It began by adding supply centers, warehouses and contract management regions. Having established itself, DSA embarked on a massive expansion. It won service support by supplying photographic film to the Air Force, fueling Navy ships and assembling three Army divisions for a possible invasion. The agency proved it could during the Cuban Missile Crisis one year after formation. The savings SAMMS generated wouldn’t have mattered if DSA couldn’t respond to crises, however. When it did, however, the result was transformative, reducing back orders, increasing material availability and increasing on-time fill rate – all while requiring fewer people.
DSA started the first Standard Automated Materiel Management System in 1964 but didn’t install it until 1971. The long-term advantage of consolidating supply chains was automation, even though writing a computer program to integrate material management took time. Constructed in silos, single managers never had such flexibility. 1, 1962, McNamara combined their capital funds so the sales of one could support the purchases of another. By merging all single managers under DSA centers Jan. Only the Army’s subsistence center was fully operational by October 1961 and, although it purchased food for the entire military, it didn’t interact with other single mangers. Service leaders thought they’d maximized all that could be gained in that area by adjusting to single-manager assignments, but they lacked understanding in supply chain integration. The Military Standard Requisitioning and Issuing Procedures form, for example, replaced 16 other forms and used punch cards capable of being read by the computers of the day.ĭSA achieved other efficiencies by focusing on supply classes. And by operating one headquarters instead of three, McNamara shed 3,481 positions from government rolls.ĭSA also created efficiency and simplified workloads by initiating standard transaction forms for supply clerks, who previously had to learn different procedures for every provider and service. McNamara, the agency’s first director, built a lean staff and assumed less warehouse space and fewer items than the Army, Navy and Air Force had used for the same missions. Able to pick employees freely from the services, Army Lt. Could it improve upon prior logistics management reforms to save money and resources? And could it be as responsive as the services in a crisis? DSA answered both questions affirmatively early in the 1960s and continued to grow, cementing its role in both the Defense Department and federal government as the decade closed.ĭSA realized savings just by forming. The Defense Logistics Agency faced two questions when it formed as the Defense Supply Agency Oct.
Editor’s note: “Celebrating 60 years” is a series of seven articles highlighting DLA’s support to America’s military since the agency was created Oct.