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Monday, April 17, 2006

Defense Contractors Paid Way Too Much For Incomplete Projects...Go Figure?

Source: Washington Post

In this culture of absolute corruption and underhandedness on the Hill and in the White House, this news really doesn't surprise anyone these days.

In late February 2004, the Army announced that it was canceling plans to build a radar-evading helicopter called the Comanche, a project that was nearly three years behind schedule and more than $3.5 billion over budget. Those problems, however, didn't stop an Army panel a few weeks later from granting the Boeing Co.-Sikorsky Aircraft Corp. partnership running the program a $33.9 million "award fee" for their work on the helicopter, part of more than $200 million in such fees paid to the partnership over four years.

Award fees are meant in theory to motivate defense contractors with extra money for performance. But a recent Government Accountability Office study found that the fees are often paid regardless of whether a project is on schedule and within its budget.
Instead of encouraging efficiency, the GAO found, award-fee payments have become routine in some major weapons contracts, built into company expectations and paid almost as a matter of course.

Current practices "undermine the effectiveness of fees as a motivational tool and marginalize their use in holding contractors accountable," the GAO concluded. Defense contractors are paid award fees for work that is simply "acceptable, average, expected, good, or satisfactory."


We are experiencing record budget cuts and deficits across the board, and this news comes to light.

The current leadership never ceases to amaze me.

Can someone please take the platinum credit card away from the GOP bully in D.C. before we go bankrupt and lose it all?

Thanks,
The taxpayers of America.

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