DOD Excess Property Systems


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DOD Excess Property


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Dod Excess Property Systems


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DOD excess property systems : throwing away millions : hearing before the Subcommittee on National Security, Emerging Threats, and International Relations of the Committee on Government Reform, House of Representatives, One Hundred Ninth Congress, first session, June 7, 2005.




Excess Personal Property


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Each year the military services identify thousands of items of personal property-including military equipment and materiel-that they need to dispose of because it is obsolete, not repairable, or excess to their requirements. For fiscal year 2014, DOD reported that excess and surplus property with a total original acquisition value of approximately $3.18 billion in nominal dollars was reutilized, transferred, or donated. DOD reported total revenues of almost $128 million from items sold in fiscal year 2014. Congress included provisions in reports accompanying legislation for GAO to review DOD's current process for disposing of excess personal property. This report (1) describes the process for disposing of DOD's excess personal property in the U.S.; (2) assesses how DOD's priorities in its disposal process affect the distribution of excess property; and (3) assesses the extent to which DOD has encountered challenges in its capacity to manage excess personal property to be processed. GAO reviewed guidance; obtained the most recently available calendar year (2013-2014) data on property obtained by law enforcement agencies, wait times, and backlogs; and interviewed cognizant officials.







DoD Excess Property


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Defense Inventory


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Inventory Management Better Controls Needed to Prevent Misuse of Excess DOD Property


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DOD has two database systems that provide accounting and management controls over the transfer and disposal of excess DOD property: (1) the Defense Reutilization and Marketing Automated Information System,5 which is used to inventory and manage excess property, and (2) the Defense Automatic Addressing System Center,6 which maintains the DOD activity address code master file. As a control mechanism, an activity address code-which is alphanumeric-identifies government entities and other organizations authorized to requisition and receive excess DOD property. To facilitate our review, we compared the requisitions of property recorded in the Defense Reutilization and Marketing Automated Information System against the Defense Automatic Addressing System Center master file on a particular day and identified 55 questionable activity codes. We viewed these 55 codes as questionable because they did not appear in Defense Automatic Addressing System Center records as being active but were considered valid by the Defense Reutilization and Marketing Automated Information System. We selected two entities with questionable codes for further investigation the University of Alabama at Huntsville (a government contractor) and a Florida Army National Guard unit. Pertinent information on the 55 activity codes has been provided to the DOD Inspector General and DLA for review and appropriate action.