MICC responsive to urgent Army Futures Command contract needs

By Daniel P. Elkins, Mission and Installation Contracting Command Public Affairs OfficeJuly 1, 2021

MICC responsive to urgent Army Futures Command contract needs
1 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – The expedited research and collaboration efforts by Stephen Noethen and Colleen Rye in June in support of an Army Futures Command contract requirement for 200 software licenses sustained the command’s collaboration capability for its Army Software Factory. Noethen is the mission division chief and Rye is a contract specialist for the Mission and Installation Contracting Command-Fort Sam Houston contracting office in Texas. (Photo Credit: Ben Gonzales) VIEW ORIGINAL
MICC responsive to urgent Army Futures Command contract needs
2 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – The Austin-based Software Factory is the first-of-its-kind concept for the Army that is leveraging a train-with-industry pipeline to empower Soldiers and Civilians to scope and solve problems with modern software practices. (Photo Credit: Luke Allen) VIEW ORIGINAL

JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO-FORT SAM HOUSTON, Texas (July 1, 2021) -- The accelerated research and responsive mission partner support efforts to procure 200 software licenses in a span of a week by contracting professionals at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, in June is sustaining secure collaboration capabilities in a nontraditional network environment for the Army Software Factory.

Army Futures Command officials headquartered in Austin, Texas, reached out to the Mission and Installation Contracting Command-Fort Sam Houston contracting office June 7 with the urgent need for the software requirement after exhausting other procurement vehicles and outreach for recommendations.

Prompting the need for the software was the service’s migration to Army 365 on June 15 that proved problematic for the Army Software Factory’s unique, collaborative nature with its 26,000-plus workforce across the Army, industry, science and academia. AFC officials announced the establishment of the Soldier-led Software Factory in 2020, which celebrated its grand opening in April 2021 at Austin Community College.

“The guiding principal of the Army Software Factory is to operate ‘by Soldiers, for Soldiers,’” said Maj. Vito Errico, the Army Software Factory co-director. “The sunset of commercially available Microsoft Teams across the Army meant that the Army Software Factory would need a new way to reach its users and collaborate across a wide variety of stakeholders in the Army, academia and industry. By teaming with the MICC’s proactive and responsive team, the Software Factory was able to continue uninterrupted operations without costly program delays and risks to user engagement across the Army.”

Patrick Morse, the director of contracting for Army Futures Command, explained the Army Software Factory is an integrated software development initiative to teach, develop and employ self-sustaining talent from all ranks within the military and civilian workforce.

“Building digital proficiency across the Army will enable Soldiers and civilians to solve Army problems, develop cutting-edge applications for current and future systems, and better prepare for disconnected warfare in 2028 and beyond,” Morse said.

MICC responsive to urgent Army Futures Command contract needs
1 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Colleen Rye worked through the weekend June 12-13 in support of an urgent Army Futures Command contract requirement for 200 software licenses that led to the small business contract award in only seven days to sustain the command’s collaboration capability for its Army Software Factory. Rye is a contract specialist with the Mission and Installation Contracting Command-Fort Sam Houston contracting office in Texas. (Photo Credit: Ben Gonzales) VIEW ORIGINAL
MICC responsive to urgent Army Futures Command contract needs
2 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Stephen Noethen led an integrated team in June to procure an Army Futures Command urgent contract requirement for 200 software licenses to sustain its unique collaboration capability for the Army Software Factory. Noethen is the mission division chief for the Mission and Installation Contracting Command-Fort Sam Houston contracting office in Texas. (Photo Credit: Ben Gonzales) VIEW ORIGINAL

MICC-Fort Sam Houston contracting officer Stephen Noethen, chief of its mission division, and contract specialist Colleen Rye immediately took steps in an integrated approach to begin conducting market research and exploring the procurement options for the new software requirement. The contracted called for the installation of Assured Control with quickstart for the Google Workspace Enterprise Plus in support of the Army Software Factory.

“I scheduled a meeting first thing to discuss specifics of the requirement and brainstorm on how we could get it done within the time frame allotted,” Rye said. “We were only able to get it completed due to open communication between the players at MICC-Fort Sam Houston and Army Futures Command.”

The firm fixed price small business contract was awarded June 14 to SADA Systems Inc. and ATX Defense at a cost of $158,250 for a performance period of one year.

“This critical initiative and projects underway within the Army Software Factory would have come to a halt if not for the expertise and dedication to mission demonstrated by Stephen Noethen, Colleen Rye and the fantastic team at MICC-Fort Sam Houston,” Morse said. “MICC-Fort Sam Houston was able to execute a contract … in only four business days, enabling continued operations and secure access to key applications.”

In the course of the days following notification of the software requirement, Rye said a flurry of Microsoft Teams messages and emails were accomplished to gather the necessary information and documents requiring updates, corrections and signatures. Simultaneously, Noethen worked closely with MICC attorney Mike Langham and small business professional Deanna Ochoa to ensure the integrity of each step of procurement process.

“Their assistance was instrumental, and we could not have completed it without them,” Rye added.

MICC responsive to urgent Army Futures Command contract needs
The Austin-based Software Factory is the first-of-its-kind concept for the Army that is leveraging a train-with-industry pipeline to empower Soldiers and Civilians to scope and solve problems with modern software practices. (Photo Credit: Luke J. Allen ) VIEW ORIGINAL

Noethen said the exceptional teamwork with the MICC Office of Counsel and MICC Office of Small Business Programs demonstrated the rapid execution of a mission-critical requirement by collaborating quickly and efficiently and pulling all the stakeholders together for a viable and legal solution to support the needs of Army Forces Command.

“This teamwork demonstrated ‘out of the box’ thinking and demonstrated that MICC-Fort Sam Houston can rise to the challenge of solving complex contracting problems in rapid fashion,” Noethen said.

Army Futures Command is responsible for leading the transformation of Army modernization to provide future warfighters with the concepts, capabilities and organizational structures needed to dominate a future battlefield. Officials with AFC and Army Software Factory attempted to procure the software through the Army Computer Hardware, Enterprise Software and Solutions, or CHESS, as well as seek recommended authorized resellers from DOD partners including the Defense Innovation Unit, Army Applications Lab and members of various Air Force software factories currently leveraging a different Google product, and Google itself. After all reasonable attempts, AFC officials turned to the MICC for a brand-name software solution.

About the MICC

Headquartered at Joint Base San Antonio-Fort Sam Houston, Texas, the Mission and Installation Contracting Command consists of about 1,500 military and civilian members who are responsible for contracting goods and services in support of Soldiers as well as readying trained contracting units for the operating force and contingency environment when called upon. As part of its mission, MICC contracts are vital in feeding more than 200,000 Soldiers every day, providing many daily base operations support services at installations, facilitate training in the preparation of more than 100,000 conventional force members annually, training more than 500,000 students each year, and maintaining more than 14.4 million acres of land and 170,000 structures.