PGI 39.9003 IT Miscellaneous portals and tools.
The following provides links to IT laws and regulations (for FAR and DFARS links, see the beginning of DLAD Part 39), policy and procedures in alphabetical order. In addition, various IT tools are located here (If the reader has knowledge of additional information that should be added to this coverage or becomes aware of obsolete or revised coverage, they are encouraged to bring it to the attention of the DLAD webmaster):
Brand Name Specification acquisitions have special posting, solicitation, documentation and approval requirements (see FAR 5.102 and 11.105). Concerning Federal Supply Schedules(FSS), see FAR 8.405-1 and 8.405-6; for non-FSS see FAR 6.302-1, 13.106-1 or 13.501. See 39.9001 (i)(1) and 39.9002 (a)(6).
Information Technology Capability Request (ITCR) web form managed within the DLA IT Investment Portfolio. The ITCR captures a description of required capability, mission need, capability gaps, market research, funding information, security and compliance.
Defense Acquisition Guidebook - The purpose of the Guidebook is to provide members of the acquisition community and our industry partners with an interactive, on-line reference to policy and discretionary best practice. Consider the Guidebook a valuable resource as you design your program.
DLA Information Technology Solutions Document - IT Solutions are components that are identified and used as common building blocks across DLA to provide services that support the DLA mission. The objectives of these solutions are to: reduce acquisition costs, increase security, ensure interoperability, and promote information sharing. Common IT solutions represent solutions that have been widely accepted both within the market and within DLA. The purpose of presenting solutions as part of the DLA Information Technology Architecture is to simplify procurement decisions at all levels and to promote seamless interoperability both within DLA and between DLA and the greater Department of Defense community. While there will always be niche, specialized requirements, the common support solutions presented here should satisfy about 95 percent of user's functional information technology requirements. Section 2 of this document identifies a set of minimum configurations for various types and classes of computing platforms used within the Agency. The remaining sections describe common support solutions in four broad categories: web environment solutions, corporate applications solutions, infrastructure solutions, and solutions related to specific DoD level systems. Solutions must respond to a myriad of complex functional requirements depending upon the specific organization environment and mission needs. Elements of one solution may also be part of other solutions. For example, Microsoft Outlook 2003 is part of the Productivity solution in the office environment. It is also the solution to workflow and group scheduling. See 39.9001 (i).
DLA One Book - Documents DLA policies, processes, and procedures on a single web site. DLAD 5025.30, a major component of the DLA Issuances System, is comprised of many process chapters. See 39.9001 (g) and 39.9002 (b).