Title: Principles of Verification and Performance
1Principles of Verification and Performance
SIMPLICITY ACCOUNTABILITY
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT CONTROL
2Principles of verification
- Guiding principles
- Major equipment and self-sustainment capabilities
are defined in terms of operational capability
for each category/sub-category - UN is responsible to ensure that major equipment
and self-sustainment meets the requirements of
the mission in accordance with the terms in the
MOU - UN verifies status, condition and quantity of
equipment and services - Control is implemented in cooperation between UN
and TCC - UN has a responsibility to assign an official
(Chief COE also POC) to the inspection team for a
sufficient period of time to ensure continuity in
the control activities - Reasonability view
- Meet military function at no additional cost to
UN or TCC - Medical equipment must be in accordance with
equipment lists - Inspection results serve as basis for
consultations in mission to ensure capabilities
are met, alternatively partner may seek to
renegotiate MOU - Inspection reports serve as basis for
reimbursement.
3Verification and Control Procedures
- UN Responsibilities
- It is a UN responsibility to ensure operational
readiness of equipment and services are verified - Operational Readiness Inspection at least every
six months and anytime mission believes standards
are not met - ME Count and inspect, operational,
classification, agreed number, UN color, used
properly, safe, maintenance capability, spare
parts and consumables (wet lease) - SS Sufficient and satisfactory.
- Standard operational reporting by contingent
- Monthly ME serviceability
- Operational Ammunition Expenditure Certificate
- Self-sufficiency items upon deployment (list,
volume, prices in US). - Periodic Verification Inspections / Spot checks.
4Verification and Control Procedures
- Inspection Conduct
- Inspections conducted by COE Inspectors and
various experts (civilian/military/police
personnel) - Integrated COE Unit under CISS day to day
business - Ad hoc COE Experts OPS FHQ/UNPOL HQ, Medical
Doctor, Transportation Officer, Communications
Officer, Engineering Officer - Occassional Environmental Officer, PCIU,
LogsOps, Rations, Fuel. - COE Unit works closely with JLOC, ISS Support
Sections, and CISS, and is a valuable partner for
the contingent on all aspects of COE/MOU - Inspections Arrival, Operational Readiness
Inspections, Periodic/Monthly Spot Checks,
Departure.
5Verification and Control Procedures
- Contingent Arrival in Mission Area
- Upon arrival in Mission Area, Contingent
Logistics Officer should immediately contact
Chief COE for - General COE Briefing
- Introduction to Self-reporting scheme,
- Coordination of first inspection.
- A complete list of major equipment (serial
numbers, quantity, make and model, UN painted
(yes/no), national registration number,
operational status (yes/no), location,
odometer/hour meter reading). - A list of personal weapons.
- List of rations, POL, food, and water with prices
in US and date of expiration initially brought
for self-sufficiency purposes. - Present ammunition and explosive holdings
indicating type/calibre and number of
rounds/volume. - Arrival Inspection
- Inspect Major Equipment to ensure correspondance
with MOU - Contingent demonstrate and explain agreed
self-sustainment capability for assessment of
operational capability (inspection within six
months) - UN demonstrate its self-sustainment services.
6Verification and Control Procedures
- Reporting
- Signed verification reports to UNHQ for
reimbursement on a quarterly basis, normally Jan
Mar, Apr Jun, Jul Sep, and Oct Dec.
Minimum one inspection per quarter and three
serviceability reports. - Mission Quarterly Impact Statement
- COE/MOU Management Review Board to review
inspection results and recommend action. - Repatriation inspections
7Verification and Standards
Major Equipment
- Must arrive in mission in serviceable condition
- Must have all associated minor equipment and
ancillaries - Contingent maintains equipment and provides spare
parts, consumables (except POL) and replacements
- Contingents have the option to bring 10 above
agreed MOU quantities to meet serviceability
standards. - Examples
- Vehicles and MHE
- Armament
- Engineering Equipment
- Medical Equipment
- Generators (gt20 KVA)
- Water Treatment Plants
8Shortfalls Major Equipment
Verification and Standards
- Unserviceable due to old equipment and
insufficient maintenance (lack of minor
equipment, spare parts and consumables, and
limited workshop capability) - Unserviceable odometers and hour-meters
- Safety issues such as lack of first aid kit,
fire extinguishers, serviceable lights and hand
breaks. Worn out tires - Insufficient number of trained operators
(engineering equipment and water treatment plants
in particular) - Equipment sensitive to environmental conditions
(Medical and other) - Deployment/re-deployment of equipment without
UNHQ approval and MOU amendment and with no
mission coordination - Proper packing of COE during deployment
9Shortfalls Major Equipment (cont.)
Verification and Standards
- Sufficient ME generators to also operate UN
provided accommodation (air conditioning and
electrical cooking equipment) - Lack of special oils and lubricants such as
brakes and hydraulic fluids, battery acid,
distilled water, and oils for various special
equipments, in particular during initial phases - Insufficient MHE capability a challenge to
re-supply of spare parts and consumables Long
supply lines - Keep relevant files in the unit for continuity
(VRs, Check lists, work shop files, documents) - Crew served weapons definition
- Major equipment in support of self-sustainment.
10Verification and Standards
Self-sustainment
- UN to identify and request self-sustainment
categories it can not provide - UN has a responsibility to ensure that any
self-sustainment services provided by a TCC - Meet minimum operational capabilities
- Are compatible with other TCCs where interface is
required and that - Cost to the UN is similar to what it would have
cost the UN to arrange centrally for provision of
services. - No UN support in TCC categories except POL
- Only reimbursement for satisfactory services
- ME in support of self-sustainment will be
reimbursed under self-sustainment (except when
force level asset).
11Shortfalls Self-sustainment
Verification and Standards
- Lack of consumables, in particular batteries for
all purposes incl. communications equipment - Insufficient number of medical staff, especially
for small units such as FPUs, enabling units,
and independent companies (able to split into two
medical teams) - Inadequately ventilated kitchen facilities and
lack of hot water for dishwashing and general
cleaning - Insufficient reefers for cold and frozen storage
(a contractor may provide, however on
cost-recovery terms) - Inadequate general maintenance (minor repairs in
electrical, plumbing) based on local, technical
standards due to inadequate capability to
purchase spare parts and supplies in mission
area.
12Shortfalls Self-sustainment (cont.)
Verification and Standards
- Binoculars, NVD/NVG and GPS and laser range
finders sufficient for operational requirements.
Personnel must be able to operate - Cramped/insufficient accommodation
- Sub-standard hygiene in kitchens and ablutions
due to lack of maintenance and tiles, and
measures against insects and rodents - Insufficient portable (long-range) communications
equipment for deployment by air - Sufficient small generators (lt20 KVA) - one per
platoon and one for essential unit locations for
medical center, OPSCEN, COMCEN, and small
refrigerators - Significant lead time if UN to take
responsibility.
13Other observations
Verification and Standards
- No ammunition for weapons
- Insufficient number of equipment for riot control
equipment and police equipment (batons, helmets
with facial protection, leg and arm protection,
gas masks and filters, reflector jackets, etc.) - Unsuitable body armor/inadequate level of
protection (L-4 / Basic Fragmentation Vests) - Spillage of oil and lubricants (including cooking
oil), and inadequate storage of hazardous waste.
Compliance with mission and DPKO draft
environmental policies important. Appoint an
Environmental Officer and seek advice with the
Missions Environmental Officer. Unit fuel points
needs to be properly secured against
contamination - Safe storage of ammunition may be difficult due
to crowded conditions and proximity to neighbors.
Roofing and cooling. Seek advice with PKO
Ammunitions Technical Officer - Insufficient fire detection and fighting
capability. Take steps for detection, plans, and
drills - Training by mission experienced personnel and
clear hand-over instructions can significantly
reduce adverse impacts from rotations.
14Principles of Verification and Performance
CONTINGENT OWNED EQUIPMENT UNIT
UNHQ, MARCH 2008