Setting Priorities for Large Research Facility Projects – The National Academies Recommendations and the NSB/NSF Report Mark Coles Deputy Director, Large.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Project Cycle Management
Advertisements

CDCs 21 Goals. CDC Strategic Imperatives 1. Health impact focus: Align CDCs people, strategies, goals, investments & performance to maximize our impact.
TEN-T Info Day for AP and MAP Calls 2012 EVALUATION PROCESS AND AWARD CRITERIA Anna Livieratou-Toll TEN-T Executive Agency Senior Policy & Programme Coordinator.
Planning and Oversight of NSFs Large Facility Projects Mark Coles Deputy Director for Large Facility Projects Office of Budget, Finance and Award Management.
NSF Experience with Management of Research Infrastructure
Board of Governors January 27, 2014 Update on Enhanced Planning.
Mark Coles Deputy Director, Large Facility Projects Office of Budget, Finance, and Award Management National Science Foundation October 1, 2010.
Conversation with ACCORD on GSMT 21 January 2005 Michael S. Turner, Assistant Director Directorate for Mathematical & Physics Sciences National Science.
NSF Merit Review Criteria Revision Background. Established Spring 2010 Rationale: – More than 13 years since the last in-depth review and revision of.
NOAA Science Advisory Board The U.S. Climate Change Science Program Strategic Plan James R. Mahoney, Ph.D. Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and.
March 8, 2011 Portfolio Analysis and Management System (PAMS) Briefing for the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee Linda G. Blevins, Office of the.
1 LBNL Enterprise Computing (EC) January 2003 LBNL Enterprise Computing.
The IGERT Program Preliminary Proposals June 2008 Carol Van Hartesveldt IGERT Program Director IGERT Program Director.
Large Facility Projects (LFP) – Guidelines & Procedures Manual Jack Lightbody Interim LFP Deputy, BFA October 10, 2002 Status Report to the NSB.
Overview of the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Major Research Instrumentation (MRI) Program Office of Integrative Activities National Science.
Purpose of the Standards
 The Middle States Commission on Higher Education is a voluntary, non-governmental, membership association that is dedicated to quality assurance and.
State of Kansas Statewide Financial Management System Pre-Implementation Project Steering Committee Meeting January 11, 2008.
Internal Auditing and Outsourcing
3 Dec 2003Market Operations Standing Committee1 Market Rule and Change Management Consultation Process John MacKenzie / Darren Finkbeiner / Ella Kokotsis,
Enterprise IT Decision Making
October 22, 2003Advisory Committee for Business and Operations 1 Management of Large Facility Projects Within the NSF Mark Coles Deputy Director for Large.
GEF Project Cycle Sub-Regional Workshop for GEF Focal Points in the Pacific SIDS Auckland, New Zealand, September 2008.
Software Engineering Chapter 15 Construction Leads to Initial Operational Capability Fall 2001.
Chapter 1 PLANNING INFRASTRUCTURE [ENTER FACILITATOR’S NAME AND CONTACT INFORMATION] Developed by Troutman Sanders LLP Developed for the Virginia Department.
GEF Project Cycle Sub-Regional Workshop for GEF Focal Points in Asia May 2008, Manila.
FY Division of Human Resources Development Combined COV COV PRESENTATION TO ADVISORY COMMITTEE January 7, 2014.
Competition for the Management of NCAR Unidata Policy Committee September 7, 2006.
MREFC Process Mark Coles Deputy Director, Large Facility Projects Office of Budget, Finance, and Award Management NSF June 12, 2006.
Why we should manage projects professionally Better outcomes (benefit & risk) Better decision-making Better management of expectations More efficient.
NCAR Supercomputing Center (NSC) Project Status Update to the CHAP 4 October 2007 Krista Laursen NSC Project Director.
Facilities Subcommittee Meeting of November 2-3, 2005 Characteristics of the Meeting: 4 of the 5 Subcommittee members attended in person; all 5 members.
Report on the Evaluation Function Evaluation Office.
Performance Assessment Assessment of Organizational Excellence NSF Advisory Committee for Business and Operations May 5-6, 2005.
Report of the Facilities Subcommittee Meeting Nov. 2-3, 2005 Mark Coles Deputy Director, Large Facility Projects, BFA and Tom Kirk Chair, Facilities Subcommittee.
Award Monitoring Update National Science Foundation Advisory Committee for Business and Operations October 22, 2003 Mary Santonastasso, Director, Division.
Funding your Dreams Cathy Manduca Director, Science Education Resource Center Iowa State University, 2005.
Brinkman Report: Setting Priorities for Large Facility Projects Sponsored by the NSF Key Issues Raised in Report Transparency of process (next slide) Involvement.
Software Engineering Committee Status Report: Preliminary Findings and Recommendations Richard Loft and Gerry Wiener SE Committee Co-chairs National Center.
OFFICE OF SCIENCE 2.3 Infrastructure and Installation Sims, Edwards 1.Does the conceptual design and planned implementation satisfy the performance specifications.
Office of Acquisition and Property Management Proposed Changes to Attachment G FY 2011 – FY 2015 Five Year Plan.
Subcommittee on Design New Strategies for Cost Estimating Research on Cost Estimating and Management NCHRP Project 8-49 Annual Meeting Orlando, Florida.
LIGO-G M Planning and Implementation Strategy for Advanced LIGO Gary Sanders LSC Meeting Hanford, August 14, 2001.
Educator Effectiveness Update January Agenda 1.Overview of CDE’s Educator Effectiveness Work 2.Focusing Funding Streams to Support Educator Effectiveness.
National Science Foundation Overview. Agenda Our Legacy: About NSF Our Work: Programs & The Merit Review Process Our Opportunities: Working at the NSF.
Fees and Services John Curran President and CEO. Situation Fee Structure Review Panel completed and discharged – Final Fee Structure Review Report released.
Fermilab Presentation Greg Bock, Pepin Carolan, Mike Lindgren, Elaine McCluskey 2014 SC PM Workshop July 2014.
Module V: Writing Your Sustainability Plan Cheri Hayes Consultant to Nebraska Lifespan Respite Statewide Sustainability Workshop June 23-24, 2015 © 2011.
Advocacy: Influencing Facility Development in Public Parks and Recreation Departments Tennis advocacy should occur year round through informal communications.
NOAA Cooperative Institutes John Cortinas, Ph.D. OAR Cooperative Institute Program, Program Manager NOAA Cooperative Institute Committee, Chairperson.
1 EMS Fundamentals An Introduction to the EMS Process Roadmap AASHTO EMS Workshop.
WHO EURO In Country Coordination and Strengthening National Interagency Coordinating Committees.
PUBLIC–PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP (PPP) FRAMEWORK AND GUIDELINES Syed M. Ali Zaidi, P.Eng. PM(Stanford), Ph.D. Director, Strategic Partnerships Alberta Infrastructure.
SOLUTION What kind of plan do we need? How will we know if the work is on track to be done? How quickly can we get this done? How long will this work take.
OMB Circular A-16 Supplemental Guidance (Endorsed) Ivan DeLoatch, Staff Director Lew Sanford Jr. & Wendy Blake-Coleman NGAC Meeting, February 4, 2009.
INTEGRATED STRATEGIC PLANNING PROCESS (ISPP) 10 year planning outlook10 year planning outlook Monia Lahaie, DCFO and Director General Finance at Statistics.
1 Community-Based Care Readiness Assessment and Peer Review Overview Department of Children and Families And Florida Mental Health Institute.
Office of Science Statement on Digital Data Management Laura Biven, PhD Senior Science and Technology Advisor Office of the Deputy Director for Science.
NSF INCLUDES Inclusion Across the Nation of Learners of Underrepresented Discoverers in Engineering and Science AISL PI Meeting, March 1, 2016 Sylvia M.
Implementing Program Management Standards at Duke Energy.
Data Infrastructure Building Blocks (DIBBS) NSF Solicitation Webinar -- March 3, 2016 Amy Walton, Program Director Advanced Cyberinfrastructure.
Large Facilities Manual New Guidance on Cost Estimating and Analysis 2016 NSF Large Facilities Workshop Kevin Porter Large Facilities Advisor, LFO, NSF.
2016 NSF Large Facilities Workshop New Initiatives Business Roundtable II-III May 25-26, 2016 Jeff Lupis, Division Director, Division of Acquisition and.
Communities of Practice & L ESSONS L EARNED Budget, Finance, and Award Management Large Facilities Office May 2016 Large Facilities Workshop 2016 S. Dillon.
Agenda Item #10 Revised Process for State Expenditure Plan and Approval of Next Steps Doug Robison, PWS Gulf Consortium Meeting April 21, 2016 Hillsborough.
IV&V Facility 7/28/20041 IV&V in NASA Pre-Solicitation Conference/ Industry Day NASA IV&V FACILITY July 28, 2004.
Camera PDR/CD1 Planning 19 September 2008
EIA approval process, Management plan and Monitoring
Strategic Plan Implementation July 18, 2018
Preliminary Project Execution Plan
Presentation transcript:

Setting Priorities for Large Research Facility Projects – The National Academies Recommendations and the NSB/NSF Report Mark Coles Deputy Director, Large Facility Projects Office of Budget, Finance and Award Management

Introduction National Academies study “Setting Priorities for Large Research Facility Projects” (Brinkman report) makes specific recommendations for prioritizing, planning, and overseeing the construction and operation of large facilities supported by NSF The report cites the need to make greater resources available for pre-award planning of a project’s workscope Implement rigorous post-award oversight through periodic external review AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

Summary of the NAS Study Recommendations Development of a 10-20 year facility roadmap Three levels of criteria for ranking: Scientific and technical merit Agency Strategic Criteria National Criteria New starts ranked in annual budget request using clear rationale based on roadmap Enhanced project pre-approval planning and budgeting Greater independent oversight and review needed Review effectiveness of Deputy Director for Large Facilities in two years OSTP should coordinates roadmaps across agencies NSF Leadership and NSB should pay careful attention to implementation of proposed reforms AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

NSF/NSB Actions NSF undertook a detailed analysis of the NAS report recommendations Formal report prepared after broadly canvassing NSF for input Committee formed under direction of Joe Bordogna: John Hunt (chair) – Senior Advisor, Director’s Office Wayne van Citters – AST Division Director, MPS Rich Behnke – Section Head, ATM/GEO Priscilla Nelson – Senior Staff Associate, Director’s Office Mark Coles – Large Facilities Deputy Director, BFA Patricia Crumley (secretary) – Program Analyst, Budget Division, BFA NSF Assistant Directors and Director reviewed Further NSB input and revision resulted in final version – on NSB web site (October 2004 Summary Report): http://www.nsf.gov/nsb/meetings/2004/1004/summary_report_1004_updt.pdf AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

Main features of NSB/NSF Report NSF is developing a facility “roadmap” Embraces NAS recommendations for greater clarity and transparency to selection and prioritization process NSF will take steps to enhance the robustness of the pre-construction project development process to improve cost projections for facilities recommended for construction AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

NSF Roadmap NSF is now developing a Facility Plan (the “roadmap”) Report of projects in construction and various stages of development Includes detailed discussion of the development plans and criteria for projects in advanced stage of pre-construction development Discussion of the scientific objectives and opportunities that provide the context and compel the need for their development Will provide discussion of overarching considerations used for cross-disciplinary prioritization (first and second NAS ranking criteria) Facility Plan will be a public document, updated annually by NSF Director Facility Plan should become a strategic tool for communicating with research communities and government policy makers First public draft of plan expected in April or May, 2005 following March NSB meeting Expect to post for public comment AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

Process of Large Facility Project Development Revises existing process defined in NSF’s Facilities Management and Oversight Guide: http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2003/nsf03049/nsf03049.pdf Defines a new stage in the pre-construction development process: “Readiness Stage”: Has well defined entrance and exit gates Entrance requires formally defined and publicly distributed development plan Readiness Stage Development plan included in NSF’s Facility Plan AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

Project Life-cycle stages Horizon Stage Blue sky thinking Concept Stage First NSF support for workshops, studies, small scale research Development Stage More focused development Initial facility proposal Formulation – with NSF – of project development plan for readiness stage Readiness Stage Activities that bring project to a “construction ready” status with cost projections that have a high degree of confidence Begins 1-2 years prior to expected for NSB approval for inclusion in budget request New start pool of NSB approved projects proposed for funding Construction Operations Renewal, re-competition, termination, etc. AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

Project Development Plans Written by project developers in consultation with NSF Lays out the development trajectory for a project in the Readiness Stage Technical, managerial activities needed to bring a project to construction readiness Planning activities that result in mature construction budget estimates and sound projections of expected operations costs Development budget requirements NSF adds oversight decision points during Readiness Stage Decision points (criteria for advance and “off-ramps”): Developed by NSF Approved by NSB Made public – included in Facilities Plan AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

Readiness stage gatekeepers Entry: Community expresses strong endorsement Advisory committee endorses first and second level criteria Division and Directorate endorsement MREFC Panel (NSF Deputy Director, Assistant Directors, OPP, CFO, LFP Deputy – ex officio) NSB approval Exit: Division and Directorate review and endorsement of project, including M&O budget CFO and LFP Deputy assertion that budget and project plans are “construction ready” MREFC panel assertion that project meets science objectives and maintains priority NSF Director concurrence with MREFC panel AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

Exiting Readiness Stage Projects exit Readiness Stage because: Board approved Fail to advance against project development plan criteria Eclipse by other projects Reprioritization Other factors, as deemed appropriate by NSF Director Successful exiting projects are in “Candidate for New Start” pool NSB may re-prioritize pool when candidates are added Reprioritization rationale will be made public NSF Director proposes subset of new start pool to OMB for construction funding OMB approves project inclusion in NSF budget request Congress appropriates funds AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

Next steps Revise NSF’s Facilities Management and Oversight Guide to incorporate these new policies Challenges: Describe specific implementation steps that incorporate these principles Define steps to develop “sufficiently mature” budget projections prior to construction approval What can be done to minimize risk of potential backlog of approved new starts? Can this new framework can be used to aid fields (like Astronomy) that have needs for very long lead items as part of facility development? Advisory Committee input welcome AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

Defining “construction ready” Creation of a robust final project “baseline”: Enabling technical developments are complete There exist thorough cost and contingency estimates with high degree of certainty that project can be completed within scope Project management is in place Project Management Control System (PMCS) in place. Expensive: 5-15% of total construction budget, but must be done eventually PMCS alone is typically 1-2% of total project cost Perhaps overly ambitious definition of “construction ready” AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

Baseline Development Need to account for practical considerations, such as difficulty of fully staffing key positions prior to construction approval. Need to preserve goal of defining scope and budget with “acceptable levels of uncertainty” prior to request for construction funds. Need to define “acceptable”. For example: High Energy Physics projects typically allocate 25-45% contingency (45% LHC detectors, 25%: IceCube, LIGO) Projects with large software component can be higher Projects with large “build to print” component much less. AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

Can the framework of NSB/NSF’s new process encompass the natural steps typical of project evolution? Planning large projects naturally evolves through several stages that are typically well understood: Conceptual design Preliminary design Final design Construction Commissioning Operation Match NSF’s internal policies to these general notions in M&O Guide The Guide should also define how solicitations for these proposals may be made, if required AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

Common baseline evolution Conceptual design Functional requirements, definition of systems and functional areas. Large cost uncertainty. About 1/3 of total design effort. Preliminary design Site-specific design. Principal components, types of equipment, members, sizes defined. Cost uncertainty much reduced, roughly 25% larger than final design cost uncertainty. Final design Interconnections of components defined. Component vendors defined. Mounting and installation defined. AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

Coordination with initiatives in other agencies Want to make sure that Facilities Plan and the NSF’s Management and Oversight Guide broadly mesh NSF’s strategic planning with activities in other agencies – DOE, NASA Incorporate project-specific factors, criteria, timing of inter-agency coordination within development plans – will be published as components of Facilities Plan Natural place to articulate NSF’s intentions for specific international partnerships AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

Next steps in revision of Facilities Management and Oversight Guide Identify specific implementation steps that support principles promulgated in NSB/NSF report NSB review Expect a period for public reaction and comment Useful to have advisory committee input on these issues and other problems that exist in current Facilities Guide AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

Backup materials

NAS Study Findings “There is a lack of funding for disciplines to conduct idea-generating and project-ranking activities and, once ideas have some level of approval, a lack of funding for conceptual development, planning, engineering, and design—information needed when judging whether a project is ready for funding in light of its ranking and for preparing a project for funding if it is selected”. AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

More planning resources will: Reduce uncertainties in construction and operations budgets Reduce uncertainty in construction schedule Reduce likelihood of de-scoping Thorough pre-construction risk assessment will create a more robust Project Execution Plan Create an appropriate framework for cooperation for activities involving international and inter-agency partnerships as an integral part of in-depth planning. Make project oversight during construction more straightforward, add more definition to the proposed workscope and decision points. Allow more in-depth consideration of transition to operations and greater certainty in predicted O&M costs. Avoid a funding hiatus. Overlap some development activities beyond NSB approval and inclusion in annual NSF budget submission. AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

NSF/NSB Report: “The National Academies’ Report properly calls attention to the necessity for considerable pre-approval funding for planning and development when it questions whether there is sufficient NSF support for this "bottom up" process. NSF endorses the Report’s recommendations to provide researchers access to funding sufficient to develop compelling research agendas, to refine and prioritize their facility requirements, and to complete research and development on facility designs and needed technologies. The level and form of funding for planning and development will be reviewed, and an evaluation will be made of how project funds are best invested to attain robust plans and schedules with better cost projections, so that only well-defined and thoroughly-costed projects are brought forward for consideration by the Board.” AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005

More NSF/NSB Report: “The Director and the Board recognize the need to strengthen oversight of the implementation of large facility projects, which will require increased investments of NSF staff time and travel funds. The Report emphasizes the importance of initial planning and definition of technical scope, budget, and schedule, followed by periodic post-award status reviews held on-site by external experts, with implementation of a transparent process for management of changes to a project’s implementation plan.” AAAC Meeting - Feb. 16, 2005