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About CTMA
Who Participates?
NCMS
members (government services) and the DoD maintenance activities are
the primary participants in this innovative program. Since program
inception in 1998, 64 collaborative projects have been formed,
totaling over $125 million in value. Industry participants provided
approximately 70% of the initial investment, with a 30% match from the
DOD.
CTMA Requirements
The
NCMS CTMA requirements are fairly simple. First, NCMS members and the
DoD maintenance activities involved develop a concept paper, which
forms the basis for project. Industry participants provide an overall
match through in-kind contributions of $2 for every $1 in direct
contract support provided by DoD. The projects are limited in
duration; no more than 24 months of support will be provided to any
activity before tangible benefits are demonstrated by either industry
or the defense maintenance activities.
CTMA Project Formation
Getting Started:
- All new project ideas need to be submitted on line at
http://ctmaideas.ncms.org.
Fill out all the fields as completely as possible.
- The project ideas are reviewed on a periodic basis (roughly
quarterly) by the CTMA review team which includes the NCMS Program
Director, the DoD Program Director, and other DoD staff as
requested.
- Project ideas are either rejected, the teams are asked for more
information, or the idea might be assigned an NCMS project manager
to more fully define the project effort.
Requirements for CTMA Project Ideas
-
What
new manufacturing technology is being developed and implemented?
-
CTMA
is not a mechanism for circumventing the DoD procurement
process
-
Is
there cross-service depot involvement?
-
For
broader dissemination of technology
-
Is
there sufficient industrial interest?
-
Greater
than 2:1 cost share
Process Steps for CTMA
-
The on-line project submittal is
used to market the project idea to others within industry and
DoD maintenance community (CTMA Connector) to more fully form project team
-
Expand
the project proposal into 5-7 page concept paper and include:
-
Joint
Industry/DoD interest and needs
-
Cost/Benefits estimate
(DoD and Industry)
-
Depot
ROI estimate
-
Participant
roles defined
-
Letter
of endorsement from depot command
-
Qualification
of in-kind by NCMS
The
Concept Paper is
then submitted to the Pentagon for review and decision
(approval/disapproval). Once a concept paper is submitted, this
approval process takes no more than 20 business days to complete. NCMS
members are then obligated to sign a customized legal contract with mutually acceptable terms and conditions. The participating DoD
facilities are only required to sign a letter of participation in the
project, and they receive a field office memorandum from DoD
headquarters authorizing their participation.
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