CACI Awarded $35 Million Task Order to Support Naval Surface Warfare Center
23 Settembre 2010 - 2:00PM
Business Wire
CACI International Inc (NYSE: CACI) announced today that it has
been awarded a $35 million task order by the U.S. Navy’s Warfare
Systems Program Office (WSPO) to provide program management and
business financial support services to the Naval Surface Warfare
Center (NSWC) in Dahlgren, VA. The new work will bring new
processes and innovative tools to help WSPO streamline its
processes and meet mission requirement on time and within budget.
The contract was awarded under the Seaport contract vehicle and is
for a base and four option years. The award strengthens CACI’s
functional core competencies with work in program management and
SETA services and business systems solutions.
The award’s services and products will support work in three
primary areas. Program business strategic vision and planning will
address and develop options for budget variables and increasing
fleet and technical requirements and identifying business
efficiencies to achieve cost and time savings. Program management
and execution support will involve tasks that include program
specific tactical and strategic planning and execution, development
of task statements and Task Planning Sheets, and developing program
schedules at the weapon system, combat system, and element level.
Business and financial management support will involve a wide array
of technical programs within multiple departments of the NSWC and
the WSPO. The overall support provided will also aid in the NSWC’s
smooth migration to enterprise resource planning (ERP), scheduled
for 2011.
Many of NSWC’s project management functions will be supported by
iNDEVOR, a CACI-developed, secure, web-based contract management
system. It provides a standardized platform from which CACI
managers and federal government contracting personnel can track and
manage their organizations, projects, funding, schedules and
subcontractors across multiple contract vehicles. CACI’s program
management and systems engineering and technical assistance (SETA)
services sustain program offices with comprehensive management
processes that optimize program resources. The company’s business
systems solutions address the full spectrum of requirements in the
financial, procurement, human resources, and supply chain
domains.
According to Bill Fairl, CACI’s President of U.S. Operations,
“With this new contract with the Naval Surface Warfare Center, we
will be able to use iNDEVOR to greatly accelerate information
access and automate and streamline a wide array of management
functions. And the expertise we provide will play an important role
in helping the Naval Surface Warfare Center in Dahlgren move
towards implementing enterprise resource planning.”
CACI President and CEO Paul Cofoni observed that, “CACI’s
long-term commitment to our Naval Sea Systems Command customer now
includes this important new work for the Naval Surface Warfare
Center in Dahlgren. Our innovative processes, and significant
record of managing large acquisition and combat systems programs,
will help strengthen the role this vital facility performs in
supporting our nation’s priorities.”
CACI provides professional services and IT solutions needed for
defense, intelligence, homeland security, and IT modernization and
government transformation. We deliver enterprise IT and network
services; data, information, and knowledge management services;
business system solutions; logistics and material readiness; C4ISR
integration services; cyber solutions; integrated security and
intelligence solutions; and program management and SETA support
services. CACI services and solutions help our federal clients
provide for national security, improve communications and
collaboration, secure the integrity of information systems and
networks, enhance data collection and analysis, and increase
efficiency and mission effectiveness. CACI is a member of the
Fortune 1000 Largest Companies and the Russell 2000 index. CACI
provides dynamic careers for approximately 12,800 employees working
in over 120 offices in the U.S. and Europe. Visit CACI on the web
at www.caci.com and www.asymmetricthreat.net.
There are statements made herein which do not address historical
facts, and therefore could be interpreted to be forward-looking
statements as that term is defined in the Private Securities
Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements are subject to
factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from
anticipated results. The factors that could cause actual results to
differ materially from those anticipated include, but are not
limited to, the following: regional and national economic
conditions in the United States and the United Kingdom, including
conditions that result from a prolonged recession; terrorist
activities or war; changes in interest rates; currency
fluctuations; significant fluctuations in the equity markets;
failure to achieve contract awards in connection with recompetes
for present business and/or competition for new business; the risks
and uncertainties associated with client interest in and purchases
of new products and/or services; continued funding of U.S.
government or other public sector projects, based on a change in
spending patterns, or in the event of a priority need for funds,
such as homeland security, the war on terrorism or rebuilding Iraq;
or an economic stimulus package; government contract procurement
(such as bid protest, small business set asides, loss of work due
to organizational conflicts of interest, etc.) and termination
risks; the results of government investigations into allegations of
improper actions related to the provision of services in support of
U.S. military operations in Iraq; the results of government audit
and reviews conducted by the Defense Contract Audit Agency or other
government entities with cognizant oversight; individual business
decisions of our clients; paradigm shifts in technology;
competitive factors such as pricing pressures and/or competition to
hire and retain employees (particularly those with security
clearances); market speculation regarding our continued
independence; material changes in laws or regulations applicable to
our businesses, particularly in connection with (i) government
contracts for services, (ii) outsourcing of activities that have
been performed by the government, (iii) competition for task orders
under Government Wide Acquisition Contracts (“GWACs”) and/or
schedule contracts with the General Services Administration; and
(iv) accounting for convertible debt instruments; our own ability
to achieve the objectives of near term or long range business
plans; and other risks described in the company’s Securities and
Exchange Commission filings.
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