[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 166 (Wednesday, December 15, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H8359-H8362]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
APPROVING PURCHASES OF LITTORAL COMBAT SHIPS
Mr. TAYLOR. Madam Speaker, I move to suspend the rules and pass the
bill (H.R. 6494) to amend the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2010 to improve the Littoral Combat Ship program of the
Navy, as amended.
The Clerk read the title of the bill.
The text of the bill is as follows:
H.R. 6494
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP PROGRAM.
(a) Contract Authority.--Subsection (a) of section 121 of
the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010
(Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2211) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)--
(A) by striking ``ten Littoral Combat Ships and 15 Littoral
Combat Ship ship control and weapon systems'' and inserting
``20 Littoral Combat Ships, including any ship control and
weapon systems the Secretary determines necessary for such
ships,''; and
(B) by striking ``a contract'' and inserting ``one or more
contracts''; and
(2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``liability to'' and
inserting ``liability of''.
(b) Technical Data Package.--Subsection (b)(2)(A) of such
section is amended by striking ``a second shipyard, as soon
as practicable'' and inserting ``another shipyard to build a
design specification for that Littoral Combat Ship''.
(c) Limitation of Costs.--Subsection (c)(1) of such section
is amended by striking ``awarded to a contractor selected as
part of a procurement'' and inserting ``under a contract''.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to the rule, the gentleman from
Mississippi (Mr. Taylor) and the gentleman from Mississippi (Mr. Akin)
each will control 20 minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Mississippi.
General Leave
Mr. TAYLOR. Madam Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all Members
have 5 legislative days to revise and extend their remarks on the bill
under consideration.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the
gentleman from Mississippi?
There was no objection.
Mr. TAYLOR. I yield myself such time as I may consume.
Madam Speaker, the Littoral Combat Ship Program started off as a very
good idea. It was to be a single purpose, low-cost war ship that would
help our Navy get to the stated goal of at least three Chiefs of Naval
Operations of getting back to a 313-ship Navy.
With that said, the program has had, admittedly, a number of
problems. First of which was, we were going to build it to commercial
specifications. That was a mistake that Congress later corrected
because this is a warship. It needed to be built to warship
recommendations. You don't build disposable ships unless you want to
have disposable crews, and our Nation will never settle for disposable
crews.
Madam Speaker, having solved that problem, we found that the two
vendors took a ship that was supposed to stand for LCS, Littoral Combat
Ship, and it came late, costly, and subject to protest. And only
because of the great work, in my opinion, of Under Secretary of Defense
Sean Stackley of devising a strategy about a year ago that, in effect,
read the riot act to both vendors and told them they were going to do a
number of things.
No. 1 in order to submit their package to Congress, their proposal,
they were going to submit with that a technical data package which
meant that our Nation that has paid to develop these ships would have
the specifications to those ships so that if either vendor continued to
underperform, we could then go out and seek additional vendors to build
this ship if we felt like our Nation was not getting the ship we
deserved at the price we need to pay. Under Secretary Stackley came
back with a proposal that said we would give to one vendor a contract
for 10 ships and then take that technical data package, put it out on
the street and give a second vendor a contract for five, a winner-take-
all strategy between a monohull ship and a trihull ship and gave the
vendors about 8 months to come up with a price.
Madam Speaker, one of the few pleasant surprises of this Congress was
that both vendors came back with remarkably good prices when given that
all-or-nothing proposal. And I want to compliment, give credit where
it's due to Under Secretary Stackley. I also want to give credit where
it's due to the Seapower Subcommittee, the gentleman from Missouri (Mr.
Akin), and the other gentleman from Missouri, Chairman Skelton, for
allowing us to work with Under Secretary Stackley to get this program
back under control.
[[Page H8360]]
Having said that, Madam Speaker, Under Secretary Stackley, once he
looked at those prices--and I deeply regret the gentleman from Arizona
was exactly right over in the other body when he said yesterday, What's
the price? The public needs to know. Unfortunately, under the rules of
our Nation, we are not allowed to divulge them just yet. Part of that
reason is the fear that both vendors will drop their bids and come back
later at higher prices.
So one of the limitations we are going to be working under today is
the inability to give the exact price to Congress but to tell you that
this ship that started out to be about a $220 million dollar ship grew
to be about a $720 million ship. We have now got the price a heck of a
lot closer to the first number than the last number which is where we
needed to go all along.
Under Secretary Stackley is now asking, since both prices came back,
and since there is a working ship of each variety out in the fleet
right now that are performing well, he has asked for permission to buy
both ships at the low price that the contractors have agreed to build
them on. Having given that some thought, I think he is right. And also
given the economic circumstances that the price of aluminum is down by
about half since 3 or 4 years ago, the price of steel is down by about
half from 3 or 4 years ago, that American vendors need work, that
because they need work, they are supplying the kind of prices that our
Nation should have been paying all along, that we can get the Navy the
ships they need at a price our Nation can afford and build 20 ships for
about $2 billion less than we had originally budgeted to build 19
ships. For all of these reasons, Madam Speaker, I rise in support of
this program. I want to thank the gentleman from Missouri (Mr. Akin)
for being a cosponsor to this measure.
Madam Speaker, I rise in support of H.R. 6494, a bill granting
authority for the Secretary of the Navy to construct up to 20 Littoral
Combat Ships, 10 each from the shipyards currently building the
vessels. This is a change in already passed authorization to ``down-
select'' to one of the two types of ships and build 19 of them over the
next 5 years. This change in acquisition strategy is the result of
lower than expected construction proposals from the two competing
shipyards.
The LCS has a very troubled history, but the bill before us today is
about the future, it is about how true competition between vendors has
actually forced these contractors to return competitive bids that this
Nation can afford. These are good ships. Up until now they have just
been too expensive to build. Neither contractor, until faced with the
prospect of being shut out of the program, had ever submitted a
realistic proposal for affordable construction. They now have.
I would not be here today requesting this House pass this legislation
if I was not highly confident that this is the right thing to do, and
that this action will not come back to be an issue that my friend and
colleague from Missouri will need to deal with in the next Congress as
he takes the gavel of the Seapower subcommittee.
I will also be the first to admit that the timing for this new
acquisition proposal from the Navy is flawed. Normally, this is not the
kind of decision that we would consider at the end of a Congress.
However, the Navy has bids in hand from the two contractors that will
expire this month if not acted upon. Unfortunately, time is of the
essence.
For my colleagues, the bottom line is this: The Navy has budgeted
approximately $12 billion dollars for 19 ships over the next 5 years.
This new strategy would buy 20 ships for approximately $9.8 billion
dollars, a savings of over $2 billion from the budget, with the
additional benefit of getting an extra ship. I believe this is a good
deal and we should take it.
I would like to state for the record that this affordable strategy
for the purchase of this class of ships would not have been possible
without the tireless work of our Assistant Secretary for Acquisition,
the Honorable Sean Stackley. He was the official responsible for the
strategy which forced the contractors to offer affordable bids, at a
firm fixed price, to build these ships. I congratulate him on the
effort. If the Department of Defense could just get 100 Sean Stackleys
working over there, we would have far fewer issues with cost overruns
and program delays on weapons and equipment our warfighters need.
I urge my colleagues to agree to this resolution.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. AKIN. Madam Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from
Virginia (Mr. Wittman).
Mr. WITTMAN. Madam Speaker, I rise today in support of H.R. 6494, a
bill that would authorize procurement for the Littoral Combat Ship.
And I will start by thanking Chairman Taylor, who has been
extraordinarily diligent in this effort in making sure that our Nation
gets the best deal on LCS, knowing that there have been some hiccups in
the past. He stood up and made sure this process was going to happen
properly, that it was going to be the best value for our Navy and the
best value for the United States. So I applaud the chairman for his
leadership there. And also to Ranking Member Akin who, alongside the
chairman, made sure also that this process was going to happen properly
and that the proper decisions were going to be made and that we were
going to make the best decision on behalf of our Navy.
And as we all know, this legislation would amend the FY 2010 National
Defense Authorization Act to authorize the procurement of 20 Littoral
Combat Ships which are absolutely needed these days in our Navy. This
bill would also allow the Navy to enter into one or more contracts and
allow the Navy to conduct a competition for an additional shipyard for
ship construction to be built to a design specification for that ship.
That technical data package will belong to the United States, so if
something doesn't go right with this two-ship acquisition, we have the
opportunity to fix that and get it back on track.
Absent an NDAA, it is imperative to ensure that our Navy shipbuilding
program remains on the right track. By procuring 20 Littoral Combat
Ships, that gives our Navy the ability to increase its mission
capability and project power throughout the littoral waterways around
the globe.
We need to do everything we can to get Federal spending under
control, and this bill does that. This bill, as Chairman Taylor says,
cuts to the heart of reducing spending, gets us actually the same
number, if not a little bit more, for $2 billion less. It is a good
deal for this Nation. The thing we have to keep in mind in the future
is looking at the operation and maintenance costs of two platforms,
making sure they were holding the Navy firm to controlling costs there,
both the training costs of multiple crews and the operation and
maintenance costs. We have been assured by Under Secretary Stackley
that that will happen. So I urge my colleagues to support this bill.
Mr. TAYLOR. Madam Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to my friend and
colleague, the gentleman from Connecticut (Mr. Courtney).
Mr. COURTNEY. Madam Speaker, I rise in support of this legislation,
which I think strikes the right balance in terms of the need for our
Navy to build up its Littoral Combat Ship Program but also addressing I
think a lot of the problems of this program, which has been very
troubled over the last few years in terms of trying to get the cost per
ship down.
{time} 1040
I'd just like to say, though, on a personal note, that the work that
Chairman Taylor has done on this program going back to 2007 with a
series of hearings, looking at, again, the alarming increases in cost
growth has been an extraordinary contribution, not just to this
Congress, but to our country. There has been no one who has been more
diligent in terms of trying to look out for the American taxpayer.
There is no one who, in my opinion, has been more knowledgeable about
every aspect of these vessels than the gentleman from Mississippi who
is departing in a few days, and who I think is going to be sorely
missed by this country in terms of the amazing work that he's done as
chairman of the Seapower subcommittee.
All across the spectrum, in terms of ships, he has been there trying
to, again, advance this country to get to the goal of a 314-ship Navy,
which has been a struggle, protecting the industrial base, from New
England all the way to San Diego and, again, all the time while being
open and accessible to all Members across both party lines in terms of
making sure that, again, we're going to achieve those goals and make
sure that our country, which is still a great maritime power, is going
to have a Navy that can project our force in a way that, again, is
adequate for the challenges of the 21st century.
Again, his service to this country has just been extraordinary. It
has been a
[[Page H8361]]
privilege to serve with him over the last 4 years. Passing this
legislation, I think, will be, again, another capstone to a great
career in Congress. And, again, I want to thank him for his service.
Mr. AKIN. Madam Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from
Maryland (Mr. Bartlett), who has been the ranking member on this
committee a number of times.
Mr. BARTLETT. Madam Speaker, I've been involved with the LCS program
from its very inception; and when the Navy announced that they were
going to do a down select with this competition, I was somewhat
dismayed because these are two very different ships, an aluminum
trimaran, and the more conventional ship optimized for these special
missions. And I wasn't sure that we knew enough about the potential of
these two ships to make that down select during this competition.
So I was very pleased when Sean Stackley called me and said that they
were surprised and shocked by the quotes that came in. Competition, you
know, really does matter. And when the down select was threatened, each
of these competitors came in with a really good price.
So I was very pleased when the Department decided that they would
like to buy 10 of each of these ships. These are multi-mission ships.
I'm sure one of these ships will be better for one mission than
another, so I am very pleased that we're taking this route; and I
couldn't be more supportive of where we're going now with this.
If we're ever going to get to a 313-ship Navy, the LCS is going to
play a big part of that. This is going to be a huge class of ship. A
half of that class is going to be bigger than almost any other class of
ships that we have had, so this is a win-win for everybody, and I'm
pleased that we are taking this route.
Mr. TAYLOR. Madam Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. AKIN. Madam Speaker, before I get into my comments, I think there
are a couple of people that we, as a Congress, and even we, as a
people, as Americans, need to be thankful for. And the first is
Chairman Taylor, who I've had a chance to work with now a couple of
years as the minority leader on the Seapower Committee. I don't know of
anybody in our country who is more committed to the Navy or to making
sure that we use our money wisely, and to the overall security of our
country than Chairman Taylor.
And so I want to extend my personal thanks for the fact that what you
don't see here just for a few minutes' discussion on the floor was
hours and hours of tours through shipyards, all kinds of details,
talking to all kinds of people and trying to make sure that a program
that was a little difficult as it started out got on track, and now is
not only on track, but represents a significant opportunity for us to
invest in the security of our country.
And so hats off to Chairman Taylor. And I agree completely that we're
going to certainly miss your expertise and your hard work, Mr.
Chairman.
Mr. BARTLETT. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. AKIN. I yield to the gentleman from Maryland.
Mr. BARTLETT. For 4 years I was the chair of this subcommittee, and
Mr. Taylor was my ranking member; and then the leadership in the
Congress changed, and for 2 years, I was his ranking member and he was
my chair. And then, sadly, due to our term limits on the Republican
side of the House, I had to leave that subcommittee, but never left my
interest, strong interest in that subcommittee.
And I will tell you that there is no person in the Congress who has
been more committed or more effective in making sure that we have the
right kind of Navy, the right size Navy.
When I first came here, I looked up Gene Taylor because we shared
some social things. And as a Democrat, he kind of shone out as
different than the other Democrats. And we've become the very best of
friends since then. He tells people that we're joined at the hip, and
indeed we are.
Gene, it's been a real, real pleasure to serve with you, and your
departure is a grave loss to this Congress and to our Nation. I've been
honored to serve with you, sir.
Mr. AKIN. Thank you for those most appropriate comments, Roscoe.
The second gentleman that I think we need to recognize, Under
Secretary Stackley, has really helped tremendously with his level of
detailed knowledge about how you work these contracts. And he got the
contracts, as Chairman Taylor mentioned, reorganized to some degree a
couple of years ago, and now we have two excellent bids before us.
Now, one of the things that people know that have been around
Congress a little bit is Congress has trouble making decisions rapidly
or even wisely sometimes. I don't think that's the case today. Today,
Secretary Stackley came to a number of us and said, look, there's two
different ways we could go, the way we were planning to go, which is we
down select, buy 10 ships, and then we resubmit bids to a number of
different vendors.
He said the other alternative, which is very interesting, is that we
just go with both contractors and buy the 20 ships right off the bat.
And so as we had a chance to ask some questions, though not to the
degree that many of us would have felt comfortable with, it became
apparent that we would save money for the Navy and we could project
more seapower more rapidly by going with both contractors, buy 10 from
each side.
Now, the ships are different, as has been mentioned this morning.
Certainly, an aluminum trimaran is a lot different than a monohull. It
has its difficulties in anchoring in certain places or docking in
certain places because it is so wide. But each has their place overall
in the Navy.
Now, these ships, to try to put them in perspective, there may be
some people who are not immersed in the detail here, we're not allowed
to talk about the price that's been bid, but, generally speaking,
you're looking at, you could buy five of these for the cost of one
nuclear-powered submarine. So what we're talking about is a ship that
is inexpensive enough, and we have enough of them that it allows
America to project its seapower to little corners of the world where
otherwise we don't have a presence that we need to have.
About a year or so ago, there was a lot of talk about pirates, and
everybody got their best pirate voice out and talked about the pirates
that were seizing commercial shipping. Some of that was allowed because
of the fact that we didn't have as many ships as we might like in
certain areas. This would be just one example of where these ships
might become useful. They would become useful in hunting submarines and
for all kinds and varieties of other missions.
And so this proposal that's before us is a result of some very good
work by both Under Secretary Stackley, his coming to us and saying,
look, there is a better way to do this but, Congress, you have to be
able to respond and be agile on your feet.
Fortunately, there is a uniform agreement across the people that have
been working these projects that, in fact Secretary Stackley is right
and this is what we should do. So hats off to Secretary Stackley and
particularly to Chairman Taylor for the good work that's been done.
I'm obviously speaking in favor of the proposal before us here. And
there was some sense of frustration early on in trying to get the
numbers and to get through the details that we had to in order to make
a decision here; but I am very comfortable that what we're doing is the
right thing.
The opportunity before us to pass this piece of legislation allows us
to prove that it's wrong once in a while that Congress can't be agile
and make wise decisions.
{time} 1050
We will look to the Navy and to Secretary Stackley to help to
continue to manage this program and make sure that the bids come in as
we expect, that the Navy gets a good buy, and that we work to where we
should be with enough ships to secure and give Americans the security
that we believe is necessary and to provide a safe and peaceful world.
Madam Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
Mr. TAYLOR. Madam Speaker, first let me again thank future Chairman
Akin, former Chairman Bartlett.
I believe it was CNO Vernon Clark who first proposed this program.
The idea was to build a ship under the speed
[[Page H8362]]
of light, an inexpensive ship. That obviously didn't happen, and we
learned some very painful mistakes as a Congress, and I hope those of
you who remain on the committee will remember those painful mistakes.
We can make mistakes doing things too rapidly. We made a lot of
mistakes in this program.
But the thing I want to most compliment the Armed Services Committee
for, and particularly the Seapower Committee, was, when we recognized
those mistakes, we admitted them and we went as far as to threaten to
cancel the program if it wasn't corrected. I think those threats and,
again, the phenomenal work of Secretary Stackley and Secretary Mabus in
holding the vendors' feet to the fire, the economic circumstances of
our Nation where people need work, the fact that the Navy needs the
ships, that the frigates that these ships will replace are getting to
the end of their useful life, and, again, the willingness of all the
members on both sides of the aisle to hold these vendors accountable
was the key element in turning this program around.
So, again, I want to thank future Chairman Akin, former Chairman
Bartlett, Mr. Wittman, Mr. Kagen, Mr. Bonner, Mr. Stupak, Ms. Baldwin,
and Mr. Conaway for being cosponsors of this measure.
I yield back the balance of my time.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The question is on the motion offered by the
gentleman from Mississippi (Mr. Taylor) that the House suspend the
rules and pass the bill, H.R. 6494, as amended.
The question was taken; and (two-thirds being in the affirmative) the
rules were suspended and the bill, as amended, was passed.
A motion to reconsider was laid on the table.
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