410 to manufacture, inspect, test, package, and
deliver M734A1 Multi-Option Fuze for mortars and M783 Point Detonating / Delay
Fuzes.
· L3Harris, Clifton, New Jersey, $16,694,725
for
FMS (unnamed): continued non-recurring engineering to develop,
integrate, test and deliver software and firmware as well as all technical data.
Also corrects deficiencies discovered during testing.
· L3Harris, Colorado Springs,
Colorado, $21,200,111 (brings contract to $650,107,962) for
Maintenance of Space Situational Awareness Integrated Capabilities (MOSSAIC)
sustainment in Colorado Springs, Colorado; Dahlgren, Virginia; Vandenberg,
California; and Eglin Air Force Base, Florida.
· L3Harris, Colorado Springs,
Colorado, $31,456,050 (brings contract to $681,564,012) for
Maintenance of Space Situational Awareness Integrated Capabilities (MOSSAIC)
sustainment in Colorado Springs, Colorado.
· L3Harris, Colorado Springs,
Colorado, $39,092,259 for
Maintenance of Space Situational Awareness Integrated Capabilities (MOSSAIC)
sustainment in Colorado (Colorado Springs) and Virginia (Dahlgren). MOSSAIC is
infrastructure to track objects in space.
· L3Harris, Colorado Springs,
Colorado, $46,369,592 (brings overall contract to $645,729,988) for
Maintenance of Space Situational Awareness Integrated Capabilities (MOSSAIC)
sustainment in Colorado Springs, Colorado, and at Eglin Air Force Base,
Florida.
· L3Harris, Millersville,
Maryland, $19,901,705 for Navy equipment, components, engineering
services, and other direct costs. Work in Millersville, Maryland (57%);
Liverpool, New York (40%); and Ashaway, Rhode Island (3%).
· L3Harris, Millersville, Maryland,
$37,661,542 for
Navy equipment, components, engineering services, and other direct costs. Work
in Millersville, Maryland (57%); Liverpool, New York (40%); and Ashaway, Rhode
Island (3%).
· L3Harris, Salt Lake City, Utah,
$20,815,286 for
the Manned/Unmanned Teaming hardware, as well as technical and engineering
support.
· Lakota Solutions, Warner Robbins,
Georgia, $49,000,000 for
aerospace ground equipment maintenance and support at Eglin Air Force Base,
Florida.
· LaweLawe Technology Services LLC, Kailua,
Hawaii, $9,807,449, for
IT and telecommunication services and administrative management re: DHA Joint
Operational Medicine Information System (JOMIS) program, Fort Sam Houston,
Texas.
· Leidos, Reston, Virginia,
$23,873,090 for
the Automated Installation Entry (AIE)
platform.
· Leidos, Reston, Virginia, $54,733,855 for
operations and sustainment of Overlord Unmanned Surface Vessels and Medium
Unmanned Surface Vehicles in Reston (51%), Virginia Beach (26%), Newport News (4%),
Virginia; La Jolla, California (7%); Morgan City, Louisiana (6%); Lexington
Park, Maryland (5%); Bethpage, New York (1%).
· Leonard S. Fiore
Inc., Altoona, Pennsylvania, $16,400,000 for renovation and upgrade: four buildings in
University Park, Pennsylvania. Fiscal 2023 Interagency and International
Services funds.
· Leonardo Societa per Azioni
(S.p.A.), Pomigliano d’Arco, Naples, Italy, $91,882,621 to
design, modify, integrate, and install the 1.2+ avionics update package on C-27J
fixed wing aircraft.
· Life Cycle Engineering Inc.,
Charleston, South Carolina (N00024-18-D-4331); Colonna’s Shipyard West LLC, San
Diego, California (N00024-18-D-4332); Continental Tide Defense Systems Inc.,
Reading, Pennsylvania (N00024-18-D-4335); Epsilon Systems Solutions Inc., San
Diego, California (N00024-18-D-4336); Southcoast Welding and Manufacturing,
Chula Vista, California (N00024-18-D-4337); Q.E.D. Systems Inc., Virginia
Beach, Virginia (N00024-18-D-4338) combined $30,000,000 for
maintenance, modernization and repair requirements for littoral combat ships
(LCS) homeported in San Diego, California. 5% work in Singapore.
· LinQuest Corp.,
Los Angeles, California, $7,830,037 (brings contract to $425,546,762) for ongoing system engineering, integration, and
test support for programs with increased security requirements. Work in El
Segundo, California, for Space Systems Command.
· Lintech Global
Inc., Farmington Hills, Michigan, $11,260,047, for being the primary IT integrator for all DOD Office
of the Inspector General (DOD OIG) systems “and “ensure that performance and
efficiencies are realized across DOD OIG’s portfolio of systems.” Work at the
Mark Center in Alexandria, Virginia.
· Lockheed Martin
Aeronautics, Fort Worth, Texas, $32,446,000 for long-lead materials, parts, components, and
associated support for production of nine F-35C aircraft (lot 17) for U.S.
Navy. Work in USA [Fort Worth, Texas (57%); Orlando, Florida (4%); Nashua, New
Hampshire (3%); Baltimore, Maryland (3%); El Segundo (14%) San Diego (2%),
California] and Warton, UK (9%); Cameri, Italy (4%); Nagoya, Japan (2%); other locations
outside Continental United States (2%).
· Lockheed Martin RMS, Liverpool,
New York, $84,938,768 (brings cumulative value of contract to $182,981,058) for
four 3D Expeditionary Long-Range Radar (3DELRR), associated production
management, travel, and other direct costs, and data under the basic contract.
· Lockheed Martin RMS, Manassas,
Virginia, $14,204,505 for
Navy equipment and spares. Work in Manassas, Virginia (65%); Clearwater (32%) and
Marion (1%), Florida; Syracuse, New York (2%).
· Lockheed Martin RMS, Moorestown,
New Jersey, $130,738,520 for
continued engineering, development, and delivery of AEGIS Weapon System
capabilities for FFG 62 and Coast Guard OPC3 Athena. Work in Moorestown,
New Jersey (98%), and Riverdale, Maryland (2%).
· Lockheed Martin RMS, Moorestown,
New Jersey, $139,651,671 for
engineering support, software development, in-service maintenance, integration,
logistics, and fielding support of AEGIS combat system configurations already
delivered or in the process of being delivered to US Navy. Work in Moorestown,
New Jersey (96%), and Dahlgren, Virginia (4%).
· Lockheed Martin RMS, Moorestown,
New Jersey, $82,778,365 for
FMS (Spain): F-110 radar component production and ship integration and
test. Work in Moorestown, New Jersey (59%); Ferrol, Spain (14%); Andover,
Massachusetts (12%); Clearwater, Florida (12%); Rota, Spain (3%).
· Lockheed Martin Sikorsky,
Stratford, Connecticut, $11,990,629 for implementation of the Tactical Cross Domain
Solution; $164,300,383 for
UH-60M aircraft; and $119,982,834
for logistics, engineering and modification
install support for the H-53 helicopter for Navy/Marine Corps and FMS.
· Lockheed Martin Sikorsky, Stratford,
Connecticut, $19,597,660 for
non-recurring engineering re: efforts to qualify the re-designed Data
Concentrator Unit and Blade Fold Distributor hardware on CH-53K aircraft for US
Navy. Work in Torrance, California (65%); Stratford, Connecticut (31%); Fort
Worth, Texas (2%); and Owego, New York (2%).
· Lockheed Martin Sikorsky,
Stratford, Connecticut, $34,045,729 for
validation and test tooling to help reach up to twenty-four (24) CH-53K “King
Stallion” helicopters per year full rate production. Work in Salt Lake
City, Utah (86%), and Stratford, Connecticut (14%).
· Lockheed Martin Sikorsky, Stratford,
Connecticut, $656,774,666 for
FMS (Australia): UH-60M aircraft.
· Lockheed Martin Sikorsky,
Stratford, Connecticut, $7,527,084 for
validation and test tooling re: CH-53K helicopter production (lots 4 and 5).
· Lockheed Martin Sikorsky, Stratford,
Connecticut, $8,324,455 for
removing test instruments from an HH-60W helicopter so that it is fully
operational.
· Lockheed Martin Space, Littleton,
Colorado, $1,178,513,393 for
program management, engineering development, systems integration, long lead
material, and special tooling and equipment in support of [submarine-launched
ballistic] missile production. Work in Denver, Colorado (46.0%); Sunnyvale,
California (22.8%); Magna, Utah (12.5%); Simsbury, Connecticut (3.6%);
Huntsville, Alabama (3.4%); Pittsfield, Massachusetts (2.4%); East Aurora, New
York (2.1%); Michoud, Louisiana (1.8%); Moorestown, New Jersey (1.6%); other
locations (less than 1.0% each, 3.8% total).
· Lockheed Martin Space, Littleton,
Colorado, $260,800,000 for
program management, engineering development, systems integration, long lead
material, and special tooling and equipment in support of [submarine-launched
ballistic nuclear] missile production. Work in Denver, Colorado (46.5%); Magna,
Utah (15.3%); Pittsfield, Massachusetts (2.3%); Simsbury, Connecticut (1.8%);
Delmar, Delaware (1.1%); Sunnyvale (15.5%) and Commerce (1.2%), California;
East Aurora (3.5%) and North Tonawanda (1.2%), New York; Madison (2.1%) and
Huntsville (1.7%), Alabama; Andover (1.3%) and Baltimore (1.3%), Maryland;
other locations (less than 1.0% each, 5.2% total).
· Lockheed Martin
Space, Littleton, Colorado, $34,999,978 for design, development, build, and integration
of equipment for missile flight tests and fielding. Work in Littleton, Colorado
(74%); Simsbury, Connecticut (8%); Sunnyvale, California (3%); Cambridge (14%)
and Pittsfield (1%), Massachusetts.
· Lockheed Martin
Space, Titusville, Florida, $474,220,267 for Trident II (D5) missile production and
deployed systems support. Some FMS (UK). Work in Magna, Utah (62.9%); Camden,
Arkansas (9.1%); Rockford, Illinois (4.5%); Biddeford, Maine (3.2%); Elkton,
Maryland (2.8%); Inglewood, California (2.7%); Denver, Colorado (2.3%);
Titusville, Florida (1.4%); Lancaster, Pennsylvania (1.3%); Joplin, Missouri (1.1%);
Lansdale, Pennsylvania (1%); and locations less than 1% each (7.7% total). Lockheed Martin Space, Titusville, Florida
$20,941,008 for engineering, technical support services,
operational support hardware and consumable spares. Work in Denver, Colorado
(24.64%); Valley Forge, Pennsylvania (23.30%); Cape Canaveral, Florida
(23.21%); Titusville, Florida (9.75%); Sunnyvale, California (7.77%); Coulport, Scotland (4.19%); Kings Bay, Georgia
(1.83%); and various locations below one percent (5.31%).
· Lockheed Martin,
Baltimore, Maryland, $21,634,132 to support the USS Wichita (LCS 13) main
propulsion diesel engine replacement in Mayport, Florida.
· Lockheed Martin, Fort Worth, Texas,
$106,954,575 for
engineering, test, maintenance, logistics, and material, in support of phase 2
upgrades of the F-35 Australia Canada UK Reprogramming Laboratory (ACURL).
Also adds scope for verification and validation of system hardware, common
system infrastructure hardware, ACURL Phase 2 follow on modernization design
and training. Work in Eglin, Florida (80%), and Fort Worth, Texas (20%). Non-U.S.
DOD participant funds $266,931,896 obligated.
· Lockheed Martin, Fort Worth, Texas,
$12,765,131 adding scope to
procure an upgraded automated test equipment system to support existing F-35
aircraft depot systems with a Windows 10 configuration for enhanced
functionality, productivity and DOD cyber compliance.
· Lockheed Martin, Fort Worth,
Texas, $12,978,681 adding scope to
procure Power Thermal Management System and Life Support System component
maintenance manuals in support of establishing initial depot repair capability
for the F-35 program.
· Lockheed Martin, Fort
Worth, Texas, $120,269,044 for continued F-35 engineering, maintenance,
logistics, and material support re: development, production, and sustainment of
software builds and developmental flight tests for USA, FMS and non-U.S. DOD
partners. Work in Fort Worth, Texas (80%); Orlando, Florida (7%); Linthicum,
Maryland (3%); Nashua, New Hampshire (3%); San Diego (2%) and El Segundo (2%);
Samlesbury, UK (1%); various locations within the continental U.S. (CONUS)
(1%); and various locations outside CONUS (1%).
· Lockheed Martin, Fort Worth,
Texas, $170,000,000 for
non-recurring engineering re: flight test instrumentation modifications to four
production aircraft (BF-139, AF-413, CF-95, and CF-110) as part of the F-35 program’s
Tech
Refresh 3 and Block 4 weapons testing objectives and ship suitability
testing for USA and non-U.S. DOD program participants. Work in Fort Worth,
Texas (30%); El Segundo, California (25%); Orlando, Florida (10%); Nashua, New
Hampshire (5%); Nagoya, Japan (5%); Baltimore, Maryland (5%); Warton, UK (20%).
· Lockheed Martin, Fort
Worth, Texas, $179,013,526 for ongoing development, installation,
integration, testing, training, and delivery of the F-35 Autonomic Logistics
Information System (ALIS) and Operational Data Integrated Network
(ODIN), including new capability development and current software
modifications. Continues support for ALIS-to-ODIN re-architecture endeavor “to
modernize ALIS in accordance with information technology and software
development best practices” for USA, FMS, and non-U.S. DOD participants.
· Lockheed Martin, Fort
Worth, Texas, $210,088,407 for F-35 logistics support (ground maintenance
activities, depot activities, ALIS operations and maintenance, supply chain and
warehouse management), and pilot and maintainer training for a non-U.S. DOD
participant: the UK. Work in Marham, UK (85%); Fort Worth, Texas (5%); and
Orlando, Florida (5%). “Non-US DOD
participants” are international users, administratively distinct from FMS, for
whom DOD often foots the bill.
· Lockheed Martin, Fort Worth,
Texas, $32,508,282 adding scope to
design, develop, and establish the F-35 NextGen Open Mission services in
support of the Mission Planning Enterprise Software, “encompassing the usage of
modern cloud-based technologies and modern software methodologies…” for US
military and non-U.S. DOD participants. “Non-US DOD participants” are
international users, administratively distinct from FMS, for whom DOD often foots
the bill. Work in Fort Worth, Texas (87%), and Eglin, Florida (13%).
·
Lockheed Martin, Fort Worth, Texas, $320,000,000 for
non-recurring engineering in support of production of one F-35A, one F-35B, and
one F-35C new flight science test aircraft to replace aging flight science test
aircraft for USA and non-U.S. DOD participants. The F-35 hasn’t even
entered full rate production yet LMT is already marketing and selling
replacement aircraft. Work in Fort Worth, Texas (30%); El Segundo,
California (25%); Orlando, Florida (10%); Nashua, New Hampshire (5%);
Baltimore, Maryland (5%); Warton, UK (20%); Nagoya, Japan (5%).
· Lockheed Martin, Fort
Worth, Texas, $79,955,058 for additional initial spares in support of F-35 (lot
17) deliveries for Air Force, Marine Corps, Navy, FMS, and non-U.S. DOD participants.
· Lockheed Martin, Grand Prairie,
Texas, $164,341,145 for
PAC-3 product assurance and launcher recapitalization.
· Lockheed Martin, Grand Prairie,
Texas, $25,796,949 for
PAC-3 software task. Some FMS (Germany, Japan, South Korea, Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait, Netherlands, Poland, Qatar, Romania, Sweden, UAE, Bahrain, Taiwan).
· Lockheed Martin, Greenville, South Carolina,
$57,104,660 for
engineering and logistics support on Presidential Helicopter avionics and
support equipment for Navy in Patuxent River, Maryland.
· Lockheed Martin, Huntsville,
Alabama, $60,000,000 for
Long Range Hypersonic Weapon ground support equipment. Lockheed Martin has had
some trouble lately with hypersonic missiles.
· Lockheed Martin, King
of Prussia, Pennsylvania, $99,932,000 for continued management and maintenance of the
Tactical Tomahawk Weapons Control System (TTWCS) software product baseline and
system & software documentation. Also provide system design and development
for TTWCS Security and supportability builds and software builds for Navy and FMS.
· Lockheed Martin, Liverpool,
New York, $10,098,530 for three enhancements to the TPY-4 radar system
re: the 3D Expeditionary Long-Range Radar (3DELRR) system.
· Lockheed Martin, Liverpool, New
York, $16,874,321 for
engineering and maintenance services on MK 48 torpedo at Intermediate
Maintenance Activity, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
· Lockheed Martin, Liverpool,
New York, $33,566,331 to support acquisition of the Terrestrial Layer
System (TLS) Brigade Combat Team. Work in Syracuse, New
York.
· Lockheed Martin, Liverpool, New York,
$8,444,082 for
Navy equipment and engineering services. Work in Liverpool, New York (66%);
Millersville, Maryland (33%); and Marion, Massachusetts (1%). Lockheed Martin, Syracuse, New York,
$14,433,528 for Navy systems and associated equipment. Work
in Syracuse, New York (85%); and Clearwater, Florida (15%). Lockheed Martin, Manassas,
Virginia, $143,086,636 for Navy equipment and spares. Work in Manassas,
Virginia (65%); Clearwater, Florida (32%); Syracuse, New York (2%); and Marion,
Florida (1%).
· Lockheed Martin,
Manassas, Virginia, $19,105,050 for Integrated Common Processors (ICP), which “provides
a common Integrated Undersea Surveillance Systems (IUSS) signal processing and
display system software and hardware suite” for Surveillance Towed Array Sensor
System ships and shore sites.
· Lockheed Martin, Moorestown, New
Jersey, $113,427,329 (from $555,192,150 to $668,619,479) for
FMS (Japan): purchase specialized transportation containers and continue
development, program management, engineering, logistics, and radar
integration.
· Lockheed Martin, Moorestown, New
Jersey, $13,174,736 for
AEGIS Combat System Engineering Agent (CSEA) efforts which include the design,
development, integration, test and delivery of Advanced Capability Build 20.
· Lockheed Martin, Moorestown, New Jersey,
$214,500,000 for
early start engineering (planning and advance studies, requirements
development, and performance assessment of the planned modernization and new
combat system capabilities selection) for allies with ships operating AEGIS. Involves
FMS to Canada ($28,082,682) and other countries.
· Lockheed Martin, Moorestown, New Jersey,
$48,518,870 for
AEGIS fielding and sustainment engineering support, software development,
in-service maintenance, integration, and logistics and fielding support for
AEGIS configurations already delivered, or in the process of being delivered,
to the Navy. Work in Moorestown, New Jersey (96%), and Dahlgren, Virginia (4%).
· Lockheed Martin, Orlando,
Florida, $12,192,199 for
engineering and program management support, in support of conducting Integrated
Test Event 12. Include developing a new mission operation flight program build,
providing pre-flight predictions, post-flight analysis of telemetry data,
failure analysis, and modeling and simulation in support of Long-Range
Anti-Ship Missile development, integration, and testing for US Navy.
· Lockheed Martin, Orlando,
Florida, $133,623,631 for
Infrared Receivers (35 for US Navy; 4 for the Air National Guard); processors
(30 for the Navy; 4 for the Air National Guard); and Inertial Measurement Units
(12 for US Navy). These low rate initial production VII systems are for F/A-18
aircraft Infrared Search and Track System Block II upgrades. Work in Orlando,
Florida (73.3%); Santa Barbara, California (18.4%); and Ocala, Florida (8.3%).
· Lockheed Martin, Orlando,
Florida, $18,000,000 for
“all activities associated with the statement of objectives as well as the
contractor's proposal” for Stand-in Attack Weapon, phase 1.3.
· Lockheed Martin, Orlando,
Florida, $186,511,034 for engineering and test vehicle materials re: developing
Air-to-Ground Missile (AGM), Long-Range Anti-Ship Missile (LRASM), C-3 variant
(AGM-158C-3) for Navy. Work in Orlando (95%) and Ocala (2.5%) Florida; Troy,
Alabama (2.5%).
· Lockheed Martin,
Orlando, Florida, $25,000,000 for training (countries new to the F-16 aircraft)
and aircraft maintenance and pilot training (longtime F-16 users). Involves some
FMS to Bahrain.
· Lockheed Martin, Orlando,
Florida, $439,461,775 for air-to-ground missile systems. Some FMS
(Australia, Czech Republic, France, South Korea, Thailand).
· Lockheed Martin,
Owego, New York, $29,582,165 for mission computers (MC): 210 for US Navy, 11
for Australia, 4 for Saudi Arabia, 3 for Denmark; 210 flight management
computers (FMC): 196 for US Navy, 9 for Australia, 3 for Denmark, and 2 for
Saudi Arabia; 40 aircraft wiring kits; 1120 Lynx licenses; 4 Gm5i-MC; and 541
RedHat licenses for US Navy in support of upgrading MCs and FMCs for MH-60R/S helicopters.
Work in Owego, New York (97%); and Clearwater, Florida (3%). FMS portion is $2,513,311.
· Lockheed Martin, Syracuse, New
York, $19,000,000 for
design and qualification testing of submarine electronic warfare equipment.
· Lockheed Martin, Titusville,
Florida, $29,745,730 for
Trident II (D5) production and support of deployed missiles. Work in California
(San Francisco 15.4%, Santa Barbara 4.6%, Sunnyvale 2.6%, Petaluma 2.6%); D.C.
(39.2%); Valley Forge, Pennsylvania (11.9%); Cambridge, UK (5%); Seattle,
Washington (4%); Albuquerque, New Mexico (3.9%); Orlando, Florida (2.7%); Kings
Bay, Georgia (2.6%); Myersville, Maryland (1.8%); Salt Lake City, Utah (1.8%);
Grand Canyon, Arizona (1.2%); locations less than 1% each (0.70% total).
· Loffredo Produce,
Des Moines, Iowa, $126,534,150 for fresh fruits and vegetables for Department of
Agriculture schools in Iowa.
· LS Marine Inc., Inver Grove
Heights, Minnesota, $12,315,624 for
construction of floodplain forests, mudflats, wetlands, duck habitat, and berms
on the Mississippi River, Bay City, Wisconsin.
· Lucianos
Excavation Inc., Taunton, Massachusetts, $8,312,000 for breakwater repairs in Isles of Shoals, New
Hampshire.
· M&M Manufacturing LLC, Lajas, Puerto Rico,
maximum $25,149,600 for
coats for Army and Air Force.
· M1 Support Services, Denton,
Texas, $83,365,717 for
aircraft maintenance services at Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada.
· Magpul Industries Corp., Austin
Texas, $20,076,393 for
gun magazines for Army and Navy.
· Magruder Construction Co., Eolia,
Missouri, $25,000,000 for
Upper Mississippi River restoration.
· Malmrose Heli
Services Inc., North Salt Lake, Utah, $8,133,200 for overhaul of the dampener-flutter on Lockheed
Martin “Blackhawk” helicopters.
· Maloney-Odin A
JV, Novato, California, $30,951,727 to build a seepage cutoff wall in Sacramento,
California.
· Management Services
Group Inc., Virginia Beach, Virginia, $39,710,682 for network, processing, and storage Technical
Insertion 16, Modification 1 production equipment, spares, and engineering support.
Some FMS (Canada) of $6,946,176 (17%).
· Manson Construction Co., Seattle,
Washington, $9,778,170 to
construct a beach berm in Fort Pierce, Florida.
· ManTech Advanced Systems
International Inc., Herndon, Virginia, $22,959,248, to support
Joint Operational Medicine Information Systems Program Management Office’s
Theater Medical Information Program – Joint (TMIP-J) in ending information
system operations in a planned and orderly manner (a.k.a. “sunsetting”), a
suite of IT services and products to support TMIP-J software in sustainment (to
include operating system validation and verification, security updates,
maintenance updates, service pack support, and updates).
· ManTech Advanced
Systems International, Herndon, Virginia, $133,129,075 for analysis to ensure engineering level
performance and design “are meeting campaign, mission, and engagement level
warfighting capability” requirements for Warfare Effectiveness Department for
Navy. Work in Patuxent River, Maryland (95.5%); Arlington, Virginia (2.5%); and
China Lake, California (2%).
· Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT), Cambridge, Massachusetts, $30,000,000 for
basic scientific research into molecular and atomic scale mechanisms
underpinning nanoscience phenomena.
· Matrix Research Inc., Dayton,
Ohio, $49,500,000 for
R&D of Electronics, Apertures, and Machine-Learning Subsystems (DREAMS),
which matures “radio frequency subsystems”, which “will integrate technology
originally developed to enhance radio frequency sensors.”
· Maytag Aircraft LLC, Colorado Springs,
Colorado, $12,355,098 for
government-owned, contractor-operated Alongside Aircraft Refueling services, Naval
Support Activity Souda Bay, Greece.
· MBDA Inc., Arlington, Virginia,
$118,673,894 for
production of Common Anti-Air Module Missile (CAMM) for Multi-Mission Surface
Combatant (MMSC)
ships. Involves FMS to Saudi Arabia. Work in Stevenage, England (70%);
Indian Head, Maryland (18%); Huntsville, Alabama (9%); Arlington, Virginia
(2%); Mayport, Florida (1%).
· MCP Computer Products, San
Marcos, California, $14,871,608 for
Dell laptops and associated equipment for SOCOM Special Operations Forces
Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics (SOF-AT&L) Program Executive Office
Command, Control, Computers, Communications (PEO-C4).
· McRae Industries
Inc., Mount Gilead, North Carolina, maximum $14,258,628 for boots for Navy.
· MDPAC JV, Honolulu, Hawaii,
$100,000,000 for
architect-engineer services for various structural, waterfront, and other
projects at locations in Guam and the Northern Marianas Islands (70%);
Australia (5%); Japan (10%); and Hawaii (15%).
· MDT Armor Corp.,
Auburn, Alabama, $21,913,585 for FMS (Israel): David Urban Light Armored
Vehicles. “Unlike other FMF recipients,
Israel is allowed
to use FMF funds to buy from local companies until 2028, under the latest
US-Israel MOU on defence,” Al-Jazeera reports.
· Mente Systems Inc.
(d.b.a. TheIncLab), McLean, Virginia, for a software suite (mission planning and
situational awareness tools) that automates “many aspects of joint operations.”
Most work done in McLean, Virginia. OTA authorized under 10 U.S. Code §4022(f).
· Michael Baker International &
Huitt-Zollars JV, Dallas, Texas, $12,954,408 for
architect-engineering services in San Antonio, Texas.
· Midnight Sun-Centennial
Kirratchiaq JV LLC, Anchorage, Alaska, $39,600,000 for
maintenance, repair, alteration, and minor construction at Seymour Johnson AFB,
Dare County Range, and Fort Fisher Recreation Area in North Carolina. Civil
Works Contracting LLC, Wilmington, North Carolina, $12,186,334 for
repairs to building 4397 (Telecommunications Information Systems Directorate) at
MCAS Cherry Point, North Carolina. Military & Federal Construction Co.,
Jacksonville, North Carolina, $14,570,382 for
repairs and improvements to Bachelor Enlisted Quarters Building 4310 at MCAS Cherry
Point, North Carolina.
· Military & Federal
Construction Co., Jacksonville, North Carolina, $13,963,687 for
renovation of Bachelor Enlisted Quarters Building M450, Camp Lejeune.
· Mississippi Limestone Corp.,
Friars Point, Mississippi, $17,760,000 for
flood control and channel improvement in Delta, Louisiana.
· MNDPI Pacific JV, Honolulu,
Hawaii, $16,960,148 for
construction of a new concrete pier for submarine repair at Polaris Point
Submarine Base, Piti, Guam.
· MNDPI Pacific JV, Honolulu,
Hawaii, $98,000,000 for
construction projects (structural, waterfront, etc.) in Guam and the Northern
Marianas (70%); Australia (10%); Japan (10%); Hawaii (10%).
· Moran Towing Corp., New Canaan,
Connecticut, $14,683,442 for
11 months of chartering eight tugboats, which will be capable of ship handling,
docking and undocking in the Norfolk harbor and surrounding waters.
· Morrish-Wallace
Construction, Cheboygan, Michigan, $8,954,044 for maintenance dredging in Cleveland, Ohio.
· Motorola, Linthicum
Heights, Maryland, $340,253,391 for Enterprise Land Mobile Radio support: lifecycle
management and sustainment maintenance for Air Force land mobile radio network.
· MSA Safety Sales
LLC, Cranberry Township, Pennsylvania, $35,120,866 for Self-Contained Breathing Apparatuses (SCBA) airpaks,
masks, Chemical Warfare Component (CWC) masks, and Supplied-Air Respirator
(SAR) kits, etc. Work in Murrysville, Pennsylvania.
· MSMM Huitt-Zollars JV, New
Orleans, Louisiana (W518EA-23-D-0001); Scout-Cardno JV LLC, Encinitas,
California (W518EA-23-D-0002); OEI-AECOM
JV, Carrollton, Texas (W518EA-23-D-0003); $35,000,000 for
architect-engineer services for USACE Fort Worth, Texas.
· MullenLowe U.S. Inc., Boston, Massachusetts,
$19,641,340 (from $196,702,403 to $216,343,743) for
Office of People Analytics (OPA) marketing
and advertising services, including streaming video/radio and social media
placements in support of DOD and the All-Volunteer Force.
· MVL USA Inc., Lansing, Michigan,
$25,000,000 for
construction, repair, and maintenance for USACE Wiesbaden, Germany.
· Nakupuna Solutions LLC,
Arlington, Virginia, $12,024,072 to
upgrade the communication infrastructure at Marine Corps Logistics Base (MCLB)
Albany, Georgia. The project is called “Base Area Network Transport and
Enterprise Unified Communications Voice.”
· National Center for Defense
Manufacturing and Machining, Blairsville, Pennsylvania, $8,474,742 for
developing auxiliary power units for tactical wheeled or tracked vehicles and
stationary power generation.
· National Center for Defense
Manufacturing and Machining, Blairsville, Pennsylvania, $9,197,165 to
develop “advanced manufacturing technologies and techniques required to
manufacture autonomous liquid hydrogen refueling systems, at scale and rate,
while enabling lower production cost, reduced manufacturing time and enhanced
process repeatability.”
· Native Instinct LLC, Boynton Beach, Florida
($12,500,000), was added
to the contract for laboratory equipment, accessories and consumables for the DLA
Electronic Catalog.
· NCS/EML SB JV LLC, Louisville, Kentucky,
$12,680,688 for
BOSS at NAS Whiting Field and outlying areas. Work in Florida (85%) and Alabama
(15%).
· Nemean Trideum JV
LLC, Sierra Vista, Arizona, $49,156,668 to expedite the procurement process and identify
cost, schedule, and performance risks “as technology is adopted at major range
test facility bases.”
· Next Level Relief
LLC, Onalaska, Wisconsin, $25,596,290 for full food services at Fort Knox, Kentucky.
· NikSoft Systems Corp.,
Reston, Virginia, $12,514,843 for six months of program management,
engineering, and operations support (for DHA Solutions Delivery Division, Defense
Health HQ, Falls Church, Virginia) regarding emigration & sustainment of
legacy systems while the replacement technology lifecycle support contract is
completed.
· Noble Supply and Logistics,
Rockland, Massachusetts, $90,000,000 (a 486-day bridge contract) for
facilities maintenance, repair and operations supplies. Work in Alabama,
Florida, and Mississippi.
· NorcaTec LLC, Garden City, New
York, $12,961,476 for
arm assembly pivot units for US Army.
· Norfolk Naval Shipyard,
Portsmouth, Virginia (N4215823DS001)
· Northbank Civil and Marine Inc.,
Vancouver, Washington, $10,962,500 to
rehabilitate the drainage, unwatering, and equalization system at McNary Lock
and Dam, Umatilla, Oregon. Fiscal 2023 Bonneville Power Administration funds
($500,000) obligated.
· Northrop Grumman, Annapolis, Maryland,
$14,845,901 for
some repair, maintenance, and modification on AN/AQS-24 Sonar Mine Detecting
Set, Common Post Mission Analysis, and Test Equipment for deployed airborne
mine countermeasures systems.
· Northrop Grumman,
Chandler, Arizona, $153,000,000 (from $353,788,276 to $506,788,276) to procure, manufacture, and assemble hardware
and perform required testing regarding acquisition of five subscale MBRV-11
vehicles (Modified Ballistic Re-Entry Vehicle-11) for the Missile Defense
Agency. Also support launch vehicle integration & execution, and pre- and
post-flight activities. Work in Chandler, Arizona, and Redstone Arsenal,
Alabama.
· Northrop Grumman, Chandler,
Arizona, $48,192,076 for
continuing (28 Feb through 31 July 2023) to develop and refine the
corporation’s Glide Phase Interceptor concept during the Materiel Solutions
Analysis Phase. Raytheon, Tucson, Arizona, $43,251,185 for continuing (28 Feb
through 31 July 2023) to develop and refine their Glide Phase Interceptor
concept during the Materiel Solutions Analysis Phase. Work in Tucson, Arizona;
El Dorado Hills, California; Aurora, Colorado; Tewksbury, Woburn, and Andover,
Massachusetts; and Huntsville, Alabama. Other Transaction Authority provided by
10 U.S. Code 4022 through the Enhanced Hypersonic Defense Broad Agency
Announcement with Glide Phase Interceptor Special Topic, HQ0851-21-S-0001.
· Northrop Grumman,
Charlottesville, Virginia, $15,723,200 for surface and submarine inertial sensor module
(ISM) configurations and material for engineering support for the navigation
program.
· Northrop Grumman,
El Segundo, California, $7,839,595 for repair of 33 items for the main landing gear
door and leading edge extension spoiler for F/A-18 aircraft for NAVSUP Weapon
Systems Support Integrated Weapon Support Team.
· Northrop Grumman,
Linthicum Heights, Maryland, $128,455,740 for Active Electronically Scanned Array radars (48
radars, 4 initial spare kits, and 2 readiness spares kits) for Air Force F-16
aircraft.
· Northrop Grumman,
Linthicum Heights, Maryland, $235,904,196 for Surface Electronic Warfare Improvement
Program (SEWIP) Hemisphere Systems. See contracting announcement for numerous
work locations.
·
Northrop Grumman, Linthicum, Maryland, $17,000,000 for
three Ground/Air Task Oriented Radar (G/ATOR) Gallium Arsenide to Gallium
Nitride retrofit kits.
This upgrade is marketed as reducing the radar’s size, weight, and energy
use.
· Northrop Grumman,
McLean, Virginia, $13,900,000 for mission command training and technical,
exercise, simulation, and organizational support. Work at Fort Hood, Texas.
· Northrop Grumman, McLean,
Virginia, $464,399,742 for
operations and sustainment of Battlefield Airborne Communications Node (BACN)
E-11A subsystems and ancillary equipment and to establish a main operating base
at an Air Force base in the continental US for BACN E-11A fleet to support
training and deployed operations.
· Northrop Grumman,
Melbourne, Florida, $10,517,960 for safety, logistics, engineering, and depot
support for the Airborne Laser Mine Detection System (ALMDS).
· Northrop Grumman, Melbourne,
Florida, $15,509,880 for
overhaul of power amplifier modules in support of E-2D aircraft. Work in
Woodland Hills, California (95%), and Liverpool, New York (5%), which is just
outside of Syracuse.
· Northrop Grumman, Melbourne, Florida,
$25,386,631 for
fabrication and installation support to retrofit Delta System Software
Configuration 4.0 in E-2D aircraft. Work in Dallas, Texas (57%); Melbourne,
Florida (11%); Boulder, Colorado (9%); Norfolk, Virginia (8%); Salisbury,
Maryland (5%); Ronkonkoma, New York (3%); locations within continental U.S.
(7%).
· Northrop Grumman,
Melbourne, Florida, $49,961,216 for non-recurring engineering, product support,
and production cut in support, in support of E-2D aircraft (lot 11). Work in
Melbourne, Florida (24.8%); St. Augustine, Florida (20.1%); Liverpool, New York
(18.8%); El Segundo, California (12.1%); Indianapolis, Indiana (4.3%); Menlo
Park, California (3.4%); Rolling Meadows, Illinois (1.8%); Aire-sur-l'Adour,
France (1.7%); Edgewood, New York (1.1%); Marlboro, Massachusetts (1%); Woodland
Hills, California (1%); Greenlawn, New York (1%); various locations within
continental U.S. (8.9%).
· Northrop Grumman,
Northridge, California, $14,966,439 for repair of two items that are part of the AAR-47 program.
· Northrop Grumman, Northridge,
California, $18,000,000 for
“all activities associated with the statement of objectives as well as the
contractor's proposal” for Stand-in Attack Weapon, phase 1.3.
· Northrop Grumman, Radford,
Virginia (W519TC-23-F-0090) and Global Military Products Inc. (GMP), Tampa, Florida (W519TC-23-F-0091)
$522,279,434 for
procurement and delivery of 155 mm rounds.
· Northrop Grumman, Rolling
Meadows, Illinois, $92,001,342 for
weapon replaceable assemblies hardware, including threat warning sensors,
control indicator unit replaceable replacements, Large Aircraft Infrared
Countermeasure (LAIRCM) processor units, Guardian laser transmitter assemblies
(GLTA) and shipping containers, and more. See contracting announcement for more
details. Work in Rolling Meadows, Illinois (43%); Goleta, California (21%);
Longmont, Colorado (9%); Apopka, Florida (8%); Blacksburg, Virginia (7%);
Boulder Colorado (3%); Carlsbad, California (3%); Verona, Wisconsin (2%);
Ashburn, Virginia (2%); Salt Lake City, Utah (1%); Tripp City, Ohio (1%).
· Northrop Grumman,
San Diego, California, $57,403,706 for continued sustainment, engineering,
logistics, and test support on MQ-4C “Triton” air vehicles, mission control,
and operator training systems; technical support from field service reps; and
reach-back engineering support for U.S. Navy and Australia. Work in Patuxent
River, Maryland (36.5%); San Diego, California, California (22.5%);
Jacksonville (7.7%) and Mayport (6.5%), Florida; Baltimore, Maryland (5.3%);
various location within continental U.S. (CONUS) (8.8%); and various location
outside CONUS (12.7%).
· NSOD JV, Rocklin, California, $7,638,921 to
strengthen a levee by addition of a seepage cutoff wall and the inclusion of
seepage berms, Marysville, California.
· nTSI LLC (a joint
venture between nou Systems, Inc. and Modern Technology Solutions, Inc.),
Huntsville, Alabama, total value $637,123,220 to
support MDA with “threat systems engineering; advanced technology; directed
energy; hypersonic defense engineering; space systems engineering; U.S-Israeli
Cooperative Program engineering; cybersecurity systems engineering; test analyses
and reporting; lethality, hit assessment/kill assessment, and collateral
effects and consequence management; and, concurrent test, training, and
operations engineering. Work at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama; Fort Belvoir,
Virginia; Kirtland AFB, New Mexico; Schriever Space Force Base, Colorado; Tel
Aviv, Israel.
· Ocean
Shipholdings Inc., Houston, Texas, $59,416,597 for worldwide operation and maintenance of 7 government-owned
Oceanographic Survey (T-AGS) vessels: U.S. Naval Ship (USNS) Waters (T-AGS 45),
USNS Pathfinder (T-AGS 60), USNS Bowditch (T-AGS 62), USNS Henson (T-AGS 63),
USNS Bruce C. Heezen (T-AGS 64), USNS Mary Sears (T-AGS 65), USNS Marie Tharp
(T-AGS 66).
· Olympus America Inc., Waltham,
Massachusetts, $22,310,158 for
aircraft engine borescope kits, spare insertion tube modules, and repairs (five
years of production 10 years of repair). Work in Webster, Texas (southeast of
Houston).
· Optima Government Solutions LLC,
Alexandria, Virginia, $90,132,680 for
services supporting the planning, operation, sustainment, and modernization of IT
of Air Force Reserve Command at Warner Robins Air Force Base, Georgia.
· Oshkosh Defense LLC, Oshkosh,
Wisconsin, $141,018,624 for
A2 Medium Tactical Trucks and Medium Trailers.
· Oshkosh Defense, Oshkosh,
Wisconsin, $11,464,117 for
tire and wheel assemblies. Work in New Jersey.
· Oshkosh Defense, Oshkosh,
Wisconsin, $84,953,107 for
Joint Light Tactical Vehicle vehicles. Oshkosh Defense, Oshkosh, Wisconsin,
$10,059,240 for
Joint Light Tactical Vehicle field service representative support.
· Owl Cyber Defense
Solutions (owned by private equity), Columbia, Maryland, $35,000,000 for Secure Collaborative Technology (SCTECH)
software and hardware.
· P.J.K. Food Service LLC (d.b.a. Keany
Produce & Gourmet), Landover, Maryland, $284,250,000 for
fresh fruits and vegetables for US Army, Marine Corps, and Department of
Agriculture schools.
· Pacific Propeller International
LLC, Kent, Washington, $50,900,000 for
overhaul and repair of the C-130 propeller (54H60) for Air Force and multiple FMS
customers. Fiscal 2023 working capital funds ($771,800) are obligated at the
time of award “to address the barrel cracking issue, with performance being
completed within 90 days.” Includes FMS to multiple countries.
· Palantir, Palo
Alto, California, $18,516,667 for Project Brown Heron platform, which supports three mission areas
to automatically ingest data across Department of the Air Force to inform
personnel decisions, planning and operations, and space situational awareness
and command & control.
· Palantir, Palo
Alto, California, $60,007,256 for R&D in the area of artificial
intelligence and machine learning.
· Parsons, Centreville, Virginia,
$16,589,847 for
collection, processing, exploitation, and dissemination of high-fidelity
signature data.
· Parsons, Centreville, Virginia; HDR
Engineering, Colorado Springs, Colorado; Michael Baker International, Moon
Township, Pennsylvania; WSP - MOCA JV, D.C.; Jacobs, Arlington, Virginia; Pond-Woolpert
LLC JV, Dayton, Ohio; Urban Collaborative LLC, Eugene, Oregon; Alliance
Consulting Group, Alexandria, Virginia; John Gallup & Associates - The
Schreifer Group JV, Marietta, Georgia $59,000,000 for
architectural and engineering services for USACE Engineering and Support
Center, Huntsville, Alabama.
· Parsons, Pasadena,
California, $164,000,000 for design completion and construction of a new
explosives decomposition chamber facility in Kingsport, Tennessee.
· Parsons, Torrance,
California, $14,439,425 for “manifesting services and integration
services” to support up to six National Security Space Launch missions.
· Pegasus Support Services LLC,
Woodstock, Georgia, $8,523,919 for
operations and maintenance at Fort Stewart and Hunter Army Airfield.
· Pegasus Support Services,
Woodstock, Georgia, $17,111,760 for
operation and maintenance support at Fort Stewart and Hunter Army Airfield, Georgia.
· Pennsylvania State University
Applied Research Lab (APL),
University Park, Pennsylvania, $99,800,000 for
research and analysis support.
· Pentaq Manufacturing Corp., Sabana Grande,
Puerto Rico, maximum $14,255,460 for
blouses and trousers for Marine Corps.
· Peraton (has made
some acquisitions lately), Herndon, Virginia,
$65,802,242 for engineering services support for AN/ALM 280
enhanced automated special test equipment, AN/ALQ-161A subsystem software
configuration, engineering qualification, integrated facility for avionics
testing, and more. Work at Robins AFB, Georgia.
· Peraton Labs Inc., Basking Ridge,
New Jersey, $7,913,687 for
phase 2 work on DARPA’s Wideband Secure and Protected Emitter and Receiver
(WiSPER). Work in Basking Ridge, New Jersey (89%); San Diego, California (10%);
and Point Mugu, California (1%).
· Peraton, Loveland,
Colorado, $144,447,936 for background investigation fieldwork nationwide
for DCSA.
· Philips Electronics, Eindhoven,
Netherlands, $9,999,801 to
transition the Rapid Analysis of Threat Exposure (RATE)
pilot program to an operational environment. Rapid Analysis of Threat Exposure
is “an infectious disease prediction algorithm that works with commercial
off-the-shelf wearables and was validated against COVID-19 through over 11,500
DOD research participants to predict infections 2+ days prior to symptom onset.”
Work at Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) facilities in Mountain View, California;
Boston, Massachusetts; Austin, Texas; and the Pentagon in Virginia.
· Phillips 66 Co., Houston, Texas
(SPE602-23-D-0471, $671,588,842); Petromax Refining Co., Houston, Texas
(SPE602-23-D-0468, $644,512,680); ExxonMobil Corp., Spring, Texas
(SPE602-23-D-0466, $345,327,694); Valero Marketing and Supply Co., San Antonio,
Texas (SPE602-23-D-0473, $313,652,220); Placid Refining Co. LLC, Port Allen,
Louisiana (SPE602-23-D-0465, $310,696,607); BPPNA GOT/IST, Chicago, Illinois
(SPE602-23-D-0459, $244,391,343); Lazarus Energy Holdings LLC, Houston, Texas
(SPE602-23-D-0464, $167,665,392); Alon USA LP, Brentwood, Tennessee
(SPE602-23-D-0458, $129,674,419); Wynnewood Energy Co. LLC, Sugarland, Texas
(SPE602-23-D-0472, $126,955,923); Husky Marketing & Supply Co., Dublin,
Ohio (SPE602-23-D-0469, $108,295,200); Marathon Petroleum Co. LP, Findlay, Ohio
(SPE602-23-D-0460, $108,185,259); Petromax LLC, Houston, Texas
(SPE602-23-D-0467, $107,487,967); BP Products North America Inc., Chicago,
Illinois (SPE602-23-D-0462, $100,177,389); Calumet Shreveport Fuels LLC,
Indianapolis, Indiana (SPE602-23-D-0461, $89,590,343); Epic Aviation LLC,
Salem, Oregon (SPE602-23-D-0462, $43,299,320); Hermes Consolidated LLC, doing
business as Wyoming Refining Co., Rapid City, South Dakota (SPE602-23-D-0475,
$40,054,942); Associated Energy Group Houston, Texas (SPE602-23-D-0474,
$14,691,991); VetJet Fuels LLC, Dallas, Texas (SPE602-23-D-0463, $9,920,390); for
various types of fuel. Performance in Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas,
Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, North
Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas and Wyoming.
· Phillips Corp., Federal Division,
Hanover, Maryland, $8,958,832 to
establish and manage “a preventive and corrective maintenance program that will
plan, schedule, and provide qualified personnel for preventative maintenance,
corrective maintenance, and calibration analysis for up to 600 pieces of
industrial plant equipment located in the controlled industrial area of Norfolk
Naval Shipyard” re: delivery of carriers, submarines, and barges in Portsmouth,
Virginia.
· Pine Bluff Sand and Gravel Co.,
White Hall, Arizona, $18,470,195 for
dredging in New Orleans and Black Hawk, Louisiana.
· Point Blank Enterprises Inc.,
Pompano Beach, Florida, $20,937,840 for
the Modular Lightweight Load-carrying Equipment 4000 rucksack set for Army and
Air Force. Work in Puerto Rico.
· Polskie Zaklady Lotnicze Sp.
z.o.o., (a Lockheed Martin subsidiary incorporated in Poland), Mielec,
Poland, $30,373,834.85 for
two new M28 aircraft,
training, spares package, medical equipment, and six months of field service representatives.
Work in Mielec, Poland. Includes ferry flight of aircraft from Mielec to Kathmandu,
Nepal. Contract involves foreign military financing (FMF) to Nepal.
· Pond Constructors Inc., Peachtree
Corners, Georgia, $12,562,045 for
recurring maintenance and minor repair of petroleum systems in Alaska
(Anchorage, Fairbanks, Delta Junction, Amchitka, King Salmon), Hawaii (Hilo, Wahiawa,
Honolulu, Waianae, Ewa Beach, Pearl Harbor, Kaneohe, Kekaha, Waimea) and
Peachtree Corners, Georgia.
· Pond Constructors, Peachtree
Corners, Georgia, $16,000,000 to
maintain and repair federally-funded and DLA-Energy capitalized petroleum
systems and facilities in Alaska (Anchorage, Fairbanks, Delta Junction,
Amchitka, King Salmon), Hawaii (Hilo, Wahiawa, Honolulu, Waianae, Ewa Beach,
Pearl Harbor, Kaneohe, Kekaha, Waimea); and Peachtree Corners, Georgia.
· Pond-CDM Smith JV LP, Peachtree
Corners, Georgia, $42,578,765 for
architect-engineer services (facility sustainment, restoration, modernization)
for Pacific Air Forces civil engineering squadrons at Kunsan Air Base and Osan
AB, South Korea; Misawa AB, Yokota AB, Kadena AB, Japan; Andersen Air Force
Base, Guam; Eielson AFB and PACAF Regional Support Center, Alaska.
· PPI Technical Services, Auburn,
Washington, $13,373,411 for
FMS (Indonesia): technical and support services, including equipment
procurement, facility modification, technical training, and management assistance.
Work at Husein Sastranegara Air Force Base, Bandung, Indonesia.
· Premier
ProduceOne Inc., Dayton, Ohio, maximum $343,225,875 for fresh fruits and vegetables for Air Force,
Air National Guard, Coast Guard, Navy, and Ohio schools.
· Prism Maritime
LLC, Chesapeake, Virginia, $250,803,495 for technical and engineering support services (install,
modify, upgrade combat systems) for the Alteration Installation Team, Navy
Surface Warfare Center Port Hueneme Division (NSWC PHD). Work at shore sites,
land-based test facilities, shipyards, and aboard ships in port or at sea for
US Navy, Coast Guard, and FMS locations.
· Pro-Mark Services Inc., West Fargo,
North Dakota; Greenstone Construction Inc., Fargo, North Dakota; West Coast
Contractors Inc., Coos Bay, Oregon; Razor Consulting Solutions Inc., Watford
City, North Dakota; North Sky Construction LLC, New Braunfels, Texas; for
construction with a total ceiling of $75,000,000 for a streamlined means to
complete maintenance, repair, design, and construction projects (estimated
between $25,000 and $9,999,999) at Grand Forks AFB and Cavalier Space Force
Station, North Dakota, over five years.
· Professional
Contract Services Inc., Austin, Texas, $14,855,802 for BOSS at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. Dale Rogers Training Center Inc., Oklahoma
City, Oklahoma, $139,055,951 for custodial services at Tinker AFB, Oklahoma.
· Progeny Systems Corp., Manassas,
Virginia, $16,439,703 for
engineering and technical services for Navy submarines and aircraft carriers.
Work in Manassas (30%) and Chesapeake (4%), Virginia; Groton, Connecticut
(25%); Bremerton, Washington (15%); Las Vegas, Nevada (10%); Cleveland, Ohio
(10%); Pearl Harbor, Hawaii (2%); San Diego, California (2%); Kings Bay,
Georgia (2%).
· Propper International Inc., Cabo
Rojo, Puerto Rico, $100,389,285 for
backpacks and related components for the Marine Corps.
· Puerto Rico Apparel Manufacturing
Corp. (PRAMA), Mayaguez, Puerto Rico, maximum $13,198,731 for
coats and trousers for Army and Air Force.
· QinetiQ, Lorton,
Virginia, $92,658,048 for analysis, development, demonstration,
testing, acquisition, transition, integration, initial deployment, sustainment,
and training of Digital Night Vision Technology and related equipment and
systems.
· R. A. Burch Construction Co.
Inc., Ramona, California, $44,243,588 to
construct a simulations center at Fort Irwin, California.
· R. Lopez de Azua & Associates
Inc., San Juan, Puerto Rico (W912EP-23-D-0001); Javier E Bidot & Associates
P.S.C., Caguas, Puerto Rico (W912EP-23-D-0002); Ruth L. Trujillo Rodriguez
Professional Land Surveyors, San Juan, Puerto Rico (W912EP-23-D-0003);
$30,000,000 for
architect-engineer services for USACE Jacksonville, Florida.
· Radiance Technologies Inc.,
Huntsville, Alabama, $14,885,095 for
test and engineering support for several developmental high energy laser weapon
systems at Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico.
· Radiance
Technologies, Huntsville, Alabama, $14,947,173 for Secure Advanced Framework for Simulation and
Modeling (SAFE-SiM) program, phase 3, for DARPA. Work in
Huntsville, Alabama (40%); Dayton, Ohio (20%); San Diego, California (5%);
Boston, Massachusetts (5%); Rome, New York (10%); Basking Ridge, New Jersey
(10%); Albuquerque, New Mexico (10%).
·
RAM-System GmbH, Ottobrunn, Germany, €41,059,056 for
Rolling Airframe Missile round pack recertification (Block II, fiscal 2023) for
the German Navy under a cooperative memorandum of understanding (MOU). Work in Germany:
Ueberlingen (36%), Schrobenhausen (34%), Roethenbach (15%), Ottobrunn (10%),
Ulm (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.
· RAMSys GmbH, Ottobrunn, Germany,
€10,639,888 for
development of a hardware demonstrator of the Launcher Servo Control Unit re:
Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) for USA and Germany. Work in Ulm (94%) and
Ottobrunn (6%), Germany.
· Raytheon (Collins Aerospace), Cedar
Rapids, Iowa, $13,488,380 for
two modernized Very Low Frequency High Power Transmit Set production kits, 63
spares, 10 production support assets, and technical data for E-6B Mercury
aircraft. Work in Richardson, Texas.
· Raytheon (Collins Aerospace),
Cedar Rapids, Iowa, $23,353,019 for
airborne subsystem pods (68), remote range units (6), common ground systems
(2), portable support equipment subsystems (4), site surveys (3), and one
contract data requirements list for Tactical Combat Training System II (TCTS)
full rate production. Work in Cedar Rapids, Iowa (55%); Ft. Walton Beach,
Florida (38%); Richardson, Texas (7%).
· Raytheon (Collins Aerospace), Cedar
Rapids, Iowa, $271,652,902 for
ARC-210 RT-2036(C) Networked Communications Airborne Radios (a maximum of 2,390
Generation 6) and associated ancillary equipment and support.
· Raytheon (Collins Aerospace), Cedar
Rapids, Iowa, $33,256,900 for
more work regarding E-2D Hawkeye training systems, as well as associated
technical data, computer software, and computer software documentation.
Includes Weapons Systems Trainers Delta Software System Configuration (DSSC)-4
retrofits and associated training, Common Open Research Emulator Simulation (CORESIM)
development, system trouble report corrections on the flight and tactics trainers,
DSSC-5 aircrew hardware development, personal computer simulator concurrency
gaps, and procurement of 10 aircraft flight management computer functional
equivalent units. Work in Virginia: Norfolk (70%) and Sterling (30%).
· Raytheon (Collins Aerospace),
Windsor Locks, Connecticut, $135,003,185 for
manufacturing and engineering support of the NP2000 eight-blade propeller,
electronic propeller control system, and to procure initial spares for the Air
Force C-130.
· Raytheon Collins
Aerospace (Hamilton Sundstrand Corp.), Windsor Locks, Connecticut, $23,623,733 for repair in support of NP2000 eight blade
propeller and electronic propeller control system on Air Force C-130 aircraft.
· Raytheon Pratt and Whitney, East
Hartford, Connecticut, $72,791,833 for
work on the troubled
F-35 engine: “non-recurring engineering in support of early identification,
development, and qualification of corrections to potential and actual F135
propulsion system operational issues, to include safety and
reliability/maintainability problems identified through fleet usage.” Also
provides continued “engine maturation, evaluates component life limits based on
operational experience, improves operational readiness, and reduces engine maintenance
and life cycle costs…” Work in East Hartford, Connecticut (90%), and
Indianapolis, Indiana (10%).
· Raytheon
Technologies’ Pratt and Whitney, East Hartford, Connecticut, $212,681,084 for continued recurring sustainment, program
management, financial and administrative, propulsion integration, engineering,
material management, configuration management, software sustainment, security
management, equipment management and product management support activities for U.S.
Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, non-U.S. DOD partners, and FMS. USA work in East
Hartford (40%) and Windsor Locks (6%), Connecticut; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
(21%); Indianapolis, Indiana (12%); West Palm Beach, Florida (6%); Fort Worth,
Texas (1%). Overseas work in Brekstad, Norway (4%); Leeuwarden, Netherlands
(3%); Iwakuni, Japan (3%); Williamtown, Australia (2%); Cameri, Italy (1%);
Marham, UK (1%). FMS funds ($25,690,292) and non-U.S. DOD participant funds ($53,300,944)
allocated.
· Raytheon, Andover,
Massachusetts, $1,225,368,567 for FMS (Switzerland): PATRIOT Missile
System fire units. Work in Andover and Tewksbury, Massachusetts; Manchester,
New Hampshire; West Plains, Missouri; Chambersburg, Pennsylvania; Las Cruces,
New Mexico; Altenstadt, Germany; and Switzerland.
· Raytheon, Andover, Massachusetts,
$17,355,794 for
Fair Share Sustainment operations. Corrected on 20 Jan 2023 to be awarded on 19
Jan 2023, not 17 Jan.
· Raytheon, Aurora, Colorado, $15,047,091 for
additional (9 months) development contractor support for Next Generation
Operational Control Segment (OCX).
· Raytheon, East
Hartford, Connecticut, $14,426,281 for Contractor Engineering and Technical Services
(CETS) personnel who will work with Air Force military and civilian personnel “to
become self-sufficient in the maintenance of aircraft systems.” Work at Air
National Guard and foreign military bases. Involves FMS (Egypt, Indonesia,
Jordan, South Korea, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Thailand).
· Raytheon, El
Segundo, California, $32,974,039 for two Active Electronically Scanned Array radar
system weapon repairable assemblies (WRA), for a total quantity of 54 WRA for F/A-18
aircraft. Work in Forest, MS.
· Raytheon, El
Segundo, California, $650,433,839 for the production and delivery Next Generation
Jammer (NGJ) Mid-Band (MB): 11 ship sets for U.S. Navy and four for Australia. Work
in Forest, Mississippi (50%); Dallas, Texas (37%); labor surplus area El
Segundo, California (10%); and Andover, Massachusetts (3%). Work expected to be
completed by October 2026.
·
Raytheon, Huntsville, Alabama, $31,389,031 for Army Integrated Air and Missile Defense Plug
& Fight A-Kit.
· Raytheon, Largo,
Florida, $8,191,218 for design agent and engineering support for the
Cooperative Engagement Capability (CEC) program. Work in Saint Petersburg (60%)
and Largo (30%), Florida; and San Diego, California (10%).
· Raytheon, Marlborough, Massachusetts,
$13,400,000 to
modify two terminals in support of Air Force Nuclear Weapons Center.
· Raytheon,
Marlborough, Massachusetts, $619,242,288 for hardware production of AN/SPY-6(V) radar. Work
in Andover, Massachusetts (29%); Scottsdale, Arizona (14%); San Diego,
California (12%); Sykesville, Maryland (10%); Syracuse, New York (8%); Cerritos,
California (5%); Stafford Springs, Connecticut (5%); Huntsville, Alabama (3%);
Indianapolis, Indiana (3%); Riverside, California (3%); Dallas, Texas (2%); Eau
Claire, Wisconsin (2%); Portsmouth, Rhode Island (2%); and Tulsa, Oklahoma (2%).
· Raytheon, Marlborough,
Massachusetts, $7,960,671 to repair and test the AEGIS SPY-1D(V) Final
Power Amplifiers. Work in Chesapeake, Virginia (61%); Mayport, Florida (13%); Marlborough
(25%) and Andover (1%), Massachusetts.
· Raytheon, Marlborough,
Massachusetts, $8,596,129 for
ordnance alteration installation services and engineering and technical
services re: MK99 Fire Control and AN/SPY-1 Radar Transmitter systems. Work in
Yokosuka, Japan (25%); Moorestown, New Jersey (25%); Marlborough, Massachusetts
(20%); Norfolk, Virginia (14%); Everett, Washington (12%); Mayport, Florida
(2%); Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1%); San Diego, California (1%). Some FY2023
FMS funds ($708,466) obligated.
· Raytheon, McKinney, Texas,
$77,020,874 for
FMS (Germany): APY-10 radar production kits (five) and non-recurring
engineering “to address obsolescence issues within the Receiver Exciter
Processors and Radar Data Centers” for Boeing P-8A Poseidon aircraft. Work in
McKinney, Texas (85.5%); Andover, Massachusetts (5.1%); Clearwater, Florida
(2.4%); Black Mountain, North Carolina (2%); Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1.4%);
St Petersburg, Florida (1%); and locations within continental U.S. (2.6%).
· Raytheon, McKinney, Texas,
$8,580,009 for
infrared equipment components in the MK 46 Gun Weapon System. Work in El
Segundo, California (75%), and McKinney, Texas (25%).
· Raytheon,
Tewksbury, Massachusetts, $15,043,848 for technical refresh and a procurement of spares
to support DDG 1000-class combat system activation, sustainment, and modernization.
Work in Portsmouth, Rhode Island (44%); Largo, Florida (29%); Marlborough,
Massachusetts (19%); Nashua, New Hampshire (8%).
· Raytheon, Tucson,
Arizona, $113,628,201 for MK 15 close-in weapon system (CIWS) upgrades
and conversions, system overhauls, and associated hardware. Work in Louisville,
Kentucky (37%); Tucson, Arizona (13%); Mason, Ohio (6%); Williston, Vermont
(5%); Hauppauge, New York (2%); Joplin, Missouri (2%); Radford, Virginia (2%);
Palo Alto, California (2%); Andover, Massachusetts (2%); Van Nuys (1%), Anaheim
(1%), Valencia (1%), Irvine (1%), California; Tempe, Arizona (1%) other
locations each less than 1% (24%).
· Raytheon, Tucson,
Arizona, $13,383,172 for air-to-air launchers (ATAL), item unique
identification registration for ATAL systems, and other services and supplies. Work
in Tucson, Arizona (66%), and Dine, New Mexico (34%).
· Raytheon, Tucson,
Arizona, $19,112,607 for engineering and technical support of Standard
Missiles 2 and 6 (SM-2/6). Some FMS to Japan ($1,553,181; 8%); Australia ($944,500;
5%); Netherlands ($569,700; 3%); South Korea ($563,250; 3%); Taiwan ($405,000;
2%); Germany ($228,055; 1%)
· Raytheon, Tucson, Arizona,
$208,736,138 for
FMS (Romania): Naval Strike Missile Coastal Defense System. Work in
Kongsberg, Norway (60%); Tucson, Arizona (34%); Schrobenhausen, Germany (2%);
Raufoss, Norway (1%); various other locations each less than 1% (3%).
· Raytheon, Tucson, Arizona,
$21,596,222 to
finalize the design, integration, and to conduct test & evaluation re:
Maritime Strike Tomahawk (MST) phase 2. Includes joint flight test, which will
“provide additional data for MST integration of hardware and software.”
· Raytheon, Tucson,
Arizona, $234,068,917 for the Over-the-Horizon Weapon System. Work in
Kongsberg, Norway (69%); Tucson, Arizona (12%); Schrobenhausen, Germany (5%);
Raufoss, Norway (4%); Huntsville, Arkansas (4%); Louisville, Kentucky (3%); De
Soto, Texas (2%); and other locations each less than one percent (1%).
· Raytheon, Tucson,
Arizona, $320,276,785 for “StormBreaker” (GBU-53/B) bomb production:
assembled weapons and containers.
· Raytheon, Tucson, Arizona,
$34,126,317 for
engineering, training, analysis/studies, integration, test event, and program
management review support, in support of the Joint Standoff Weapon Program for US
Navy and FMS. Work in Tucson, Arizona (65%); Sydney, Australia (8%); Poznan,
Poland (6%); Tampere, Finland (5%); Khamis, Saudi Arabia (5%); Doha, Qatar
(5%); Hualien City, Taiwan (4%); Souda Bay, Greece (1%); and Eskisehir, Turkey
(1%).
· Raytheon, Tucson,
Arizona, $43,574,473 for Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) block 2B
Guided Missile Round Pack requirements. Work in Ottobrunn, Germany (25%);
Glenrothes Fife, Scotland (4%); and USA [[Tucson, Arizona (58%); Cincinnati,
Ohio (6%); Bedford, New Hampshire (4%); Keyser, West Virginia (2%); Joplin,
Missouri (1%)].
· Raytheon, Tucson,
Arizona, $55,076,756 for fiscal 2023 guided missile assemblies,
shipping containers, and spare parts in support of Evolved Seasparrow Missile
(ESSM) block 2 full rate production. Work in Tucson, Arizona (42%); Raufoss,
Norway (14%); Edinburgh, Australia (7%); San Jose, California (7%);
Mississauga, Canada (5%); Ottobrunn, Germany (4%); Cambridge, Canada (3%); Nashua,
New Hampshire (3%); Hengelo, Netherlands (2%); Koropi Attica, Greece (2%);
Torrance, California (2%); Canton, New York (1%); Ankara, Turkey (1%); Grenaa,
Denmark (1%); West Lake Village, California (1%); various other locations each
less than 1% (5%).
· Raytheon, Tuscon, Arizona,
$219,867,079 for
production of 155 mm Excalibur Increment Ib projectiles. Work in Anniston,
Alabama; East Camden, Gilbert, Phoenix and Tuscon, Arizona; Chino, Healdsburg,
Inglewood, Santa Ana and Valencia, California; Woodridge, Illinois; Cedar
Rapids, Iowa; Cookstown, New Jersey; Farmington, New Mexico; Joplin, Missouri;
Cincinnati, Ohio; McAlester, Oklahoma; Lansdale, Pennsylvania; Trenton, Texas;
Salt Lake City, Utah; Karlskoga, Sweden; Glenrothes, Scotland; and Southway,
Plymouth, UK. Some FMS to Jordan.
· Raytheon’s Collins Aerospace (d.b.a. Goodrich
Corp.), Westford, Massachusetts, $29,885,260 for
training multiple countries on the DB-110/MS-110 RECCE pod and associated
systems. Initial airborne and ground segment training at Collins in Westford,
USA, and Malvern, UK. Later training at designated training locations as
outlined in applicable task orders through 2026.
· Raytheon’s Collins Aerospace, Windsor Locks,
Connecticut, $22,799,684 for
80 hardware kits and installation kits, and two component kits with line
replaceable units re: Modern Pump Housing (MPH) installs on E-2 and C-2
aircraft propellers for Navy.
· Raytheon/Lockheed Martin Javelin
JV, Tucson, Arizona, $44,890,952 for
the Javelin missile system.
· RELX Inc,
Miamisburg, Ohio, $10,058,160 for continued access to LexisNexis Continuous
Evaluation / ProMonitor, which “provides public records holdings that include
third party data, data analytics, risk scoring, and alerting” for DCSA. Work in
Miamisburg, Ohio.
· RENK America LLC,
Muskegon, Michigan, $48,029,744 for transmissions, transmission containers, and
transmission control modules re: tracked combat vehicles.
· Ribcraft USA, Marblehead,
Massachusetts, $66,152,179 for
11-meter rigid inflatable boats.
· Riverview Construction
Associates, Clifton Park, New York, $10,552,800 to
construct a C-130 flight simulator training facility for the National Guard in
Scotia, New York.
· Rolls-Royce
Corp., Indianapolis, Indiana, $714,030,586 for technical, logistics, engineering,
maintenance, repair, and overhaul of C-130J R391 propeller, nacelle, powerplant
assembly, whole (AE2100) engines, and line replaceable units. Work at Robbins AFB,
Georgia, within the contiguous U.S., and outside the contiguous U.S.
· Rolls-Royce, Indianapolis,
Indiana, $15,554,347 for FMS (Japan): develop a repair
capability and facility standup for V-22 engine (AE 1107C) in Hyogo, Japan. Includes
integration of an engine test cell into existing Kawasaki Heavy Industries
facilities.
· RQ Construction, Carlsbad,
California, $28,694,000 for
a combat water survival training facility at Camp Pendleton.
· RQ-WM Jordan JV, Carlsbad,
California, $16,506,834 for
relocating the logistics operations school at Camp Lejeune.
· Saab Inc., East
Syracuse, New York, $14,629,146 for MK 9 development and production, fiscal 2023.
Work in East Syracuse (81%), Airmont (3%), Ronkonkoma (1%), New York; Rancho Cordova,
California (13%); Mountain View, California (2%).
· SAIC, Fairfield, New Jersey, $90,000,000
(a 456-day bridge contract) for
facilities maintenance, repair, and operations supplies in the Pacific: Hawaii,
Guam, and Kwajalein Atoll.
· SAIC, Fairfield, New Jersey,
$99,000,000 for
facilities maintenance, repair, and operations supplies in Virginia, West
Virginia, Maryland, and D.C.
· SAIC, Reston, Virginia,
$102,475,669 for
production, spares, production support material, engineering support, and
hardware repair of components for MK 48 Mod 7 heavyweight torpedo for US Navy,
Australia, and Taiwan. Work in Bedford, Indiana (80%), and Middletown, Rhode
Island (20%).
· SAIC, Reston,
Virginia, $12,072,714 for engineering services to support hardware,
modeling and simulation development at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama. SAIC, Reston,
Virginia, $14,399,683 for hardware-in-the-loop aviation systems
engineering services.
· SAIC, Reston, Virginia,
$22,004,729 for
cybersecurity, network operations, and IT support in South Korea.
· SAIC, Reston, Virginia,
$33,782,230 for
multi-discipline, integrated technical baseline evaluations, developmental
progress assessments, cost, schedule, emerging technology, and maturity of
design assessments for NAVAIR acquisition programs in support of NAVAIR Systems
Engineering Department. Work in Patuxent River, Maryland (95%); locations
within continental U.S. (4%); locations outside (1%).
· Salient CRGT (now GovCIO), Fairfax, Virginia, $99,188,617
for
engineering on fixed submarine broadcast system low frequency. Work in Norfolk,
Virginia (3%); Dallas, Texas (17%); Charleston, South Carolina (18%); San
Diego, California (31%); Oklahoma City, Oklahoma (31%).
· Salient
Federal-SGIS, McLean, Virginia, $7,636,866 for ongoing case processing support for DCSA. Work
primarily in McLean, Virginia.
· Sallyport Global Holdings,
Reston, Virginia, $235,608,052 for
FMS (Iraq): another year of base operations support, base life support,
and security for Iraq’s F-16 program, Martyr Brigadier General Ali Flaih Air
Base, Iraq.
· San Antonio Lighthouse for the
Blind, San Antonio, Texas, $8,800,260 for
flame retardant environmental ensemble/enhanced weather outer layer trousers
for Army and Air Force.
· San Antonio Shoe,
San Antonio, Texas, $90,590,940 for athletic shoes for Army, Navy, Air Force,
Marine Corps and Coast Guard.
· San Rafael Rock Quarry Inc., San
Rafael, California, $73,863,110 to
address erosion and levee failure risk in Sacramento, California.
· Sauer Construction LLC,
Jacksonville, Florida, $37,618,000 for
construction of two additions to the Trident Training Facility, a Strategic
Systems Program missile control center team trainer, and a weapons handling
system team trainer at Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay, Georgia.
· Sauer Construction LLC,
Jacksonville, Florida, $7,833,000 for
demolition, construction, and renovation at Building 2314, Joint Base
Charleston, South Carolina.
· SAVIT Corp., Rockaway, New
Jersey, $40,160,222 for
R&D into “new demilitarization technology and processes in order to safely
and effectively treat and render unusable or inert ammunition, dispose of all
by-products safely and in compliance with environmental regulation, and remove
all explosive hazards.”
· SeaCube Leasing International, Woodcliff Lake,
New Jersey, $19,310,574; Textainer Equipment Management (U.S.) Ltd., San Francisco,
California, $20,053,557; Triton Container International Ltd., Hamilton,
Bermuda, $19,212,216 for
intermodal equipment leasing and transportation services, and related container
support functions.
· Sealevel Construction, Thibodaux,
Louisiana, $17,357,450 to
remove existing steel tainter gates and fabricate and install new ones in
Marksville, Louisiana.
· Seaward Marine
Services LLC, Norfolk, Virginia, $295,900,000 for waterborne hull cleaning on ships and craft for
Director of Ocean Engineering, Supervisor of Salvage and Diving. Work worldwide.
· Sedna Digital
Solutions LLC, Manassas, Virginia, $12,957,680 for engineering design development procurement.
· Seemann Composites, Gulfport,
Mississippi, $22,579,069 for
construction of composite components for Landing Craft, Air Cushion (LCAC) 100 class.
Work in Gulfport, Mississippi (77%), and Greenville, South Carolina (23%).
· Seiler Instrument and
Manufacturing Co., St. Louis, Missouri, $30,722,692 for
feeder assembly units for the Army.
· Seqirus Inc., Summit, New Jersey, $30,821,648 for
the injectable influenza vaccine. Location of performance is Pennsylvania.
· Serco, Herndon, Virginia, $8,683,092, for
operations and maintenance support for Ground-based Electro-optical Deep Space
Surveillance System (GEODSS).
Work in Socorro, New Mexico; Diego Garcia; and Maui, Hawaii.
· SEWP Solutions
LLC, Fairfax, Virginia, $8,016,650 for the Air Force Publicly Available Information
Toolkit. Work at Langley AFB, VA.
· SGJV LLC, Virginia Beach,
Virginia, $80,889,608 to
replace boilers at Hill Air Force Base, Utah, with new dual-fuel boilers.
· Sherpa 6 Inc., Littleton,
Colorado, $49,802,057 for
Ground Soldier Technology Workflow, Integration, and eXperience (GS-TWIX).
· Shimmick Construction Co., Irvine,
California; Kiewit Infrastructure Co., Woodcliff Lake, New Jersey; Brad Cole
Construction Co., Carrollton, Georgia; Wood Environment & Infrastructure
Solutions Inc., Blue Bell, Pennsylvania; Howard W. Pence Inc., Elizabethtown,
Kentucky; Geiger Brothers Inc., Jackson, Ohio; Custom Mechanical Systems Corp.,
Bargersville, Indiana; $250,000,000 for
civil works construction for U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Nashville, Tennessee.
· Sierra Nevada Corp. (SNC),
Sparks, Nevada, $11,205,758 for
the Orchestration of Resilient Cyber Activities project: deliver “game-changing
tools and methods to overcome known and emerging challenges and ensure
continued Navy cyber superiority.” Work in Englewood, Colorado.
· Signature Flight
Support, Orlando, Florida ($11,758,462), was added to the contract for fuel support at Fort
Smith Regional Airport, Arkansas, issued against solicitation SPE607-23-R-0202
awarded 6 Mar 2023.
· Silver Ships
Inc., Theodore, Alabama, $8,496,795 for Marine Corps assault amphibian safety vessels.
· SNC Manufacturing LLC, Orocovis,
Puerto Rico, $25,499,513 for
trousers for Army and Air Force.
· Snow &
Company Inc., Seattle, Washington, $8,841,762 for Workboat Mediums for the Commander, Naval
Installation Command.
· Sonalysts Inc., Waterford, Connecticut,
$9,885,351, for
Standard Space Trainer (support and delivery, network, infrastructure,
hardware, and architecture products) in Colorado Springs, Colorado.
· SOPAKCO Inc., Mullins, South
Carolina, $39,979,333 for
cold weather rations.
· SourceAmerica, Vienna, Virginia,
$26,489,074 for
facility maintenance at Fort Knox.
· Sparton LLC, DeLeon Springs,
Florida, $26,848,442 for
production of very low frequency transducers.
· Speegle Construction Inc.,
Niceville, Florida, $18,750,753 for
design/build construction of the Flightline Fire Station at Duke Field, Eglin AFB,
Florida.
· SRC Inc., North Syracuse, New
York, $13,853,099 to
research, analyze, document, and review electromagnetic systems, events, and
signatures. Work, “required by all services and other U.S. agencies,” is in San
Antonio, Texas, under the Sensor Beam Program.
· SRCTec LLC, Syracuse, New York,
$99,202,786 for
AN/TPQ-50 Radar Systems and Engineering Change EC1 upgrade kits.
· Strategic
Analysis Inc., Arlington, Virginia, $17,289,711 for providing the Office of the Under Secretary
of Defense for Research and Engineering [OUSD(R&E)] with professional, technical,
analytical, financial, administrative, and specialized support operations. Assists
OUSD(R&E) with the DOD Science and Technology Foundations and Futures
programs within the organization of the Deputy Chief Technology Officer for
Science and Technology. Work at contractor’s office in Arlington, Virginia; the
Pentagon; and the Mark Center, Alexandria, Virginia. There is no reason
why generals and their staff cannot do this.
· Sunshine Aero Industries, Florala, Alabama,
minimum $24,128,950 for
fuel support at Florala Municipal Airport, Alabama, for US military and “federal
civilian agencies.” Pike Aviation, Troy, Alabama ($14,239,183), was added
to the contract for fuel support at Troy Municipal Airport, Alabama.
· SupplyCore Inc., Rockford,
Illinois, $375,000,000 for
facilities maintenance, repair, and operations supplies and incidental services
in South Korea.
· SupplyCore, Rockford, Illinois,
$30,000,000 (90-day bridge contract) for
facilities maintenance, repair and operations supplies in South Korea.
· SupplyCore, Rockford, Illinois,
$90,000,000 for
facilities maintenance, repair and operations supplies. Work in Louisiana and
Texas.
· Sysco USA, New
Braunfels, Texas, $15,684,189 for full-line food and beverage items.
· System High Corp., Chantilly,
Virginia, $29,049,951 (from $27,305,220 to $56,355,171) for
program security for DARPA in Arlington, Virginia.
· T Square
Logistics Corp., Colorado Springs, Colorado, $26,130,850 for logistic services re: material management,
ground transportation, and vehicle management at Sheppard AFB, Texas.
· Tech Systems Inc., Tysons,
Virginia, $8,787,189 for
logistics support services at Fort Rucker, Alabama.
· Techflow Mission Support, Idaho
Falls, Idaho, $23,143,561 for
base operations support at Camp Lejeune, MCAS New River, and outlying areas in
eastern North Carolina.
· Technica Corp., Sterling,
Virginia, $19,368,923 for
weapon system engineering and maintenance (including incremental software
version development and installation; security patch installations;
preventative maintenance; troubleshooting; and responsive tiered support) for
the Cyberspace Vulnerability Assessment/Hunter (CVA/H) weapon system. Work at
Joint Base San Antonio-Chapman Annex, Texas; Scott AFB, Illinois; Joint Base
San Antonio-Lackland, Texas; Des Moines Air National Guard Base, Illinois;
Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, New Jersey; Joint Base Lewis-McChord and Camp
Murray, Washington; and Horsham Air Guard Station, Pennsylvania.
· Teichert-Odin JV, Sacramento,
California, $15,017,850 to
obtain and transport seepage berm material.
· Telecote Research Inc., Goleta,
California, $8,448,636 for
additional cloud infrastructure and platform support in El Segundo, California.
· Teledyne Brown
Engineering, Huntsville, Alabama, $9,104,053 for MK11 Shallow Water Combat Submersibles
rotatable frames and enclosures.
· Teletronics Technology Corp.,
(d.b.a. Curtiss-Wright Defense Solutions), Newtown, Pennsylvania, $287,084,416 for
High-Speed Data Acquisition System (HSDAS) specifically designed for flight
test users, and flight test related commercial hardware, software, and
firmware, technical support, repair, and training. Supports operation and
sustainment of existing and new installations. Also covers services in support
of the Interactive Analysis and Display System (IADS). Work in Newtown,
Pennsylvania, and Edwards Air Force Base, California.
· Tevet LLC, Greenville, Tennessee,
$25,628,822 for
replenishment spare parts and components for the Versatile Depot Automatic Test
System (VDATS) in support of depot maintenance at Robins AFB, Georgia.
· Texas Work Force Commission,
Austin, Texas, $38,319,367 to
run dining facilities at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland.
· Textron Aviation, Wichita,
Kansas, $113,107,250 for
production and delivery of ten (10) Multi-Engine Training System aircraft,
initial spares, support equipment, instructor pilot training, and maintenance
personnel training re: training sailors for accession into naval aircraft (P-8,
EP-3, KC-130, E-6, E-2, CMV-22, MV-22). Work in Wichita, Kansas (99%), and
Corpus Christi, Texas (1%).
· Textron Systems
Corp., Wilmington, Massachusetts, $10,978,583 for XM204 (anti-tank land mine) qualification testing.
· Textron, Hunt Valley, Maryland, $20,790,809 to
develop a mine countermeasure technology called Magnetic and Acoustic
Generation Next Unmanned Superconducting Sweep (MAGNUSS). This technology is “composed
of a high temperature superconducting magnetic source with an advanced acoustic
generator.” MAGNUSS might be used on Mine Countermeasure Unmanned Surface
Vehicle. Work in Ayer, Massachusetts (47%); Hunt Valley, Maryland (35%);
Groton, Connecticut (18%).
· Textron, Hunt Valley, Maryland,
$9,112,824 for
continued unmanned aircraft systems ISR services for the US military, “other
government agencies,” and domestic and overseas contingency operations.
Work in Hunt Valley, Maryland (20%), and locations outside continental U.S.
(80%).
· The Aerospace Corp., El Segundo,
California, $19,000,000 (bringing total contract to $5,637,262,130) for
federally funded research and development center (FFRDC) support in El Segundo,
California. This additional funding is “under Need for Fee in accordance with
Statement of Work Requirement 6.17.”
· The County of Harnett,
Lillington, North Carolina, $48,427,595 incorporating a change in wastewater
commodity charge rate for
the Army.
· The Dutra Group,
San Rafael, California, $67,478,100 for dredging and potential clean-up in Norfolk,
Virginia.
· The Lighthouse for the Blind
Inc., Seattle, Washington, $7,512,750 for
one quart water canteens for Army.
· The Treadwell Corp., Thomaston,
Connecticut, $8,052,851 for
services in support of Model 6L16 Electrolytic Oxygen Generator, Automated
Electrolytic Oxygen Generator, Low Pressure Electrolyzer, and their respective
simulators for training aboard Navy submarines and facilities. Work in Bangor,
Washington (25%); Pearl Harbor, Hawaii (17%); San Diego, California (10%);
Portsmouth, New Hampshire (8%); Groton, Connecticut (8%); Norfolk, Virginia
(8%); Kings Bay, Georgia (8%); Diego Garcia (8%); and Guam (8%).
· The Whiting-Turner Contracting
Co., Baltimore, Maryland, $20,349,359 for
designing and building a maritime operations and boat maintenance facility and
renovating a headquarters building at Naval Special Warfare Command, Naval Base
Coronado, California.
· Three corporations in North
Carolina [Civil Works Contracting LLC, Wilmington (N40085-23-D-0013); Quadrant
Construction Inc., Jacksonville (N40085-23-D-0014); Riza Construction,
Jacksonville (N40085-23-D-0015)], $95,000,000 for
civil and paving projects at Camp Lejeune and the surrounding area. Contractors
compete for future task orders under the terms and conditions of the awarded
contract.
· Tidewater Inc., Elkridge, Maryland,
$16,532,008 to
correct deficiencies of narrow pavement, poor drainage, erosion, pavement and
subgrade damage and deterioration, and pavement repair at Marine Corps Base
Quantico.
· TK&K Services
LLC, Alpharetta, Georgia, maximum $9,693,802 for operation and maintenance of fuel facilities
and alongside aircraft refueling services for Air Force at Joint Base Lewis
McChord and Yakima Training Center, Washington.
· Trade West Construction Inc.,
Mesquite, Nevada, $7,850,000 for
repair of Moss Landing (California) north and south jetties, replace two danger
signs, two project signs, two aids to navigation, and remove timber piles.
· TranLogistics LLC, Miami, Florida,
$622,000,000 for
husbanding, management, and integration. Involves charter and hire, utilities,
force protection, communications, and land transportation services to support U.S.
military, Coast Guard, NATO, and other foreign vessels participating in U.S. or
NATO exercises and missions. Work in thirty geographic regions. Part of global
multiple award contract (GMAC).
· Transoceanic Cable Ship Co., Baltimore,
Maryland, $36,314,150 for
11 months of operating the U.S. flagged cable ship CS Global Sentinel to
lay and repair cable for DOD worldwide.
· Transtar-Orion JV, San Diego, California,
$7,887,000 for
repair and upgrade at a water treatment plant, MCAS Yuma.
· TRAX International Corp., Las Vegas, Nevada,
$61,389,183 for
test support services in Yuma, Arizona, and Fort Greely, Alaska. TRAX International Corp., Las Vegas,
Nevada, $116,897,805 for test support services in Las Yuma, Arizona;
and Fort Greely, Alaska.
· Treen Box & Pallet Inc.,
Mifflintown, Pennsylvania (SPE8EF-23-D-0005); Cutter Lumber Products,
Livermore, California (SPE8EF-23-D-0006); Just Packaging Inc., New Carlisle,
Indiana (SPE8EF-23-D-0007); $34,833,521 for
wood pallets. Work in Arkansas, Michigan, and Ohio for Defense Logistics
Agency.
· Tri-State Government Services Inc.,
Chattanooga, Tennessee, maximum $9,820,047 for
hazardous waste removal and disposal in Georgia for Air Force, Air Reserve, Air
National Guard, Army, Army Reserve, Army National Guard, Coast Guard, and Navy.
· Trident E&P LLC, Pottstown,
Pennsylvania, maximum $46,000,000 for
a 60-month lease of A3 multifunctional devices, accessories and office document
devices. Work in Japan for Defense Logistics Agency.
· Triple B. Corp., d.b.a. Charlie’s Produce,
Salt Lake City, Utah, maximum $63,750,000 for
fresh fruits and vegetables for Army, Air Force, and Department of Agriculture
schools and reservations.
· Triumph Engine Control Systems
LLC, West Hartford, Connecticut, $9,916,270 to
overhaul / repair fuel engine controls for Boeing CH-47 “Chinook” helicopters.
· Trumbull Corp. & Brayman
Construction Corporation JV, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, $11,902,980 for
construction of a graded pad and access at the Montgomery Locks and Dam New
River Chamber, which is on the Ohio River downstream from Pittsburgh. This pad
and access are for use in construction of a concrete batch plant and aggregate
storage and preparation facilities. Fiscal 2023 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law
funds obligated.
· TRX System,
Greenbelt, Maryland, $402,529,209 for Dismounted Assured Positioning, Navigation,
and Timing System Generation II Line replaceable units and associated required services.
· Tutor Perini Corp., Sylmar,
California, $74,991,089 for
building renovations at the U.S. Air Force Academy, Colorado.
· Ultimate Training
Munitions, Somerville, New Jersey, $53,733,000, for munitions for SOCOM.
· United Parcel Service Co.,
Louisville, Kentucky (SP4701-23-D-0002); Delta Air Lines, Atlanta, Georgia
(SP4701-23-D-0003); Northern Air Cargo, Anchorage, Alaska (SP4701-23-D-0004);
Amerijet International, Miami, Florida (SP4701-23-D-0005); Air Transport International,
Wilmington, Ohio (SP4701-23-D-0006); Western Global Airlines, Estero, Florida
(SP4701-23-D-0007); $45,000,000 for
medical freight transportation: pick up inside continental US for
transportation to outside continental US.
· University of
Texas—Austin, Applied Research Laboratories (ARL-UT), Austin, Texas, $358,450,170 for ongoing R&D of 1) characteristics of the
medium relative to the ocean acoustic environment; 2) high frequency sonar as
applied to war fighting applications; 3) acoustic and electromagnetic
properties; 4) signal and information processing; 5) navigation and precise
location in space, air, water, and on land; 6) command, control,
communications, computers, and intelligence (C4I); 7) mission related and
public service oriented research, technology development, test, evaluation and
systems analysis.
· Valiant Global
Defense Services Inc., San Diego, California, $47,266,444 to support rotational training at Fort Polk,
Louisiana.
· Valiant Government Services LLC, Hopkinsville,
Kentucky; AECOM, Los Angeles, California; Global Engineering & Construction
LLC, Renton, Washington; Herman Construction Group, Escondido, California; J&J
Maintenance Inc., Austin, Texas; StructSure Projects Inc., Kansas City,
Missouri; and FSI Construction LLC, Charlotte, North Carolina $99,000,000 for
medical repair and renewal design-build projects for USACE' Engineering and
Support Center, Huntsville, Alabama.
· Valiant Integrated Services LLC.,
Herndon, Virginia, $530,000,000 for
full-line food distribution in “the Southern Arab Peninsula and Nations of
Eastern Africa.”
· Valley Apparel
LLC, Knoxville, Tennessee ($16,876,125) and Federal Prison Industries (UNICOR),
D.C. ($16,285,500), for cold weather jackets for Army and Air Force.
· Vector Solutions Inc., Glendale,
Arizona, $19,742,299 to
help train MC-12 “Liberty”
tactical systems operators at Will Rogers National Guard Base, Oklahoma, for Air
Force Special Operations Command.
· Vectrus, Colorado Springs,
Colorado, $264,951,370 for
the Enhanced Army Global Logistic Enterprise (EAGLE) at Fort
Benning, Georgia.
· Vectrus, Colorado
Springs, Colorado, $73,872,000 for logistics support services in Fayetteville,
North Carolina. SFS/GOVCIO,
Fairfax, Virginia, $15,520,000 to
extend operation and maintenance services in Fayetteville, North Carolina.
· Vectrus, Colorado Springs,
Colorado, $9,455,640 for
dining facility food services in Kuwait City, Kuwait.
· Vectrus, Maxwell AFB,
Alabama, $32,827,972 for BOSS at Maxwell-Gunter AFB, Alabama.
· VersAbility
Resources, Hampton, Virginia, $140,719,079 for official mail and postal support at
continental Air Force installations and mission support center approved bases.
· Vigor Marine LLC, Portland, Oregon, $7,897,103,
for
repair and replacement of structural decking in support of the USS John Paul
Jones 2C1 docking selected restricted availability. Work in Seattle,
Washington.
· Vigor Marine, Portland, Oregon,
$37,398,872 for
maintenance, modernization, and repair of USS Gridley (DDG 101) in
Everett, Washington.
· Walashek
Industrial & Marine Inc., National City, California, $9,427,929 for Landing Craft, Air Cushion (LCAC) Extended
Service Life Extension Program in Camp Pendleton, CA.
· Walsh Construction Company II
LLC, Chicago, Illinois; DPR-RQ Construction, Carlsbad, California; StructSure
Projects, Kansas City, Missouri; Gilbane Federal, Concord, California; JE Dunn
Construction, Kansas City, Missouri $900,000,000 for
integrated design-build initial outfitting construction services for U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers, Little Rock, Arkansas.
· Walsh Federal LLC,
Chicago, Illinois, $148,978,000 for design and construction of a nuclear command,
control and communications alert campus at Offutt AFB, Nebraska.
· Walsh Federal
LLC, Chicago, Illinois, $27,937,000 for construction of a new hangar at Selfridge Air
National Guard Base, Michigan.
· Watterson Construction,
Anchorage, Alaska, $51,700,000 to
design and build a barracks at Fort Wainwright, Alaska.
· WesTest Engineering Corp., Layton, Utah
($24,100,000); ION Corp., Eden Prairie, Minnesota ($37,500,000); Total Quality
Systems, Roy, Utah ($43,400,000); X Technologies Inc., San Antonio, Texas
($43,900,000) for
design and manufacture of interface test adapters and related test equipment
design and manufacturing for Air Force Government Test Program Set development.
· Weston Solutions Inc.,
Albuquerque, New Mexico, $7,934,873 for
recurring maintenance and minor repair of petroleum systems.
· Wilco Inc., Madison, Wisconsin,
$7,640,000 to
build stone dikes and tiebacks, Tallahatchie County, Mississippi.
· Winston-Salem Industries for the
Blind, Salem, North Carolina, $7,587,915 for
flame retardant environmental ensemble / enhanced weather outer layer parkas
for Army.
· Woodward HRT,
Santa Clarita, California, $8,380,994 for 97 hydraulic servocylinder assemblies for
Boeing F-18 aircraft.
· Woodward Inc., Fort Collins,
Colorado, $10,764,606 for
ship service gas turbine generator full authority digital control cabinets (max
of 32).
· Woodward Inc., Rockford,
Illinois, $17,161,040 for
repair of hydro mechanical units, which are interchangeable with the main fuel
controls used on T700 401C engines.
· WSP USA Solutions Inc., D.C.; AECOM,
Neu-Isenburg, Germany; Alberto Izzo & Partners, Naples, Italy; A.I.C.E.
Consulting, Srl, San Giuliano Terme, Italy $9,000,000 for
architect-engineer services for USACE European District.
· Wunderman Thompson, Atlanta,
Georgia, $34,352,672 for
“supplemental advertising initiatives including the 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) to enhance
Marine Corps recruiting efforts.”
· Young & Rubicam (d.b.a. VMLY&R), New
York City, $95,000,000 (from $455,182,742 to $550,182,742) for
marketing and advertising for Navy recruiting. Work in Memphis, Tennessee (59%),
and New York City (41%).
· Zodiac-Poettker HBZ JV II LLC, St. Louis,
Missouri, $17,644,000 for
construction of a genetics research lab office building for Department of
Agriculture, Columbia, Missouri.