The document discusses the Coast Guard's strategy for implementing the Coast Guard Logistics Information Management System (CG-LIMS) to replace legacy logistics systems and standardize business processes. It outlines a multi-segment acquisition approach for CG-LIMS that will allow the retirement of modules from the Aviation Logistics Management Information System (ALMIS) as CG-LIMS capabilities come online. It also describes the status of the logistics transformation effort and how different asset types are being prepared for transition to CG-LIMS. Challenges include integrating legacy data systems, addressing the unique needs of facilities and units with limited connectivity, and completing the transformation of all assets and inventory.
1. UNITEDÂ STATESÂ COASTÂ GUARDÂ
Â
Â
CGâLIMSÂ ImplementationÂ
StrategyÂ
A White PaperÂ
Â
Jim SylvesterÂ
3/30/2010Â 7:36Â AMÂ
SYLVESTER. Digitally signed by SYLVESTER.JAMES.
MJ.1045298317
DN: c=US, o=U.S. Government, ou=DoD,
JAMES. ou=PKI, ou=USCG, cn=SYLVESTER.JAMES.
MJ.1045298317
MJ.1045298317 Reason: I am the author of this document
Date: 2010.03.30 07:37:36 -04'00'
This paper is intended assist in building a vision of how CGâLIMS capability will be brought intoÂ
productive use across all asset type communities from several legacy logistics data systems while takingÂ
in to consideration the business process transformation currently underway for logistics in general.Â
2. CGâLIMS Implementation StrategyÂ
Logistics Business Process Transformation
Since the LMTO 1 concluded in 2005 that IT consolidation is only possible if an organization
transforms to use a common business process, the basic strategy of legacy system transition was
established. Logistics transformation as implemented by the LTPIO 2 fulfilled the strategy of
business process transformation before IT acquisition.
One of the several business processes supporting Coast Guard logistics at the time was identified
as an internal best practice based on product line concepts, disciplined configuration
management, bi-level maintenance, and well aligned with established industry standards. The
chosen process was that of the CG Aviation logistics community.
The transformation plan established by LTPIO was based on matching the IT tool to the business
process. The IT tool in use for aviation support was ALMIS 3 . A transformation infrastructure
consisting of playbooks, process guides, training curriculum, training staff, interim policies, and
transformation schedules was developed and implemented by LTPIO. The transformation
process includes RCM 4 backfit analysis for legacy assets to be properly enrolled into ALMIS.
The LTPIO established a transformation capability that âcouldâ be leveraged in the CG-LIMS
implementation strategy, which is a multi-pronged approach to final IT consolidation. This is
not to say that logistics transformation capabilities that exist today âshouldâ be leveraged in the
CG-LIMS implementation strategy. The future of funding of logistics transformation has never
been a sure thing, and if incorporated into the CG-LIMS implementation strategy, may well
represent an unnecessary risk and complexity. It should be clear, however, that the original
outcome objective of the logistics transformation was IT consolidation. CG-LIMS represents
that strategic objective.
The logistics transformation is preparing the organization at the process level to use a single IT
tool (CG-LIMS) with requirements based on those processes. This means that as the
transformation continues, progressively more people and asset types will be prepositioned to use
a tool like CG-LIMS.
1
Logistics Management Transformation Office (LMTO) â chartered in 2004 to develop a plan to consolidate
logistics systems to a common IT system for all logistics. This group concluded in a 2005 business case
documenting two critical points. The first point was that the IT tool stove pipes derive from diverse business
processes. The second point was that the business case for consolidating IT systems is not in the system costs, it is
in the efficiency and effectiveness of a common business process.
2
Logistics Transformation Program Integration Office (LTPIO) â chartered in 2005 to implement the strategic
conclusion of LMTOâs business case.
3
Aviation Logistics Management Information System (ALMIS) â subsequently renamed to âAssetâ Logistics
Management Information System to accommodate the non-aviation assets which were to be enrolled under logistics
transformation. Comprised of EAL(mission/ops), ACMS, AMMIS, A-TIMS/TMAPS and Decision Support Systems
(DSS).
4
Reliability Centered Maintenance (RCM) â a systems engineering process for determining configuration items and
maintenance appropriate to sustaining operational and support objectives for availability, reliability and
maintainability. The âbackfitâ process is often required for undocumented legacy assets or, for changes in mission
or operational plans which alter the support requirements of an asset. See U.S. Navy Sea Systems Command RCM
Handbook (S9081-AB-GIB-010).
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3. CGâLIMS Implementation StrategyÂ
CG-LIMS Acquisition Planning
The Clinger-Cohen Act recommended IT projects to deliver new capability in small usable
increments. Supporting that objective, part of the segmented acquisition strategy for CG-LIMS
includes a first segment targeting complete functionality of one of the modules (ACMS) in
ALMIS, allowing that module to be shut down once the first segment of CG-LIMS has been
delivered and fully implemented for all ACMS enrolled assets. Similarly, the second segment
which is supply chain and inventory management will allow AMMIS to be turned off after full
implementation. Full implementation of the third segment for Technical Data Management will
allow A-TIMS and any remaining technical document management tools to be turned off. This
particular part of the strategy also enables the sunset of one entire legacy logistics system
(ALMIS). All of the segment implementations, and the ability to shut down a legacy module,
will depend heavily on interim integration with internal and external legacy systems; logistics
and financial. Financial integration is a bit of a moving target depending on the progress of the
DHS TASC effort. Therefore, interim financial integration may be required to CG financial
systems; whereas FOC integration will likely be to a DHS Enterprise financial system.
Segments of CG-LIMS capability include:
1) Configuration & Maintenance Management (allows turn off of ACMS)
2) Supply Chain Management (allows turn off of AMMIS)
3) Technical Data Management (allows turn off of A-TIMS, may retain TMAPS)
4) Financial Integration (enables successful CFO Audit)
5) All other integration (enables DoD and OGA interoperability)
Logistics Transformation
The logistics transformation process is delivering units and/or assets in one of three tier states
after transformation:
âą Tier 1: Fully enrolled in all components of ALMIS(EAL, ACMS, AMMIS, A-
TIMS/TMAPS). Either backfit RCM will have been completed, or reliable technical data
will have been already available.
âą Tier 2: Enrolled in EAL and ACMS; not enrolled in AMMIS, or A-TIMS/TMAPS. Tier
2 does include process plans to get from Tier 2 to Tier 1 enrollment. This includes the
same backfit RCM analysis which Tier 1 enrollment requires.
âą Tier 3: This level of transformation treats the unit/asset minimally with the strategic
expectation that the unit/asset disposition is imminent or that the value/benefit of full
enrollment of the unit/asset into ALMIS or CG-LIMS is not worth the cost over the
projected remaining service life. Most numerous among these assets are non-standard
boats.
I should make clear that the strategic plan for transformation of all assets is not, by any means,
complete at the writing of this paper. Even the definition of what âall assetsâ actually means, is
unclear. Included here is the best knowledge and vision currently available. There are a myriad
of asset and inventory types that are currently either not supported by an IT system or at best
exist in a spreadsheet (sometimes several) with poor (or no) data integrity rules, application level
controls, or internal process controls implemented.
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Page 3 of 8
4. CGâLIMS Implementation StrategyÂ
I fully expect that as the bulk of major asset types complete transformation and find their way
into CG-LIMS that the ability to focus on the remainder of the smaller, often neglected, asset and
inventory types will become easier. The availability of reliable technical data for enrollment into
either ALMIS or CG-LIMS will be the second largest challenge. The absolute largest challenge
for these business areas will be the process transformation itself, which will enable them to use
the common enterprise IT tool.
That said, the Operational Requirements Document (ORD) for CG-LIMS will state as well as
possible âwhatâ is expected of the acquisition program, and by âwhenâ. The complexities of
future transformation enrollment status, technical data quality, data sources and specific lists of
assets and inventory, as discussed herein, are not likely to appear in the detail of the ORD. The
ORD requires that âallâ CG assets be supported by CG-LIMS by FOC. The sequencing of
enrollments, data migration from legacy logistics systems, deployment and training, will be the
challenge of the acquisition program. Some of those challenges are addressed in the following
paragraphs.
A common business process is critical to the successful implementation and acceptance of CG-
LIMS. If the basic processes of mission support are not transformed to a common process model
across the enterprise, the ability to use CG-LIMS as a common IT toolset will be undermined,
and, the enterprise will run the risk of regressing to a world of stovepipe processes and systems.
This risk cannot be overemphasized.
Surface Forces - Cutters
The Logistics Transformation is managing patrol boats essentially the same as small boats. The
newer patrol boats are receiving RCM backfit analysis if recent technical data is not available
and are being enrolled into ALMIS Tier 1.
The best estimate from the Logistics Transformation group for remaining surface forces asset
classes and unit types is as follows:
225 & 175 Tier 1 Sep 2010
DOG Tier 1 Nov 2010
110' WPB Tier 2 Nov 2010
HEC Tier 2 Nov 2010
WMEC Tier 2 Feb 2011
EAGLE Tier 1 Feb 2011
The Tier 2 plan for legacy HECâs and MECâs raises the question regarding deployment and data
sources for migration. ACMS enrollment will mean that configuration and knowledge of
maintenance procedures will be available. However, the MPCâs, while in a standard format, will
potentially be stored outside of the ALMIS environment. That shouldnât be a major issue, since
ALMIS MPCâs are generated today using an XML editing tool and stored in a web accessible
repository for field access. Transformation could use the same methodology for HECâs and
MECâs. Supply data (e.g. AMMIS) would not be enrolled for HECâs/MECâs. That kind of data
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5. CGâLIMS Implementation StrategyÂ
would exist to some degree in CMPlus, however the supply data may not match the transformed
MPCâs, unless Transformation specifically addresses this with CMPlus. Should CMPlus be
inherently part of the Tier 2 strategy for HECâs/MECâs, the deployment (loss of network
connectivity) challenge would be handled for legacy HECâs/MECâs. However, this would also
create another data source for supply data migration into CG-LIMS, using either CMPlus or
FLS(NESSS).
Notably, this discussion has not addressed NSCâs, FRCâs or OPCâs. Additional information will
be needed from the Transformation group WRT the planned tier treatment and timing of
transformation of these asset classes, in order to determine a path for these assets being
migrated/enrolled into CG-LIMS. Anything above Tier 2 treatment which uses CMPlus, will
face the challenge of lengthy deployments and periodic loss of network connectivity.
The reader should understand that transformation schedule reflected above is not the same as the
CG-LIMS implementation timeline reflected in the CG-LIMS ORD (section 1.3-Timeframe). 5
Limited or zero network connectivity is explicitly addressed in the CG-LIMS ORD.
C4ISR
C4ISR assets are largely embedded components in other asset platforms and will thus be treated
according to the strategy for that platform type. However, there are some stand alone C4ISR
systems which will need to be treated as an asset class. The transformation currently has plans
for one of these systems. The intent is to transform DGPS using a Tier 1 approach in Apr 2010.
For DGPS this means that data migration will be from ALMIS components to CG-LIMS.
Shore Facilities
A distinct challenge for logistics transformation is the shore facilities community. This asset
community has traditionally had no enterprise O-level maintenance program (except at Facility
Engineering units). Therefore, much of the basic RCM technical data necessary to achieve
enrollment of facility assets, simply doesnât exist for most of the facility assets. While some
facilities do have high risk profiles for life safety and/or economics (driving considerations in a
failure modes, effects, and criticality analysis (FMECA), performed as part of an RCM process),
most do not. Therefore, though the sheer magnitude of assets requiring backfit RCM analysis
may seem daunting (greater than 20,000 including buildings and structures), the level of effort
associated with most of the individual assets may be minimal (though not trivial, by any means).
The overall lack of a an O-level program for shore facilities means that there is not currently any
business intelligence linkage between a supply chain, maintenance work performed on the asset,
the asset configuration hierarchy, and any D-Level work which is identified, prioritized and
performed on the asset. The need to build such a program means that the facilities community is
likely to remain untransformed for the longest of all asset communities. Notably, NASA has
recently accomplished a similar effort in their facilities world, triggered by catastrophic damage
to one of their satellites prior to launch by facilities and equipment which were not properly
5
CG-LIMS Operational Requirements Document (ORD)
Â
Page 5 of 8
6. CGâLIMS Implementation StrategyÂ
maintained. 6 Recent research indicates that the industry of asset management as well as the
market of asset management IT tools is moving in the direction of managing all asset types with
the same IT tool (air, marine, vehicles, rail, special support equipment, facilities, etc).
Ironically, the IT tool (SAM) currently employed by the CG facilities community is the only
COTS based tool of its type currently used by the CG, and is considered to be one of a handful of
best of breed products in the asset management market. It is the expectation that the facilities
community will continue to use SAM until transformed processes can begin to fill in the current
gaps of data. Currently the data quality in SAM would not justify using it as a direct source of
data migration into CG-LIMS without substantial analysis and ETL 7 effort. The completion of
âsomeâ amount of backfit RCM analysis and the implementation of an enterprise O-level
maintenance program which is tied to D-level maintenance will be prerequisite to any migration
or enrollment process for shore facility assets, whether into ALMIS components, or directly into
CG-LIMS.
Strategically this means the following assumptions are generally true for CG-LIMS
implementation relative to shore facility assets:
âą âFacilityâ asset data will be migrated from SAM after that community has been
transformed
âą Enrollments directly in to CG-LIMS will likely occur as the result of backfit RCM efforts
where the asset either did not have data in an existing legacy logistics system, or, where
the asset had no reliable RCM data on record. This would represent the sustained
production capability of CG-LIMS at FOC, for any new or âdiscoveredâ asset.
âą The SILC community has stated explicitly that backfit RCM analysis will not be
expected from the CG-LIMS acquisition program, and this will be the assumption of the
PMO.
Of course, as CG-LIMS approaches FOC, assets and organizations which have not yet been
transformed, can be transformed and enrolled (if appropriate) using the same infrastructure and
processes set up by LTPIO to begin to use CG-LIMS directly, without ever using legacy ALMIS
logistics components first. This would only be a government âoptionâ, and not necessarily an
objective of the ORD or the Acquisition Program for CG-LIMS.
6
Lesson Learned from HESSI incident, #1764, 27-Jul-2006.
This lesson-learned led to production of their RCM Guide for Facilities and Collateral Equipment.
7
Extraction, Transformation and Loading (ETL).
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7. CGâLIMS Implementation StrategyÂ
Legacy Logistics Systems Disposition
Major legacy logistics systems which will eventually be sunset as transformation and CG-LIMS
implementation proceeds to completion include:
âą ALMIS (non-mission operations modules, custom software, EAL and possibly DSS
remains)
âą FLS including VLS, NESSS, NE-TIMS, CMPlus and ARMS (all custom)
âą SAM (IBM Maximo 6x based, COTS software)
It is expected that other legacy logistics systems which are in marginal use will also be sunset as
those assets/inventory are either enrolled by transformation, or, migrated by the CG-LIMS
acquisition program.
CG-LIMS Deployment & Implementation Strategy
âą Multi-dimensional, beginning with first segment functionality (Configuration &
Maintenance Mgt) and one air asset product line (probably HC-144A)
âą Migrate all assets enrolled from ACMS to CG-LIMS first segment as subsequent segment
development continues
âą With delivery of second segment (supply chain), migrate all data from AMMIS to CG-
LIMS for assets currently enrolled in CG-LIMS
âą With delivery of third segment (Tech Data), migrate all data from A-TIMS/TMAPS to
CG-LIMS for assets currently enrolled in CG-LIMS
âą After delivery of second segment (Supply Chain), untransformed assets will either be
transformed and enrolled, or migrated into CG-LIMS directly from a legacy system.
âą The fourth segment of CG-LIMS will bring complete financial integration (something
ALMIS does not have today). That may entail integration with the current CG Financials
baseline, or with the product of the DHS TASC effort. The standards targeted are the
same FSIO and FMMIA requirements in either case.
âą The fifth segment of CG-LIMS will bring external integration to DoD, DHS, OGAâs and
private industry.
âą All segments will include retrospective and forward leaning interface requirements for
both internal and external interfaces.
Â
Page 7 of 8
8. CGâLIMS Implementation StrategyÂ
Improvements over ALMIS capabilities
âą Deterministic links between configuration, maintenance, technical data and supply
information.
âą Integration to CG Core Financial Systems.
âą Asynchronous operation in zero or limited bandwidth environments with store and
synchronize capability when network connectivity and adequate bandwidth are restored.
âą Automated component aging.
âą Warranty management.
âą IUID support and compliance including support for AIT (barcode scanners, etc).
âą Full configuration management capabilities including functional configuration
traceability and audit capabilities.
âą Automated real time configuration auditing tied to maintenance records.
âą Complete inventory management capability (not just Type 2 & 4).
âą Ability to predict asset operational and maintenance status.
âą Prognostic health and machinery monitoring interface capabilities.
âą Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) capable of accessing external services for non-CG-
LIMS functionality (such as HR and Finance), and, the ability to register CG-LIMS
services as available to users both in and outside the CG.
CG-LIMS ORD FOC Objectives
âą Consolidated capability to support all CG assets/inventory with common set of IT tools
under a common Mission Support business model
âą Asynchronous capability to support limited or zero network connectivity operational
environments
âą Financial integration which will support the CFO in a successful audit
âą The ability to shutdown all major and minor legacy logistics systems
Jim Sylvester is Chief of the Logistics Systems Division at Coast Guard Headquarters and is the Sponsorâs
Representative for CG-LIMS. He was a member of the LMTO, and LTPIO which planned and implemented
Logistics Transformation including documentation of the Mission Support business model, and was an original
member of the Mission Support Planning and Integration Team (MSPAIT) during the early days of developing
the organization construct for Mission Support, and ultimately, CG Modernization.
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