Eliminating Marine Corps Logistics Overlap Saves Millions; Further Savings Possible
Highlights
In 1975, GAO reported that the Marine Corps' logistics system either duplicated or performed certain logistics functions similar to those being carried out by other Department of Defense (DOD) activities. Substantial reductions in the Marine Corps' logistics system were possible through greater reliance on other DOD logistics activities and the General Services Administration (GSA). GAO recommended that the Secretary of Defense require that the Marine Corps operating forces receive supply support from other DOD integrated managers and GSA, ammunition be subject to DOD-wide management, equipment be overhauled by the congnizant military service, war reserve materiel be stored by appropriate DOD activities, and all principle items of equipment be purchased and provisioned by the military service which uses the items the most. In response to these recommendations, the Marine Corps eliminated some of the logistics overlap by discontinuing duplicate management of many items and no longer stocking them in wholesale quantities for peacetime use. It has also closed two small storage activities. DOD has designated the Secretary of the Army as single logistics manager for all conventional ammunition and transferred a small workload of Marine Corps equipment to other services for depot maintenance. These changes have saved an estimated $65 million, and recurring savings are estimated at $2.9 million annually.