Sec. 806. Secretary of Defense waiver of acquisition laws to acquire vital national security capabilities
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/bill/114/s/1376/pcs/section-806A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
The Secretary of Defense is authorized to waive any provision of acquisition law or regulation described in subsection
(c)for the purpose of acquiring a capability that would not otherwise be available to the Armed Forces of the United States, upon a determination that— the acquisition of the capability is in the vital national security interest of the United States; the application of the law or regulation to be waived would impede the acquisition of the capability in a manner that would undermine the national security of the United States; and the underlying purpose of the law or regulation to be waived can be addressed in a different manner or at a different time. Whenever the Secretary of Defense makes a determination under subsection (a)(1) that the acquisition of a capability is in the vital national security interest of the United States, the Secretary shall designate a senior official of the Department of Defense who shall be personally responsible and accountable for the rapid and effective acquisition and deployment of the needed capability. The Secretary shall provide the designated official such authority as the Secretary determines necessary to achieve this objective, and may use the waiver authority in subsection
(a)for this purpose. Upon a determination described in subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense is authorized to waive any provision of law or regulation addressing— the establishment of a requirement or specification for the capability to be acquired; research, development, test, and evaluation of the capability to be acquired; production, fielding, and sustainment of the capability to be acquired; or solicitation, selection of sources, and award of contracts for the capability to be acquired. Nothing in this subsection authorizes the waiver of— the requirements of this section; any provision of law imposing civil or criminal penalties; or any provision of law governing the proper expenditure of appropriated funds. The Secretary of Defense shall notify the congressional defense committees at least 30 days before exercising the waiver authority under subsection (a). Each such notice shall include— an explanation of the basis for determining that the acquisition of the capability is in the vital national security interest of the United States; an identification of each provision of law or regulation to be waived; and for each provision identified pursuant to paragraph (2)— an explanation of why the application of the provision would impede the acquisition in a manner that would undermine the national security of the United States; and a description of the time or manner in which the underlying purpose of the law or regulation to be waived will be addressed. The authority of the Secretary to waive provisions of laws and regulations under subsection
(a)is non-delegable.