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Report to Congressional Requesters: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

May 2010: 

Defense Inventory: 

Defense Logistics Agency Needs to Expand on Efforts to More 
Effectively Manage Spare Parts: 

GAO-10-469: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-10-469, a report to congressional requesters. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) procures and manages large supplies 
of spare parts to keep military equipment ready and operating. At a 
time when U.S. military forces and equipment are in high demand and 
the nation faces long-term fiscal challenges, it is critical that DLA 
ensure that the warfighter is supplied with the right items at the 
right time and exercise good stewardship over the billions of dollars 
invested in its inventories. GAO has identified supply chain 
management as a high-risk area due in part to high levels of inventory 
beyond what is needed to support requirements and problems in 
accurately forecasting demand for spare parts. GAO’s objectives were 
to (1) determine the extent to which DLA’s inventory of spare parts 
reflects the amount needed to support requirements; and (2) identify 
causes, if applicable, for DLA’s having spare parts inventory that 
does not align with requirements. GAO analyzed DLA inventory data for 
fiscal years 2006 through 2008. 

What GAO Found: 

GAO’s review showed that DLA can enhance its efforts to manage spare 
parts more effectively primarily by focusing on the front end of the 
process when decisions are being made on what items to buy and how 
many in response to requirements. GAO’s analysis of DLA data showed 
the agency had significantly more spare parts secondary inventory than 
was needed to meet current requirements in fiscal years 2006 through 
2008. Current requirements include all the requirements used by DLA to 
determine when to order new parts, which Department of Defense (DOD) 
guidance refers to as the “requirements objective.” The average annual 
value of the inventory for the 3 years reviewed was about $13.7 
billion. Of this total, about $7.1 billion (52 percent) was beyond the 
amount needed to meet the requirements objective, and about $5.1 
billion (37 percent) was not needed to meet the requirements objective 
plus 2 years of estimated future demand. Of the $5.1 billion, DLA had 
an average of $4.1 billion in retention stock (materiel for possible 
contingencies or materiel deemed to be more economical to keep than to 
dispose of) and had identified $1 billion as potential excess (for 
reutilization or disposal). 

Although DOD policy requires that DLA minimize investment in inventory 
while also meeting requirements, at least seven factors are continuing 
to cause DLA to order and stock parts that do not align with 
requirements. Three factors relate to how many parts to buy: 
inaccurate demand forecasting for parts, unresolved problems with 
accurately estimating lead times needed to acquire spare parts, and 
challenges in meeting the military services’ special requests to DLA 
for future spare parts support for weapon systems. Three more factors 
relate to DLA initiatives that, while showing promise for reducing the 
acquisition and retention of parts not needed to meet requirements, do 
not appear to be achieving their full potential: closing gaps in 
providing accurate, timely data to inventory managers as input into 
purchase decisions; modifying or canceling planned purchases that may 
no longer be needed to meet currently estimated requirements; and 
reducing contingency retention stock that may no longer be needed. 
Lastly, DLA is not tracking the overall cost efficiency of its 
inventory management. Although DLA has recognized and begun to address 
many of these factors, its current efforts may not be fully effective 
at reducing the significant mismatches GAO identified between spare 
parts inventory levels and requirements. Acquiring inventory for which 
demand is much lower than expected reduces the amount of funding 
available for other military needs. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO is making recommendations on the seven factors contributing to 
mismatches between inventory levels of spare parts and requirements. 
Among other things, DLA should develop an action plan for addressing 
demand planning issues, and DOD should work with DLA to define goals 
and metrics for assessing and tracking the cost-efficiency of 
inventory management. DOD concurred with GAO’s recommendations. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-469] or key 
components. For more information, contact Jack Edwards at (202) 512-
8246. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

A Significant Portion of DLA's Secondary Inventory Did Not Align with 
Current Requirements and Had Limited Demand: 

Several Factors Contributed to DLA's Having Inventory Levels of Spare 
Parts That Did Not Align with Current Requirements: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Defense: 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Related GAO Products: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Value of DOD's and DLA's Secondary Inventory (Fiscal Years 
2006-2008): 

Table 2: Stratification of DLA Spare Parts Secondary Inventory (Annual 
Average for Fiscal Years 2006-2008): 

Table 3: Average Annual Value of Aviation, Land, and Maritime 
Inventory Beyond the Requirements Objective (Fiscal Years 2006-2008): 

Table 4: Value of DLA Active and Inactive Inventory Compared with 
Goals, by Supply Chain, as of June 2009: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Categories of DOD Spare Parts Inventory: 

Figure 2: DLA's Secondary Inventory Levels for Requirements Objective, 
Forecasted Demand, and Inactive Inventory (Fiscal Years 2006-2008): 

Figure 3: Value of DLA's Total Inventory on Hand and on Order (Fiscal 
Years 2006-2008): 

Figure 4: Value of DLA's Inventory Beyond the Requirements Objective 
by Projected Years of Supply (Fiscal Years 2006 and 2008): 

Figure 5: Estimated Value of On-Hand Inventory Deficits Against 
Operating Requirements by Supply Chain (Fiscal Years 2006-2008): 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: Washington, DC 20548: 

May 11, 2010: 

The Honorable Solomon P. Ortiz: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable J. Randy Forbes: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Readiness: 
Committee on Armed Services: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Bernard Sanders: 
United States Senate: 

The Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) and the military services procure 
and manage large supplies of spare parts to keep military equipment 
ready and operating. As of September 30, 2008, the Department of 
Defense (DOD) reported that the total value of its secondary 
inventory, including spare parts and other items, was about $94 
billion.[Footnote 1] At a time when U.S. military forces and equipment 
are in high demand and the nation and military face long-term fiscal 
challenges, it is critical that DLA and the services work toward 
ensuring both that the warfighter is supplied with the right items at 
the right time and that good stewardship is demonstrated over the 
billions of dollars invested in their inventories. 

Since 1990, we have identified DOD supply chain management as a high- 
risk area due in part to ineffective and inefficient inventory 
management practices and procedures, problems with accurately 
forecasting demand for spare parts, and high levels of inventory 
beyond what is needed to support requirements. These high levels of 
inventory have included both on-hand and on-order inventory. Inventory 
that is in DOD's possession is considered to be on hand. Inventory 
that is not in DOD's possession but for which a contract has been 
awarded or funds have been obligated is considered to be on order. 
Whereas the military services focus on managing reparable spare parts, 
DLA primarily focuses on managing consumable parts, which are normally 
expended or intended to be used up beyond recovery. Additionally, 
Section 328 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2010 requires the Secretary of Defense to submit a comprehensive plan 
to improve the inventory management system of the military departments 
and DLA, with the objective of reducing the acquisition and storage of 
secondary inventory excess to requirements.[Footnote 2] 

In response to your request that we review DOD's management of its 
secondary inventory, this report addresses DLA's management of the 
spare parts that it purchases, stores, and delivers to its military 
service customers, including parts for aviation, maritime, and land 
systems. Our specific objectives were to (1) determine the extent to 
which DLA's inventory of spare parts reflects the amount needed to 
support requirements; and (2) identify causes, if applicable, for 
DLA's having spare parts inventory that does not align with 
requirements. We previously reported on the management of the Army's, 
the Navy's, and the Air Force's spare parts inventories (see Related 
GAO Reports section at the end of this report). 

To determine the extent to which DLA's spare parts inventory reflects 
the amount of inventory needed to support requirements, we analyzed 
fiscal year 2006 through 2008 stratification data, including summary 
reports and item-specific data as of September 30 for each fiscal 
year.[Footnote 3] These data were the most recent available for our 
analysis. After assessing DLA's data, we determined that the data were 
sufficiently reliable for the purposes of our analysis and findings, 
as discussed in appendix I in more detail. We determined the total 
number of items that had more than or less than enough inventory to 
satisfy requirements, as identified by DOD, and for each of these 
items also determined the number and value of parts that were more 
than or less than what was needed to satisfy requirements. In 
presenting the value of inventory in this report, we converted then-
year dollars to constant fiscal year 2008 dollars using DOD operations 
and maintenance price deflators.[Footnote 4] 

It is important to note that our analysis reflects points in time over 
the 3-year period we reviewed and that requirements and inventory 
levels are constantly shifting. DOD and DLA officials noted that when 
military operations are ongoing, requirements from customers are 
particularly volatile and less defined. They further stated that 
effective, timely supply support to the warfighter is of paramount 
interest and that efforts to measure the cost-efficiency of DLA's 
investment in inventory should take the current and recent wartime 
environment into consideration, as well as the agency's success at 
meeting customer demands. The scope of our review did not include an 
analysis of DLA's effectiveness at meeting customer demands. 

In this report, we characterize inventory as beyond current 
requirements when existing inventory levels are greater than what DOD 
calls its "requirements objective," defined as follows: "For wholesale 
stock replenishment, the maximum authorized quantity of stock for an 
item. It consists of the sum of stock represented by the economic 
order quantity, the safety level, the repair-cycle level, and the 
authorized additive levels."[Footnote 5] We used the requirements 
objective as a criterion level because, according to DOD Regulation 
4140.1-R, it establishes the target quantity for replenishing an 
item's level of stock through procurement. In other words, if DLA had 
enough parts to meet the requirements objective, it would not 
typically purchase new parts. The requirements objective is reflected 
in DLA stratification reports as material needed to meet various 
operating requirements (comprised of low demand items, war reserves, 
back orders, and safety levels), the time required to acquire parts 
(known as acquisition lead time), and an economic order quantity that 
may be added to these requirements. The categories DOD and DLA use to 
characterize and manage inventory are discussed further in the 
Background section of this report. 

DOD officials stated that our focus on current requirements (that is, 
the requirements objective) does not fully portray the department's 
total requirements for spare parts, which includes parts held for 
potential demands that have not yet materialized. To address this 
concern, in this report, we also identify inventory levels that are 
needed to meet what DOD calls its "approved acquisition objective," 
defined as follows: "The quantity of an item authorized for peacetime 
and wartime requirements to equip and sustain U.S. and Allied Forces, 
according to current DOD policies and plans."[Footnote 6] DLA includes 
materiel needed to meet the requirements objective plus 2 years of 
estimated future demand in the approved acquisition objective. 
According to DOD officials, while spare parts acquisitions are managed 
based on the requirements objective, the approved acquisition 
objective is their preferred criterion for measuring inventory levels 
since it allows DLA and the services to stock items for the future, 
thus helping them to ensure sufficient inventory will be available for 
customers when needed. According to DLA, both the requirements 
objective and the approved acquisition objective exclude "inactive" 
inventory, which consists of economic and contingency retention stocks 
and parts that DLA has identified for potential disposal or 
reutilization. 

We use the term "inventory deficit" to describe items that have an 
amount of on-hand inventory that falls below the operating 
requirements. We used this criterion level because it reflects DLA's 
ability to respond to an immediate demand for a spare part. According 
to DOD and DLA officials, they would not consider inventory to be in a 
true deficit position if new parts are on order. Consequently, in our 
report we also present analysis of the extent that on-order inventory 
would cover the on-hand deficits we identified. 

To identify causes for DLA's having inventory that does not align with 
requirements, we selected a nonprobability sample of 90 inventory 
items for which DLA inventory data indicated a mismatch between 
inventory levels and requirements. We used March 2009 stratification 
data to identify these items because these were the most recent data 
available when we selected our cases. We met with DLA inventory 
managers responsible for managing these items to obtain information on 
factors that contributed to the apparent mismatch between inventory 
levels and requirements. Because we used a nonprobability sample, our 
results cannot be projected to items outside our sample. We also 
interviewed DLA headquarters officials and other agency personnel to 
obtain information about DLA's inventory management policies and 
practices, inventory improvement initiatives, and other activities 
related to managing spare parts. Appendix I provides further 
information on our scope and methodology, including our methodology 
for analyzing DLA stratification data and selecting sample items for 
review. 

We conducted this performance audit from February 2009 through May 
2010 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for 
our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

Results in Brief: 

DLA had significantly more spare parts secondary inventory than was 
needed to meet current requirements in fiscal years 2006 through 2008, 
and it also experienced some inventory deficits, though to a far 
lesser extent. Our analysis indicated that the average annual value of 
DLA's spare parts inventory for the 3 years was about $13.7 billion. 
Of this total, about $7.1 billion (52 percent) was beyond the amount 
needed to meet its requirements objective, and this inventory 
represented 1.4 billion (55 percent) of the 2.5 billion parts that DLA 
held on average for each of the 3 years. In addition, the analysis 
showed that about $5.1 billion (37 percent) of DLA's total inventory 
was not needed to meet its approved acquisition objective--the 
requirements objective plus 2 years of estimated future demand. Of the 
$5.1 billion, DLA had an average of $4.1 billion in retention stock 
(materiel for possible contingencies or materiel deemed to be more 
economical to keep than to dispose of) and had identified $1 billion 
as potential excess (for reutilization or disposal). In addition, 
applying DLA forecasts of future demand for those items where our 
analysis indicated quantities were beyond the requirements objective, 
we found that the inventory levels of some items were sufficient to 
meet over 10 years of demand, or had no projected demand, although the 
value of this inventory had decreased from fiscal year 2006 to fiscal 
year 2008. Finally, on the basis of our analysis, we also found that 
DLA had inventory deficits--where on-hand inventory levels were below 
operating requirements--with an estimated value of $1.5 billion on 
average each year during the 3 years we reviewed. Of this total, about 
$712 million (47 percent) had sufficient inventory on order to meet 
the on-hand deficits we identified. 

Despite some positive actions by DLA to decrease its inventory of 
spare parts that have limited or no future demand, at least seven 
factors continue to cause DLA to order and stock parts that do not 
align with requirements. These seven factors overlap with one another 
but can be grouped into three major categories. 

First, DLA faces challenges in determining how many parts to buy for 
its customers: 

* DLA faces challenges due to inaccurate demand forecasting for the 
parts it manages. DOD's supply chain regulation states that customer 
demand shall be part of all DOD components' inventory management 
decisions; that components shall not stock an item that does not have 
any possibility of future demand; and that variance in demand 
forecasts outside established parameters should be flagged for 
management analysis and action.[Footnote 7] DLA has identified 
problems with demand planning and begun to address some of these 
issues, but it has not articulated specific goals, objectives, 
resources, or time frames for completing this effort. Without an 
action plan articulating these specific elements, DLA may have 
difficulty sustaining and expanding upon its current efforts. 

* DLA has not resolved problems with accurately estimating suppliers' 
lead times needed to acquire spare parts, which can lead to a mismatch 
between inventory levels and requirements if parts are delivered 
before or after they are needed. We identified problems with DLA 
overstating lead times in a prior report and found instances within 
our sample of cases in this review where fewer parts might have been 
procured if lead time estimates had been more accurate. DLA officials 
noted that they had already made some changes since 2008 to better 
estimate administrative lead time, but the agency had not yet 
determined the root causes for inaccurate production lead time 
estimates. 

* DLA faces challenges in meeting the military services' estimated 
additional requirements for spare parts identified in supply support 
requests and special program requirements. These two processes provide 
a means by which the services submit requirements to DLA when they 
first anticipate that they will need DLA to supply future spare parts. 
The services have tended to overestimate their additional 
requirements, which may result in DLA's holding inventory beyond what 
is needed to meet requirements. DLA's internal controls for evaluating 
and adjusting purchases in response to these requirements have not 
always operated effectively. Also, DLA officials noted that the 
services lack a financial incentive for minimizing their supply 
support requests because they will not purchase the parts from DLA 
using their own funds until the parts are needed. The feasibility of 
requiring up-front military service funding for spare parts supply 
support requests has not been evaluated. 

Second, DLA has some initiatives under way to address known problem 
areas, and preliminary results from these initiatives show promise for 
reducing the acquisition and retention of spare parts that are not 
needed to meet current requirements. However, their implementations 
appear to fall short of achieving their full potential: 

* DLA has an initiative to improve the exchange of demand data that 
inventory managers receive from customers to make purchase decisions, 
and sound supply chain management principles emphasize the need for 
effective communication internally within the organization and 
externally among all stakeholders in the supply chain. However, we 
found a number of instances during our review where inventory managers 
did not consistently have accurate, timely data to make fully informed 
purchase decisions. DLA's current demand data exchange initiative has 
been established with a limited number of customers and items. DLA has 
not conducted a program evaluation or made clear to what extent it 
plans to expand this initiative to more customers and items. 

* While DLA has an "over-procurement" process for identifying, and 
then modifying or canceling, planned purchases of spare parts that may 
no longer be needed to meet currently estimated requirements, several 
factors have limited its implementation and associated cost 
reductions. These factors include, for example, requirements 
thresholds established for identifying potential over-procurements and 
the exclusion of special programs from being evaluated under this 
process. DLA has not evaluated the overall effectiveness of its over-
procurement process and the feasibility of applying it on a wider 
scale. 

* DLA has reported progress in an initiative aimed at reducing the 
proportion of its secondary inventory that is inactive, but continues 
to have large amounts of contingency retention stock. While some of 
this contingency retention stock may no longer be needed, the services 
have not provided input that DLA needs in order to make these 
determinations. 

Third, DLA does not assess and track the cost efficiency of its 
inventory management. Although DOD's supply chain regulation directs 
the military components to size secondary item inventories to minimize 
DOD's investment while providing the inventory needed, DLA lacks goals 
and associated metrics that would enable it to determine the extent to 
which it is meeting this requirement. DLA has metrics aimed at 
measuring the extent to which the agency is able to satisfy customer 
requisitions and other aspects of its performance, but it lacks cost- 
efficiency metrics. The lack of cost-efficiency metrics limits DLA's 
ability to track and evaluate outcomes of its inventory management 
improvement efforts over the long term. 

Although DLA has recognized and begun to address many of the factors 
we identified as contributing to mismatches between inventory levels 
and requirements, our review shows that DLA's current efforts may not 
be fully effective at providing assurance that the agency is 
minimizing DOD's investment in unneeded secondary inventory. In the 
absence of additional actions to improve inventory management, DLA 
will likely continue to purchase and retain items that its customers 
do not need and then spend additional resources to handle and store 
these items. Acquiring inventory for which demand is much lower than 
expected reduces the amount of funding available for other military 
needs. 

To improve the management of DLA secondary inventory, we are making 
recommendations regarding each of the seven factors we identified as 
contributing to mismatches between inventory levels of spare parts and 
requirements. DLA officials stated that addressing some of the factors 
we identified requires a collaborative approach among DLA; the Office 
of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and 
Logistics; and the military services. We took these comments into 
account in making our recommendations. DOD, in its comments on a draft 
of this report, concurred with our recommendations and identified 
corrective actions to be completed. The corrective actions were 
generally responsive to our recommendations. 

Background: 

Under DOD's supply chain materiel management policy, secondary item 
inventory is to be sized to minimize DOD's investment while providing 
the inventory needed to support both wartime and peacetime 
requirements.[Footnote 8] Management and oversight of DLA inventory is 
a responsibility shared between the Under Secretary of Defense for 
Acquisition, Technology and Logistics and the Director, DLA. The Under 
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics is 
responsible for developing materiel management policies and ensuring 
their implementation in a uniform manner throughout the department, 
while the Director, DLA, is responsible for implementing DOD policies 
and procedures for the assets DLA manages. DLA provides support in the 
areas of subsistence, medical, construction and equipment, clothing 
and textile, and fuel, as well as aviation, land, and maritime spare 
parts. Aviation items are managed at DLA's office in Richmond, 
Virginia; maritime and land items are managed at DLA's office in 
Columbus, Ohio. Inventory managers at these locations are assigned to 
manage individual items. DLA has developed guidance and procedural 
instructions for computing requirements for its secondary inventory. 

DLA Has Made Changes to Its Business Practices and Information Systems: 

In fiscal year 2006, DLA issued its plan to transform how it does 
business in order to improve warfighter support and reduce costs 
through business process reengineering, workforce development, 
technology modernization, and organizational change.[Footnote 9] The 
plan notes that DLA altered its business model, redefined its 
supporting processes, and introduced new information systems 
architecture. DLA also undertook initiatives in customer relationship 
management, supplier management relations, and business systems 
modernization, which involved a major information technology 
reengineering effort. DLA replaced its legacy materiel management 
information systems with a new enterprise resource planning system-- 
called the Enterprise Business System--using commercial-off-the-shelf 
software applications. The transition to the Enterprise Business 
System took 6 years and achieved full operating capability in July 
2007. DLA continues to enhance the system and resolve identified 
problems. 

Another major change at DLA involved a reorganization of its inventory 
management personnel. Before DLA's reorganization, item managers were 
the sole points of contact for handling orders and the distribution of 
items assigned to them. As part of the reorganization, DLA made a 
major shift, dividing this responsibility and establishing two main 
facets of planning: demand planning and supply planning. Demand 
planners gather data, determine how the demand plan will be created, 
generate the plan, and provide the plan to others in the organization. 
In contrast, supply planners use the demand plan to determine how best 
to meet the customers' expected demands and generate supply plans. 
Within DLA, the demand and supply planning functions also require 
input from weapon systems managers, customer account specialists, and 
procurement officials. 

In addition to these changes DLA has made, decisions made as part of 
the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) process in 2005 were aimed at 
achieving economies and efficiencies related to supply and storage of 
secondary inventory. Specifically, the military services were directed 
to (1) realign or relocate management and related support functions 
for the procurement of depot-level reparables to DLA; (2) relocate 
consumable item management to DLA to consolidate missions and reduce 
excess capacity; and (3) transfer supply contracting functions for 
tires, packaged petroleum products, and compressed gases to DLA, and 
privatize all other supply, storage, and distribution functions for 
these commodities. DOD is in the process of implementing the BRAC 2005 
actions, which are required to be completed by September 15, 2011. We 
have recently reported on the progress made and challenges DLA still 
faces to consolidate supply-related functions at 13 depot locations. 
[Footnote 10] 

Value of Secondary Inventory Has Varied in Recent Years: 

DOD reported that the total value of its secondary inventory decreased 
from fiscal years 2006 to 2007 before increasing to $94.1 billion as 
of September 30, 2008. DOD stratification reports show that the value 
of DLA's secondary inventory--which includes spare parts and other 
commodities managed by the agency--followed a similar pattern, 
decreasing by $1.1 billion from fiscal years 2006 to 2007 and then 
increasing by $4.8 billion in fiscal year 2008 (see table 1). 
According to DLA, most of this increase was caused by higher fuel 
costs. The value of DLA secondary inventory as a percentage of the DOD 
total remained steady at 19 percent in fiscal years 2006 and 2007 
before rising to 22 percent in fiscal year 2008. 

Table 1: Value of DOD's and DLA's Secondary Inventory (Fiscal Years 
2006-2008) (Dollars in billions): 

Fiscal year: 2006; 
DOD secondary inventory: $89.3; 
DLA secondary inventory: $17.0; 
Percentage of DOD secondary inventory held by DLA: 19%. 

Fiscal year: 2007; 
DOD secondary inventory: $84.2; 
DLA secondary inventory: $15.9; 
Percentage of DOD secondary inventory held by DLA: 19%. 

Fiscal year: 2008; 
DOD secondary inventory: $94.1; 
DLA secondary inventory: $20.7; 
Percentage of DOD secondary inventory held by DLA: 22%. 

Source: GAO analysis of DOD data. 

Notes: Values are expressed in constant fiscal year 2008 dollars. DOD 
values inventory at latest acquisition cost, with reductions for 
reparable inventory in need of repair and salvage prices for potential 
reutilization/disposal stock. 

[End of table] 

DLA's Process for Determining Needed Amount of Secondary Inventory: 

DLA determines requirements by calculating the amount of wholesale 
inventory it needs to either have in storage (on hand) or purchase (on 
order). According to DLA officials, the agency identifies in its 
stratification reporting the amount of inventory allocated to meet its 
requirements objective, which includes various operating requirements 
and acquisition lead time, as well as a calculated economic order 
quantity that may be added to these requirements. Operating 
requirements include low demand items and war reserves, back orders, 
and safety levels. Low demand items are requirements for parts for 
which demand cannot be forecast but nevertheless need to be stocked. 
War reserves include mission-essential secondary items sufficient to 
attain and sustain authorized operational objectives. Back orders are 
customer-requisitioned materiel that is not immediately available to 
issue, but is recorded as a commitment for future issue. Safety levels 
are stock that is to be kept on hand in case of minor interruptions in 
the resupply process or unpredictable fluctuations in demand. 
Acquisition lead time includes both administrative and production lead 
time requirements. Administrative lead time requirements refer to 
inventory reserves sufficient to satisfy demand from the time that the 
need for replenishment of an item is identified to the time when a 
contract is awarded for its purchase or an order is placed. Production 
lead time requirements refer to inventory purchases sufficient to 
satisfy demand from the time when a contract is let or an order is 
placed for inventory to the time when the item is received. 

When on-hand and on-order inventory levels drop to a threshold level-- 
called the reorder point--the supply manager may place an order for 
additional inventory of that item. The reorder point factors in demand 
for an inventory item during the reordering period so that DLA can 
replace it before it goes out of stock, and a safety level to ensure a 
supply of stock during interruptions in production or repair.[Footnote 
11] An economic order quantity--the amount of inventory that will 
result in the lowest total costs for ordering and holding inventory--
is automatically calculated by a computer program and is added to the 
order, if applicable. A purchase request or purchase order may be 
terminated or modified if requirements change.[Footnote 12] 

On-hand and on-order parts that are not needed to meet DLA's 
requirements objective may include some inventory that satisfies 2 
years of estimated future demand. As noted earlier, the approved 
acquisition objective incorporates both materiel needed to meet the 
requirements objective and materiel needed to meet 2 years of 
estimated future demand. Materiel that is on hand or on order that 
exceeds the approved acquisition objective is referred to as inactive 
inventory.[Footnote 13] Inactive inventory includes economic retention 
stock, which is materiel that has been deemed more economical to keep 
than to discard because it is likely to be needed in the future; 
contingency retention stock, which is material retained for specific 
contingencies; and potential excess materiel,[Footnote 14] which has 
been identified for possible disposal but has potential for 
reutilization. Figure 1 summarizes how DOD inventory categories are 
aggregated in the context of DLA stratification reporting. 

Figure 1: Categories of DOD Spare Parts Inventory: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

* Operating requirements: 
Low demand items; 
War reserves; 
Back orders; 
Safety levels; 
* Acquisition lead time: 
* Economic order quantity. 
Lead to: 
Requirements objective: 
Approved acquisition objective. 

* Forecasted demand (2 years): 
Leads to:
Approved acquisition objective. 

* Economic retention: 
* Contingency retention: 
Lead to: 
Retention stock: 
Inactive inventory. 

* Potential excess: 
Leads to: 
Inactive inventory. 

Source: GAO analysis of DOD policies and DLA stratification reporting. 

[End of figure] 

A Significant Portion of DLA's Secondary Inventory Did Not Align with 
Current Requirements and Had Limited Demand: 

Our analysis of DLA secondary inventory data for the 3-year period we 
examined showed that, on average, about half (52 percent) of DLA's 
total inventory was not needed to meet current requirements (the 
requirements objective) and more than one-third (37 percent) was not 
needed to meet the approved acquisition objective--the requirements 
objective plus 2 years of estimated future demand. More than one-third 
of DLA's total inventory (37 percent) was inactive, comprising 
retention stock and material DLA had identified as potential excess 
(for reutilization or disposal). In addition, according to DLA's 
demand forecasts for items exceeding the requirements objective in 
fiscal years 2006 and 2008, the inventory levels of some items were 
sufficient to meet over 10 years of demand, or had no projected 
demand. We also identified on-hand inventory deficits for some items. 

About $7.1 Billion, or 52 Percent, of DLA's On-Hand and On-Order 
Inventory Value Exceeded the Requirements Objective Each Year: 

Our analysis of DLA secondary inventory data showed that, for the 3 
fiscal years 2006 through 2008, an average of about $6.5 billion (48 
percent) of the total annual inventory value was needed to meet the 
requirements objective, whereas $7.1 billion (52 percent) was not 
needed for these requirements. Measured by total number of parts, 45 
percent applied to the requirements objective on average each year, 
and the remaining 55 percent did not apply to these requirements. Our 
analysis revealed that DLA managed an average of about 1.7 million 
unique items each year, and many of these had more parts than were 
needed to meet the requirements. Table 2 shows DLA's spare parts 
secondary inventory grouped by stratification category. DLA identified 
$1.0 billion on average each year as potential excess to be reviewed 
for possible reutilization or disposal. 

Table 2: Stratification of DLA Spare Parts Secondary Inventory (Annual 
Average for Fiscal Years 2006-2008): 

Requirements objective: 

Stratification category: Operating requirements; 
Parts (in billions): 0.5; 
Value (in billions): $2.8. 

Stratification category: Acquisition lead time; 
Parts (in billions): 0.3; 
Value (in billions): $2.7. 

Stratification category: Economic order quantity; 
Parts (in billions): 0.3; 
Value (in billions): $1.0. 

Subtotal: Requirements objective; 
Parts (in billions): 1.1; 
Value (in billions): $6.5. 

Stratification category: Forecasted demand (2 years); 
Parts (in billions): 0.4; 
Value (in billions): $2.1. 

Subtotal: Approved acquisition objective; 
Parts (in billions): 1.5; 
Value (in billions): $8.6. 

Inactive inventory: 

Stratification category: Economic retention; 
Parts (in billions): 0.3; 
Value (in billions): $1.5. 

Stratification category: Contingency retention; 
Parts (in billions): 0.6; 
Value (in billions): $2.6. 

Stratification category: Potential excess; 
Parts (in billions): 0.1; 
Value (in billions): $1.0. 

Subtotal: Inactive inventory; 
Parts (in billions): 1.0; 
Value (in billions): $5.1. 

Subtotal: Forecasted demand and inactive inventory; 
Parts (in billions): 1.4; 
Value (in billions): $7.1. 

Total inventory: 
Parts (in billions): 2.5; 
Value (in billions): $13.7. 

Source: GAO analysis of DLA data. 

Notes: Values are expressed in constant fiscal year 2008 dollars and 
do not include cost recovery rates (overhead charges). Totals may not 
add up due to rounding. 

[End of table] 

In table 2, the approved acquisition objective includes the 
requirements objective subtotal ($6.5 billion) plus the 2 years of 
forecasted demand ($2.1 billion). Using the approved acquisition 
objective as a criterion, about $8.6 billion (63 percent) of the total 
inventory was needed to meet these requirements, and $5.1 billion (37 
percent) was not needed. In effect, DLA had already purchased a 
significant amount of inventory toward its future needs. If some of 
these forecasted demands do not materialize, the purchased parts may 
become part of DLA's inactive inventory and may eventually be marked 
for potential reutilization or disposal. 

Our data analysis also showed some variability from year to year in 
the balance between inventory meeting current requirements (the 
requirements objective) and inventory beyond those requirements 
(composed of both the 2-year forecasted demand and the inactive 
inventory). For example, both the requirements objective and the 
forecasted demand increased each year, whereas the inactive inventory 
increased from fiscal years 2006 to fiscal year 2007 and then 
decreased in fiscal year 2008. Figure 2 shows the data for each of the 
3 years included in this review. 

Figure 2: DLA's Secondary Inventory Levels for Requirements Objective, 
Forecasted Demand, and Inactive Inventory (Fiscal Years 2006-2008): 

[Refer to PDF for image: stacked vertical bar graph] 

Fiscal year: 2006; 
Requirements objective: $5.3 billion; 
Forecasted demand (2 years): $1.9 billion; 
Inactive inventory: $5.4 billion; 
Total: $12.6 billion. 

Fiscal year: 2007; 
Requirements objective: $6.5 billion; 
Forecasted demand (2 years): $2.0 billion; 
Inactive inventory: $5.6 billion; 
Total: $14.1 billion. 

Fiscal year: 2008; 
Requirements objective: $7.7 billion; 
Forecasted demand (2 years): $2.4 billion; 
Inactive inventory: $4.2 billion; 
Total: $15.3 billion. 

Source: GAO analysis of DLA data. 

Note: Values are expressed in constant fiscal year 2008 dollars and do 
not include cost recovery rates (overhead charges). 

[End of figure] 

On average during the 3-year period, about 68 percent of the value of 
DLA's total inventory was on hand and 32 percent of the value was on 
order. The relative portion of DLA's on-hand and on-order inventory 
varied somewhat over this period, with the value of on-order inventory 
rising from 26 percent of the total in 2006 to 34 percent in 2008 (see 
figure 3). 

Figure 3: Value of DLA's Total Inventory On Hand and On Order (Fiscal 
Years 2006-2008): 

[Refer to PDF for image: stacked vertical bar graph] 

Fiscal year: 2006; 
On order: $3.2 billion; 
On hand: $9.4 billion; 
Total: $12.6 billion. 

Fiscal year: 2007; 
On order: $4.8 billion; 
On hand: $9.4 billion; 
Total: $14.2 billion. 

Fiscal year: 2008; 
On order: $5.0 billion; 
On hand: $9.3 billion; 
Total: $14.3 billion. 

Source: GAO analysis of DLA data. 

Note: Values are expressed in constant fiscal year 2008 dollars and do 
not include cost recovery rates (overhead charges). 

[End of figure] 

Inventory Beyond Requirements Objective Varied by Supply Chain, and 
Some Items Had Many Years of Projected Demands: 

Much of DLA's inventory beyond the requirements objective was 
concentrated in the aviation supply chain. Table 3 shows the average 
number and value of parts beyond the requirements objective for each 
of the three supply chains. Additional analysis of the data on only 
the portion of the inventory beyond the requirements objective showed 
that the aviation supply chain had about three-fourths (73 percent) of 
DLA's total number of spare parts and more than half (61 percent) of 
the total value of DLA's spare parts beyond the requirements 
objective. In contrast, the land supply chain accounted for a 
relatively small percentage (6 percent) of the number of parts beyond 
the requirements objective, although the value of these parts was 
about $900 million, or 12 percent of the value of DLA's spare parts 
that were beyond the requirements objective. 

Table 3: Average Annual Value of Aviation, Land, and Maritime 
Inventory Beyond the Requirements Objective (Fiscal Years 2006-2008): 

Supply chain: Aviation; 
Parts: Number (in millions): 0.9; 
Parts: Percent: 73; 
Value: Dollars (in billions): $4.3; 
Value: Percent: 61. 

Supply chain: Maritime; 
Parts: Number (in millions): 0.3; 
Parts: Percent: 21; 
Value: Dollars (in billions): $2.0; 
Value: Percent: 27. 

Supply chain: Land; 
Parts: Number (in millions): 0.1; 
Parts: Percent: 6; 
Value: Dollars (in billions): $0.9; 
Value: Percent: 12. 

Supply chain: Total; 
Parts: Number (in millions): 1.3; 
Parts: Percent: 100%; 
Value: Dollars (in billions): $7.1; 
Value: Percent: 100%. 

Source: GAO analysis of DLA data. 

Note: Values are expressed in constant fiscal year 2008 dollars and do 
not include cost recovery rates (overhead charges). Totals may not add 
due to rounding. 

[End of table] 

Applying DLA forecasts of future demand for those items where our 
analysis indicated quantities were beyond the requirements objective, 
we found that some of DLA's inventory for fiscal years 2006 and 2008 
was sufficient to meet over 10 years of demand. In addition, many 
items showed no projected demand. Figure 4 shows the values associated 
with the spare parts beyond the identified requirements grouped into 
projected years of supply. 

Figure 4: Value of DLA's Inventory Beyond the Requirements Objective 
by Projected Years of Supply (Fiscal Years 2006 and 2008): 

[Refer to PDF for image: multiple vertical bar graph] 

Up to 2 years: 
Fiscal year 2006: $0.8 billion; 
Fiscal year 2008: $1.4 billion. 

More than 2 up to 10 years: 
Fiscal year 2006: $1.5 billion; 
Fiscal year 2008: $1.1 billion. 

Over 10 years: 
Fiscal year 2006: $1.9 billion; 
Fiscal year 2008: $1.4 billion. 

Source: GAO analysis of DLA data. 

Notes: We identified an annual demand forecast for individual items 
with inventory beyond the requirements objective in the stratification 
reports for fiscal years 2006 and 2008. We divided inventory beyond 
the requirements by the annual demand forecast to obtain the number of 
years of supply the inventory levels would satisfy, and then 
multiplied the result by the fiscal year 2008 per part cost. 

Values are expressed in constant fiscal year 2008 dollars and do not 
include cost recovery rates (overhead charges). 

[End of figure] 

As shown in figure 4, about $1.4 billion of the inventory beyond the 
requirements objective in fiscal year 2008 would supply up to 2 years 
of forecasted demand, about $1.1 billion of parts would meet more than 
2 and up to 10 years of forecasted demand, and about $1.4 billion of 
parts would meet forecasted demand for over 10 years. A comparison of 
the supply data for the 2 fiscal years suggests some positive changes 
occurred. Specifically, the value of inventory forecasted to be used 
in the next 2 years was higher in 2008 than in 2006, and the value of 
inventory with more than 2 years of supply was lower. Similarly, our 
analysis further showed that the value of inventory with no forecasted 
demand decreased from $2.3 billion in fiscal year 2006 to $1.6 billion 
in fiscal year 2008. 

Other information provided by DLA supply distribution centers also 
indicated that the agency had large amounts of on-hand inventory as of 
September 2008 for which there was little to no demand. Specifically, 
this information showed that DLA held parts valued at about $3.2 
billion that had no demand in the past 2 or more years. (The value of 
these parts was calculated based on the cost that would be charged to 
customers and thus differed from the cost data associated with the 
stratification reports that we used for our analysis.) Of this total, 
parts valued at about $1 billion had no demands for at least the past 
8 years. DLA estimated it incurred about $2.5 million in costs for 
storing these items with 8 years or more of no demand. At a DLA 
warehouse we visited, we saw some of these items on the shelves, 
including 3 packaged circuit boards with a total value of $730,140, 15 
cable assembly parts valued at $59,086, and 74 contact assembly boards 
with a value of $26,270. In each case, DLA has had no demand for the 
items in 8 or more years. 

On-Hand Inventory Deficits Were Identified for Some Items: 

DLA had on-hand inventory deficits for some items--that is, DLA had an 
insufficient level of on-hand inventory to meet operating 
requirements.[Footnote 15] For fiscal years 2006 through 2008, DLA had 
on-hand inventory levels below operating requirements for an average 
of about 166,000 items worth an estimated $1.5 billion. DLA 
experienced more on-hand inventory deficits for aviation items than 
for maritime and land items each year. Figure 5 shows the estimated 
value of DLA's on-hand inventory deficits, by supply chain, for each 
of the fiscal years included in our review. 

Figure 5: Estimated Value of On-Hand Inventory Deficits Against 
Operating Requirements by Supply Chain (Fiscal Years 2006-2008): 

[Refer to PDF for image: stacked vertical bar graph] 

Fiscal year: 2006; 
Maritime: $0.3 billion; 
Land: $0.2 billion; 
Aviation: $0.6 billion; 
Total: $1.1 billion. 

Fiscal year: 2007; 
Maritime: $0.3 billion; 
Land: $0.3 billion; 
Aviation: $1.0 billion; 
Total: $1.6 billion. 

Fiscal year: 2008; 
Maritime: $0.4 billion; 
Land: $0.4 billion; 
Aviation: $0.9 billion; 
Total: $1.7 billion. 

Source: GAO analysis of DLA data. 

Note: Values are expressed in constant fiscal year 2008 dollars and do 
not include cost recovery rates (overhead charges). 

[End of figure] 

DOD and DLA officials said they would not consider inventory to be in 
a true deficit position if inventory levels have reached the reorder 
point and new parts are on order. They noted that inventory managers 
typically will place an order for new parts when an item's inventory 
falls to the reorder level. We subsequently analyzed the fiscal year 
2006 to 2008 data and determined that, on average, about 44,000 (27 
percent) of the items with an estimated value of about $712 million 
(47 percent) had sufficient inventory on order to meet the on-hand 
deficits we identified.[Footnote 16] DLA inventory managers told us 
that deficits occur and can persist for various reasons, including 
when there is an unexpected surge in requirements for parts or when a 
supplier is no longer in business or producing the needed part and a 
new, qualified supplier must be found. We could not determine the 
criticality of the on-hand inventory deficits we identified because 
this information is not available in stratification reporting. 

Several Factors Contributed to DLA's Having Inventory Levels of Spare 
Parts That Did Not Align with Current Requirements: 

On the basis of our audit, we identified several inventory management 
factors that contribute to a mismatch between DLA inventory levels and 
current requirements for secondary spare parts. These factors involve 
deficiencies in (1) accurately forecasting customer demands, (2) 
estimating lead times for acquiring parts, (3) meeting the services' 
estimated additional requirements for spare parts, (4) improving 
communications among stakeholders to ensure purchase decisions are 
based on accurate and timely data, (5) modifying or canceling planned 
purchases of items that may no longer be needed to meet currently 
estimated requirements, (6) determining whether inventory being stored 
as contingency retention stock is still needed, and (7) assessing and 
tracking the overall cost efficiency of its inventory management. 

These factors overlap with one another but can be grouped into three 
major categories. The first three factors relate to determining how 
many parts to buy. The next three factors relate to DLA initiatives 
that, while showing promise for reducing the acquisition and retention 
of parts not needed to meet requirements, do not appear to be 
achieving their full potential due to limits on their implementation. 
The last factor--assessing and tracking the overall cost efficiency of 
its inventory management--reflects a deficiency in DLA's current 
ability to determine the extent to which it is fulfilling DOD guidance 
directing the military components to size secondary item inventories 
to minimize DOD's investment while providing the inventory needed. 
According to DLA officials, some of these factors--such as determining 
the need to retain contingency retention stocks--requires a 
collaborative approach among DLA; the Office of the Under Secretary of 
Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics; and the military 
services. 

Inaccurate Demand Forecasts May Result in Acquiring More Spare Parts 
Than Needed to Meet Requirements: 

DLA faces challenges in aligning inventory levels with requirements 
due, in part, to inaccurate demand forecasting for the parts it 
manages. When customers' demands for parts are lower than originally 
forecasted, DLA can be left holding more inventory than needed to meet 
requirements. Conversely, when demands are higher than expected, DLA 
may have inventory deficits until new parts can be acquired. Having 
accurate demand forecasts is vital to cost-effective inventory 
management. DOD's supply chain regulation states that customer demand 
shall be part of all DOD components' inventory management decisions; 
that components shall not stock an item that does not have any 
possibility of future demand; and that variance in demand forecasts 
outside established parameters should be flagged for management 
analysis and action.[Footnote 17] DLA officials, in discussing demand 
planning issues with us, also stated that forecast accuracy is the 
most significant factor for simultaneously decreasing inventory levels 
while maintaining or increasing customer service. 

Our prior reports on the services' management of their spare parts 
inventory found that problems with demand forecasting were the leading 
cause of mismatches between inventory levels and their requirements 
objectives. DOD agreed with this assessment, has included the issue in 
the department's strategic business management plan, and is studying 
potential improvements. In our current audit, we found instances 
within our sample of DLA items where inaccurate demand forecasts 
presented problems in managing spare parts and minimizing mismatches 
between inventory levels and requirements. For example, the March 2009 
stratification report showed that for one of our sampled items (a 
drive assembly), DLA had a purchase request for 270 parts valued at 
$1.3 million. At our request, the demand planner reviewed the item in 
August 2009. She found notes in the record indicating the forecast for 
this item had been accepted; however, she determined based on her 
review that the forecast was too high. Her research showed that there 
had been a prior higher demand for this item that was nonrecurring. 
She told us that she subsequently reduced the demand forecast for the 
item. 

DLA officials acknowledged that the agency can face challenges in 
obtaining accurate demand forecasts for items. DLA has been analyzing 
demand forecasting issues, emphasizing the need for better demand 
planning, and taking steps aimed at mitigating the impact of 
inaccurate demand forecasts. DLA steps include reorganizing its work 
force to provide additional resources aimed at improving demand 
planning, identifying and tracking initiatives and actions that 
deserve priority for management attention for enhancing demand 
accuracy,[Footnote 18] and adjusting forecasting models to account for 
a greater range of demand patterns. 

Despite these positive steps, DLA is still in the early stages of 
assessing the issues surrounding inaccurate demand forecasting, and it 
has not developed an integrated long-term action plan. For example, 
although DLA has identified demand planning issues to focus on, it has 
not articulated specific goals, objectives, resources, or time frames 
for instituting corrective actions. Without a long-term integrated 
action plan that incorporates these elements, DLA may have difficulty 
sustaining and expanding its current efforts to improve demand 
forecasting issues. In commenting on this factor, DLA officials told 
us that the agency is providing greater management visibility and 
emphasis on cases where overforecasts caused higher than expected 
inventory levels. The officials also stated that improved demand 
forecasting will require a collaborative effort among DLA; the Office 
of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and 
Logistics; and the military services. 

DLA Has Not Resolved Problems with Estimating Lead Times Needed to 
Acquire Spare Parts: 

DLA has not resolved problems in accurately estimating acquisition 
lead times for the parts it acquires. Inaccurate lead time estimates 
can result in a mismatch between inventory levels and requirements 
because these estimates are included in calculations for purchasing 
parts. For fiscal years 2006 through 2008, parts needed for lead time 
requirements had an annual average value of $2.7 billion (20 percent) 
of the $13.7 billion in total inventory value. About $1.9 billion of 
this lead time value was for production lead time, and the remaining 
$0.8 billion was for administrative lead time. 

In 2007, we reported that DLA tended to overestimate lead time 
requirements, which resulted in inventory arriving sooner than 
expected.[Footnote 19] For example, in examining about 1 million 
shipment deliveries during fiscal year 2005, we found that almost 40 
percent had actual lead times that were at least 90 days shorter than 
their estimated lead times. Conversely, about 3 percent of the 
deliveries had actual lead times that were at least 90 days longer 
than their estimated lead times. On the basis of that earlier 
analysis, we recommended that DLA review and revise the methodology 
and the data it uses to estimate lead time. DOD responded that our 
review used data prior to DLA's implementation of the Enterprise 
Business System, and that we had not taken into account the benefits 
of its new system and related business processes. In our evaluation of 
DOD's comments, we noted that calculating the lead times in the same 
manner but recording the values in a new computer system would not 
improve the accuracy of lead time estimates. 

Determining the extent to which DLA continues to experience problems 
in estimating lead times for acquiring spare parts was not part of our 
current review, but we found instances of this problem within our 
sampled cases. In one case, a DLA inventory manager identified 
overstated lead time on a purchase of 172 helicopter valves costing 
DLA about $2,624 each, or about $451,000 in total. According to DLA 
data, the production lead time for this item was 601 days. When we 
discussed this case with DLA officials, they estimated that the 
production lead time should have been 272 days (about 45 percent of 
the production lead time used in the purchase decision) and said it 
was not uncommon for production lead times to be overstated. Using the 
lower lead time estimate might have reduced the purchase order 
requirement and DLA's investment in these valves. In another example 
involving a power inverter, a reduction in the lead time from 720 days 
to 90 days (about 13 percent of the prior estimated lead time) led DLA 
to cancel the purchase of 147 items. With an average price of $1,313, 
these canceled items had a total value of about $193,000. 

DLA officials acknowledged continuing problems with overstated lead 
time requirements, but noted that they had made some changes since 
2008 to better estimate administrative lead time. These changes 
include evaluating and revising DLA's internal administrative 
processing of purchase requests and purchase orders. The DLA officials 
stated that analyzing production lead time--which accounted for about 
more than two-thirds of the total lead time requirements for the 3-
year period we analyzed--is particularly difficult because DLA does 
not have access to contractor data that would be needed to determine 
the root causes of inaccurate production lead time estimates. While 
the DLA officials acknowledged that such an analysis could be useful, 
they said it could be too costly to require contractors to generate 
and report the data. 

DLA Faces Challenges in Efficiently Meeting the Services' Estimated 
Additional Requirements for Spare Parts: 

DLA has long faced challenges in efficiently meeting the military 
services' requirements for spare parts identified in the form of 
supply support requests and special program requirements. These two 
processes provide a means by which the services may submit estimated 
additional requirements to DLA when they first anticipate that they 
will need the agency to supply future spare parts. The services, 
however, have tended to overestimate these additional requirements, 
which may result in DLA's acquiring and holding inventory beyond what 
is needed to meet actual requirements that materialize. While DLA has 
internal controls for evaluating and adjusting purchases in response 
to the services' estimated additional requirements, these internal 
controls have not always operated effectively. 

Supply Support Requests Have Included Overstated Requirements 
Forecasts: 

Supply support requests are the principal means by which the military 
services notify DLA of anticipated requirements, such as spare parts 
that will be needed to support the maintenance of a new weapon system. 
[Footnote 20] The services provide forecasted requirements in their 
supply support requests to DLA and are required to retain 
documentation showing how the forecasts were computed for at least 3 
years after the date the parts are needed to support the weapon 
system. DLA is supposed to evaluate the supply support requests and 
purchase materiel as it deems appropriate to meet expected 
requirements. 

DLA officials said the services tend to overestimate requirements in 
their supply support requests. Data provided by DLA show that the 
services' estimates of forecasted requirements for supply support 
requests were significantly higher than their actual demands. For 
example, the services submitted supply support requests to DLA valued 
at $1.7 billion in fiscal year 2008; but by June 2009, the services 
had requisitioned $34 million (2 percent) of the requirements that 
they had forecasted.[Footnote 21] The problem of overestimated 
forecasted requirements in supply support requests has been known for 
many years. As far back as 1988, the DOD Inspector General (DODIG) 
reported that forecasted requirements submitted by the services with 
their supply support requests were frequently excessive.[Footnote 22] 
DODIG reported again in September 1993 that the services' forecasted 
requirements were unnecessary, unreasonable, or unsubstantiated; did 
not materialize at times; and resulted in unnecessary or premature 
investment in inventory.[Footnote 23] 

Although DLA has long been aware of this issue, internal controls 
aimed at minimizing unnecessary purchases of spare parts have 
sometimes operated ineffectively. For example, DOD guidance states 
that integrated materiel managers (demand planners in DLA) are to 
validate supply support requests,[Footnote 24] and DLA officials 
identified supply support requests valued at $2,500 and higher as 
those that should be validated. DLA officials, however, said they have 
typically lacked data from the services showing how the services' 
requirements were calculated and, as a result, were not able to 
validate the supply support requests. DLA officials told us in August 
2009 that to improve the implementation of this internal control, a 
special demand planning team started to track validations of higher 
value supply support requests. These officials also said that a 
systems change request has been submitted, but not yet implemented, to 
enable the Enterprise Business System to automate and track supply 
support request validations. Additional guidance on the supply support 
request process is being drafted as part of a revision to DOD guidance 
(DOD Manual 4140.26-M). Given the long-term nature of the problem, it 
is uncertain whether these steps will be effective at improving the 
efficiency of the supply support request program without additional 
DLA emphasis to reinforce and reinvigorate internal controls. 

DLA officials noted that the services lack a financial incentive for 
minimizing their supply support requests because they do not purchase 
the parts from DLA using their own funds until the parts are actually 
needed. If a service does not later purchase all of the requested 
parts from DLA, the service does not incur any additional costs for 
the unused parts. Instead, the parts remain in DLA's inventory long 
term and may result in the agency having inventory levels for these 
items beyond requirements. Under the revolving fund approach used by 
DOD to finance spare parts, DLA purchases parts using working capital 
funds and is reimbursed when the parts are later sold to a customer. 
By design, working capital funds, rather than service funds, are tied 
up in the inventory until the parts are requisitioned. DLA officials 
suggested that the services might have more incentive to submit 
accurate supply support requests if they were required to provide some 
portion of the up-front funding for DLA's initial purchase of the 
parts. However, the military services have resisted the idea of 
providing up-front funding in the past, and DLA-proposed pilot 
programs to test the concept have not been implemented. DOD budget 
officials confirmed that up-front service funding for supply support 
requests has never been formally proposed or evaluated. DLA officials 
said there could be challenges in implementing up-front service 
funding. For example, a service may not have funds available when the 
DLA purchase is made. However, up-front service funding is already 
required for certain DLA purchases of clothing and other textiles. 

Special Program Requirements Have Often Not Materialized: 

Special program requirements refer to nonrepetitive requirements for 
spare parts that cannot be forecast based on demand data and which 
have the greatest probability of materializing and resulting in the 
eventual submission of requisitions. As with supply support requests, 
the services use special program requirements to plan future supply 
support from DLA. As part of the requirement submitted to DLA, the 
service identifies a specific anticipated date that the parts will be 
needed. On or about the specified support date, the customer is 
expected to submit its requisition for the parts. However, 
requisitions for the services' special program requirements often have 
not materialized. 

DODIG has reviewed special program requirements and found issues 
similar to those with supply support requests. In 1990, DODIG reported 
that the majority of special program requirements submitted to DLA 
from the services included overstated and unsubstantiated forecast 
estimates.[Footnote 25] It further found that internal controls had 
not been put in place by either the services or DLA to account for 
specific procurements and transactions, or to monitor the overall 
effectiveness of this program. A 2004 DODIG review found some internal 
control improvements aimed at minimizing the investment in inventory 
to support special program requirements, although these improvements 
were limited to one DLA supply center (Philadelphia).[Footnote 26] Our 
current review of 90 sampled items showed that DLA has continued to 
experience problems in economically managing special program 
requirements. For example, March 2009 inventory data showed DLA had a 
purchase order to satisfy a one-time special program requirement for 
about 1,650 mechanical drive housing parts with a total value of about 
$850,000. However, DLA inventory managers said the customer had 
requisitioned only 44 percent of the parts by the support date 
specified in the special program requirement submission. Upon further 
review of this item, the managers told us the customer may have 
incorrectly identified this item as a recurring need, unnecessarily 
increasing the quantity of parts ordered. 

With regard to internal controls, DODIG's 2004 report focused on two 
initiatives that, at the time, had been implemented at DLA's 
Philadelphia supply center.[Footnote 27] One was a streamlined 
validation process. The streamlined process was designed to 
automatically cancel a special program requirement if the organization 
submitting the requirement did not validate it within specified time 
frames.[Footnote 28] While this process was operating at the time of 
our current review, DLA lacked data demonstrating its effectiveness. 
For example, DLA lacked data comparing prevalidation requirements to 
modified procurement quantities. According to DLA officials, these 
data have not been available since the transition to the Enterprise 
Business System. Furthermore, a relatively small percentage of special 
program requirements were identified as being validated by the 
services. For example, according to DLA data, the agency received 
special program requirements for a total of about 400,000 items for 
fiscal years 2007 through 2009, but requirements for only about 16,000 
items (or 4 percent) had been validated. 

The second internal control for managing special program requirements 
was a program to track the services' requisition, or "buy-back," 
rates. The buy-back program was aimed at tracking the rates at which 
the services' requisitioned parts compared with their previously 
submitted special program requirements and then adjusting future 
procurements based on these buy-back rates. DODIG found the buy-back 
program to be effective at reducing procurement quantities, and 
thereby minimized investment for some inventory. Prior to the buy-back 
program, DLA procured 100 percent of the special program requirements, 
according to DODIG. Despite the positive effects from the program 
noted in the DODIG report, our current audit found that DLA stopped 
updating its buy-back rates in 2006, coinciding with the 
implementation of the Enterprise Business System. In May 2009, DLA 
began again to update buy-back rates. As a result, during this period 
when rates were not updated, DLA may not have been optimizing 
investment in inventory purchased for special program requirements. 

DLA Inventory Managers Do Not Consistently Have Accurate, Timely Data 
to Make Informed Purchase Decisions: 

DLA inventory managers do not consistently have accurate, timely data 
needed to make informed purchase decisions, which may lead to the 
acquisition of parts that are not needed to meet requirements. 
Although DLA recognizes that sound supply chain management principles 
emphasize the need for effective communication within the agency and 
externally with all other stakeholders in the supply chain, we found 
that DLA inventory managers have experienced gaps in effective 
communication and data exchange. Our review of sampled items 
identified cases where inventory managers, as a result of these gaps, 
lacked accurate, timely data that could have influenced purchase 
decisions. For example: 

* DLA received a purchase request in June 2008 for 230 aircraft access 
covers at a cost of about $3,900 each for a total cost of about 
$897,000. Because March 2009 inventory data indicated that DLA had 
significant inventory for this item beyond its requirements objective, 
we asked DLA to review this purchase request. Inventory managers 
indicated that they had not recently communicated with the customer 
for this item. When the inventory managers obtained updated 
information following our inquiry, they determined that the purchase 
request should have been reduced from 230 to 35 parts costing about 
$136,500. 

* DLA issued a purchase order in June 2008 for 37 pad assemblies for 
Navy aircraft, with a total value of about $402,000. However, DLA 
determined later that year that the part was obsolete and the purchase 
order should be canceled. The contractor estimated that termination 
costs for canceling the order would be about $111,000. The purchase 
order was canceled in early 2009. 

* DLA purchased parts kits for an Army vehicle but was not aware until 
later that the customer's original requirement was no longer valid. 
Specifically, DLA inventory data as of September 2008 showed that the 
agency had 17,737 kits on hand and had placed a purchase order for 
47,146 additional kits. The total value of the purchase order was 
about $1.3 million. In May 2009, DLA had 60,717 kits on hand and 3,574 
on order, indicating that requirements for the total amount of 
inventory (including both on-hand and on-order parts) had remained 
about the same. When we inquired about this item, inventory managers 
told us there had been several months of no demand and that the 
monthly forecast had been reduced from 144 to 1. Furthermore, DLA 
checked with its Army customer and learned that the Army did not need 
the item as indicated in its purchase request. 

DLA in 2005 began an initiative called demand data exchange to improve 
collaboration between the agency and customers on the management of 
certain items. Under this program, DLA works collaboratively with 
customers on selected items to evaluate historical demand data and 
tailor procurement plans. Participating customers select items that 
they anticipate would benefit from this enhanced collaboration. For 
example, an item may be selected because requirements are expected to 
fluctuate. As of November 2009, DLA had rolled out the program to 
about 80 customers and for about 47,500 items. DLA officials told us 
that they were reviewing performance data from their existing demand 
data exchange activities and these data indicated the demand data 
exchange program effectively improved collaboration in some instances 
but not in others. However, DLA had not yet conducted a formal program 
evaluation, and it was unclear at the time of our review whether or to 
what extent DLA was planning to expand this initiative to incorporate 
additional customers and items. 

DLA Process for Modifying or Canceling Unneeded Purchases of Spare 
Parts Has Been Implemented on a Limited Basis: 

While DLA has a process for identifying and limiting the purchase of 
spare parts not needed to meet requirements, several factors have 
limited its implementation and potential for minimizing investment in 
unneeded inventory. Through this "over-procurement" process, DLA 
identifies purchase requests and purchase orders that may no longer be 
needed to meet currently estimated requirements; evaluates each case 
in more detail to determine whether to proceed with, or to cancel part 
or all of, the purchase; and then executes cancellation decisions when 
applicable. DLA data for fiscal year 2009 showed that a total of $275 
million in purchase orders and purchase requests were reviewed, with 
$123 million recommended for cancellation and $44 million actually 
canceled. The canceled amount represented 16 percent of the $275 
million reviewed and about 36 percent of the $123 million recommended 
for cancellation. Where the data distinguished between purchase orders 
and purchase requests, the analysis indicated that most of the 
cancellations were purchase requests.[Footnote 29] Our review of 90 
sampled items identified cases where DLA had planned purchases that 
appeared to exceed requirements but for some reason did not go through 
the over-procurement process. For example: 

* DLA inventory data for a combustion chamber liner showed that as of 
March 2009, the agency had 527 parts on hand and another 762 parts on 
order. The average unit price for the item was $3,748, and the total 
value for all 1,289 parts was $4.8 million. Inventory managers told us 
that even though this item was identified as being in the top 5 
percent in dollar value of aviation inventory, it did not have demand 
every month, and a more recent computation indicated the item may be 
over-procured by 403 parts priced at $1.5 million. We were told that 
this item was not selected for an over-procurement review until we 
requested information. 

* For another item, an instrument mounting part for B1B aircraft, DLA 
had a purchase order for 86 parts. With an average unit price of 
$13,410, the total value of parts on the purchase order was $1.2 
million. Inventory officials said the production lead time was 
recently extended from 322 days to between 800 and 1,000 days, but 
they did not know why. The officials added that the item appeared over-
procured by 31 parts valued at about $416,000. They said they would 
not have reviewed this item if we had not brought it to their 
attention. 

DLA officials expressed the view that these cases of missed 
opportunities are not representative of the overall success of the 
over-procurement process at identifying and reducing purchases of 
unneeded parts. However, DLA has not formally evaluated the 
effectiveness of the over-procurement process. In addition, while we 
agree the over-procurement process has shown promise, our example 
cases indicate that it may have greater potential for minimizing 
investment in inventory than has been achieved to date. We identified 
several factors that may be limiting the impact of the over-
procurement process. These factors include the following: 

First, purchases are not identified and reviewed as potential over- 
procurements if they do not meet or exceed DLA-established minimum 
thresholds. DLA initially established a minimum threshold of 150 
percent of the requirements objective for identifying a potential over-
procurement--that is, the value of the purchase request or purchase 
order had to exceed the value of the requirements objective by at 
least 50 percent in order to be flagged for review. In 2008, DLA 
lowered the threshold to 125 percent of the requirements objective, 
which flagged a greater number of potential over-procurements for 
further review.[Footnote 30] 

Second, items are not identified and reviewed for potential over- 
procurement if they support programs that have been exempted from the 
process.[Footnote 31] A number of items in our sample supported the 
Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicle--a program exempted from over- 
procurement review--and were identified by inventory managers as being 
in over-procured positions at the time of our site visit. For example, 
March 2009 inventory data for a winch parts kit for the vehicle showed 
that DLA had 4 kits on hand and an existing purchase order for 220 
kits. A purchase request for 1,200 additional kits was generated in 
February 2009, a purchase order was placed in April 2009, and the 
items were received in May 2009. In the meantime, forecasted demand 
for this item dropped in April 2009 from about 51 per month to 6 per 
month. At the demand rate of 6 per month, the 1,424 kits represented 
about 20 years of supply and a total value of about $691,000. 

Third, items flagged as potential over-procurements may go through a 
lengthy review process, which can make it more difficult to execute a 
cancellation decision. Although DLA lacked summary data on the overall 
timeliness of the process, individual cases may take several months 
from the time a potential over-procurement is identified through when 
a final decision is reached. For example, inventory data for one of 
our sampled items, an antenna accessory kit, showed that DLA had 26 
parts on hand and 46 on order as of August 2008. With an average unit 
cost of about $3,000, the total value of these 72 parts was about 
$216,000. The inventory manager told us that, due to a drop in demand, 
the item was in an over-procurement position. Over-procurement reports 
for this item were generated in February 2009, May 2009, and September 
2009. When the supply planner tried to cancel the on-order parts after 
receiving the September report, the contract administrator determined 
the planner's request was not timely, and the cancellation was not 
executed. This review process may be lengthy because numerous 
individuals are involved in evaluating and reviewing the decision, 
particularly for higher value purchases where a cancellation has been 
recommended. In addition, the supply planner responsible for the item 
may not have extensive experience with the item, which could increase 
the time needed to evaluate a potential over-procurement. With 
responsibility for thousands of items, each planner has limited time 
to spend on any particular item and must make trade-offs in how to use 
the available time. DLA officials said recent management emphasis has 
been placed on making the processing of over-procurement reports more 
timely. 

Fourth, according to DLA officials and inventory managers we 
interviewed for our sample, other factors can limit the impact of the 
over-procurement process. For example, data on customers' requirements 
for the items may be inaccurate or obsolete; circumstances related to 
a potential over-procurement can be complex; canceling or amending 
purchase orders may be difficult because of a high termination cost; 
and canceling a purchase request within DLA becomes more difficult the 
closer it gets to contract award because of the amount of time and 
work invested. 

DLA officials identified plans to improve the over-procurement process 
in fiscal year 2010. First, DLA planned to expand the number and value 
of purchases flagged for over-procurement review. Also, DLA officials 
said they planned to target more attention on identifying and reducing 
purchase orders. Finally, DLA officials said tighter goals have been 
set, including at least a 10 percent improvement compared to fiscal 
year 2009 performance. These planned improvements in the over- 
procurement process recognize that there is greater potential for 
minimizing investment in inventory than has been achieved to date. 

DLA Has Reported Progress in Reducing the Proportion of Inventory That 
Is Inactive, but the Agency Continues to Store Large Amounts of 
Contingency Retention Stock: 

DLA has reported progress toward its goal of rebalancing its inventory 
and reducing the proportion of inactive inventory--those items in the 
inventory that are not needed to meet the requirements objective plus 
2 years of future supply (collectively referred to as the approved 
acquisition objective).[Footnote 32] In July 2008, DLA observed that, 
as measured in value, half of its inventory was active and the other 
half inactive, a split that the agency determined was too heavily 
weighted on the inactive side. To help rebalance its inventory, DLA 
established active inventory goals for individual supply chains, 
including aviation (75 percent), maritime (74 percent), and land (80 
percent). DLA reported that it made progress toward rebalancing its 
inventory, although it had not met its specific goals for these supply 
chains as of June 2009 (see table 4). 

Table 4: Value of DLA Active and Inactive Inventory Compared with 
Goals, by Supply Chain, as of June 2009 (Dollars in billions): 

Total inventory; 
Aviation: $6.0; 
Maritime: $2.5; 
Land: $1.4. 

Inactive inventory: 

Economic retention; 
Aviation: $0.8; 
Maritime: $0.4; 
Land: $0.2. 

Contingency retention; 
Aviation: $1.3; 
Maritime: $0.6; 
Land: $0.1. 

Potential excess; 
Aviation: $0.1; 
Maritime: [A]; 
Land: [A]. 

Subtotal: Inactive inventory; 
Aviation: $2.2; 
Maritime: $1.0; 
Land: $0.3. 

Subtotal: Active inventory; 
Aviation: $3.8; 
Maritime: $1.5; 
Land: $1.0. 

Percent active; 
Aviation: 63%; 
Maritime: 60%; 
Land: 79%. 

Goal for percent active; 
Aviation: 75%; 
Maritime: 74%; 
Land: 80%. 

Source: GAO presentation of DLA data. 

Note: Totals may not add up due to rounding. 

[A] Less than $50 million. 

[End of table] 

DLA officials attributed the progress in rebalancing inactive and 
active inventory to its efforts in fiscal years 2008 and 2009 to 
dispose of parts. Despite this progress, DLA continues to have large 
amounts of contingency retention stock. Our data analysis for fiscal 
years 2006 through 2008 showed that the agency annually held an 
average of about $2.6 billion of its secondary inventory as 
contingency retention, and the data presented in figure 4 show that 
DLA reported having about $2 billion in contingency retention stock as 
of June 2009. Some of this inventory may no longer be needed. However, 
DLA has not determined the extent that its contingency retention stock 
is no longer needed because the services have not provided input 
needed to make these determinations. 

DLA has a retention and disposal program aimed at identifying items in 
its contingency retention stock that should be retained and items that 
are potential excess and should be considered for disposal or 
reutilization. The agency's contingency retention requirements are 
aimed at precluding disposal of assets that might be needed for future 
nonrecurring demand, such as provisioning or planned maintenance 
actions; items used primarily in wartime which have limited use in 
peacetime; and future foreign military sales. Since DLA holds 
contingency retention stock for the services, DLA depends on the 
services to provide input on which contingency inventory items are no 
longer needed and should be considered for disposal or reutilization. 

DOD regulations require DLA to annually evaluate and attest to the 
extent that its contingency retention stock should be retained. 
[Footnote 33] Specifically, the DOD regulations require that DLA 
ensure that mechanisms are in place to take proper retention, 
redistribution, and disposal actions against items in that category of 
inventory. To ensure that contingency retention stocks correspond with 
the needs for current and future force levels, DLA is to review and 
validate its methodologies for making contingency retention decisions. 
Contingency retention reviews should focus on verifying that the 
reason for contingency retention still exists and the reason is 
properly recorded. The inventory management organization commander or 
designee is required to attest in writing to the validity of the 
annual review decisions. According to DLA officials, they cannot 
achieve the goals of the regulation without service input, and 
information from the services would enable the agency to reduce 
unneeded contingency retention stock in its inventory. However, they 
noted that the services have not been providing input to DLA. DLA has 
informed the services that all contingency retention levels must be 
validated or eliminated in fiscal year 2010. However, if the services 
do not provide the necessary information to DLA, then DLA may continue 
to carry unneeded inventory. 

DLA Does Not Assess and Track the Cost Efficiency of Its Inventory 
Management: 

Although DOD's supply chain regulation directs the military components 
to size secondary item inventories to minimize DOD's investment while 
providing the inventory needed, DLA does not assess and track the cost 
efficiency of its inventory management to determine whether it is 
meeting this requirement. DLA has effectiveness-related metrics aimed 
at measuring the extent to which the agency is able to satisfy 
customer requisitions and other aspects of its performance, but it 
lacks goals and metrics to measure the cost efficiency of its 
inventory management. As a result, DLA does not know whether it is 
meeting inventory requirements at least cost. 

DOD's supply chain management regulation emphasizes a need for both 
effective and efficient management of materiel. The regulation sets 
out management goals such as considering all costs associated with 
materiel management in making best-value logistics decisions, and 
directs DOD components and DLA to take a number of steps to implement 
these goals. These steps include balancing the use of all available 
logistics resources to accomplish timely and quality delivery at the 
lowest cost; and measuring total supply chain performance based on 
timely and cost-effective delivery. To help ensure efficient and 
effective supply chain management, the regulation also calls for the 
use of metrics to evaluate the performance and cost of supply chain 
operations. These metrics should, among other things, monitor the 
efficient use of DOD resources and provide a means to assess costs 
versus benefits of supply chain operations.[Footnote 34] However, the 
regulation does not prescribe specific cost metrics and goals that the 
services or DLA should or must use to track and assess the efficiency 
of their inventory management practices. 

DLA has numerous metrics for assessing and tracking supply chain 
performance. None of these, however, enable DLA to monitor the 
efficient use of resources for inventory management or to provide a 
means for assessing costs versus benefits. Examples of DLA's current 
key metrics include orders received, materiel availability, unfilled 
orders, and purchase requests awarded. Other DLA performance metrics 
track demand plan accuracy; inventory turnover; the timeliness, 
quantity, quality, and documentation of filled orders; the receipt and 
transportation of materiel; and customer satisfaction. Two additional 
metrics that track supply chain financial performance are cash 
performance plan (the difference between monthly disbursements and 
collections) and net operating result (metrics that track revenue and 
expenses monthly, assess performance against the budget, and identify 
variances early in the fiscal year). DLA officials told us they are 
developing a framework for integrating effectiveness measures with 
supply chain costs, but they have not developed milestones for 
completing the design or implementation of this framework. They also 
told us that they believe the Office of the Secretary of Defense 
should be involved in developing any additional metrics to monitor the 
efficient use of DOD resources and provide a means to assess costs 
versus benefits of supply chain operations. 

DLA officials also expressed the view that a lack of cost-efficiency 
metrics does not necessarily mean that DLA is being wasteful. They 
asserted that DLA strives to be a good steward of government 
resources. However, without such metrics, DLA cannot demonstrate that 
it is minimizing inventory costs consistent with the DOD regulation. 
In addition, without such metrics, DLA is likely to have difficulty in 
establishing (1) a baseline for the agency's collective efforts to 
improve efficiencies in various areas of inventory management, (2) a 
means for DLA to demonstrate progress against the baseline, and (3) a 
basis for understanding and responding to any positive or negative 
cost-efficiency trends that may occur in the future. 

Moreover, the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 
[Footnote 35] requires the Secretary of Defense to submit a 
comprehensive plan to the congressional defense committees for 
improving the inventory management systems of the military departments 
and DLA with the objective of reducing the acquisition and storage of 
secondary inventory that is excess to requirements.[Footnote 36] The 
Secretary of Defense's comprehensive plan is to include (among other 
things): (1) a plan for a comprehensive review of demand forecasting 
procedures to identify and correct any systematic weaknesses in such 
procedures, including the development of metrics to identify bias 
toward over-forecasting and adjust forecasting methods accordingly; 
(2) a plan to reduce the average level of on-order secondary inventory 
that is excess to requirements, including a requirement for the 
systemic review of such inventory for possible contract termination; 
(3) a plan for the review and validation of methods used by the 
military departments and DLA to establish economic retention 
requirements; (4) a plan for an independent review of methods used by 
the military departments and DLA to establish contingency retention 
requirements; and (5) a plan for a comprehensive assessment of 
inventory items on hand that have no recurring demands, including 
metrics to track years of no demand for items in stock and procedures 
for ensuring the systemic review of such items for potential 
reutilization or disposal. 

Conclusions: 

Our review showed that DLA can enhance its efforts to manage spare 
parts more effectively primarily by focusing on the front end of the 
process when decisions are being made on what items to buy and how 
many in response to requirements. Our analysis showed that DLA had 
substantial mismatches between spare parts inventory levels and its 
current requirements for each of the 3 fiscal years we reviewed, and 
it has invested in large amounts of inventory that now have little or 
no projected demand. The accumulation of inventory beyond either the 
requirements objective or the approved acquisition objective is caused 
by many overlapping factors, including some that have been identified 
in prior audits. The best opportunities for minimizing investment in 
unneeded inventory while still meeting required inventory levels are 
at the front end of the process when the agency is making decisions on 
what and how much to purchase. In addition, DLA needs to have 
effective policies and practices in place to modify planned purchases 
as appropriate when demands for parts change. DLA has been taking 
positive steps to correct problems it has identified in its inventory 
management. In addition to enterprisewide changes in business 
practices and replacement of legacy information systems, DLA has 
efforts aimed at improving specific inventory management practices, 
such as the over-procurement process and the demand data exchange 
initiative. While some of DLA's steps are relatively recent and may 
not be fully implemented, the magnitude of inventory levels beyond 
current requirements suggests that the agency has additional 
opportunities to minimize its investment in secondary inventory while 
still meeting required inventory levels. If DLA does not take 
additional actions to better align inventory levels and requirements, 
it will continue to invest in spare parts long before they are needed 
to meet customer demand or in the future become potential excess 
stock. Acquiring inventory for which demand is much lower than 
expected reduces the amount of funding available for other military 
needs. The recent legislative requirement directing the Secretary of 
Defense to submit a comprehensive plan for improving inventory 
management practices provides further impetus for addressing the 
factors we identified in this review that contribute to mismatches 
between inventory levels and requirements. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To minimize investment in unneeded spare parts inventory, we recommend 
that the Secretary of Defense direct the Director, Defense Logistics 
Agency, to take the following five actions: 

* Establish an action plan for completing the agency's evaluation of 
identified demand planning issues, and include goals, objectives, 
resources, and time frames in this action plan. 

* Develop an approach for working with suppliers to assess the root 
causes of inaccurate production lead time estimates and implement 
corrective actions linked to these root causes. 

* Reinforce and reinvigorate effective internal controls aimed at 
evaluating and making adjustments to the military services' estimated 
additional requirements, including both supply support requests and 
special program requirements. 

* Conduct a program evaluation of the demand data exchange initiative 
to determine what, if any, additional actions should be taken to (1) 
improve communication and data exchange internally and with military 
customers and suppliers and (2) expand the initiative across the 
enterprise (for example, to other customers, items, and processes). 

* Evaluate the effectiveness of the agency's process for identifying 
and reducing potential over-procurements and determine the feasibility 
of applying the process on a wider scale. 

In addition, we recommend that the Secretary of Defense direct the 
Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics, 
in conjunction with the Director, Defense Logistics Agency, and the 
Secretaries of the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force, to take the 
following two actions: 

* Formally evaluate and report on the feasibility of requiring up-
front military service funding for a portion of their supply support 
requests. 

* Establish goals and metrics for tracking and assessing the cost 
efficiency of inventory management in accordance with DOD's policy 
requiring DLA and the services to minimize investment in secondary 
item inventory while providing inventory needed; develop and implement 
an approach for integrating these goals and metrics with inventory 
management improvement efforts; and incorporate the goals and metrics 
into existing management and oversight processes. 

Finally, we recommend that the Secretary of Defense direct the 
Secretaries of the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force to certify to DLA 
which items and what quantities of the contingency reserve stock 
should be retained, in response to DLA's requests that they do so, and 
direct the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Logistics and 
Technology to provide guidance and oversight of this certification 
process. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

In its written comments on a draft of this report, DOD concurred with 
our recommendations and identified corrective actions to be completed. 
The planned actions were generally responsive to our recommendations. 
The department's written comments are reprinted in appendix II. 

DOD concurred with our recommendation that DLA establish an action 
plan for completing an evaluation of identified demand planning 
issues. DOD stated that DLA will establish an action plan that will 
include goals, objectives, resources, and time frames and that will be 
completed in the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2010. DOD cited a 
number of actions that are already underway to evaluate and adjust 
demand inputs and also commented that over-forecasting in the 
Enterprise Business System does not always equate to over-buying 
because of actions to mitigate supply planning impacts of over-
estimated demand. We believe that DOD's planned action is responsive 
to our recommendation. 

DOD concurred with our recommendation that DLA develop an approach for 
assessing the root causes of inaccurate production lead time estimates 
and implement corrective actions linked to these root causes. DOD 
stated that DLA has already identified several root causes for 
inaccurate lead times, including suppliers not accurately predicting 
lead time from subcontractors, suppliers including "buffers" in their 
projected production time, and suppliers relying on past lead times 
for current purchase requests. DOD also identified DLA management 
actions to challenge the lead time quotes from vendors to ensure the 
quotes are realistic, look at required delivery dates on contracts, 
conduct reviews to identify suspected excessive production lead times, 
and adjust these lead times as appropriate. It said that DLA will 
continue to work with suppliers to improve estimates and noted that 
DLA has been able to reduce production lead time over-estimates since 
early 2009. We recognize the value of these actions and believe DLA's 
efforts could be further enhanced by identifying in measurable terms 
the extent to which specific root causes are contributing to 
inaccurate production lead time estimates, and then using these data 
as benchmarks to assess the effectiveness of corrective actions. 

DOD concurred with our recommendation that DLA reinforce and 
reinvigorate effective internal controls aimed at evaluating and 
making adjustments to the military services' supply support requests 
and special program requirements. According to DOD, DLA will reinforce 
effective internal controls and has already enhanced internal controls 
for special program requirements. DOD cited, for example, a recent 
effort to eliminate ongoing discrepancies and issues with Army special 
program requirements. DOD said this effort eliminated over $200 
million in Army special program requirement submissions. Although we 
did not review this effort or the results cited by DOD, it highlights 
the potential positive effects that further reinforcing and 
reinvigorating internal controls might have if such actions are 
implemented. 

DOD concurred with our recommendation to conduct a program evaluation 
of the demand data exchange initiative to determine what, if any, 
additional actions should be taken to improve and expand the 
initiative. DOD said that DLA has an evaluation of the initiative 
underway, with completion set for February 2011. As part of its 
evaluation, DLA will review items as potential candidates for 
collaboration partnerships with additional customers and suppliers and 
will also look to continue improving forecast accuracy with its 
current collaboration customers. DOD also cited actions by DLA to 
modify its business rule logic, in response to feedback from current 
customers, and to begin holding collaboration forums in August 2010 
to, among other things, expand the use of demand data exchange. We 
believe these actions are responsive to our recommendation. 

DOD concurred with our recommendation that DLA evaluate the 
effectiveness of the agency's process for identifying and reducing 
potential over-procurements and determine the feasibility of applying 
the process on a wider scale. DOD commented that DLA has made 
significant progress in reducing its over-procurements. For example, 
in 2009, the aviation supply chain initiated a review of its over- 
procurement process, and initial findings from that review have been 
adopted DLA-wide, resulting in significant cancellations of purchase 
requests. DLA will also evaluate ways to increase purchase order 
cancellations and, by October 2010, will complete a review and 
validation of items currently being excluded from the over-procurement 
process. According to DOD, DLA will ensure that any items it continues 
to exclude from the systemic over-procurement process will be subject 
to a separate review process that allows for cancellation of purchase 
requests and purchase orders exceeding requirements. We believe the 
actions cited by DOD are positive steps. Because this process provides 
opportunities on a continuing basis for DLA to identify and limit the 
purchase of spare parts that may no longer be needed to meet currently 
estimated requirements, the agency would benefit from a thorough 
evaluation of the over-procurement process, including identifying any 
factors that may be limiting its potential impact. 

DOD concurred with our recommendation to formally evaluate and report 
on the feasibility of requiring up-front funding from the military 
services for a portion of their supply support requests. It said that 
the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, 
Technology and Logistics, in conjunction with the Office of the Under 
Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) and the military services, will 
evaluate and report on the feasibility of requiring up-front funding 
of supply support requests. DOD also said that DLA is pursuing a pilot 
effort with the Navy and the Marine Corps to support the H-1 
helicopter, wherein DLA and the services share the burden of 
investment risk. The concept of this initiative is to have the Navy 
and the Marine Corps pay half of the total cost of the supply support 
request investment in advance of the anticipated support date. DLA, in 
turn, will honor the total supply support request requirement and buy 
both retail and wholesale quantities. We believe these planned actions 
are positive steps and responsive to our recommendation, although DOD 
did not cite time frames for completing either its evaluation or the 
pilot project involving the H-1 helicopter. 

DOD concurred with our recommendation to establish goals and metrics 
for tracking and assessing the cost efficiency of inventory 
management. DOD stated the department is undertaking a comprehensive 
review of its inventory management practices, to include establishing 
goals and metrics for tracking inventory management improvement 
initiatives and cost efficiency. DOD is developing an improvement plan 
that will include goals, objectives, metrics, targets, and a 
governance process for overseeing execution and refreshing the plan on 
a regular basis. The target for publishing the plan is the last 
quarter of fiscal year 2010. We believe the inclusion of cost-
efficiency goals and metrics as part of overall efforts to improve 
inventory management is responsive to our recommendation. 

DOD concurred with our recommendation aimed at identifying which items 
and what quantities of these items to retain as contingency reserve 
stock. It said the military services and DLA are collaboratively 
reviewing contingency retention inventory and the Office of the Under 
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics will 
review the results of that review once complete. In addition, the 
department stated that, in conjunction with its previously discussed 
plan for improving inventory management practices, it will conduct an 
independent review of contingency retention methodologies. That 
review, according to DOD, will highlight any changes in guidance 
necessary to improve the contingency retention process. We believe 
DLA's planned actions are responsive to the recommendation. 

As arranged with your offices, unless you publicly announce its 
contents earlier, we plan no further distribution of this report until 
30 days after its date. At that time, we will send copies to 
interested congressional committees; the Secretary of Defense; the 
Secretaries of the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force; the Under 
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics; the 
Director, DLA; and the Director, Office of Management and Budget. In 
addition, the report will be available at no charge on the GAO Web 
site at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/]. 

If you or your staff have any questions concerning this report, please 
contact me on (202) 512-8246 or edwardsj@gao.gov. Contact points for 
our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found 
on the last page of this report. Key contributors to this report are 
listed in appendix III. 

Signed by: 

Jack E. Edwards: 
Director, Defense Capabilities and Management: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

We conducted work at the Defense Logistics Agency's (DLA) headquarters 
and at DLA Supply Centers in Richmond, Virginia, and Columbus, Ohio. 
We used DLA stratification data to determine the extent to which the 
DLA's inventory of spare parts reflected the amount needed to support 
requirements. The Department of Defense (DOD) requires DLA and each 
military service to semiannually prepare inventory stratification 
reports, which are used to determine procurement and repair budget 
requirements and identify potential excess or reutilization stock. 
[Footnote 37] Stratification is a process that applies assets, by 
type, for an individual item against requirements for the same item in 
a prescribed priority sequence. The stratification reports serve as a 
mechanism for matching on-hand and on-order inventory to requirements. 

We conducted the following steps in our analysis of inventory data: 

* Obtained DLA's stratification summary data for three DLA supply 
chains--aviation, land, and maritime. We also obtained item-specific 
electronic files as of October 30 of each fiscal year from 2006 
through 2008. These data were the most recent available for our 
analysis. Our analysis was based on analyzing DLA's item 
stratifications within the opening position table as defined for DOD's 
Central Secondary Item Stratification Reports. Opening position data 
represent current requirements as of a certain cutoff date and do not 
include any forecasted requirements or simulations. DLA's secondary 
inventory data are identified by unique stock numbers for each unique 
item, such as an engine for a particular aircraft. DLA may have in its 
inventory multiple quantities of the same item, which we refer to as 
parts. 

* Assessed the reliability of the data to be used in our audit. While 
our assessments occurred throughout our analyses, most of our efforts 
to evaluate the data were concentrated in the initial stages of data 
analysis. Those assessments included reviewing DOD requirements for 
secondary spare parts inventory reporting, comparing the data we 
generated from DLA-provided electronic files to its summary tables, 
searching for and reconciling inconsistent information (e.g., out-of- 
range and missing data), and discussing DLA's data and our findings 
with database managers. After assessing DLA's data, we determined that 
the data were sufficiently reliable for the purposes of our analysis 
and findings. 

* Calculated the value of each unique item by multiplying the quantity 
of parts for an item by the item's moving average unit price, which is 
the latest acquisition cost for the item. We computed total values for 
all items in DLA's inventory and recreated the stratification tables. 
This computation approach is consistent with DOD's process for valuing 
assets in its annual Supply System Inventory Report. Values do not 
include DLA cost recovery rates (overhead charges). 

* Converted then-year dollars to constant fiscal year 2008 dollars 
using DOD operations and maintenance price deflators.[Footnote 38] 

We analyzed the data to determine the extent to which DLA had more 
inventory than was needed to satisfy its requirements objective based 
on the opening position table of DLA's budget stratification report. 
DOD defines the requirements objective as the maximum authorized 
quantity of stock for wholesale items.[Footnote 39] However, if DLA 
has more inventory on hand or on order than is needed to satisfy its 
requirements objective, it can allot inventory that is beyond its 
requirements objective to satisfy forecasted demands over a 2-year 
period. When the forecast is added to its requirements objective, it 
constitutes the approved acquisition objective. Inventory beyond an 
item's approved acquisition objective is identified as inactive 
inventory and is applied to economic retention requirements[Footnote 
40] and then to contingency retention requirements.[Footnote 41] Only 
after applying inventory to satisfy these additional requirements 
would DLA consider that it has more inventory than is needed and would 
consider this inventory for potential reutilization or disposal. 
[Footnote 42] We used the requirements objective as a criterion for 
our analysis because, according to DOD Regulation 4140.1-R, it 
establishes the target quantity for replenishing an item's level of 
stock through procurement. DOD's requirements objective process does 
not consider the 2-year forecast or inactive inventory as additional 
requirements when determining inventory needs. The requirements 
objective is reflected in DLA stratification reports as material 
needed to meet various operating requirements (comprised of low demand 
items, war reserves, back orders, and safety levels) and also factors 
in the time required to acquire parts--or acquisition lead time--as 
well as an economic order quantity that may be added to these 
requirements. 

We also analyzed the data to determine the extent to which DLA had 
less inventory than was needed to satisfy its requirements. We 
considered DLA to have inventory deficits if levels of on-hand 
inventory were insufficient to meet the operating requirements. We 
used this criterion level because it reflects DLA's ability to respond 
to an immediate demand for a secondary inventory item. DOD and DLA 
officials said they would not consider inventory to be in true deficit 
position if new parts are on order. Therefore, we also analyzed the 
extent to which on-order inventory for those items would cover the on-
hand inventory deficits identified. 

Additionally, we calculated, based on DLA's forecasted demand, the 
number of years of supply for each item with on-hand and on-order 
quantities greater than the requirements objective. Our calculations 
were based on quantity of parts and demand for those parts at the time 
of stratification in October 2006 and October 2008. We identified an 
annual demand forecast for individual items with inventory beyond the 
requirements objective in the stratification reports for fiscal years 
2006 and 2008. We divided inventory beyond the requirements objective 
by the annual demand forecast to obtain the number of years of supply 
the inventory levels would satisfy. We grouped these data into 
categories as follows: up to 2 years, more than 2 to less than 10 
years, over 10 years, and no forecasted demand. 

To identify causes for DLA's having inventory that does not align with 
requirements, we used a case study approach using a nonprobability 
sample of 90 inventory items for which DLA inventory data indicated a 
mismatch between inventory levels and requirements. We used March 2009 
stratification data because these were the most recent available when 
we selected our case studies. From the data set, we identified those 
items with inventory levels that were beyond the requirements 
objective and further identified those items with open purchase 
requests and open purchase orders. We focused on such items because 
DLA did not yet have physical possession of the items and there could 
be an opportunity for DLA to modify or cancel the request or order to 
reflect changes in demand. Of the items meeting these criteria, we 
identified those with the highest purchase request and purchase order 
values, as determined by DLA's moving average price, and further 
identified items where at least one-third of the value was stratified 
to retention or potential disposal categories. We then selected an 
equal number of items as case studies from each of DLA's three supply 
chains--aviation, land, and maritime--and selected 10 items with open 
purchase orders and 10 with open purchase requests--for a total of 60 
items. We selected 30 additional items for our sample where the March 
2009 data showed that there were insufficient quantities of parts on 
hand to meet the requirements objective. We identified these items 
with purchase requests that also had the greatest back order deficits 
by value, as determined by DLA's moving price average. Selections 
based on purchase request value and back order data helped identify 
items experiencing more current and critical deficits. We met with DLA 
inventory managers responsible for managing the items in our sample to 
obtain information on factors that contributed to the apparent 
mismatch between inventory levels and requirements. For example, we 
discussed and documented the initial requirements, any adjustments, 
current status, and future plans. This provided insight into how 
inventory management processes were applied to these items. Because we 
used a nonprobability sample, our results cannot be projected to items 
outside our sample. 

We also interviewed DLA headquarters officials and other agency 
personnel to obtain information about DLA's inventory management 
policies and practices, inventory improvement initiatives, and other 
activities related to managing spare parts. 

We conducted this performance audit from February 2009 to May 2010 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Defense: 

Office Of The Assistant Secretary Of Defense: 
Logistics And Materiel Readiness: 
3500 Defense Pentagon: 
Washington, DC 20301-3010: 

April 28, 2010: 

Mr. Jack Edwards: 
Defense Capabilities and Management: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, N.W. 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Mr. Edwards: 

This is the Department of Defense response to the GAO Draft Report, 
GAO-10-469, "Defense Inventory: Defense Logistics Agency Needs to 
Expand on Efforts to More Effectively Manage Spare Parts," dated March 
23, 2010 (GAO Code: 351316). The Department's detailed comments on the 
report recommendations are enclosed. 

The Department concurs with the eight recommendations in the draft 
report. The Defense Logistics Agency has taken immediate steps to 
improve its inventory management practices and is fully engaged in the 
development of the Department's comprehensive plan on improving its 
inventory management practices. 

The Department appreciates the opportunity to comment on the draft 
report. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Alan F. Estevez: 
Principal Deputy: 

Enclosure: As stated: 

[End of letter] 

GAO Draft Report Dated March 23, 2010: 
GA0-10-469 (GAO Code 351316): 

"Defense Inventory: Defense Logistics Agency Needs To Expand On 
Efforts To More Effectively Manage Spare Parts" 

Department Of Defense Comments To The GAO Recommendations: 

Recommendation 1: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Director, Defense Logistics Agency, to establish an action 
plan for completing the agency's evaluation of identified demand 
planning issues, and include goals. objectives, resources, and time 
frames in this action plan. 

DOD Response: Concur. The Defense Logistics Agency will establish an 
action plan for completing the agency's evaluation of its demand 
planning process currently underway. The plan will include goals, 
objectives, resources and time frames for actions and be completed 
Fourth Quarter FY2010. Significant actions are already underway to 
continuously evaluate and adjust demand input prior to incorporation 
into the DLA demand plan. DLA has established management objectives 
for Demand Plan Accuracy at the enterprise and demand chain level. The 
objectives are based on a three-month timeframe, resulting in holding 
DLA's demand planners to a very high standard of performance. Monthly 
performance reviews are presented to DLA senior leaders. 

It is important to note that over-forecasting in EBS does not always 
equate to overbuying, as actions are taken monthly to mitigate Supply 
Planning impacts of overestimated demand in order to optimize 
obligation authority utilization. Because improving Demand Planning 
remains a top priority for DLA, requiring a continuous focus on both 
people and system settings, HQ DLA hosts a bi-monthly Demand Planning 
Executive forum (attended by its field activity Deputy Commanders) to 
ensure improvement actions on all aspects of Demand Planning (system-
generated statistical forecasts, Customer input, and Demand Planner 
input) are aggressively identified. pursued, and tracked. 

Recommendation 2: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Director, Defense Logistics Agency, to develop an approach 
for working with suppliers to assess the root causes of inaccurate 
production lead time estimate and implement corrective actions linked 
to these root causes. 

DOD Response: Concur. DLA has already identified several root causes 
for inaccurate lead times, including suppliers not accurately 
predicting lead time from subcontractors, suppliers including 
"buffers" in their projected production time, and suppliers relying on 
past lead times for current purchase requests. DLA challenges the lead 
time quotes from vendors to ensure realistic Production Lead Time 
(PLT), and looks at required delivery dates on all contracts. As part 
of DLA's Supplier Relationship Management, PLT is one of the metrics 
measured, captured, and reported on a monthly basis. DLA conducts 
monthly reviews to identify suspected excessive PLTs and performs 
monthly updates to adjust the PLTs, as appropriate. DLA will continue 
its efforts to work with suppliers on improving estimates by utilizing 
the Supplier Requirements Visibility Application (SRVA) tool to give 
vendors access to forecast data that will allow sub-contractors to 
predict accurate lead times. 

DLA also identifies items that have not been bought for a significant 
period of time that may have outdated lead times in the system, using 
SRVA and other collaboration methods to identify these out-of-
production type items. On the supply planner side, DLA uses outlier 
reports to identify one-time occurrences and ensure they do not impact •
 system lead times. 

DLA has been able to achieve a 20% reduction in PLT overestimates 
since early 2009. These improvements are due to systemic changes in 
updating lead times of record. 

Recommendation 3: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Director, Defense Logistics Agency, to reinforce and 
reinvigorate effective internal controls aimed at evaluating and 
making adjustments to the Military Services' estimated additional 
requirements, including both supply support requests and special 
program requirements. 

DOD Response: Concur. DLA will reinforce effective internal controls 
on additional requirements. In fact, the DLA has already enhanced 
internal controls for Special Program Requirements (SPRs). One example 
of these enhancements is the recently-initiated SPR validation effort 
with the Army to eliminate ongoing discrepancies/issues that were 
partly associated with Army using multiple systems to submit SPRs to 
DLA. A manual effort is underway to validate all Army SPRs as a 
result. These controls have identified and eliminated over $200M in 
Army SPR submissions. Additionally, DLA compares submitted SPRs with 
historical accuracy rates (by item) prior to making investment 
decisions. 

DLA also makes forecast adjustments, based on intelligence received 
from the Service program offices, during the monthly Sales & 
Operations Planning (S&OP) process. S&OP provides an additional avenue 
to query Services on forecasts that do not materialize in actual 
demand, and DLA can use the responses to make trade-off decisions for 
funding future procurement actions. 

Recommendation 4: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Director. Defense Logistics Agency, to conduct a program 
evaluation of the demand data exchange initiative to determine what, 
if any, additional actions should be taken to (1) improve 
communications and data exchange internally and with military 
customers and suppliers and (2) expand the initiative across the 
enterprise (for example, to other customers, items, and processes). 

DOD Response: Concur. DLA has a program evaluation of its Demand Data 
Exchange (DDE) initiative currently underway, with completion set for 
February 2011. As part of its evaluation, DLA will review candidate 
items for collaboration partnerships with additional customers and 
suppliers. The evaluation will also look to continue improving 
forecast accuracy with its current collaboration customers. Based on 
feedback received from current DDE Service customers, DLA will roll 
out modified DDE business rule logic for all collaboration customers. 
The new business rules will be effective in May 2010. 

Beginning in August 2010, DLA will host two Collaboration forums 
annually, one for Service customers participating in Demand Data 
Exchange (DDE) and one for suppliers. The intent of these forums is to 
obtain feedback, improve communication, and expand the use of both DDE 
and the Supplier Visibility Requirements Application (SRVA). 

Recommendation 5: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Director, Defense Logistics Agency, to evaluate the 
effectiveness of the agency's process for identifying and reducing 
potential over-procurements and determine the feasibility of applying 
the process on a wider scale. 

DOD Response: Concur. DLA continues to make significant progress in 
reducing its over-procurements. In 2009, its Aviation supply chain 
initiated a Lean Six Sigma review of the entire over-procurement 
process. The initial findings from that review have already been 
adopted DLA-wide and have resulted in significant Purchase Request 
(PR) cancellations. Additional outcomes of this review will include 
evaluations of ways to improve/increase Purchase Order (PO) 
cancellations. By October 2010, DLA will complete a review and 
validation of items currently being excluded from the over-procurement 
process. DLA will ensure that any items it continues to exclude from 
the systemic over-procurement process will be subject to an off-line 
over-procurement review processes that allows for cancellation of PRs 
and POs exceeding requirements. 

DLA has begun working to streamline the over-procurement process by 
eliminating the currently-required manual review of open purchase 
actions in a 100% over-procured position. 

Recommendation 6: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and 
Logistics, in conjunction with Director, Defense Logistics Agency, and 
the Secretaries of the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force to formally 
evaluate and report the feasibility of requiring up-front Military 
Service funding for a portion of their supply support requests. 

DOD Response: Concur. The office of USD(AT&L) will evaluate and report 
the feasibility of requiring up-front funding of Supply Support 
Requests (SSRs) in conjunction with the office of the USD(Comptroller) 
and the Military Services. 

Currently, DLA is pursuing a pilot effort with Navy/Marine Corps with 
the H-1 Helicopter, wherein DLA and the Services share the burden of 
investment risk. The concept of this initiative is to have Navy/Marine 
Corps pay half of the total SSR investment cost a lead time away from 
the recorded support date. DLA, in turn, will honor the total SSR 
requirement and buy both retail and wholesale quantities. 

Recommendation 7: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and 
Logistics. in conjunction with Director, Defense Logistics Agency, and 
the Secretaries of the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force to establish 
goals and metrics for tracking and assessing the cost efficiency of 
inventory management in accordance with DOD's policy requiring DLA and 
the Services to minimize investment in secondary item inventory while
providing inventory needed; develop and implement an approach for 
integrating these goals and metrics with inventory management 
improvement efforts; and incorporate the goals and metrics into 
existing management and oversight processes. 

DOD Response: Concur. The Department is undertaking a complete review 
of its inventory management practices, to include establishing goals 
and metrics for tracking inventory management improvement initiatives 
and cost efficiency. The office of USD(AT&L) is working closely with 
the Military Services and DLA to develop and publish a data-driven and 
actionable comprehensive inventory management improvement plan which 
will include goals, objectives, metrics, targets and a governance 
process for overseeing execution and refreshing the plan on a regular 
basis. The target for publication of the plan is Fourth Quarter FY2010. 

Recommendation 8: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Secretaries of the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force to 
certify to DLA which items and what quantities of the contingency 
reserve stock should be retained, in response to DLA's requests that 
they do so, and direct the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, 
Technology and Logistics to provide guidance and oversight of this 
certification process. 

DOD Response: Concur. The Military Services and DLA are 
collaboratively reviewing contingency retention inventory currently 
and the USD(AT&L) will review the results of that review once 
complete. The Department is also undertaking a complete review of its 
inventory management practices, to include an independent review of
contingency retention methodologies. This review is part of the 
comprehensive plan for improving inventory management practices due in 
Fourth Quarter FY2010. This independent review will highlight any 
changes in guidance necessary to improve the contingency retention 
process. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Jack Edwards, (202) 512-8246 or edwardsj@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contact named above, Thomas Gosling, Assistant 
Director; Lionel Cooper; Qahira El'Amin; Foster Kerrison; Elke 
Kolodinski; Steve Pruitt; and Minette Richardson made key 
contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

Military Base Realignments and Closures: DOD Needs to Update Savings 
Estimates and Continue to Address Challenges in Consolidating Supply- 
Related Functions at Depot Maintenance Locations. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-703]. Washington, D.C.: July 9, 
2009. 

Defense Inventory: Army Needs to Evaluate Impact of Recent Actions to 
Improve Demand Forecasts for Spare Parts. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-199]. Washington, D.C.: January 12, 
2009. 

Defense Inventory: Management Actions Needed to Improve the Cost 
Efficiency of the Navy's Spare Parts Inventory. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-103]. Washington, D.C.: December 
12, 2008. 

Defense Inventory: Opportunities Exist to Save Billions by Reducing 
Air Force's Unneeded Spare Parts Inventory. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-232]. Washington, D.C.: April 27, 
2007. 

Defense Inventory: Opportunities Exist to Improve the Management of 
DOD's Acquisition Lead Times for Spare Parts. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-281]. Washington, D.C.: March 2, 
2007. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] DOD defines secondary inventory items to include reparable 
components, subsystems, and assemblies other than major end items 
(e.g., ships, aircraft, and helicopters), consumable repair parts, 
bulk items and materiel, subsistence, and expendable end items (e.g., 
clothing and other personal gear). 

[2] Pub. L. No. 111-84, § 328 (2009). Section 328(d) states that for 
the purposes of section 328, the term "inventory that is excess to 
requirements" means inventory that is excess to the approved 
acquisition objective and is not needed for the purposes of economic 
retention or contingency retention. 

[3] Section C9.2.2.3.2. of DOD Regulation 4140.1-R, Supply Chain 
Materiel Management Regulation (May 23, 2003) requires each service 
and DLA to report secondary inventory data annually as of September 
30, no later than February 1, and requires that report to have a 
narrative that describes significant trends, changes from previous 
reporting periods, and modifications to systems, procedures, or 
operations impacting on the reported value of materiel. Secondary 
inventory data are stratified by item, each of which is assigned a 
unique stock number. DLA may have in its inventory multiple quantities 
(parts) of each unique item. 

[4] DOD Comptroller, National Defense Budget Estimates for FY 2009 
(March 2008), p. 47. 

[5] According to DOD Regulation 4140.1-R, § C2.6.3.2.3 (May 23, 2003), 
authorized additive levels include nondemand-based requirements, such 
as stock for wartime reserve and planned program requirements. 

[6] DOD Regulation 4140.1-R, § AP1.1.4 (May 23, 2003). 

[7] DOD Regulation 4140.1-R, § C2.5.1.1 and C2.5.1.6 (May 23, 2003). 

[8] DOD Directive 4140.1, Supply Chain Materiel Management Policy 
(April 2004), establishes policy and responsibilities for materiel 
management. DOD Regulation 4140.1-R implements this directive. 

[9] DLA, Transformation Roadmap, Fiscal Year 2006. 

[10] GAO, Military Base Realignments and Closures: DOD Needs to Update 
Savings Estimates and Continue to Address Challenges in Consolidating 
Supply-Related Functions at Depot Maintenance Locations, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-703] (Washington, D.C.: July 9, 
2009). 

[11] The reorder point also typically includes a repair-cycle level 
(for repairable items) and authorized additive levels (e.g., war 
reserves), but DLA does not include those levels in its reorder point 
calculus. 

[12] A purchase request is a requisition for an item that has not yet 
been placed on order. A purchase order refers to inventory that has 
been purchased but not yet delivered to DLA's possession. 

[13] Defense Logistics Agency Memorandum, Improving DLA Inventory 
Management and Performance (July 25, 2008). 

[14] DLA uses the term "potential excess" to describe materiel that 
DOD Regulation 4140.1-R categorizes as "potential reutilization and/or 
disposal materiel." Potential reutilization and/or disposal materiel 
is defined as materiel identified by an item manager for possible 
disposal, but with potential for reutilization. 

[15] This analysis excluded acquisition lead time and economic order 
quantity requirements. 

[16] This analysis of on-order inventory included purchase orders but 
not purchase requests. 

[17] DOD Regulation 4140.1-R, § C2.5.1.1 and C2.5.1.6 (May 23, 2003). 

[18] DLA determined that approximately 400,000 items of its 1.7 
million items (24 percent) meet specific criteria and have sufficient 
demand data to qualify for forecasting. According to DLA, about 20 
percent (or 80,000) of the 400,000 items should receive greater 
priority for management attention due to such factors as their dollar 
value and the programs they support. 

[19] GAO, Defense Inventory: Opportunities Exist to Improve the 
Management of DOD's Acquisition Lead Times for Spare Parts, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-281] (Washington, D.C.: 
Mar. 2, 2007). 

[20] DOD Manual 4140.26, Defense Integrated Materiel Management Manual 
for Consumable Items (May 23, 1997) prescribes the policy and 
procedures for supply support requests. 

[21] DLA did not have data readily available on amounts requisitioned 
prior to fiscal year 2008. 

[22] DODIG, Requirements Forecasts on Supply Support Requests, Report 
No. 88-140 (Arlington, Va.: Apr. 27, 1988). 

[23] DODIG, Follow-Up Audit of Requirements Forecasts on Supply 
Support Requests, Report No. 93-175 (Arlington, Va.: Sept. 30, 1993). 

[24] DOD Manual 4140.26-M, Chapter 4 (May 23, 1997). 

[25] DODIG, Special Program Requirements for Logistic Support, No. 90- 
087 (Arlington, Va.: June 27, 1990). 

[26] DODIG, Logistics: Defense Logistics Agency Processing of Special 
Program Requirements, D-2005-020 (Arlington, Va.: Nov. 14, 2004). 

[27] DLA's Philadelphia supply center now administers this program 
agencywide. 

[28] The validation process is to begin 90 days before an item's 
reorder point. The information system generates an e-mail validation 
request to all submitting organizations for all special program 
requests exceeding $10,000 in value. If no reply is received within 30 
days, a follow-up e-mail is sent, and the submitting organization has 
an additional 30 days to respond. If no response is received, a final 
validation request is sent. If no response is received within 15 days 
of the final request, DLA automatically cancels the special program 
requirement. 

[29] The data included one maritime item with both a purchase request 
and a purchase order outstanding. 

[30] DLA is concerned that reducing the threshold too much may result 
in costs associated with placing and terminating contracts and the 
activities associated with initiating a purchase, terminating the 
purchase before completion, and then having to initiate a new purchase. 

[31] Programs may be exempted for various reasons. DLA has exempted 
items that are categorized as safety related or that support a special 
program such as the Navy's nuclear reactor program. DLA has also 
exempted items at depots where DLA is taking over the retail 
management. 

[32] In contrast, DLA defines active inventory as materiel in the 
approved acquisition objective. DLA Memorandum, Improving DLA 
Inventory Management and Performance (July 25, 2008). 

[33] DOD Regulation 4140.1-R, § C2.8.1.1 (May 2003). 

[34] DOD Regulation 4140.1-R, §§ C2.8.1.1, C2.8.1.1.2, and C2.8.1.2.6 
(May 23, 2003). 

[35] Pub. L. No. 111-84,§ 328 (2009). Additionally, the law directs 
the Comptroller General to submit a report setting forth an assessment 
of the extent to which the plan meets the requirements of section 328 
to the congressional defense committees, not later than 60 days after 
the plan's submission, and an assessment of the extent to which the 
plan has been effectively implemented, not later than 18 months after 
the plan's submission. 

[36] Section 328(d) of Pub. L. No. 111-84 (2009) states that for the 
purposes of that section, the term "inventory that is excess to 
requirements" means inventory that is excess to the approved 
acquisition objective and is not needed for the purposes of economic 
retention or contingency retention. 

[37] DOD Regulation 4140.1-R, §§ C9.1.2.1 and C9.1.2.3 (May 23, 2003). 

[38] DOD Comptroller, National Defense Budget Estimates for FY 2009 
(March 2008), p. 47. 

[39] DOD Regulation 4140.1-R (May 23, 2003), AP1.1.126. DOD refers to 
this inventory level as its "total requirements objective." 

[40] Economic retention inventory includes items that have been 
determined to be more economical to keep than to dispose of because 
they are likely to be needed in the future. 

[41] Contingency retention inventory exceeds economic retention 
inventory and would normally be processed for disposal, but it is 
retained for specific contingencies. 

[42] Potential reutilization and/or disposal materiel exceeds 
contingency retention requirements and has been identified for 
possible disposal but with potential for reutilization. 

[End of section] 

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