An Analysis of Army Contract Administration With Regard to Contracting Officers Representatives

reportActive / Technical Report | Accession Number: AD1029901 | Open PDF

Abstract:

This research project examines Army contract administration procedures in the Continental United States CONUS and Outside Continental United States OCONUS performed by Contracting Officers Representatives CORs for service contracts. We analyze COR roles, responsibilities, educationtraining, found gaps and challenges that affect the completion of COR duties relating to Army service contracts. We identified five common COR issues that need to be communication, staff levels, oversight, and leadership support by comparing and contrasting Army COR contract administration processes from a CONUS and OCONUS perspective. The results inform Army Contracting leadership about differences and discrepancies that exist in the training of CORs and in the processes followed. Using regulatory documents, audit reports, and interviews with CONUS and OCONUS CORs and supervisors, leaders, and commanders of CORs, we addressed educationtraining, communication, staff Levels, oversight, and leadership support. We found that COR training differs in CONUS and OCONUS environments. Additionally, lessons learned revealed that COR training remains inadequate, communication among contracting personnel and CORs requires improvement, staff levels need to be increased to support contract administration, managers nominate CORs who lack technical knowledge and experience, and commanders and leaders neither understand the requirements needed to support contract administration requirements nor COR roles and responsibilities.

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Collection: TR
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