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entitled 'Depot Maintenance: Improved Strategic Planning Needed to 
Ensure That Navy Depots Can Meet Future Maintenance Requirements' 
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Report to the Subcommittee on Readiness, Committee on Armed Services, 
House of Representatives: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

June 2010: 

Depot Maintenance: 

Improved Strategic Planning Needed to Ensure That Navy Depots Can Meet 
Future Maintenance Requirements: 

GAO-10-585: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-10-585, a report to the Subcommittee on Readiness, 
Committee on Armed Services, House of Representatives. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The Navy’s depots provide critical maintenance support to operations 
around the world. The Department of Defense’s (DOD) increased reliance 
on the private sector for depot maintenance support coupled with 
downsizing led to a deterioration of depots’ capabilities and cost 
increases. In 2007, the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) 
directed each service to submit a depot maintenance strategic plan and 
provided direction for the content of those plans. The 2007 U.S. Navy 
Depot Maintenance Strategic Plan contained a separate plan for each of 
five functional areas and an executive summary. GAO used qualitative 
content analyses to determine the extent to which two of the plans 
address (1) elements of a results-oriented management framework and 
(2) OSD’s direction for the plan’s content. GAO examined the plans for 
Navy aviation (NAVAIR) and ships (NAVSEA), which account for 94 
percent of Navy depot workload. 

What GAO Found: 

While the Navy’s plans for aviation and shipyard depot maintenance 
focus efforts on weapon system and equipment availability, they do not 
fully address the elements of a results-oriented management framework. 
GAO’s prior work has shown that seven elements of a results-oriented 
management framework are critical for comprehensive strategic 
planning. The NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans both fully address one of the 
elements by including mission statements that summarize their depots’ 
major functions and operations, but the plans partially address or do 
not address the other six elements. For example, even though the plans 
describe goals for the depots’ mission-related functions, they do not 
specify interim milestones or time frames for achieving the goals. 
Additionally, the plans include some measurable warfighter support 
metrics to gauge progress toward achieving the NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans’
long-term goals; however, the plans do not describe how these metrics 
directly correspond to each long-term goal, desired levels for each, 
or how they will be used to evaluate each goal. Further, the Navy does 
not have an integrated Navy-wide depot maintenance strategic plan, but 
instead uses an overarching executive summary that does not have clear 
linkages to the separate plans and has the weaknesses resulting from 
the separate plans’ missing or limited information on some elements. 
The NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans do not fully address these concerns 
because of weaknesses in oversight. Although OSD established an 
oversight body, which included senior representatives from OSD and the 
services, to review the services’ plans, this body did not review the 
plans. Also, the Navy did not establish an oversight mechanism to 
review its plans. The plans’ weaknesses may limit the Navy’s ability 
to use its plan as a tool to meet future challenges effectively and 
efficiently. 

In addition, the NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans are not fully responsive to 
OSD’s direction to the services that was designed to provide the 
services with a framework to meet future challenges. OSD directed the 
services to address 10 specific issues in four general areas: 
logistics transformation, core logistics capability assurance, 
workforce revitalization, and capital investment. Both plans partially 
address 8 of these issues and do not address the remaining 2. For 
example, both plans discuss management approaches for integrating 
public- and private-sector depot sources, but the plans are silent 
with regard to integrating joint, interservice, or multinational depot 
capabilities. The plans do not discuss the methods for estimating the 
amount of workload or the projected effects on depot workload caused 
by weapon system retirements and locating weapon systems at specific 
installations. The plans do not fully respond to OSD’s direction for 
the plans’ content in part because of weaknesses in oversight in both 
OSD and the Navy. As a result, these weaknesses could additionally 
limit the Navy’s efforts to posture and resource its depots to meet 
future maintenance challenges. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO is recommending that the Navy revise its plans to fully address 
all elements of the framework and all Office of the Under Secretary of 
Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics (OUSD [AT&L])–
directed issues, demonstrate linkages in future strategic plans, and 
implement oversight procedures for reviewing future plan revisions and 
plan implementation. DOD concurred with our recommendations. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-585] or key 
components. For more information, contact Jack Edwards at (202) 512-
8246 or edwardsj@gao.gov. 

[End of letter] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

NAVAIR and NAVSEA Plans Do Not Fully Address All Elements of a Results-
Oriented Management Framework: 

NAVAIR and NAVSEA Plans Do Not Fully Respond to OUSD (AT&L)'s 
Direction Designed to Meet Future Challenges: 

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 Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Related GAO Products: 

Tables: 

Table 1: NAVAIR and NAVSEA Depots, Locations, Principal Work, 
Workload, and Number of Civilian Personnel: 

Table 2: The Extent to Which the NAVAIR and NAVSEA Depot Maintenance 
Strategic Plans Address the Elements of a Results-Oriented Management 
Framework: 

Table 3: The Extent to Which the NAVAIR and NAVSEA Depot Maintenance 
Strategic Plans Address OUSD (AT&L)'s Direction: 

Table 4: Organizations Contacted to Obtain Information about the 
Navy's Depot Maintenance Strategic Plan: 

Abbreviations: 

BRAC: Base Realignment and Closure Act: 

DOD: Department of Defense: 

NAVAIR: Naval Air systems Command: 

NAVSEA: Naval Sea Systems Command: 

OSD: Office of the Secretary of Defense: 

OUSD (AT&L): Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, 
Technology and Logistics: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

June 11, 2010: 

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

The Navy's 11 maintenance depots provide equipment repair and 
sustainment services that are critical to supporting ongoing 
operations around the world. Prior to the onset of military operations 
in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Department of Defense's (DOD) increased 
reliance on the private sector for depot maintenance support--coupled 
with declining budgets, downsizing, and consolidations as a result of 
previous Base Realignment and Closure Act (BRAC) decisions--led to a 
decline in maintenance workloads for the depots and contributed to the 
general deterioration of capabilities, reliability, and cost- 
effectiveness of military depots. Downsizing efforts also affected the 
depots' abilities to obtain investments in facilities, equipment, and 
human capital to support their long-term viability and to ensure that 
they remained a key resource for repair of new and modified systems. 
In 2001, DOD identified performance-based logistics[Footnote 1] as its 
preferred support strategy, further increasing reliance on contractors 
to support many of its weapon systems. 

In 2003 and again in 2006, the House Armed Services Committee 
encouraged DOD to develop a comprehensive depot maintenance strategy. 
[Footnote 2] In March 2007, the Office of the Under Secretary of 
Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics (OUSD [AT&L]) issued 
DOD's depot maintenance strategic plan, which articulated the 
department's strategy for posturing and resourcing the depots to meet 
the national security and management challenges of the 21st century. 
In March 2007, the Office of the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for 
Logistics and Materiel Readiness, within OUSD (AT&L), directed each of 
the services to conduct strategic planning for depot maintenance and 
submit plans that focus on achieving DOD's strategy.[Footnote 3] In 
response, the Navy published its December 2007 U.S. Navy Depot 
Maintenance Strategic Plan, which consists of an overarching executive 
summary and the individual depot maintenance plans developed by the 
following Navy commands and centers: (1) the Naval Sea Systems Command 
(NAVSEA), (2) the Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR), (3) the Naval 
Undersea Warfare Center, (4) the Naval Surface Warfare Center, and (5) 
the Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command. According to Navy 
officials, together these five documents and updates issued in 2009 
collectively respond to OUSD (AT&L)'s direction. DOD's 2007 Depot 
Maintenance Strategy and Implementation Plans also notes that the 
services would update their depot maintenance strategic plans no later 
than 6 months after the publication of an updated DOD depot 
maintenance strategic plan, which will be published within 6 months of 
the publication of the February 2010 Quadrennial Defense Review 
Report.[Footnote 4] 

Our prior work has shown that organizations conducting strategic 
planning--as the Navy is doing for its maintenance depots--need to 
develop a comprehensive, results-oriented management framework to 
remain operationally effective, efficient, and capable of meeting 
future requirements.[Footnote 5] Such a framework includes seven 
critical elements: a comprehensive mission statement; long-term goals; 
strategies to achieve the goals; use of metrics to gauge progress; 
identification of key external factors that could affect the 
achievement of the goals; a discussion of how program evaluations will 
be used; and stakeholder involvement in developing the plan. In its 
March 2007 call for strategic plans, OUSD (AT&L) directed the services 
to address many of these elements in their strategic plans. In 
addition, OUSD (AT&L) directed the services to address 10 specific 
issues in four general areas: logistics transformation, core logistics 
capability assurance, workforce revitalization, and capital 
investment. OUSD (AT&L) officials told us that the direction in these 
four areas was designed to provide the services' plans with a 
framework to meet future challenges. 

In September 2009, we issued a report on the Army's and Marine Corps' 
depot maintenance strategic plans.[Footnote 6] Subsequently, your 
office asked us to review the Air Force's and Navy's depot maintenance 
strategic plans to determine the extent to which the latter plans 
provided a comprehensive strategy for meeting future requirements. In 
May 2010, we issued a report on the Air Force depot maintenance 
strategic plan.[Footnote 7] As agreed with your office, this report 
addresses two questions: (1) To what extent does the Navy's depot 
maintenance strategic plan address key elements of a results-oriented 
management framework? and (2) To what extent does the Navy's depot 
maintenance strategic plan address OUSD (AT&L)'s direction that was 
designed to provide a framework for the services to meet future 
challenges? The Related GAO Products section at the end of the report 
lists additional publications on related topics. 

We used the same set of methodological procedures to answer both 
questions, and each type of procedure was performed simultaneously for 
the two questions. Specifically, we reviewed the December 2007 U.S. 
Navy Depot Maintenance Strategic Plan. Because the Navy does not have 
a single Navy-wide plan, but rather a family of strategic planning 
documents, we focused our review on plans developed by the two 
commands whose maintenance depots collectively are responsible for 94 
percent of the Navy's depot maintenance workload. The two plans are 
NAVAIR's Naval Aviation Industrial Strategy and NAVSEA's Naval 
Shipyard Business Plan. We reviewed the 2007 NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans 
and their 2009 updates. We evaluated the NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans using 
qualitative content analyses to compare information from them against 
criteria both from the seven elements of a results-oriented management 
framework[Footnote 8] and the 10 issues listed in the OUSD (AT&L) 
direction for depot maintenance strategic plans. To conduct these 
analyses, we first developed a data-collection instrument that 
incorporated these two types of criteria. One team member then 
analyzed the plans using this instrument. To verify the preliminary 
observations from this initial analysis, a second team member 
concurrently conducted an independent analysis of the plans. We 
compared the two sets of observations and discussed any differences. 
We reconciled the differences with the assistance of analysts from the 
team that was evaluating the Air Force depot maintenance strategic 
plan. We met with Navy officials to confirm our understanding of the 
plans and sought additional information where our preliminary analyses 
revealed that one or both plans partially address or do not address 
the criteria. We also interviewed and obtained documentary evidence 
from relevant OUSD (AT&L) officials regarding its oversight of the 
services' plans. Additionally, we interviewed depot leaders and 
strategic planning personnel at three of the seven NAVAIR and NAVSEA 
depots to obtain first-hand information on issues the depots face. We 
also analyzed depot-level and servicewide depot maintenance data such 
as workload, personnel, and depot capacity utilization and determined 
that these data were sufficiently reliable for our report. More 
detailed information on our scope and methodology is provided in 
appendix I. 

We conducted this performance audit from August 2009 through June 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. 

Background: 

Depot maintenance is the materiel maintenance or repair requiring the 
overhaul, upgrading, or rebuilding of parts, assemblies, or 
subassemblies, and the testing and reclamation of equipment, 
regardless of the source of funds for the maintenance or repair or the 
location at which the maintenance or repair is performed.[Footnote 9] 
The Navy maintains 11 maintenance depots that are designed to retain, 
at a minimum, a ready, controlled source of technical competence and 
resources to meet military requirements. NAVAIR's three Fleet 
Readiness Centers and NAVSEA's four Naval Shipyards work on a wide 
range of weapon systems and military equipment. These Fleet Readiness 
Centers and Naval Shipyards are responsible for over 94 percent of the 
Navy's depot maintenance workload. Table 1 describes the location, 
principal work, workload, and personnel for NAVAIR and NAVSEA depots. 
[Footnote 10] 

Table 1: NAVAIR and NAVSEA Depots, Locations, Principal Work, 
Workload, and Number of Civilian Personnel: 

Navy depot and location: NAVAIR: Fleet Readiness Center East; Cherry 
Point, North Carolina; 
Principal work: Marine Corps and multiservice aircraft, helicopter and 
turbofan vectored engines, auxiliary power units, pressurization 
units, and related components; 
Fiscal year 2009: Workload (in millions of direct labor hours): 3.4; 
Fiscal year 2009: Civilian personnel: 3,385. 

Navy depot and location: NAVAIR: Fleet Readiness Center Southeast; 
Jacksonville, Florida; 
Principal work: Airframes; and propulsion, avionics, surveillance, and 
countermeasure systems; 
Fiscal year 2009: Workload (in millions of direct labor hours): 3.4; 
Fiscal year 2009: Civilian personnel: 3,178. 

Navy depot and location: NAVAIR: Fleet Readiness Center Southwest; 
North Island, California; 
Principal work: Navy and Marine Corps fixed-and rotary-wing airframes, 
propulsion systems, avionics, command and control equipment, and early 
warning and airborne battle-management systems; 
Fiscal year 2009: Workload (in millions of direct labor hours): 3.2; 
Fiscal year 2009: Civilian personnel: 2,664. 

Navy depot and location: NAVSEA: Norfolk Naval Shipyard; Norfolk 
Virginia; 
Principal work: Nuclear refueling and defueling, nuclear submarines, 
aircraft carriers, and surface combatants; 
Fiscal year 2009: Workload (in millions of direct labor hours): 9.8; 
Fiscal year 2009: Civilian personnel: 8,117. 

Navy depot and location: NAVSEA: Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard; 
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii; 
Principal work: Nuclear refueling, and defueling, nuclear submarines, 
surface combatants, and watercraft; 
Fiscal year 2009: Workload (in millions of direct labor hours): 5.2; 
Fiscal year 2009: Civilian personnel: 4,279. 

Navy depot and location: NAVSEA: Portsmouth Naval Shipyard; 
Kittery, Maine; 
Principal work: Nuclear refueling nuclear submarines, and deep- 
submergence vehicle maintenance; 
Fiscal year 2009: Workload (in millions of direct labor hours): 5.4; 
Fiscal year 2009: Civilian personnel: 4189. 

Navy depot and location: NAVSEA: Puget Sound Naval Shipyard; 
Bremerton, Washington; 
Principal work: Nuclear refueling and defueling, nuclear submarines, 
aircraft carriers, and ship recycling; 
Fiscal year 2009: Workload (in millions of direct labor hours): 12.8; 
Fiscal year 2009: Civilian personnel: 10,004. 

Source: GAO analysis of Navy data. 

Note: Data are from the 2007 U.S. Navy Depot Maintenance Strategic 
Plan and Navy budget documents. 

[End of table] 

Depot maintenance activities are complex and require deliberate 
planning in order to efficiently and effectively meet future 
requirements. Our prior work has shown that organizations, like Navy 
depots, need sound strategic management planning in order to identify 
and achieve long-range goals and objectives. We have identified 
critical elements that should be incorporated into strategic plans to 
establish a comprehensive, results-oriented management framework. 
[Footnote 11] A results-oriented management framework provides an 
approach whereby program effectiveness is measured in terms of 
outcomes or impact, rather than outputs, such as activities and 
processes. Approaches to such planning vary according to agency- 
specific needs and missions, but our work suggests that, irrespective 
of the context in which planning is done, such a strategic plan should 
contain the following elements:[Footnote 12] 

1. Mission statement: A statement that concisely summarizes what the 
organization does, presenting the main purposes for all its major 
functions and operations. 

2. Long-term goals: A specific set of policy, programmatic, and 
management goals for the programs and operations covered in the 
strategic plan. The long-term goals should correspond to the purposes 
set forth in the mission statement and develop with greater 
specificity how an organization will carry out its mission. 

3. Strategies to achieve the goals: A description of how the goals 
contained in the strategic plan and performance plan are to be 
achieved, including the operational processes; skills and technology; 
and the human, capital, information, and other resources required to 
meet these goals. 

4. Use of metrics to gauge progress: A set of metrics that will be 
applied to gauge progress toward attainment of each of the plan's long-
term goals. 

5. External factors that could affect goals: Key factors external to 
the organization and beyond its control that could significantly 
affect the achievement of the long-term goals contained in the 
strategic plan. These external factors can include economic, 
demographic, social, technological, or environmental factors, as well 
as conditions or events that would affect the organization's ability 
to achieve its strategic goals. 

6. Evaluations of the plan to monitor goals and objectives: 
Assessments, through objective measurement and systematic analysis, of 
the manner and extent to which programs associated with the strategic 
plan achieve their intended goals. 

7. Stakeholder involvement: Consideration of the views and 
suggestions--solicited during the development of the strategic plan--
of those entities potentially affected by or interested in the 
organization's activities. 

In addition to our work on strategic planning, recent legislation has 
focused attention on DOD's and the military departments' maintenance 
strategies and plans. The National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2009[Footnote 13]requires the Secretary of Defense to 
contract for a study, that, among other things, will address DOD's and 
the military departments' life-cycle maintenance strategies and 
implementation plans on a variety of topics including: outcome-based 
performance-management objectives, workload projection, workforce, and 
capital-investment strategies. Additionally, the act requires that the 
study examine "the relevant body of work performed by the Government 
Accountability Office." OUSD (AT&L) officials told us that they expect 
the final report from this study to be delivered to Congress in 
December 2010. 

NAVAIR and NAVSEA Plans Do Not Fully Address All Elements of a Results-
Oriented Management Framework: 

NAVAIR and NAVSEA Plans Do Not Fully Address Elements of a Results- 
Oriented Management Framework, and Linkages with Navy-wide Summary Are 
Unclear: 

While the NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans focus their efforts on weapon system 
and equipment availability, they do not fully address the elements of 
a results-oriented management framework, and the two plans and the 
Navy-wide executive summary are not clearly integrated. The NAVAIR 
plan fully addresses one of the seven elements, partially addresses 
five elements, and does not address one element that our prior work 
has shown to be critical in developing a comprehensive strategic plan. 
The NAVSEA plan fully addresses one of the seven elements, partially 
addresses four elements, and does not address the remaining two 
elements. Table 2 summarizes the extent to which both depot 
maintenance strategic plans address the elements of a results-oriented 
management framework. Additionally, the Navy does not have an 
integrated servicewide plan with clear links across the command-level 
plans and to the Navy-wide overarching executive summary. As a result 
of these weaknesses, the Navy may be limited in its ability to use the 
information in the plans as a servicewide decision-making tool to meet 
future challenges. 

Table 2: The Extent to Which the NAVAIR and NAVSEA Depot Maintenance 
Strategic Plans Address the Elements of a Results-Oriented Management 
Framework: 

Elements: 1. Mission statement; 
Degree plan addresses element: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: 
Addresses: The plan includes a results-oriented mission statement that 
defines the NAVAIR mission and aligns with the DOD and Navy depot 
maintenance mission statements. Specifically, the depots' overarching 
purpose is to produce relevant quality aircraft, engines, components, 
and support equipment to meet fleet demand and ensure fleet safety 
with improved efficiency and reduced cost; 
Degree plan addresses element: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: 
Addresses: The plan includes a results-oriented mission statement that 
defines the NAVSEA mission and aligns with the DOD and Navy depot 
maintenance mission statements. Specifically, the depots' overarching 
purpose is to provide the capability on ships and weapons systems 
required by Navy component commanders and combatant commanders. 

Elements: 2. Long-term goals; 
Degree plan addresses element: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan identifies five goals: core sustaining 
capability, optimization of the industrial base, logistics 
transformation, workforce revitalization, and capital investment; 
however, it does not specify the time frames for achieving these 
goals. For example, while the NAVAIR plan identifies developing the 
industrial capabilities to support future Naval Aviation requirements 
as one of its industrial base optimization goals, it does not specify 
interim goals and milestones or the time frame for achieving this goal; 
Degree plan addresses element: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan identifies three goals: accomplish the 
current readiness workload; sustain the capability and capacity for 
future workload; and improve processes and systems to provide quality, 
value, and operational availability to customers. However, it does not 
specify the time frames for achieving these goals. For example, while 
the NAVSEA plan identifies sustaining capability and capacity for 
future workload as one of its sustaining future workload goals, it 
does not specify the time frame for achieving this goal. 

Elements: 3. Strategies to achieve the goals; 
Degree plan addresses element: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan generally discusses NAVAIR's strategies 
to achieve its depot maintenance goals; however, it does not describe 
the resources required to achieve the goals. For example, the plan 
discusses a general strategy that involves processes for the 
integration of depot and intermediate levels of repair, industrial and 
maintenance program coordinators, and the infusion of new technologies 
to transform NAVAIR maintenance processes. It does not, however, 
describe the capital, personnel, or technologies needed to execute 
this strategy; 
Degree plan addresses element: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan generally discusses NAVSEA's strategies 
to achieve its depot maintenance goals; however it does not describe 
the resources required to achieve the goals. For example, the plan 
discusses NAVSEA's Information Technology Modernization strategy to 
provide the Naval Shipyards with information systems they need to 
sustain future workloads. However, the plan does not describe the 
capital, personnel, or technologies needed to execute the strategy. 

Elements: 4. Use of metrics to gauge progress; 
Degree plan addresses element: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan includes some measurable warfighter-
support metrics that NAVAIR officials told us were intended to 
indirectly gauge progress toward achieving each of the plan's long-
term goals. However, the plan does not describe how these metrics 
directly correspond to each long-term goal, desired levels for each, 
or how they will be used to evaluate each goal. For example, the 
NAVAIR plan identifies flying-hour metrics, but the plan does not 
directly link these metrics to any of the five long-term goals; 
Degree plan addresses element: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan includes some measurable workload 
metrics that NAVSEA officials told us were intended to indirectly 
gauge progress toward achieving each of the plan's long-term goals; 
however, the plan does not describe how these metrics directly 
correspond to each long-term goal, the desired levels for each, or how 
they will be used to evaluate each goal. For example, while the plan 
identifies a metric for shipyard workload levels, it does not describe 
how workload levels are calculated or how the metric gauges progress 
toward any of the three long-term goals. 

Elements: 5. Key external factors that could affect goals; 
Degree plan addresses element: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan broadly identifies two external factors 
that could affect its successful implementation. Specifically, the 
plan identifies changes in force structure and the ongoing conflicts 
in Afghanistan and Iraq. However, the plan does not discuss a method 
for monitoring the environment for changes in these or other factors; 
Degree plan addresses element: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: 
Does not address: The plan does not identify external factors that 
could affect NAVSEA's ability to achieve program goals. External 
factors may include economic, demographic, social, technological, or 
environmental factors, as well as conditions or events that would 
affect the organization's ability to achieve its strategic goals. 
Additionally, the plan does not discuss a method for monitoring the 
environment for changes in these or other factors. 

Elements: 6. Evaluations of the plan to monitor goals and objectives; 
Degree plan addresses element: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: 
Does not address: The plan does not describe program evaluations to 
assess depot performance against the plan's goals and strategies even 
though the plan indicates that NAVAIR must continuously validate and 
update the plan to meet operational depot maintenance requirements. 
For example, the plan does not describe the scope, methodology, or 
schedule for evaluations; 
Degree plan addresses element: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: 
Does not address: The plan does not describe program evaluations to 
assess performance against the plan's goals and strategies, even 
though the plan indicates that NAVSEA must continuously validate and 
update the plan to meet operational depot maintenance requirements. 
For example, the plan does not describe the scope, methodology, or 
schedule for evaluations. 

Elements: 7. Stakeholder involvement in developing the plan; 
Degree plan addresses element: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: 
Partially addresses: We were told that many offices within NAVAIR 
collaboratively developed its depot maintenance strategic plan; 
however, depot officials indicated that they were not involved in some 
aspects of the development of the plan, even though their depots must 
carry out actions described in the plan. NAVAIR solicited input 
primarily from the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for 
Research, Development and Acquisition; the Office of the Assistant 
Secretary of the Navy for Installations and Environment; the Office of 
the Chief of Naval Operations, Director of Fleet Readiness and 
Logistics; and NAVAIR directorates and program executive offices; 
Degree plan addresses element: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: 
Partially addresses: Many offices within NAVSEA collaboratively 
developed its depot maintenance strategic plan; however, depot 
officials indicated that they were not involved in some aspects of the 
development of the plan, even though their depots must carry out 
actions described in the plan. NAVSEA officials told us they solicited 
input primarily from the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy 
for Research, Development and Acquisition; the Office of the Assistant 
Secretary of the Navy for Installations and Environment; the Office of 
the Chief of Naval Operations, Director of Fleet Readiness and 
Logistics; the Atlantic and Pacific fleets; and NAVAIR directorates 
and program executive offices. 

Source: GAO analysis of NAVSEA and NAVAIR data. 

Note: Among other things, the 2007 U.S. Navy Depot Maintenance 
Strategic Plan contained NAVAIR's Naval Aviation Industrial Strategy 
and NAVSEA's Naval Shipyard Business Plan. NAVAIR and NAVSEA also 
published updates in 2009. We reviewed information from the 2007 and 
2009 documents in our evaluation of the NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans. 

[End of table] 

NAVAIR and NAVSEA Plans Fully Address the Depot Maintenance Mission 
Statement Element: 

The NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans' depot maintenance mission statements 
fully address one of the seven elements of a results-oriented 
management framework. NAVAIR's and NAVSEA's mission statements 
summarize each command's overarching purpose and address its major 
functions and operations. In prior reports on strategic planning, we 
have noted that a mission statement is important because it provides 
focus by explaining why an organization exists and what it does. 
[Footnote 14] The overarching purpose of the NAVAIR depots is to 
ensure that weapons systems and equipment are operational and 
available to meet fleet demand at reduced costs. The overarching 
purpose of the NAVSEA Naval Shipyards is to provide the capability on 
ships and weapons systems required by Navy component commanders and 
combatant commanders. Both mission statements are outcome-oriented and 
correspond with the more general departmentwide mission statement in 
DOD's Depot Maintenance Strategy and Implementation Plans, which 
states that the mission of DOD depots is to meet the national security 
and materiel readiness challenges of the 21st century. 

NAVAIR Plan Partially Addresses Five Elements, and NAVSEA Plan 
Partially Addresses Four Elements: 

The NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans each partially address four of the results-
oriented management framework elements: long-term goals, strategies to 
achieve the goals, use of metrics to gauge progress, and stakeholder 
involvement in developing the plan. The NAVAIR plan also partially 
addresses a fifth area--external factors that could affect goals--that 
the NAVSEA plan does not address. 

With regard to the long-term goals, while both plans identify some 
strategic goals that generally relate to mission statements, they do 
not specify time frames for achieving any of these goals. For example, 
the NAVAIR plan listed five goals, including the goal to optimize the 
industrial base; however, it does not describe what aspects of the 
industrial base require adjustments or specify the milestones or time 
frames for achieving this goal. Similarly, the NAVSEA plan identifies 
three strategic goals. For example, the plan identifies the goal of 
enhancing ship operational availability by minimizing maintenance 
time, but the plan does not discuss the time frames, numbers and types 
of ships that will undergo maintenance, or the level of availability 
anticipated. 

Both plans partially address strategies to achieve the goals. For 
example, to realize the goal of logistics transformation, NAVAIR has 
adopted a strategy that includes initiatives for the integration of 
depot and intermediate levels of repair, industrial and maintenance 
program coordinators, and the infusion of technologies into 
maintenance processes. Similarly, the NAVSEA plan identifies multiple 
key strategic investment areas to achieve its goals, such as the 
Information Technology Modernization Plan to provide the Naval 
Shipyards with the information systems they need to meet their 
mission. However, neither plan describes the capital, personnel, or 
technology resources needed to facilitate implementation of the 
strategies. 

Regarding metrics to gauge progress, the NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans 
partially address this element. Officials for each command indicated 
that the metrics listed in their plan are intended to "indirectly" 
gauge progress toward achieving the plan's long-term goals. The NAVAIR 
plan includes measurable warfighter support metrics such as "cycle 
time" (the amount of time from when the need of repair is identified 
to when the component such as an engine is reinstalled on the aircraft 
or restocked on a shelf) and "time on wing" (the amount of time a 
component is operational on the aircraft). The NAVSEA plan also 
generally describes some metrics such as shipyard workload levels. 
However, the plans do not describe how these metrics correspond to 
each long-term goal, the desired level for each metric, or how the 
metrics will be used to evaluate each goal. 

For the stakeholder-involvement element, NAVAIR and NAVSEA involved 
many relevant stakeholders in the development of their respective 
plans, but neither command involved depot officials directly in all 
aspects of its strategic planning process. NAVAIR and NAVSEA developed 
their plans primarily by using inputs from directorates and program 
executive offices within the commands and the following Navy-wide 
stakeholders: 

* Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Research, 
Development and Acquisition; 

* Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Installations and 
Environment; and: 

* Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, Director of Fleet Readiness 
and Logistics. 

In our interviews with NAVAIR and NAVSEA depot officials, they said 
they were not directly involved in the plans' development, even though 
their depots would be directly affected by the plans. For example, 
NAVAIR and NAVSEA depot officials indicated that they had limited or 
no involvement in the development of their plans. 

Regarding external factors that could affect the goals, the NAVAIR 
plan partially addresses this element, but the NAVSEA plan did not 
address the element. The plan identifies ongoing conflicts in 
Afghanistan and Iraq and changes in NAVAIR's force structure as some 
of the key external factors, but it does not describe how these 
factors can affect the plan. Also, our report that identified the 
elements of a results-oriented management framework for strategic 
planning noted a wide range of key external factors to consider, such 
as economic, demographic, social, and environmental factors.[Footnote 
15] In contrast, the NAVSEA plan does not identify any key external 
factors that could affect execution of that plan. 

NAVSEA Plan Does Not Address Two Elements, and NAVAIR Plan Does Not 
Address One Element: 

As cited above, the NAVSEA plan does not address any key external 
factors; and neither the NAVAIR nor the NAVSEA plan provides 
information on how the command intends to evaluate the execution of 
its plan. For example, neither describes the scope, methodology, or 
schedule for the evaluations that will be needed to provide reliable 
data on goal attainment. Also, neither plan identifies how the command 
will monitor and use the results of such evaluations to adjust the 
plan's long-term goals and strategies to achieve desired levels of 
performance. Both plans do, however, indicate that the commands must 
continuously validate and update their depot maintenance strategic 
plans to meet operational depot maintenance requirements. 

The Navy Does Not Have an Integrated Servicewide Plan for Depot 
Maintenance: 

The Navy does not have an integrated depot maintenance strategic plan 
that clearly links the elements of the commands' plans with the 
servicewide executive summary. As mentioned previously, the Navy-wide 
plan consists of an executive summary and five separate plans. OUSD 
(AT&L) instructed each service to publish its depot maintenance 
strategic plan in a single depot maintenance-specific document or as 
an integral part of one or more documents having a broader scope. 

Linkage of information between the executive summary and one or more 
of the plans, as well as linkage of information from the various 
plans, was sometimes unclear. For example, the executive summary 
identifies four "outcome metrics"--material availability, material 
reliability, mean down time, and ownership costs--to be used across 
all fleet and aviation depot maintenance activities. While the NAVAIR 
plan identifies metrics, the links between those metrics and the four 
Navy-wide outcome metrics were not specified. We could not determine 
if all four of the Navy-wide metrics were addressed, at least 
indirectly, by the metrics in the NAVAIR plan. Similarly, the 
commonalities or linkages among the plans were sometimes not evident. 
For example, the NAVAIR plan identifies optimizing the industrial base 
as one of its long-term strategic goals, but the NAVSEA plan is silent 
about this goal. 

Navy officials told us that they did not publish a single plan because 
Navy commands and activities have different missions, capabilities, 
and maintenance processes. They acknowledged that the linkages among 
the plans and with the executive summary could have been more clearly 
established, and they said they will address these weaknesses in 
future plan updates. The limited integration across the separate plans 
and the executive summary could have negative effects such as making 
it difficult to (1) recognize areas where each plan does not address 
key Navy-wide concerns and (2) use the separate plans efficiently and 
effectively for servicewide decision making. 

OUSD (AT&L) and the Navy Did Not Use Effective Oversight Mechanisms to 
Systematically Evaluate the Plan: 

OUSD (AT&L) Did Not Use an Effective Oversight Mechanism to 
Systematically Evaluate the Plan: 

OUSD (AT&L) did not use an effective oversight mechanism to 
systematically evaluate the NAVAIR and NAVSEA's plans to determine 
whether they fully address all needed elements. DOD's Depot 
Maintenance Strategy and Implementation Plans states that the Depot 
Maintenance Working Integrated Process Team[Footnote 16] would monitor 
the development and subsequent execution of the services' depot 
maintenance strategic plans on a continuing basis. However, that team 
did not review any of the services' plans, according to OUSD (AT&L) 
and Navy officials. 

OUSD (AT&L) officials representing the Assistant Deputy Under 
Secretary of Defense for Maintenance Policy and Programs told us that, 
in practice, the Integrated Process Team did not assume responsibility 
for oversight of the plan but instead monitored selected issues (such 
as the implementation of some specific process-improvement 
initiatives) that the services' plans describe. The Maintenance Policy 
and Programs officials told us that they reviewed the NAVAIR and 
NAVSEA plans through a process consisting of informal meetings and 
conversations with service representatives. They told us that, through 
their review, they found that the NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans were a "good 
first start" but did not address all needed elements. However, Navy 
officials told us that they were not informed that the plans did not 
fully address elements of a results-oriented management framework nor 
were they asked to revise the plans. They also said that they did not 
receive any comments from OUSD (AT&L) about linkages among the plans 
and with the executive summary. Additionally, Maintenance Policy and 
Programs officials were unable to provide us with documentation of 
their review of the NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans. 

In addition to reporting similar results in our review of Air Force 
depot maintenance planning, we recommended, among other things, that 
the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and 
Logistics address this oversight concern. Specifically, we recommended 
that the Under Secretary develop and implement procedures to review 
revisions of the depot maintenance strategic plan to ensure that they 
fully address all key elements of a results-oriented management 
framework, explicitly address any OUSD (AT&L) direction for the plans, 
and periodically assess progress and corrective actions to the extent 
needed in meeting the plans' goals. 

The Navy Lacked an Effective Oversight Mechanism to Systematically 
Evaluate the NAVAIR and NAVSEA Plans: 

At the time NAVAIR and NAVSEA developed their plans, the Navy lacked 
an effective oversight mechanism to help ensure that the plans fully 
address the elements of a results-oriented management framework. 
Office of the Chief of Naval Operations officials responsible for the 
Navy's strategic planning documents, including the NAVAIR and NAVSEA 
plans, did not review the plans to ensure that the documents fully 
address the elements of a results-oriented management framework. 
Furthermore, the Chief of Naval Operations officials did not provide 
direction to NAVAIR and NAVSEA regarding strategic planning elements 
that should be incorporated in their respective plans. Moreover, while 
Chief of Naval Operations officials told us that they conduct periodic 
reviews of depot maintenance programs and that these reviews help 
provide oversight of the plans' implementation, these reviews do not 
systematically assess the progress in achieving the plans' long-term 
goals. 

While Navy officials responsible for the plans acknowledged some of 
the plans' weaknesses, they told us that they believe the plans more 
fully address the results-oriented management framework elements than 
our analysis reflects. These officials stated that (1) although the 
plans do not address some elements explicitly, the elements are 
implied in the plans' discussion of various initiatives and processes, 
and (2) experienced professionals involved in Navy depot maintenance 
would be able to recognize these elements. However, because the plans 
do not explicitly address these elements, they may not be clear to 
individuals not involved or less involved in developing the plans. 

In our review of the Air Force depot maintenance plan, we reported 
similar oversight challenges for that service and recommended that the 
Secretary of the Air Force take actions to strengthen its oversight of 
the plans. The recommended actions to improve the Air Force's 
oversight parallel those listed previously in this report for the 
Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics. 
[Footnote 17] 

NAVAIR and NAVSEA Plans Do Not Fully Respond to OUSD (AT&L)'s 
Direction Designed to Meet Future Challenges: 

While the NAVAIR and NAVSEA depot maintenance strategic plans describe 
many initiatives and programs important to the NAVAIR and NAVSEA 
depots, they are not fully responsive to OUSD (AT&L)'s direction to 
the services that was designed to provide the services with a 
framework to meet future challenges. Specifically, the plans do not 
fully address logistics transformation, core logistics capability 
assurance, workforce revitalization, and capital investment--the four 
areas that OUSD (AT&L) directed each service, at a minimum, to include 
in its plan. Within these four general areas are 10 issues that OUSD 
(AT&L) also identified. The NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans each partially 
address 8 issues and do not address the remaining 2. Table 3 
summarizes our evaluation of the extent to which the NAVAIR and NAVSEA 
plans address each of the 10 issues. 

Table 3: The Extent to Which the NAVAIR and NAVSEA Depot Maintenance 
Strategic Plans Address OUSD (AT&L)'s Direction: 

Logistics transformation: 

OUSD (AT&L)-directed issue: 1. Future roles and capabilities 
envisioned for the depots and how these capabilities will be 
quantified and measured; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan notes that the role of the depots is to 
establish and sustain capabilities to support future weapon system 
requirements, but the plan does not define these projected future 
capabilities (e.g., maintenance, repair, and overhaul) or discuss how 
these capabilities will be quantified or measured; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan notes that the role of the Naval 
Shipyards is to provide the capability on ships and weapons systems 
required by Navy component commanders and combatant commanders, but 
the discussion is limited to workforce capabilities and does not 
describe other capabilities (e.g., maintenance, repair, and overhaul) 
that NAVSEA envisions for the shipyards, or how those capabilities 
would be quantified or measured. 

OUSD (AT&L)-directed issue: 2. Actions being taken to transform depots 
into the envisioned future capability; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan mentions capability and capacity 
measurement, but only in the context that this is a framework NAVAIR 
plans to develop. Under the future capabilities and readiness goal, 
the plan identifies the need to develop enterprisewide capability and 
capacity baselines and tools to plan and analyze capability and 
capacity so that NAVAIR can optimize delivery of products to meet 
warfighter requirements. However, the plan does not identify the 
resources required to develop a baseline, nor the method and time 
frame for doing so; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan refers to a continuous process-
improvement program but does not discuss the specific actions and 
associated time frames to transform the shipyards to the envisioned 
future capabilities. For example, the plan notes that one of the goals 
of a continuous process-improvement program is to increase workforce 
efficiencies; however, the plan does not identify actions to achieve 
the efficiencies that will assist with the transformation. 

OUSD (AT&L)-directed issue: 3. Management approaches for integrating 
various depot capabilities, including public-and private-sector 
sources, joint, interservice, and multinational capabilities; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan discusses management approaches for 
integrating public-and private-sector depot sources. For example, the 
plan notes that one way of maximizing support for the warfighter is by 
exploring opportunities provided through public-private partnerships. 
However, the plan is silent with regard to joint, interservice, and 
multinational capabilities; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan discusses management approaches for 
integrating public-and private-sector depot sources. For example, the 
plan discusses several actions, such as reassigning intermediate-level 
workload at regional maintenance centers and intermediate maintenance 
facilities to public and private shipyards, that NAVSEA could take to 
mitigate fluctuations in projected public shipyard workload. However, 
the plan is silent with regard to joint, interservice, and 
multinational capabilities. 

Core logistics capability assurance: 

OUSD (AT&L)-directed issue: 4. Actions being taken or contemplated to 
(a) identify core requirements at program initiation, (b) ensure that 
depot source of repair decisions are identified upon program 
initiation, (c) encourage the formation of public-private 
partnerships, and (d) identify and rectify core capability 
deficiencies; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan partially addresses three of the four 
types of actions. For example, the plan states that NAVAIR will 
support the warfighter by exploring opportunities to provide labor 
through commercial partnerships; yet, the plan does not identify these 
opportunities nor discuss how these opportunities would affect core 
workload and requirements; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan partially addresses two of the four 
types of actions. For example, the plan cites a "One Shipyard" concept 
that includes sharing of resources among public shipyards and 
partnering with private shipyards, yet the plan does not provide 
details on how NAVSEA may encourage the formation of these 
partnerships. 

OUSD (AT&L)-directed issue: 5. Methods used for workload estimating 
and projected effects of weapon system retirements and bed-down (i.e., 
the act or process of locating a weapon system at a particular base); 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: Does 
not address: The plan does not discuss the methods for estimating the 
amount of workload, nor does the plan discuss the projected effects of 
weapon system retirements and bed-down on depot workloads; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: Does 
not address: The plan does not discuss the methods for estimating the 
amount of workload, nor does the plan discuss the projected effects of 
weapon system retirements and bed-down on depot workloads. 

Workforce revitalization: 

OUSD (AT&L)-directed issue: 6. Reengineering strategies: Actions being 
taken to identify new skill requirements and reengineer existing 
employees' skills to satisfy new capability requirements; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan discusses the Qualified and Proficient 
Technician Training program that is designed to provide existing 
employees new and enhanced skills, but it does not discuss NAVAIR-wide 
or depot-specific actions to identify emerging skill requirements; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan notes that new weapon systems and 
modifications will result in new workforce skill requirements, but it 
does not discuss NAVSEA-wide or depot-specific actions to identify 
these emerging skill requirements and the reengineering needed to 
enable existing employees to gain the emerging skills. 

OUSD (AT&L)-directed issue: 7. Replenishment requirements: Methods 
used for forecasting workforce replenishment requirements, including 
data on projected annual losses due to retirements and projected 
annual new hire requirements; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan discusses a Workload Shaping model that 
includes forecasts of attrition rates, but it does not describe the 
methods used for forecasting projected losses (e.g., by specialty and 
by year); 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan discusses using shipyard demographic 
data to forecast future workforce attrition rates, but it does not 
describe the methods used for forecasting projected losses (e.g., by 
specialty and by year). 

OUSD (AT&L)-directed issue: 8. Replenishment strategies: Management 
approach for developing and implementing replenishment strategies, 
including a description of the actions being used to recruit and train 
new employees; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan notes recruitment actions such as hiring 
entry-level engineers and production workers, but it does not discuss 
a comprehensive management approach for recruiting and training new 
employees; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan notes recruitment actions such as hiring 
at least 100 apprentice employees at each Navy Shipyard each year, but 
it does not discuss a comprehensive management approach for recruiting 
and training new employees. 

Capital investment: 

OUSD (AT&L)-directed issue: 9. Benchmarks used for evaluating the 
adequacy of investment funding and the basis for selecting the 
benchmark; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: Does 
not address: The plan does not discuss any benchmark for evaluating 
the adequacy of investment funding or the basis for selecting the 
benchmark; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: Does 
not address: The plan does not discuss any benchmark for evaluating 
the adequacy of investment funding or the basis for selecting the 
benchmark. While the plan states that NAVSEA will continue making an 
annual capital investment of at least 6 percent of revenue, it does 
not identify how NAVSEA will evaluate the adequacy of this investment. 

OUSD (AT&L)-directed issues: 10. Methods for quantifying current 
capabilities, current and projected deficiencies, and the capabilities 
that planned investment will provide, including the method for 
prioritizing needed investments and quantitative data on projected 
funding for facilities and equipment; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVAIR plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan discusses several factors that affect 
capital-investment planning, such as environmental safety and security 
and customer priorities. However, it does not describe a method for 
prioritizing needed investments nor the quantitative data that can be 
used to project the level of funding needed for facilities and 
equipment; 
Degree plan addresses issues: Overview and examples: NAVSEA plan: 
Partially addresses: The plan identifies the amounts of funding needed 
for current and future military construction, but it does not describe 
a method for prioritizing these investments. 

Source: GAO analysis of NAVSEA and NAVAIR data. 

Note: Among other things, the 2007 U.S. Navy Depot Maintenance 
Strategic Plan contained NAVAIR's Naval Aviation Industrial Strategy 
and NAVSEA's Naval Shipyard Business Plan. NAVAIR and NAVSEA also 
published updates in 2009. We reviewed information from the 2007 and 
2009 documents in our evaluation of the NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans. 

[End of table] 

As discussed for the elements of a results-oriented management 
framework, OUSD (AT&L) and the Navy did not identify missing or 
partially addressed issues because neither used effective oversight to 
help ensure that OUSD (AT&L)'s direction for developing the plan was 
carried out. Among other things, DOD's Depot Maintenance Strategy and 
Implementation Plans states that the DOD strategy will ensure that DOD 
is postured to meet the national security and materiel readiness 
challenges of the 21st century. However, at present, information 
missing from the NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans may limit the service's 
assurance that its depots are postured and resourced to meet future 
maintenance requirements. 

NAVAIR and NAVSEA Plans Partially Address the Three Logistics 
Transformation Issues: 

The NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans partially address each of the three 
logistics transformation issues that OUSD (AT&L) directed the services 
to discuss in their plans. In this area, OUSD (AT&L) directed the 
services to discuss the future roles and capabilities of the depots, 
transformation actions, and approaches for integrating various depot 
capabilities in their plans. 

The two plans generally discuss the future roles of their depots, but 
the plans do not discuss projected future capabilities of the depots 
or how those capabilities will be measured. The NAVAIR plan states the 
general role of the Fleet Readiness Centers is to establish and 
sustain capabilities to support future weapon systems, and the NAVSEA 
plan states that Naval Shipyards' role is to provide the capability on 
ships and weapon systems required by Navy component commanders and 
combatant commanders. However, the NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans have a 
limited discussion on projected future capabilities despite changes to 
the Navy's force structure. For example, the February 2006 Quadrennial 
Defense Review Report noted that the integration of the Navy's and 
Marine Corps' tactical aircraft would result in reducing the 
procurement of 500 Navy tactical aircraft. This report also mentioned 
that four of the Navy's oldest nuclear ballistic missile submarines 
would reenter service after being converted into guided-missile and 
special-operations platforms. NAVAIR officials told us that they did 
not consider the effect these force structure changes would have on 
the strategic plan when it was being developed. In addition, these 
officials said that they will consider any effects the 2010 
Quadrennial Defense Review Report would have on the plan when it is 
next updated.[Footnote 18] 

Additionally, the NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans partially address actions 
they are taking to transform their depots. For example, under its 
future capabilities and readiness goal, the NAVAIR plan discusses 
developing capability and capacity baselines and tools so NAVAIR can 
improve the delivery of products to meet warfighter requirements. 
However, the plan does not identify the resources, methodology, and 
time frame required to develop the baselines and tools. The NAVSEA 
plan notes that one of the goals of the command's continuous process- 
improvement program is to increase workforce efficiencies, but the 
plan does not describe these efficiencies or the specific actions and 
time frames to achieve them. 

Moreover, the NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans partially address the management 
approach for integrating various depot maintenance capabilities, 
including public-and private-sector sources as well as joint, 
interservice, and multinational capabilities. Both plans discuss a 
management approach for integrating public-and private-sector depot 
sources. For example, the NAVAIR plan notes that one way of maximizing 
support for the warfighter is by exploring opportunities provided 
through public-private partnerships. In addition, the NAVSEA plan 
notes that workload fluctuations at public shipyards can be mitigated 
by reassigning some intermediate-level work at regional maintenance 
centers and facilities to public-and private-sector shipyards. 
However, both plans are silent with regard to a management approach 
for integrating joint, interservice, and multinational capabilities. 
Because the plans do not discuss their approaches for integrating 
these other three types of capabilities, it is unclear if NAVAIR and 
NAVSEA are positioned to reduce redundancies and take advantage of 
potential cost-saving measures. 

NAVAIR and NAVSEA Plans Partially Address One of the Core Logistics 
Capability-Assurance Issues and Do Not Address the Other: 

The NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans partially address one core logistics 
capability-assurance issue and do not address one issue. For the issue 
that both plans partially address, OUSD (AT&L) directed the services 
to address four types of actions being taken or contemplated: NAVAIR's 
plan contains information on three of the four types of actions, and 
NAVSEA's plan contains information on two of the four. 

* Identify core requirements at program initiation. The NAVAIR plan 
notes that industrial and maintenance coordinators work with weapon 
acquisition program offices to identify core requirements during the 
acquisition process, including program initiation. The NAVSEA plan 
does not have a discussion regarding identifying core requirements. 

* Ensure that depot source of repair decisions are made upon program 
initiation. Neither plan discusses actions that the command would take 
to ensure that depot source of repair decisions for new systems are 
made upon program initiation. 

* Encourage the formation of public-private partnerships. Both plans 
describe actions to encourage the formation of public-private 
partnerships. For example, the NAVAIR plan states that the command 
will support opportunities to provide labor through commercial 
partnerships, but the plan does not identify these opportunities. The 
NAVSEA plan discusses the "One Shipyard" concept that includes the 
sharing of resources among public shipyards and partnering with 
private shipyards, but it does not provide details on how NAVSEA may 
encourage the formation of partnerships. 

* Identify and rectify core capability deficiencies. Both plans 
describe actions to address deficiencies, but neither describes how 
the deficiencies will be identified. For example, the NAVAIR plan 
notes that the command will establish strong liaison between the 
maintenance activities and the acquisition community. The NAVSEA plan 
notes that core requirement levels will be sustained, in part, by 
reducing the total workforce by 20 percent or 22,000 employees. 

For the second of the two core logistics capability-assurance issues, 
neither plan discusses the OUSD (AT&L) direction to address the 
projected effects of weapon system retirements and bed-down (i.e., the 
act or process of locating a weapon system at a particular base) and 
retirements, despite changes to the Navy's force structure for 
aircraft and ships, as mentioned previously. In addition, the methods 
for estimating depot workload are not addressed in the NAVAIR and 
NAVSEA plans. In contrast, we reported DOD's method of compiling and 
internally reporting core requirements and associated workloads for 
2007 did not reveal core capability shortfalls, even though the 
services--including the Navy--had identified shortfalls in specific 
equipment/technology categories.[Footnote 19] 

NAVAIR and NAVSEA Plans Partially Address Each of the Three Workforce 
Revitalization Issues: 

The NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans both partially address each of the three 
OUSD (AT&L)-directed workforce revitalization issues: reengineering 
strategies, replenishment requirements, and replenishment strategies. 
Regarding the workforce reengineering strategies issue, the NAVAIR 
plan discusses the Qualified and Proficient Technician Training 
program that is designed to provide existing employees new and 
enhanced skills, and the NAVSEA plan notes that new weapon systems and 
technology modifications will require new workforce skill 
requirements. However, neither plan discusses commandwide or depot-
specific actions to identify emerging skill requirements. Also, the 
NAVSEA plan does not discuss the reengineering needed to enable 
existing employees to gain the emerging skills. 

Regarding workforce replenishment requirements, both plans include 
some information on forecasts of future workforce levels. For example, 
the NAVAIR plan mentions its Workload Shaping model that includes 
forecasts of workforce attrition rate. While the NAVSEA plan discusses 
using shipyard demographics data to forecast future workforce 
attrition rates and an annual 5 percent attrition rate for the 
workforce, it does not provide details regarding attrition effects on 
more specific groups such as blue-and white-collar workers. In 
addition, both plans do not describe the methods used for forecasting 
projected losses (e.g., by specialty and by year), even though the 
OUSD (AT&L) direction explicitly called for discussion of those 
methods. 

To address the workforce replenishment strategy issue, both plans 
provide examples of recruiting actions, but they have limited 
information on training--a second part of the OUSD (AT&L)-directed 
issue. The NAVAIR plan briefly mentions hiring entry-level engineers 
and production workers. Similarly, the NAVSEA plan talks about hiring 
100 apprentice employees at each Naval Shipyard each year. In addition 
to having few details on the cited hiring plans, neither plan 
discusses a comprehensive management approach for the recruitment and 
training. 

The NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans' limited and missing information for the 
three issues in the workforce revitalization area is noteworthy in the 
contexts of our previous findings on the DOD depot maintenance 
workforce and information in the OUSD (AT&L)'s document directing the 
services to provide the plans. In 2003, we reported that DOD faced 
significant management challenges in succession planning to maintain a 
skilled workforce at its depot maintenance facilities.[Footnote 20] 
Among other challenges, we reported that relatively high numbers of 
civilian workers at maintenance depots were nearing retirement age. 
DOD's Depot Maintenance Strategy and Implementation Plans makes a 
similar point. It states that DOD's depot maintenance community, like 
the rest of the federal government, faces increasing numbers of 
retirements as the "baby boom" generation reaches retirement 
eligibility. It goes on to state that the retirement-eligible 
population within the depot maintenance workforce and forecasted 
annual retirements are expected to increase annually for the remainder 
of the decade. This dynamic--coupled with the highly skilled nature of 
some depot maintenance work and the length of time required to train 
new employees--creates hiring, training, and retention challenges. 
Without a discussion that acknowledges these and other such workforce 
challenges, it is unclear how well NAVAIR and NAVSEA are positioned to 
address the challenges that their depots face. 

NAVAIR and NAVSEA Plans Address One Capital-Investment Issue but Do 
Not Address the Other: 

The NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans partially address the capital-investment 
issue of quantifying current capabilities but do not address the other 
issue--capital-investment benchmarks. Neither the benchmarks for 
evaluating the adequacy of investment funding nor NAVAIR's and 
NAVSEA's basis for selecting the benchmarks are in the plans despite 
OUSD (AT&L)'s direction to address these concerns. Even though neither 
plan addresses capital-investment benchmarks, the NAVSEA plan notes 
that the command intends to continue making an annual capital 
investment of at least 6 percent of revenue, as required by law, to 
sustain depot infrastructure requirements.[Footnote 21] An OUSD (AT&L) 
official mentioned that NAVSEA's citing of the 6 percent capital 
investment should be seen as addressing the benchmark issue. While the 
NAVAIR plan did not mention the 6 percent requirement, NAVAIR 
officials told us they intend to continue making capital investments 
of at least this amount. 

The NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans partially address the issues pertaining to 
the methods for quantitatively articulating these capital-investment 
concerns: current capabilities, current and projected deficiencies, 
and the capabilities that planned investment will provide. While the 
NAVAIR plan notes that its capital investments are prioritized in 
order to support naval aviation requirements, the NAVSEA plan 
discusses investments in the context of supporting shipyard 
operations. Both plans discuss an infrastructure-investment 
prioritization process but do not describe the method for prioritizing 
needed investments. In addition, the NAVAIR and NAVSEA plans do not 
present quantitative data on the projected funding (or shortfalls) for 
facilities and equipment, despite both plans noting infrastructure 
shortfalls and funding limitations. Modernizing and refurbishing their 
facilities is an essential step for optimizing their operating 
efficiencies. Key steps in modernizing facilities are articulating 
investment priorities, quantifying shortfalls, and discussing how 
these shortfalls may affect accomplishing strategic goals. 

Capital investment in DOD depots has been an issue of concern in our 
prior work. For example, in 2001, we reported that capital investments 
in depot facilities and plant equipment had declined sharply in the 
mid-1990s as a result of defense downsizing, depot closures and 
consolidations, and DOD's plan to increase its reliance on the private 
sector for logistics support of new weapon systems.[Footnote 22] As a 
result of DOD's lack of capital investment, its depots did not keep up 
with the latest technologies. In subsequent years, funding levels 
increased as the services recognized the need to modernize their 
depots. As with any business, modernizing and refurbishing plant and 
equipment for optimal operating efficiency, as well as acquiring new 
capabilities and cutting-edge technologies linked to new workloads, 
are important to the future viability of the military depots. An 
incomplete discussion of capital investment could negatively limit 
Navy decision makers' ability to purchase depot infrastructure, 
equipment, and process improvements. 

Conclusions: 

OUSD (AT&L) officials told us that the primary intent of OUSD (AT&L)'s 
direction was to provide a framework for the services to meet 
challenges in the future and that the issues identified in the four 
areas specified in the direction were designed to address those 
challenges. Further, DOD's Depot Maintenance Strategy and 
Implementation Plans states that (1) each service will conduct depot 
maintenance strategic planning that focuses on achieving the DOD depot 
maintenance strategy and (2) the DOD strategy will ensure that DOD is 
postured to meet the national security and materiel readiness 
challenges of the 21st century. However, NAVAIR's and NAVSEA's plans 
do not provide a comprehensive, results-oriented management framework 
to efficiently and effectively guide the Navy's future actions, nor do 
they fully respond to OUSD (AT&L)'s direction that was designed to 
provide a framework for the services to overcome four general areas of 
future challenges. Furthermore, focusing on the development of 
separate command-level plans and an executive summary, rather than a 
single Navy-wide plan, may have made it more difficult to determine 
where additional information was needed to address the elements and 
issues at the servicewide level. Another primary reason for not 
correcting weaknesses in the plans is that OUSD (AT&L) and Navy do not 
have effective oversight mechanisms in place to promptly identify the 
weaknesses, communicate weaknesses to the plan developers, monitor the 
revision of the plans to ensure that the weaknesses have been 
addressed, and determine whether goals are being achieved. These 
weaknesses in content, linkage, and oversight resulted in a missed 
opportunity to identify a more complete Navy-wide vision for the 
effective and efficient operation of its depots in the future. For 
example, had NAVSEA and NAVAIR identified and implemented a systematic 
program evaluation and a thorough set of metrics to directly assess 
goal achievement, they and the Navy overall would have additional 
tools for reacting in a timely manner to potential issues and 
challenges in executing the strategies. Most importantly, integration 
of the plans could have resulted in the Navy having more assurance 
that its depots are viably positioned and have the maintenance 
workforce, equipment, facilities, and funds they need to meet current 
and future requirements. On a closing note, we previously made a 
recommendation to OUSD (AT&L) to develop and implement procedures to 
(1) review revisions of the depot maintenance strategic plan to ensure 
they fully address all key elements of a results-oriented management 
framework, (2) explicitly address any OUSD (AT&L) direction for the 
plans, and (3) periodically assess progress and corrective actions to 
the extent needed in meeting the plans' goals. We reassert the need 
for DOD to implement that recommendation. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To provide greater assurance that Navy depots will be postured and 
resourced to meet future maintenance requirements, we recommend that 
the Secretary of Defense direct the Secretary of the Navy to take the 
following four actions to revise the Navy's depot maintenance 
strategic plan: 

* Fully and explicitly address all elements needed for a comprehensive 
results-oriented management framework, including those elements that 
we have identified as partially addressed or not addressed in the 
current plan. 

* Demonstrate clear linkages among plans should the Navy continue to 
submit individual depot maintenance strategic plans instead of a 
single Navy-wide plan. 

* Fully and explicitly address the four critical areas of logistics 
transformation, core logistics capability assurance, workforce 
revitalization, and capital investment, consistent with OUSD (AT&L) 
criteria. 

* Develop and implement procedures to review revisions of the depot 
maintenance strategic plan to ensure they fully address all key 
elements of a results-oriented management framework, explicitly 
address any OUSD (AT&L) direction for the plans, and periodically 
assess progress and corrective actions to the extent needed in meeting 
the plans' goals. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

In written comments on a draft of this report, DOD concurred with our 
four recommendations to provide greater assurance that Navy depots 
will be postured and resourced to meet future maintenance 
requirements. DOD's written comments are reprinted in appendix II. 

The department concurred with our recommendation to direct the 
Secretary of the Navy to revise the Navy's depot maintenance strategic 
plan to fully and explicitly address all elements needed for a 
comprehensive results-oriented management framework. DOD stated that 
it will direct the Navy and the other services to more clearly address 
all elements needed for a results-oriented strategy in the next OUSD 
(AT&L) request to the services to update their depot maintenance 
strategic plans. DOD noted that the updates are expected in early 
2011, after completion of the mandated future depot capability study. 

DOD also concurred with our recommendation to direct the Secretary of 
the Navy to revise the Navy's depot maintenance strategic plan to 
demonstrate clear linkages among the plans, should the Navy continue 
to submit individual depot maintenance plans instead of a single Navy-
wide plan. In its response, DOD stated that it will direct the Navy 
and the other services to more clearly demonstrate the linkages of 
their depot maintenance strategies to the DOD depot maintenance 
strategic plan in the next OUSD (AT&L) request to the services to 
update their depot maintenance strategic plans. 

The department also concurred with our recommendation to direct the 
Secretary of the Navy to revise the Navy's depot maintenance strategic 
plan to fully and explicitly address OUSD (AT&L)'s direction that 
provides a framework for the services to address the four critical 
areas of logistics transformation, core capability assurance, 
workforce revitalization, and capital investment, consistent with OUSD 
(AT&L) criteria. DOD stated that it will direct the Navy and the other 
services to explicitly address the OUSD (AT&L) direction for depot 
maintenance strategic planning in the next OUSD (AT&L) request to the 
services to update their depot maintenance strategic plans. 

Additionally, DOD concurred with our recommendation to direct the 
Secretary of the Navy to revise the Navy's depot maintenance strategic 
plan to develop and implement procedures to review revisions of the 
depot maintenance strategic plan to ensure they fully address all key 
elements of a results-oriented management framework, explicitly 
address any OUSD (AT&L) direction for the plans, and periodically 
assess progress and corrective actions to the extent needed in meeting 
the plans' goals. In its response, DOD stated that it will direct the 
services to explicitly address the procedures noted in our 
recommendation. DOD also said that OUSD (AT&L) would further develop a 
process to periodically assess progress and corrective actions to 
ensure the services are meeting OUSD (AT&L) and service plans' goals. 

DOD also provided technical comments that we have incorporated into 
this report where applicable. 

We are sending copies of this report to the Secretary of Defense, the 
Secretary of the Navy, the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, 
Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR), and Naval Sea Systems Command 
(NAVSEA). 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, please call me at (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. Staff members who made key contributions 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: 

In this report, we address two questions: (1) To what extent does the 
Navy's depot maintenance strategic plan address key elements of a 
results-oriented management framework? and (2) To what extent does the 
Navy's depot maintenance strategic plan address Office of the Under 
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics' (OUSD 
[AT&L]) direction that was designed to provide a framework for the 
services to meet future challenges? Because Naval Air Systems Command 
(NAVAIR) and Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) are collectively 
responsible for 94 percent of the Navy's depot maintenance workload, 
we focused the scope of our review on NAVAIR's Naval Aviation 
Industrial Strategy, NAVSEA's Naval Shipyard Business Plan, and the 
2009 update that each command provided.[Footnote 23] 

We used the same set of methodological procedures to answer both 
questions, and each type of procedure was performed simultaneously for 
the two questions. To understand the context of our analysis, we first 
reviewed relevant laws; Department of Defense (DOD) and Navy 
instructions governing depot maintenance; and depot maintenance- 
related reports issued by agencies and organizations such as GAO, DOD, 
the Logistics Management Institute, and RAND. We then used qualitative 
content analyses to compare the Navy plans against criteria from the 
seven elements of a results-oriented management framework and the 10 
issues listed in the OUSD (AT&L) direction for depot maintenance 
strategic plans. To conduct these analyses, we first developed a data- 
collection instrument that incorporated these two types of criteria. 
One team member then analyzed the plans using this instrument. To 
verify preliminary observations from this initial analysis, a second 
team member concurrently conducted an independent analysis of the 
plans. We compared observations of the two analysts and discussed any 
differences. We reconciled the differences with the assistance of 
analysts from the team that was evaluating the Air Force depot 
maintenance strategic plans. We subsequently met with Navy officials 
to confirm our understanding of the plans and sought additional 
information where our preliminary analyses revealed that the plans 
partially address or do not address the criteria. We also interviewed 
and obtained documentary evidence from relevant OUSD (AT&L) officials 
regarding the office's oversight of the services' plans. Additionally, 
we interviewed depot leaders and strategic planning personnel at four 
NAVAIR and NAVSEA depots to obtain first-hand information on issues 
the depots face. We also obtained data on workload and personnel from 
the Navy and determined that these data were sufficiently reliable for 
our report. 

The organizations and installations where we visited and conducted 
interviews are listed in table 4. 

Table 4: Organizations Contacted to Obtain Information about the 
Navy's Depot Maintenance Strategic Plan: 

DOD: 

Office of the Assistant Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for 
Maintenance Policy and Programs, Arlington, Virginia. 

Office of the Assistant Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Materiel 
Readiness, Arlington, Virginia. 

Joint Depot Maintenance Activities Group, Columbus, Ohio. 

Navy: 

Office of the Secretary of the Navy, Arlington, Virginia. 

Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, Arlington, Virginia. 

Naval Air Systems Command, Patuxent River, Maryland. 

Naval Sea Systems Command, Washington, D.C. 

Fleet Readiness Center Southeast, Jacksonville, Florida. 

Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, Portsmouth, New Hampshire. 

Other: 

The Logistics Management Institute, McLean, Virginia. 

Source: GAO. 

[End of table] 

We conducted this performance audit from July 2009 through June 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: 

Note: Page numbers in the draft report may differ from those in this 
report. 

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

May 23 2010: 

Mr. Jack E. Edwards: 
Director, 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 (DoD) response to the GAO Draft 
Report, GA0-10-585, "Depot Maintenance: Improved Strategic Planning 
Needed to Ensure That Navy Depots Can Meet Future Maintenance 
Requirements," dated April 27, 2010 (GAO Code 351381). 

The Department concurs with all four recommendations and appreciates 
the opportunity to comment on the GAO Draft Report. (Attached) 

My point of contact in this matter is Mr. Hal Amerau. He can be 
reached at (703) 697-1903. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

[Illegible] for: 

Alan F. Estevez: 
Principal Deputy: 

Attachment: As stated: 

[End of letter] 

GAO Draft Report — Dated April 27, 2010: 
GAO-10-585 (GAO Code 351381): 

"Depot Maintenance: Improved Strategic Planning Needed To Ensure That 
Navy Depots Can Meet Future Maintenance Requirements" 

Department Of Defense Comments To The Recommendations: 

Recommendation 1: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Secretary of the Navy to revise the Navy's Depot 
Maintenance Strategic Plan to fully and explicitly address all 
elements needed for a comprehensive results-oriented management 
framework, including those elements that we have identified as 
partially addressed or not addressed in the current plan. (See page 
28/GAO Draft Report.) 

DOD Response: Concur with comment. Rather than revise the FY08 Navy 
Depot Maintenance Strategic Plan, the Navy and the other Services will 
be directed to more clearly address all elements needed for a results-
oriented strategy in the next OUSD (AT&L) request for Service updates 
to their Depot Maintenance Strategic Plans. This update is expected in 
early 2011 after completion of the FY09 National Defense Authorization 
Act, Section 322 Future Depot Capability Study. 

Recommendation 2: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Secretary of the Navy to revise the Navy's Depot 
Maintenance Strategic Plan to demonstrate clear linkages among plans 
should the Navy continue to submit individual depot maintenance 
strategic plans instead of a single Navy-wide plan. (See page 28/GAO 
Draft Report.) 

DOD Response: Concur with comment. Rather than revise the FY08 Navy 
Depot Maintenance Strategic Plan, the Navy and the other Services will 
be directed to more clearly demonstrate the linkages of their depot 
maintenance strategies to the DOD Depot Maintenance Strategic Plan in 
the next OUSD (AT&L) request for Service updates to their Depot 
Maintenance Strategic Plans. This update is expected in early 2011 
after completion of the FY09 National Defense Authorization Act, 
Section 322 Future Depot Capability Study. 

Recommendation 3: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Secretary of the Navy to revise the Navy's Depot 
Maintenance Strategic Plan to fully and explicitly address the four 
critical areas of logistics transformation, core capability assurance, 
workforce revitalization, and capital investment, consistent with OUSD 
(AT&L) criteria. (See page 28/GAO Draft Report.) 

DOD Response: Concur with comment Rather than revise the FY08 Navy 
Depot Maintenance Strategic Plan, the Navy and the other Services will 
be directed to explicitly address the OUSD (AT&L) direction and 
framework in the next OUSD (AT&L) request for Service updates to their 
Depot Maintenance Strategic Plans. This update is expected in early 
2011 after completion of the FY09 National Defense Authorization Act, 
Section 322 Future Depot Capability Study. 

Recommendation 4: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Secretary of the Navy to revise the Navy's depot 
maintenance strategic plan to develop and implement procedures to 
review revisions of the depot maintenance strategic plan to ensure 
they fully address all key elements of a result-oriented management 
framework, explicitly address any OUSD (AT&L) direction for the plans, 
and periodically assess progress and corrective actions to the extent 
needed in meeting the plans' goals. (See page 28/GAO Draft Report.) 

DOD Response: Concur. The next OUSD (AT&L) request for Service updates 
to their Depot Maintenance Strategic plans is expected in early 2011 
after completion of the FY09 National Defense Authorization Act, 
Section 322 Future Depot Capability Study. In that update request the 
Services will be directed to explicitly address the procedures noted 
in the recommendation. Additionally, a process will be developed by 
OUSD (AT&L) to periodically assess progress and corrective actions to 
ensure the Services are meeting OUSD (AT&L) and Service plans' goals. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

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

Staff Acknowledgments: 

Key contributors to this report were Sandra B. Burrell, Assistant 
Director; Allen Westheimer; Steve Boyles; Ron La Due Lake; Joanne 
Landesman; Cristina M. Ruggiero-Mendoza; Michael Willems; and 
Elizabeth Wood. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

Depot Maintenance: Improved Strategic Planning Needed to Ensure That 
Air Force Depots Can Meet Future Maintenance Requirements. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-526]. Washington, D.C.: May 14, 
2010. 

Depot Maintenance: Improved Strategic Planning Needed to Ensure That 
Army and Marine Corps Depots Can Meet Future Maintenance Requirements. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-865]. Washington, D.C.: 
September 17, 2009. 

Depot Maintenance: Actions Needed to Identify and Establish Core 
Capability at Military Depots. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-83]. Washington, D.C.: May 14, 2009. 

Depot Maintenance: Actions Needed to Provide More Consistent Funding 
Allocation Data to Congress. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-126]. Washington, D.C.: November 
30, 2006. 

Depot Maintenance: DOD's Report to Congress on Its Public-Private 
Partnerships at Its Centers of Industrial and Technical Excellence 
(CITEs) Is Not Complete and Additional Information Would Be Useful. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-902R]. Washington, 
D.C.: July 1, 2008. 

Depot Maintenance: Issues and Options for Reporting on Military 
Depots. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-761R]. 
Washington, D.C.: May 15, 2008. 

DOD Civilian Personnel: Improved Strategic Planning Needed to Help 
Ensure Viability of DOD's Civilian Industrial Workforce. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-472]. Washington, D.C.: April 30, 
2003. 

Defense Maintenance: Sustaining Readiness Support Capabilities 
Requires a Comprehensive Plan. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-01-533T]. Washington, D.C.: March 23, 
2001. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Performance-based logistics refers to the purchase of performance 
outcomes, such as the availability of functioning weapon systems, 
through long-term support arrangements rather than the purchase of 
individual elements of support--such as parts, repairs, and 
engineering support. 

[2] H.R. Rep. No. 108-106 (2003), p. 304; H.R. Rep. No. 109-452 
(2006), pp. 296-297. 

[3] OUSD (AT&L) outlined the military services' depot maintenance 
strategic planning responsibilities in its report to Congress. See 
DOD, Depot Maintenance Strategy and Implementation Plans, (Washington, 
D.C.: March 2007), pp. I-21 through I-24. This document established 
OUSD (AT&L) criteria for the services' strategic plans. 

[4] DOD, Quadrennial Defense Review Report (Washington, D.C.: February 
2010). 

[5] GAO, Managing for Results: Critical Issues for Improving Federal 
Agencies' Strategic Plans, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-97-180] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 
16, 1997). 

[6] GAO, Depot Maintenance: Improved Strategic Planning Needed to 
Ensure That Army and Marine Corps Depots Can Meet Future Maintenance 
Requirements, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-865] 
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 17, 2009). 

[7] GAO, Depot Maintenance: Improved Strategic Planning Needed to 
Ensure That Air Force Depots Can Meet Future Maintenance Requirements, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-526] (Washington, D.C.: 
May 14, 2010). 

[8] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-97-180]. 

[9] 10 U.S.C. § 2460. Depot-level maintenance and repair also includes 
all aspects of software maintenance classified by DOD as of July 1, 
1995, as depot-level maintenance and repair, and interim contractor 
support or contractor logistics support, to the extent that such 
support is for depot maintenance. Depot-level maintenance and repair 
does not include the procurement of major modifications or upgrades of 
weapon systems that are designed to improve program performance or the 
nuclear refueling of an aircraft carrier; however, a major upgrade 
program covered by this exception could continue to be performed by 
private-or public-sector activities. Depot-level maintenance also does 
not include the procurement of parts for safety modifications, but 
does include the installation of parts for that purpose. 

[10] The Navy's other four maintenance depots are two naval warfare 
centers: Naval Surface Warfare Center and Naval Undersea Warfare 
Center; and two space and naval warfare systems centers: Space and 
Naval Warfare Systems Center, Charleston and San Diego. 

[11] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-97-180]. 

[12] OUSD (AT&L) directed each of the services to include many of 
these same elements in its depot maintenance plan. Specifically, OUSD 
(AT&L) directed the services to include a comprehensive mission 
statement; general goals and objectives; a description of how the 
goals and objectives are to be achieved; the metrics that will be 
applied to gauge progress toward attainment of each of the goals and 
objectives; an identification of those key factors external to the 
military services and beyond their control that could significantly 
affect the achievement of the general goals and objectives; and a 
description of the program evaluations used in establishing, 
monitoring, or revising general goals and objectives. 

[13] Pub. L. No. 110-417, § 322 (2008). 

[14] GAO, The Results Act: Observations on DOD's Draft Strategic Plan, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/NSIAD-97-219R] 
(Washington, D.C.: Aug. 5, 1997). 

[15] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-97-180]. 

[16] The Depot Maintenance Working Integrated Process Team is a group 
overseen by the Materiel Readiness Senior Steering Group, which 
consisted of senior representatives from OUSD (AT&L), the Joint Staff, 
the services, and the Defense Logistics Agency. It was replaced by the 
Maintenance Executive Steering Committee in December 2008. The 
Maintenance Executive Steering Committee consists of senior 
maintenance and logistics representatives from throughout DOD and is 
intended to serve as a mechanism for the coordinated review of DOD 
maintenance policies, systems, programs, and activities. 

[17] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-526]. 

[18] DOD, Quadrennial Defense Review Report. (Washington, D.C.: 
February 2010) 

[19] GAO, Depot Maintenance: Actions Needed to Identify and Establish 
Core Capability at Military Depots, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-83] (Washington, D.C.: May 14, 
2009). 

[20] GAO, DOD Civilian Personnel: Improved Strategic Planning Needed 
to Help Ensure Viability of DOD's Civilian Industrial Workforce, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-472] (Washington, D.C.: 
Apr. 30, 2003). 

[21] Section 2476 of Title 10 requires that each fiscal year the 
Secretary of each military department shall invest in the capital 
budgets of certain "covered depots" of that department a total amount 
equal to not less than 6 percent of the average total combined 
workload funded at all of the depots of that military department for 
the 3 preceding fiscal years. Section 101(a)(8) of Title 10 defines 
the term "military departments" as the Department of the Army, 
Department of the Navy, and Department of the Air Force. 

[22] GAO, Defense Maintenance: Sustaining Readiness Support 
Capabilities Requires a Comprehensive Plan, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-01-533T] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 23, 
2001). 

[23] The Navy's 2007 U.S. Navy Depot Maintenance Strategic Plan also 
contained an executive summary and a plan for each of three other 
commands: the Naval Undersea Warfare Center, Naval Surface Warfare 
Center, and the Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command. 

[End of section] 

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