Join Now

Want news that’s as fresh as your morning coffee? Join our community and stay in the know!

One contractor is on the Space Force’s naughty list

Date:

Share:

The Space Force has put a defense contractor on a blacklist intended to hold companies accountable for poor performance and program delays. 

“There is a company on the watch list today. I won’t say who it is,” Lt. Gen. Philip Garrant, commander of Space Systems Command, told reporters at a Defense Writers Group event. 

The Contractor Responsibility Watch List, or CRWL, was created in the 2018 National Defense Authorization Act to give Space Systems Command the power to stop underperforming contractors from getting new contracts. Until today, the service has never confirmed if it has used the list. 

The list “has absolutely worked as intended. We’ve seen significant improvement in performance and attention at the most senior levels of the corporation,” Garrant said. While Garrant didn’t name the company, he said the contractor works on high-priority space programs. 

The service wants to expand the tool in the 2025 NDAA and move the authority to blacklist contractors to Air Force space acquisition chief Frank Calvelli. Calvelli has been known to publicly call out defense contractors for schedule delays, and has emphasized the need to hold industry accountable. 

Once the authority is moved, Calvelli will likely use it “more frequently,” Garrant said. 

Calvelli has been trying to address long-delayed “problem children” programs in the Space Force, including an RTX program called GPS Next Generation Operational Control Segment, or OCX, which are ground stations that will control the Pentagon’s constellation of GPS satellites, as well as an L3Harris space command-and-control system called Advanced Tracking and Launch Analysis System, or ATLAS. 

The Space Force recently booted RTX from a contract to develop new missile warning and tracking satellites due to cost overruns and schedule problems—an example of how the service is keeping contractors accountable, Garrant said.

“[Calvelli] has talked a lot about holding people accountable, whether they’re in the government or in industry. Without particulars, in my tenure, we have relieved program managers that work for me, holding them accountable. I would offer that removing one of the industry partners was holding them accountable to what they proposed to us from a cost, schedule, performance perspective. That’s the indication,” he said. 

Unmatched Baby Essentials

baby

━ more like this

Where To Find Dragons In Disney Dreamlight Valley

Disney Dreamlight Valley is a relaxing title filled to the brim with adorable creatures to meet and feed. If you want to befriend them...

Microsoft at 50: An AI Giant. A Kinder Culture. And Still Hellbent on Domination

No question about it: Nadella’s Microsoft is a triumph. Finally, in the 2020s, Microsoft has centered on the most innovative tech since the PC...

Cyberpunk 2077 Isn’t PS5 Pro Enhanced And Won’t Be Anytime Soon

Cyberpunk 2077 is one of those benchmark games fans rush to check out when they upgrade their gaming hardware. From its disastrous launch on...

The 20 best Hanukkah gifts to give in 2024

Santa's got the Christmas shopping covered, but you're on the hook for Hanukkah. Now, aren't you lucky! Actually, you are because I've done all...

Is Silicon Valley Actually Libertarian?

Lauren Goode: It sounds like you're a little bit aligned with the successful tech entrepreneurs who were surveyed by the junior college in Palo...

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here