Posted on 08/19/2013 2:01:24 PM PDT by Steve Peacock
Up to $500 million is slated for improvements that the U.S. Agency for International Development seeks to achieve in its global-health resources network.
USAID's Global Health Supply Chain Program is seeking contractor help in modernizing how the agency manages and secures its health-specific supply system.
The half-billion cap on procuring technical assistance, or TA, is for "supply chain management and commodity security" in foreign assistance recipient-nations.
"Since 2005, USAID has procured and delivered more than 4,300 different products valued at $2.4 billion and has provided more than $500 million in supply chain technical assistance in more than 50 countries," according to the draft Performance Work Statement (PWS).
Such endeavors, the PWS asserts, support the Bureau of Global Healths vision of a world where people lead healthy, productive lives and where mothers and children survive and thrive.
Three offices within the bureau as well as the Office of Health Systems (OHS) are tasked with procuring "health commodities and technical assistance for USAID programs and Presidential initiatives globally": the Office of Health, Infectious Diseases, and Nutrition (HIDN); the Office of HIV/AIDS (OHA); and the Office of Population and Reproductive Health (PRH).
That IS what I just read, isn't it ?
1) Use DDT.
2) Don’t squat upstream of the well.
3) Don’t poke each other in the hiney.
Problems solved.
Money flushed down the drain.
Why do our troops in Afghanistan has to go without a hot breakfast?
The half-billion cap on procuring technical assistance, or TA, is for “supply chain management and commodity security” in foreign assistance recipient-nations.
And they shuved obamacare down the American people throat yet we pay for the worlds better healthcare
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.