Deep Trouble for Deepwater
The Coast Guard's massive rebuilding project is just one of its many problems
Fissures. But Deepwater has other problems as welllike the need to rework designs for ships that have already been partially built. The national security cutter is getting an upgrade because of fatigue concerns; auditors say it won't survive its 30-year life span, a notion Northrop officials strongly deny. Congress, however, has reason to be skeptical: The Coast Guard used about $90 million to overhaul eight patrol boats, only to withdraw them from service in November when fissures in the hulls and engine troubles made them unseaworthy.
The contractors have defended their work. Leo McKay, Lockheed Martin's lead executive on the project, has said Deepwater has "already resulted in measurable progress with the Coast Guard's rescue, enforcement, and interdiction missions on the high seas." And experts point to the non-drone aircraftincluding newly engined helicopters that can carry twice the weight of their predecessorsas bona fide Deepwater successes. But the program's bottom line still seems troubling: The Coast Guard has spent about $4 billion on the contract so far but today has fewer operational cutters than it had before 9/11. "This didn't need to happen," Capt. Kevin Jarvis, a retired Coast Guard engineer, said recently. He described government employees futilely writing memos about already-visible safety problems even before ships were built. Rep. Henry Waxman, chairman of a House oversight committee, calls Deepwater "one of the worst contract organizations that I've ever seen."

All that comes on top of other difficulties. Last summer, for the first time in its history, the service court-martialed an academy cadet for sexual assault. Then in August, two of the service's storied corps of rescue swimmers died during a routine training dive in the Arctic Ocean, the first such drownings since 1974. Sen. Maria Cantwell, the top Democrat overseeing the Coast Guard, has promised to investigate. The service's own probe revealed that some members of the divers' support team had been drinking and misinterpreted distress calls. The number of dive teams more than tripled after 9/11, causing oversight challenges: Some of their equipment was years overdue for inspection.
Allen, who's garnered kudos for a no-nonsense style, is attacking the problems vigorously. "We will not accept," he wrote to the entire Coast Guard in January, "preventable [life] loss or injury." In the days after the drownings, he halted all diving until every piece of underwater equipment in use was reinspected. To clean up troubles at the Coast Guard Academy in New London, Conn., he created a task force in September to study the climate there after reports of drinking and promiscuity. A related investigation has already resulted in the reprimand of a senior Coast Guard official.
Deepwater, however, is arguably more daunting. "We'll never have the organizational structure you'll find in the [U.S.] Navy," Allen says of the service's ability to coordinate massive purchases, "but ... I'm trying to create as much of that capability in the Coast Guard as I can." He recently gave the service's chief engineer the authority to veto designs. He's also incorporating regular third-party evaluations of contracting work, calling for robust training of oversight personnel, and reorganizing the entire Coast Guard to limit layers of bureaucracy that may have contributed to Deepwater's problems. And more is coming: Between now and June, Allen can rewrite portions of the contract. Last week, the Coast Guard revealed it would reach outside the contract for one of the ships, which was to be provided by the Lockheed-Northrop team. The reason: Coast Guard officials think they can get similar boats for $100,000 less apiece than the price quoted by the contracting team.
Still, some wonder if it'll be enough. "At this point," Cantwell says, "I think we need legal advice" on recouping contract costs. Rep. Bob Filner, formerly the ranking House Democrat overseeing the service, has urged dropping the contract arrangement altogether. "The first thing you do when you've dug yourself into a hole," Filner says, "is stop digging."
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