Manufacturing Industry
Cooperative logistics role for National Codification Bureau stressed in local training course
DISAM Journal, Winter, 2003 by Lynn B. Schmoll
[The following is a reprint from the News Release created by the Defense Logistics Information Service. For further information about this article go to DISL on line at www.dla.mil/dlis.]
Defense Logistics Information Service is a major field activity of the Defense Logistics Agency. It creates, obtains, manages and integrates data from several sources. It shares this data through user-friendly products and services that support logistics operations throughout the Defense Department, other federal agencies and elements of the private sector. DLIS' expertise in cataloging and information management makes it an important contributor to electronic commerce between the US government and its many suppliers. DLIS manages the Federal Catalog System (FCS) and serves as the National Codification Bureau (NCB) for the United States. It is also an important facilitator for international cooperation in military/government logistics, educating foreign logisticians about the importance of NCBs in modern logistics.
The role of National Codification Bureaus is little known in logistics circles, less so outside of logistics. Yet the NCBs provide a foundation for international cooperation in military and government logistics; furthermore, they now play a role in commercial logistics. That is why the Defense Logistics Information Service (DLIS) located in Battle Creek, Michigan, is educating foreign logisticians about such bureaus and their place in modern logistics.
"Cataloging or as it is referred to internationally, 'codification' is a small field compared to the rest of logistics. It is the DNA of the Department of Defense (DoD) supply chain, and increasingly used both commercially and in international logistics. Yet, its impact is immense," said Marine Colonel Joseph D. Cassel Jr., DLIS commander. "This logistics data underlies the lifecycle support of all major weapons systems and most military sustainability efforts. It is critical to mission success." Cassel explained that the bureaus rely upon the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Codification System (NCS) for the data interoperability, the data/systems integration, and the data integrity that underpins coalition and joint logistics.
"For a relatively small investment, cataloging provides a big return, a return that keeps on giving." Cassel said.
Catalogers compile data for the supply systems of participating countries in the NCS, where each distinct item only needs to be cataloged and assigned a National Stock Number once. That one number is shared by participating countries and provides the basis for both sharing item information and sharing items themselves. The NATO Group of National Directors on Codification (Allied Committee 135, or AC/135) manages the system.
By agreement, each country that uses the system must have a single office that serves as point of contact for every other country. That office is responsible for linking its national catalog system with those of other governments. Normally the office chosen is part of the national cataloging organization. Since DLIS already manages the Federal Catalog System, it logically serves as the NCB for the United States.
Because the international logistics field is rather specialized, until recent years there was little available training that addressed the management of a catalog system and protocols for exchange of data between countries. Four years ago, DLIS filled the need by establishing an annual training program titled, "Logistics Information Management Course for International Logisticians" better known as "The NCB College."
Forty-seven officers and civilians from twenty-three different countries have been trained by DLIS during the past four years. They are taught the role of cataloging in logistics and how to implement and run a cataloging system in their government.
Many NCB College students are from countries that are either new NATO members or nations seeking to join NATO. These nations are anxious to meet NATO standards in this area. Other students are from countries with well-established cataloging systems (e.g., Malaysia, South Korea and the United Kingdom) or countries seeking to better understand the NCS (e.g., Ecuador, Mexico,).
While cataloging may be a small field in terms of the number of catalogers, it is very large in terms of the number of countries that subscribe to the NCS. From the beginning NATO allowed non-NATO countries to participate (e.g., Australia). In recent years, there has been a seeming rush to join. Currently, nearly fifty countries are formally associated with the NCS and maintain an NCB. In addition, NCS data and techniques are used in other countries (e.g., Japan) while not formally aligning themselves with the system.
According to Chris Yoder, chief of DLIS' International Division, there are two big reasons for recent growth in the system. First, there are the efficiencies that the NCS brings to logistics; and, second, there is a plus or a minus depending on the nation. For example, for Japan the association with NATO could pose some political issues and that might serve as an obstacle to formal membership. On the other hand, for Bulgaria, the NATO association is a driving force.
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