ASRC Federal wins $473M FAA engineering recompete

Signage marking the Mike Monroney Aeronautical Center in Oklahoma City.

Signage marking the Mike Monroney Aeronautical Center in Oklahoma City. FAA photo.

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The company has held this contract that supports the National Airspace System since 2017.

ASRC Federal has won a potential five-year, $437.2 million contract to continue its engineering and professional services work at a key Federal Aviation Administration office that houses training for air traffic controllers.

The FAA awarded the Second Level Engineering Services contract on Tuesday and received two proposals in total, according to Federal Procurement Data System records.

Solicitation documents released in November describe the new contract as covering support for power, navigational aids, communications, surveillance and weather systems that feed into the National Airspace System that includes airports and other key facilities.

ASRC Federal won the current contract in 2017, when it was called the National Airspace System Engineering and Support Services program. The FAA has obligated $346.9 million in task order volume to-date against that contract ahead of its March 18 sunset date, according to GovTribe data.

Work primarily takes place at the Mike Monroney Aeronautical Center in Oklahoma City, where approximately 6,300 federal employees are based. They represent one of the Transportation Department’s largest workforce concentrations outside the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area.

MMAC is also home to the FAA Logistics Center, an organization that supports the National Airspace System of air traffic controllers and aviation safety inspectors, and the FAA Academy where air traffic controllers receive training.