Pentagon Plans Multibillion-Dollar IT Consolidation: This is IT
By Robert Levinson
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The Defense Department is consolidating many of its disparate “fourth estate” agency information technology systems into one single system providing a variety of services used across the department at both the unclassified and secret level.
The fourth estate is made up of agencies that aren’t part of the military services and handle such functions as administration and support services for health care and human resources, IT, research and development, and acquisition across the entire Defense Department.
The consolidation was directed by the DOD chief information officer in late 2018 to improve cybersecurity and customer support, and to save money, according to DISA. The effort is known as the Fourth Estate Network Optimization Project, according to a video briefing released by the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA). The resulting single service will be called Defense Enclave Services (DES).
The 14 agencies involved in the consolidation are the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, Defense Contract Audit Agency, Defense Contract Management Agency, Defense Finance and Accounting Service, Defense Health Agency, Defense Human Resources Agency, DISA, Defense Logistics Agency, Defense Media Activity, Defense Microelectronics Activity, Defense Prisoner of War/Missing in Action Accounting Agency, Defense Technical Information Center, Defense Threat Reduction Agency, and the Missile Defense Agency. Their networks operate globally with approximately 370,000 user devices and 8,500 managed network and security devices, according to the latest request for information (RFI).
“The objective is to move the fourth estate’s common use IT systems, personnel, functions, and program elements associated with the support of those systems and technologies into a single service provider architecture,” said Drew Jaehnig, DISA’s chief of the consolidation effort, in a news release earlier this year.
DISA is seeking a single contractor to “integrate and consolidate the disparate networks into (1) single managed NIPR network environment and (1) single managed SIPR network environment,” according to the RFI. NIPR refers to “Non-classified Internet Protocol Router Network (NIPRNet),” and SIPR is “Secret Internet Protocol (IP) Router Network (SIPRNet).” Most of the fourth estate’s daily IT activity uses these networks. Services that will be provided fall into five categories:
- Cybersecurity
- Enterprise Services
- Asset Management
- Network Services
- Operations
Some functions listed under each category are inherently governmental and won’t be provided by the contractor.
Jaehnig said that the first phase of the effort was set to begin in fiscal 2019, which ended on Sept. 30, and the second phase is planned for fiscal 2022. The latest RFI provides the following schedule:
- The award will be made in the second quarter of fiscal 2021 to provide operations for an initial 20,000 seats and to begin migrating another 10,000 seats.
- Another 70,000 seats will be migrated in fiscal 2022.
- In fiscal 2023, another 120,000 seats will be migrated.
- The remaining 150,000 will be migrated in fiscal 2024, for rough total of 370,000 managed seats.
DISA hasn’t provided an estimated value for the project, but the RFI references an acquisition with a multibillion-dollar ceiling. The RFI requests information from potential vendors, including small businesses, on a cost per seat for 370,000 users “to manage common use services across cybersecurity, asset management, network services, and operations.”
According to Bloomberg Government data, the 14 agencies involved in the consolidation spend about $6 billion annually on information technology. It’s possible that eventually much of that spending could be absorbed by the DES program. The top IT contractors from the beginning of fiscal 2015 through fiscal 2019 for fourth estate agencies are Leidos holdings Inc. ($3.5 billion in obligations), Perspecta Inc. ($1.4 billion) and General Dynamics Corp. ($1.2 billion).
To contact the analyst: Robert Levinson in Washington, D.C. at rlevinson@bgov.com
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Daniel Snyder at dsnyder@bgov.com; Jodie Morris at jmorris@bgov.com
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