SPECIAL NOTICE
99 -- AFLCMC Data Operations Commercial Solutions Opening
- Notice Date
- 2/9/2023 11:47:23 AM
- Notice Type
- Special Notice
- NAICS
- 518210
— Data Processing, Hosting, and Related Services
- Contracting Office
- FA8600 AFLCMC PK WRIGHT PATTERSON AFB OH 45433-7120 USA
- ZIP Code
- 45433-7120
- Solicitation Number
- FA8600-23-S-C056
- Response Due
- 2/8/2028 8:59:00 PM
- Archive Date
- 02/08/2028
- Point of Contact
- Neal Duiker (Contracting/Agreements Officer), Phone: 937-255-8194
- E-Mail Address
-
neal.duiker@us.af.mil
(neal.duiker@us.af.mil)
- Description
- AFLCMC Data Operations CSO 1.0 Overview This Commercial Solutions Opening (CSO) is intended to be a streamlined vehicle to allow for the establishment of a modern Data Operations (DataOps) solution supporting a variety of critical national security systems.� This CSO authority is established under section 803 of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year (FY) 2022 (Pub. L. 117-81) and Class Deviation 2022-O0007. The Air Force Life Cycle Management Center (AFLCMC) programs require the utilization and leveraging of the latest technology advances from a large variety of prospective Contractors. AFLCMC invites innovating technical approach proposals addressing all aspects of DataOps focusing on the below objective areas. However, these enumerated focus areas are minimum requirements, and AFLCMC is open to the identification of technologies useful for modernizing DataOps for sophisticated security and weapon systems. This requires delivering an enduring, secure, robust, efficient, responsive, agile, elastic, and extensible classified DataOps solution. This CSO will focus on existing and emerging technologies and platforms across AFLCMC, Department of the Air Force (DAF), Department of Defense (DoD) and the Intelligence Community, as well as leveraging commercial markets to perform an integrated analysis of the capabilities of varying technologies that support our critical national security systems and prioritize investments over time. The CSO may result in the award of FAR Part 12 Contracts or Other Transaction Agreements (OTAs) under 10 USC 4022, through Calls via Amendments to the CSO. The Government anticipates future Calls to be competitively solicited. These Calls will contain specific Areas of Interest, User Stories and/or Problem Statements related to program specific DataOps Focus Areas. These specific Areas of Interest are what prospective Contractors shall focus their solutions towards. The Government reserves the right to issue separate Calls for each DataOps Focus Area or combine several Focus Areas under an individual Call. Disclaimer: No proposals or white papers are being requested at this time. Those will be requested via Calls published under the CSO solicitation. AFLCMC is not obligated to make any awards from any publicized Call, and all awards under this CSO are explicitly subject to the availability of funds and successful negotiations. The Government is not responsible for any monies expended by any vendor prior to the issuance of any awarded contract/agreement. AFLCMC reserves the right to modify the solicitation requirements of this CSO and each subsequent Call at its sole discretion. This CSO seeks to fund innovative technologies that propose new solutions to expand AFLCMC�s capabilities as it relates to modern DataOps Focus Areas. AFLCMC is interested in capabilities from all interested vendors to include, but not limited to, traditional defense contractors, nontraditional defense contractors, large businesses, small businesses, and research institutions (collectively referred as vendors). It should be noted, many of the critical national security systems operate in varying classification environments, including highly classified environments � such as collateral, Sensitive Compartmentalized Information, and Special Access Program. Though some DataOps Focus Areas may require unclassified work, respondents should be aware that vendors cleared to work, or the ability to be cleared to work, in highly classified environments will be necessary for any award. The CSO is a streamlined acquisition process that seeks to reduce acquisition timelines and acquire new, innovative solutions that vendors can bring forth to meet the stated Areas of Interest detailed in each Call. 2.0 DataOps Technology Focus Areas AFLCMC is seeking capabilities to prove out end-to-end DataOps for representative modern embedded weapon systems. The desired end-state is a DataOps capability/prototype that enables a weapon system to exploit data across the full lifecycle of an embedded weapon system (development, integration, test, deployment, operations and sustainment) across all classification levels. An ideal partner has first-party ability to directly modify underlying commercial hyperscale and edge cloud fabric to meet the project�s requirements across all classification levels and supporting partners would be considered as enabling providers supporting specific aspects of the potential solution. Each Technology Focus Area identifies an area where prospective vendors can bring substantial value to meet the DataOps mission. These focus areas are meant to be read expansively and are not limited to the enumerated Focus Areas. Additional Focus Areas may be included via amendments to this CSO. AFLCMC prefers to bucket several Focus Areas into singular Calls, which means vendors that can optimize several Focus Areas will be preferred. AFLCMC requires provider(s) to deliver an innovative state-of-the-art commercial solution that innovates all or some of the following capability areas. Whether using a single vendor or using multiple vendors, AFLCMC�s intended Minimum Viable Product (MVP) should contain the following Six Foundational Attributes: 1. Hybrid Cloud IaaS, PaaS, SaaS: AFLCMC seeks solutions for Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS), Platform as a Service (PaaS), and Software as a Service (Saas) that can be hosted in a hybrid cloud architecture.� For the purposes of this CSO, �hybrid cloud� is defined as: a virtual environment provided to a single customer that combines private cloud compute, storage, and services running on-premises with compute, storage, and services running in a public cloud along with the ability to move information seamlessly and transparently between them. �All offerings will be templated, extensible, and elastically scalable on converged and/or hyperconverged infrastructure.� All offerings will support �bring your own �X�,� such that AFLCMC can re-host existing workloads without interruption.� All offerings will comply with relevant Department of Defense instructions, regulations, and policies such that they will be readily accreditable and interoperable with existing DoD networks and information systems at the Unclassified, Secret, and Top-Secret classification levels.� Additionally, all offerings will be accredited or readily accreditable to handle Special Access Program (SAP) and Sensitive Compartmented Information (SCI) handling caveats at the Secret and Top-Secret classification levels. 2. Information Transport AFLCMC is seeking solutions for information transport that complies with relevant Department of Defense instructions, regulations, and policies such that any transport solution offering will be readily accreditable and interoperable with existing Department of Defense Information Networks (DODIN).� Information Transport offerings will also be required to interoperate with the hybrid IaaS, PaaS, and SaaS solutions offered under technology focus area (1).� All Information Transport offerings must operate in multi-level classification environments, enabling multi-modal connectivity from anywhere in the Continental United States (CONUS) via a high-bandwidth/low-latency transport solution. �Cryptographic transport shall meet National Security Agency (NSA) Type 1 encryption products or equivalent cryptographic solutions. Further, AFLCMC requires capability to support edge resources to operate in disconnected, intermittently connected or low-bandwidth (DIL) environments. Initial connectivity shall encompass Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (AFB), Edwards AFB, Tinker AFB and an off-base facility in the Dayton, Ohio greater metropolitan area. 3. Fielding Operations AFLCMC is seeking solutions to rapidly deploy the solutions acquired under focus areas (1) and (2). To support our system program offices, AFLCMC desires rapid �full network/crypto� deployability to new locations within 30 days from award. Connections should include all enterprise capabilities such as NIPR, SIPR, JWICS, existing classified, SAP capable, hyper-elastic cloud regions and other program networks. Moreover, AFLCMC seeks automated disaster recovery functionality to support Continuity of Operations (CoOPS). 4. Crypto-Net Managements/Commercial Solutions for Classified AFLCMC requires innovative commercial products to be used to protect classified data, including both data-in-transit (DIT) and data-at-rest (DAR). To the maximum extent practicable, technologies for AFLCMC shall be procured in accordance with requests Commercial Solutions for Classified (CSfC) services to comply with the Committee on National Security Systems Policy (CNSSP) No. 11, National Policy Governing the Acquisition of Information Assurance and IA-Enabled Information Technology Products.� 5. Network Operations Center (NOC) / Security Operations Center (SOC) AFLCMC is seeking solutions to support, enable, and augment network administration and cybersecurity operations for solutions acquired under focus areas (1) and (2).� Solutions will include services that enable real-time and near real-time metering, auditing, logging, monitoring, and status reporting of the entire virtual environment. 6. Help Desk AFLCMC requires a customer support help desk to assist end-users in navigating, utilizing and accessing data within the cloud environments. AFLCMC envisions a software-as-a-service that can manage all communication and network channels, establish performance metrics and monitoring, and is maximally available to meet mission requirements. AFLCMC is interested in additional focus areas beyond the above six (6) Foundational DataOps focus areas. �AFLCMC may issue Calls against the below supplemental focus areas. These supplemental focus areas are meant to be read expansively and not limited to the enumerated areas. Additional Focus Areas beyond those enumerated below may be included via an individual Call against this CSO. Vendors that meet some or all the above Focus Areas may also identify capabilities for the additional focus areas. I. Secure Access Service Edge AFLCMC has a requirement to provide consistent, fast and secure access to dispersed end users operating in permanent military installations as well as forward operating base. Services should establish identity-driven security compliant with US Government security parameters for all classification levels (Unclassified, Secret, Top Secret and SAP programs). II. Software-Defined Networking (SDN) AFLCMC has a requirement to explore implementing SDN for fully networked Command, Control and Communications (C3) functionality, particularly in day-to-day Military Operating Base (MOB) and sustainment missions. SDN should contain a high degree of network programmability and reconfigurability to meet the needs of different government systems and emphasize advantageous situational awareness for faster response times. Further, AFLCMC is interested in other ways SDN can be applied to military environments while preserving data security. III. Edge Hyper-Converged Infrastructure AFLCMC anticipates migrating away from discrete, hardware-defined systems toward software-defined environments permitting all functionality through commercial service platforms while protecting data at all classification levels (unclassified, secret, top secret, SAP). IV. Zero Trust Architecture Given the security posture of many programs, AFLCMC requires zero trust security architecture by �never trusting, always verifying� network security. AFLCMC desires strong identity verification, validation of device compliance before granting access and ensuring least privilege access. V. Infrastructure as Code (IaC) Infrastructure as code is the process of managing and provisioning computer data centers through machine-readable definition files, rather than physical hardware configuration or interactive configuration tools. AFLCMC seeks partners who would be able to expedite the onboarding process for new players by inflating an IaC instance within a cloud environment, enabling immediate executability of licenses, cloud resource management, and other capabilities. VI. Cloud Native Design On-premises (on-prem) infrastructure comes with an immense number of limitations as well as a high threshold for entry for new players in terms of hardware investments and schedule lead times. Utilization of cloud native designs for all network mapping, tooling, IaaS, etc. is of extreme interest to AFLCMC. VII. Software defined perimeter enabling classified data processing AFLCMC participates in work ranging from CUI all the way up to TS/SAR/SCI. Having cloud native, logically defined perimeters around separate enclaves that exist at various classification levels is critical to mission success. Organizations should be prepared to provide a body of evidence to demonstrate logical controls that safeguard information at different impact levels (ILs). VIII. Augmented and virtual reality capabilities (e.g., training, maintenance, etc.) AFLCMC requires commercial augmented and virtual reality capabilities to assist USAF maintenance and service technicians to interface with USAF systems. Applications should have practical maintenance applications as well as training capabilities. IX. Data Encryption (at rest, in motion, FIPS 140-3) Experience with encrypting and safeguarding data is critical to DoD success and cybersecurity. FIPS 140.3 is the standard that shall be used in designing and implementing cryptographic modules that federal departments and agencies operate or are operated for them under contract.� The standard provides four increasing, qualitative levels of security intended to cover a wide range of potential applications and environments.� The security requirements cover areas related to the secure design, implementation, and operation of a cryptographic module.� These areas include cryptographic module specification; cryptographic module interfaces; roles, services, and authentication; software/firmware security; operating environment; physical security; non-invasive security; sensitive security parameter management; self-tests; life-cycle assurance; and mitigation of other attacks. Organizations with familiarization and expertise with establishing and maintaining compliant data encryption could be of use to the DoD. X. Cyber, Secure Processing Due to the sensitive nature of the USAF mission, the ability to leverage cyber secure processing, compliant with DoD standards for all impact levels is required. XI. Machine Learning (ML) and Artificial Intelligence (AI) data factories AFLCMC seeks to find new and innovative ways to deploy and enable AI/ML to identify areas of interest within large data sets. These data factories should be able to pinpoint concerns, operational or safety threats, and shall help alleviate Human in the loop (HITL) man hours currently required to analyze data sets. XII. Big Data capability (data warehousing, data lakes, restructured data engineering) Test sets drive a requirement to capture, transport, and analyze massive amounts of data in near-real-time, as well as a requirement to host portions of that data for an indefinite amount of time. AFLCMC has interest in organizations that have experience with long-term data lakes, and data storage with the ability to enable petabyte and exabyte transport at high speeds between various CONUS and OCONUS locations. XIII. Continuous Integration (CI)/Continuous Development (CD) software pipeline AFLCMC utilizes a DEVSECOPS framework for many of its projects. CI/CD pipelines enable ALFCMC to adapt to emerging threats. Entities with experience in optimization and automation of CI/CD pipelines would be of particular use to the DoD. XIV. Application Development + application refactoring for cloud deployment AFLCMC sees a future use case of being able to pull data developed from another DoD organization to be easily digested and absorbed from a cloud environment and then re-tooled to meet mission requirements. AFLCMC requires a cloud-based platform to host both the outputs of application development (IE app store) as well as a toolkit to refactor an applications targeted use. XV. Existing capability refactoring/integration for Application Programming Interface (API) microservice architecture AFLCMC has a potential future requirement to establish a microservice architecture to iteratively build new applications/capability without impacting availability of systems. AFLCMC requires microservice refactoring within designated cloud-based platforms. XVI. Reverse Engineering AFLCMC has a potential future requirement for reverse engineering services. In instances where AFLCMC lacks sufficient engineering data for varying aircraft or supporting system parts, AFLCMC desires the ability to conduct reverse engineering services to produce underlying engineering data necessary for alternate sourcing of parts or manufacturing of the parts. XVII. Additive Manufacturing AFLCMC desires additive manufacturing services with the capacity for potential on-premises manufacture of varying parts. AFLCMC seeks commercial application of 3d printers and other technologies that permit immediate production of parts to reduce mission incapable awaiting parts (MICAP) status of critical systems/assets. 3.0 CSO with Calls This CSO is a hybrid solicitation against which both Closed Calls and/or Open Period Calls can be published via amendments to the CSO. All Calls issued under this CSO will include specific instructions including dates, Areas of Interest/Focus Areas, evaluation criteria and proposal instructions to offerors. While each offer shall adhere to this CSO, the Calls may contain other information of which the proposing vendors should also strictly adhere. Each Call will be announced on the Government Point of Entry (beta.SAM.gov), which may result in the award of a FAR Part 12 contract or an Other Transaction Agreement (OTA) under 10 USC 4022. 3.1 Closed Calls (One-Step or Two-Step) Over the period of this CSO, Calls may be issued to request white papers and/or proposals for specific Areas of Interest/Focus Areas. It will be determined on a Call-by-Call basis whether the announcement is for a one-step (proposals only) or a two-step process (White Paper first, then Proposals by invite-only). The submission for white papers and proposals shall be submitted at a specific date and time as set for in each particular Call. White papers and/or proposals may not be reviewed if submitted after the stated date and time. 3.1.1 One-Step Calls Step 1: Proposal due date and time will be provided in Calls issued against this CSO. AFLCMC will make selections from vendor proposals only in accordance with the evaluation criteria contained in the Call. 3.1.2 Two-Step Calls Step 1: White Paper due date and time will be provided in Calls issued against this CSO. AFLCMC, at its sole discretion, may or may not request a presentation or discussion with Government personnel about the White Paper. Step 2: Proposal due date and time will be provided in Requests for Proposal (RFPs) sent to offers that submit White Papers who are evaluated favorably in accordance with the evaluation criteria contained in each Call. 3.2 Open Period Calls (Two-Step) This CSO may also have Open Period Calls. Open Period Calls will only be issued under a two-step process (see 3.1.2 above). After an Open Call is published, white papers may be submitted at any time during an Open Period for the Areas of Interest/Focus Areas detailed within the Call. It is important to note that only white papers submitted in response to specific Areas of Interest/Focus Areas detailed in the Call will be considered. Step 1: White Paper due date and time will be provided in Calls issued against this CSO. AFLCMC, at its sole discretion, may or may not request a presentation or discussion with Government personnel about the White Paper. Step 2: Proposal due date and time will be provided in Requests for Proposal (RFPs) sent to offers that submit White Papers who are evaluated favorably in accordance with the evaluation criteria contained in each Call. 4.0 Definitions CSO with Calls: This allows for the publication of an umbrella CSO solicitation that contains overarching information but does not request white papers or proposals. The CSO functions as a framework identifying the technical areas and giving the basic terms and administrative information of the CSO. The requests for white papers and/or proposals are done by issuing Calls that are published via amendments to the CSO. Calls can be issued at any time during the period of performance of the CSO. Each Call will be tailored to best fit the acquisition approached identified by the Government. The Calls may also include specific terms and/or conditions that apply to that particular Call such as technical details, security requirements and/or other pertinent clauses. Proposals or white papers are submitted only when Calls under this CSO are published. Open Period Calls: This type of Call allows for white paper and proposal submittals at any time within a specified period as set forth in the subsequent Call. Closed Calls: This type of Call allows for white paper and/or proposal submittals at a specified date and time as set forth in the subsequent Call. This process and the dates associated with it are more structured than Open Period Calls. Areas of Interest/ Focus Areas: These are specific requests for innovative solutions that AFLCMC will detail in each subsequent Call and will derive from the Technology Focus Areas (2.0 above). Vendor�s innovative solutions should focus on addressing the specific Technology Focus Areas contained within a specific Call. White Paper: A brief (usually 2-5 pages) summary of the proposed technical approach with an accompanying rough order of magnitude (ROM) price. Pitch Day: Pitch Day is a tool that can be used as part of the Call process. When used, Pitch Day gives vendors an opportunity to meet AFLCMC personnel in-person and provide a Pitch of their proposed technology. If a Pitch Day is utilized, specific details explaining the process and evaluation methods will be contained within a specific Call. Other Transaction: Refers to the type of Other Transaction Agreement (OTA) that may be placed as a result of this CSO and associated Calls. This type of OT is authorized by 10 USC 4022 for prototype projects directly relevant to enhancing the mission effectiveness of military personnel and the supporting platforms, systems, components, or materials proposed to be acquired or developed by the Department of Defense (DoD), or for the improvement of platforms, systems, components, or materials in use by the armed forces. This type of OTA is treated by DoD as an acquisition instrument, commonly referred to as an �other transaction� for a prototype project or a Section 4022 �other transaction.� Prototype Project: Can generally be described as a proof of concept, model, reverse engineering to address obsolescence, pilot, novel application of commercial technologies for defense purposes, agile development activity, creation, design, development, demonstration of technical or operational utility, or combinations of the foregoing. A process, including a business process, may also be the subject of a prototype project. Although assistance terms are generally not appropriate in OT agreements in 10 U.S.C. 4022, ancillary work efforts that are necessary for completion of the prototype project, such as test site training or limited logistics support, may be included in prototype projects. A prototype may be physical, virtual, or conceptual in nature. The quantity of prototypes/commercial solutions should generally be limited to that needed to prove technical or manufacturing feasibility or evaluate military utility. Innovative: This refers to any technology, process, or method, including research and development that is new as of the date of proposal submission; or any new application of an existing technology, process or method as of the proposal date. Nontraditional Defense Contractor: As defined in 10 U.S.C. 2302(9) as an entity that is not currently performing and has not performed, for at least the one-year period preceding the solicitation of sources by the DoD for the procurement or transaction, any contract or subcontract for the DoD that is the subject for full coverage under the cost accounting standards prescribed pursuant to 41 U.S.C. 1502 and the regulations implementing such section. This includes all small business concerns under the criteria and size standards in 13 C.F.R. Part 121. Small Business Concern: Defined in the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 632) and 13 C.F.R. Part 121. 5.0 Contract/Agreement Details As stated in the Overview Section, Calls issued under this CSO can result in the award of either a FAR Part 12 Contract or an Other Transaction Agreement (OTA) under 10 U.S.C. 4022. Regardless of the contract instrument, AFLCMC chooses to pursue the Contract/Agreement type for all as Fixed Price, which includes Firm Fixed Price (FFP) and Fixed Price Incentive (FPI). Future solicitations are not accepting offers for grants or cooperative agreements as the purpose of this CSO is to transfer something of value directly to the Government. The Government will be the sole decision authority on whether to pursue a FAR Part 12 Contract, an OTA or no award at all. The Government reserves the right to award some, all or none of the proposal from the responses to each Call. The Contracting/Agreements Officer reserves the right to negotiate directly with the offeror on the terms and conditions prior to execution of the resulting contract/agreement on behalf of the Government. Be advised that only a Contracting/Agreements Officer has the authority to enter into, or modify, a binding contract/agreement on behalf of the United States Government. 5.1 Prototyping This CSO may result in the award of prototype projects, which include not only commercially available technologies fueled by commercial or strategic investment, but also concept demonstrations, pilots, and agile development activities that can incrementally improve commercial technologies, existing government-owned capabilities, and/or concepts for broad defense and/or public application. The Government reserves the right to award a FAR Part 12 contract or an Other Transaction (OT) under 10 U.S.C. 4022 agreement (including an OT for a prototype project and a follow-on OT or contract for production), or a no award at all. Calls issued under this CSO constitute competitive procedures. AFLCMC may competitively award OTs for prototype projects that provide for the award or a follow-on production contract or OT for production to participants in the OT for prototype projects without the use of further competitive procedures, if the participant in the OT for prototype projects successfully completes the prototype project, as permitted by 10 USC 4022(f). 5.1.1 Iterative Prototyping A contract or OT for a prototype awarded under this CSO shall allow for an iterative prototyping process. An iterative prototyping process will allow the Government to modify, by mutual agreement, the scope of a prototype contract or OT to allow for the adaptation and modification of the technology being prototyped to meet additional unique and discrete purposes/mission sets. The sequential prototype iterations may result in a separate prototype project rather than a modification of the original prototype contract or OT. These additional unique and discrete purposes/mission sets can be generated by AFLCMC or originate within any organization that AFLCMC supports. 5.1.2 Successful Completion of a Prototype A prototype project is complete upon the written determination of the appropriate approving official (program manager and Contracting/Agreements Officer) for the matter in question that the efforts conducted under a prototype contract or OT: (1) met the key technical goals of a project; (2) met the metrics incorporated into the prototype contract or OT; or (3) accomplished a particularly favorable or unexpected result that justifies the transition to a production contract or OT. Furthermore, prior to successful completion of a prototype project under this CSO, the Government can transition any aspect of the prototype project determined to provide utility into production while other aspects of the prototype project have yet to be completed. 5.1.3 Follow-on Production of a Prototype After award of a prototype using OT authority, the Government and vendor may negotiate a follow-on contract or OT for production or solution integration with or without further competition. Any concept/technology/solution successfully proven through a Prototype OT can be transitioned to a production contract. The Government reserves the right to award a follow-on contract or OT before the prototype is compete, under competitive procedures as provided in 10 U.S.C. 4022. Any Call posted by the Government under this CSO could result in the potential award of a follow-on production or solution integration contract or OT. The Government reserves the right to extend the performance to all, some or none of the selected solutions and decisions will be made based on the availability of government funds. 5.2 Other Transaction Agreements (OTAs) Specifics In accordance with 10 U.S.C. 4022(c), if an Agreement for a prototype is utilized and if that Agreement provides for payments in a total amount in excess of $5M, the Agreement will include a mandatory clause that provides for the Comptroller General the ability to examine the records of any party to the agreement or any entity that participates in the performance of the agreement. The $5M amount includes the base agreement plus any options. Additionally, to enter into an OT for a Prototype agreement under 10 U.S.C. 4022, one of the following conditions must be met: There isat least one nontraditional defense contractor or nonprofit research institution participating to a significant extent in the prototype project. All significant participants other than the Federal Government are small business concerns or nontraditional defense contractors. Parties to the transaction other than the Federal Government must pay at least one third of the prototype total cost. The senior procurement executive determines that exceptional circumstances justify the use of an OT to provide an innovative business arrangement not feasible under a contract or to expand the defense supply base in a manner not practical under a contract. All OTAs awarded under this CSO will contain prohibitions on the use of certain telecommunications devices in accordance with DFARS 52.204-25. Further specifics and requirements as it relates to OTs may be applicable and included in subsequent Calls published under this CSO. 6.0 Closed Calls This CSO will have Close Calls that consist of either a one-step or two-step process, which will be specified in each individual Call. For a one-step Call, only proposals will be solicited. For a two-step Call, white papers will be solicited first and then, consistent with this section, subsequent Requests for Proposals may follow after the Government reviews the White Paper. Any part of this process may be modified or altered by AFLCMC in the Calls or through an amendment to this CSO. It is important to note that at no stage is AFLCMC obligated to make any awards and all awards are subject to the availability of funds and successful negotiations. The Government is not responsible for any monies expended by vendors prior to the issuance of any contract/agreement award. 6.1 One-Step Closed Call Process 6.1.1 Call Published AFLCMC intends on publishing a Call via an amendment to this CSO. The Call will specifically state the CSO Call type (Closed, One-Step). This Call will provide a required date and time for submission of the proposal. The C...
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