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Competition Watch
Commonwealth
Competition Council,
P. O. Box 1475, Richmond, VA 23218
Vol. 5, No. 1
June 2000
Food
Delivery System Best Practices
On January 26, 2000, the United States General Accounting
Office presented its report to the United States Congress
on best commercial inventory practices. The report is titled
"DEFENSE INVENTORY- Opportunities Exist to Expand
the Use of Defense Logistics Agency Best Practices."
(GAO/NSIAD-00-30).
The report is a follow up to the requirements of the National
Defense Authorization Act of 1998 which required the Defense
Logistics Agency to implement the best commercial inventory
practices.
A best commercial inventory practice is defined in the 1998
Act as a practice that enables the agency to reduce inventory
levels and holding costs1 while improving
the responsiveness of the supply system to user needs. These
initiatives reduce or eliminate processing individual purchase
orders and leverage the Agency's buying power to obtain
lower prices. Other initiatives use techniques such as
Prime Vendors under which a portion of the inventory management
responsibilities are transferred to a single vendor, allowing
customers to order supplies only as they are needed and receive
supplies on a timely basis.
Prime Vendor Program is a success - As stated by the
General Accounting Office, the most effective and successful
initiatives to date have been the medical and food
Prime Vendor initiatives, which have transferred inventory
management functions from the Agency to key suppliers. These
initiatives enabled the Agency to reduce inventory levels
and related costs and improve service to customers. The food
Prime Vendor program in fiscal year 1999 totaled $599
million.
For example, in one initiative, the Agency contracted for
Prime Vendors to distribute food items to major dining facilities
within 48 hours of ordering. According to officials, this
initiative has reduced or eliminated the need for Department
of Defense-owned warehouse/storage facilities and associated
inventories. This initiative has resulted in a $39 million
reduction in inventories and an estimated $78 million cost
savings at customer locations over a two year period.
The GAO Report and its relationship to HJR 709 (1999)
and House Document No. 61 (2000) - The 1999 General Assembly
directed a task force to study the food delivery system for
prisons and mental health hospitals in Virginia. As part of
its deliberations, the task force invited officials from the
Defense Logistics Agency and Prime Vendor food distributors
to make presentations on their programs and capabilities.
The results of that study and copies of all presentations
are found in House Document No. 61.
1 Holding costs include the cost of having
funds tied up in inventory, the cost of storing items, material
obsolescence cost, and inventory losses.
Some of the findings in House Document No. 61 (2000) pertaining
to the central warehouse, prisons and mental health facilities
included:
- In fiscal year 1999, food and
food related items were purchased from over 300 vendors;
- Prisons and mental health facilities
purchased $38.8 million in food and food related items in
fiscal year 1999;
- Food/food related warehouse
and storage space totals over 387,000 square feet;
- On June 30, 1999 the food and
food related inventory on hand totaled $10,043,364;
- The prisons' food and food related
inventory on June 30, 1999 was approximately $6.1 million
representing a 70 day supply on hand;
- Prisons and mental health hospitals
do not utilize "just-in-time" deliveries (average
deliveries are 30 days);
- Other states have employed Prime
Vendors with success to reduce costs and improve efficiency.
NOTE:
The 2000 General Assembly has directed the Joint Legislative
Audit and Review Commission to study the distribution of food
and other products from the Virginia Distribution Center to
state agencies and political subdivisions. In completing the
study, the Commission is to consider the findings and recommendations
of the Task Force Study on the Food Delivery System for Prisons
and Mental Health Hospitals in Virginia. Reference: House
Document No. 61 (2000).
ESOP
Updates
Employee Ownership Companies Again Top Best 100 Companies
- The National Center for Employee Ownership reports that
once again, employee ownership companies dominate the "Best
100 Companies to Work For." The list is developed for
Fortune magazine by the Great place to Work Institute and
Hewitt Associates. Winners are selected from over 1,000 large
and mid-size companies based on employee surveys. At least
nine of the companies have ESOPs or other employee ownership
plans and among the top ten, eight were employee ownership
companies. While employee ownership may itself not cause a
company to be a great place to work, it is clearly a good
indicator of management philosophy. ESOP Association Company
of the Year - Congratulations to C.R. Hudgins Plating,
Inc., of Lynchburg, VA, for earning the Mid-Atlantic Chapter's
ESOP Association Company of the Year award.
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A
PRIMER ON EMPLOYEE STOCK OWNERSHIP
PLANS (ESOPs)
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ESOPs
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Taxation
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Participation Rules
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Allocation Rules
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Distribution Rules
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ESOPs
are governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act (ERISA) and hold shares in trust for employees.
Plans are funded by
employer
contributions.
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Contributions
are tax-deductible to the company within limits; plans
can borrow money that is repaid in tax-deductible dollars;
employees taxed at distribution unless funds are rolled
into an IRA.
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Generally,
at least all full-time employees who have worked at
least one year must be included.
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Allocations
of shares must be made based on the relative compensation
of plan participants or a more level formula.
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Generally,
employees must begin to receive a distribution of their
plan assets within one year after death, retirement,
or disability, or five years after termination.
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Rethinking
Ways to Present Financial Information to Employees -
Activity-Based Costing
Most organizations sharing performance information with employees
use traditional approaches to determine what measures matter.
One alternative approach bears consideration, at least as
a supplement to traditional ways of presenting the numbers.
Activity-based costing - This is an intuitively simple
concept that seeks to allocate actual costs and revenues for
any particular activity. For each product or service the organization
provides, the organization first allocates all direct
costs (cost of goods, salaries for all people working on that
product or service, marketing, etc.).
Then it adds to the direct costs all the indirect
costs, such as the percentage of rent, administrative staff,
debt, general support, etc., that are attributable to that
activity. In theory, all these costs should add up to 100%
of the total organizational costs. These costs can then be
compared to the revenues/funding for each activity to see
if it really is making a profit or is self-supporting. The
same model can be used to assess the performance of units
whose customers are purely internal.
Using ABC, overhead costs are traced to products and services
by identifying the resources, activities, and their costs
and quantities to produce output. A unit of output (a driver)
is used to calculate the cost of each activity. Cost is traced
to the product or service by determining how many units of
output each activity consumed during any given period of time.
This requires a different way of looking at things than traditional
accounting methods. The virtues of ABC are obvious. It provides
employees with a very clear definition of whether what they
are doing is working or not, while providing management with
a much better idea of whether a service or activity is productive.
Even if ABC cannot be implemented in a precise way, just
using estimated costs can still be useful in helping employees
think more like business people. Employees are now part of
their own mini-business, from which direct linkages can be
made to the overall success of the organization.
ABC does not only apply to manufacturing organizations: it
is appropriate for service organizations such as financial
institutions, medical care providers, and governmental units.
In fact, some banking organizations have been applying the
concept for years under a different name - unit costing. Unit
costing is used to calculate the cost of banking services
by determining the cost and consumption of each unit of output
required to deliver the service.
To learn more about full costing, The Institute for Management
Accountants has written an article on "Implementing Activity-Based
Costing" and the Commonwealth Competition Council has
developed a PC-based software program named "COMPETE",
which generates an annual cost per service unit of output.
Copies of the article and more information on "COMPETE"
are available by calling the Council's office.
"PRIVATIZATION IS A TOOL THAT CAN HELP PUBLIC OFFICIALS
PROVIDE ESSENTIAL SERVICES IN A COST-EFFECTIVE MANNER.
INTRODUCING COMPETITION AND PRIVATIZATION TO GOVERNMENT SERVICES
REQUIRES REAL COST INFORMATION. PRIVATIZATION INCREASES COMPETITION
AND COMPETITION INCREASES PRODUCTIVITY."
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COMPETITION
WATCH
Published quarterly
by the
Commonwealth Competition Council
P. O. Box 1475, Richmond, VA 23218-1475
Senator Emmett
W. Hanger, Jr., Chairman
(804) 786-0240
or FAX (804) 786-1594
E-mail: competition@state.va.us
World Wide Web Site: http://www.vipnet.org/ccc
Information
appearing in this newsletter is gathered from various
sources.
The Commonwealth Competition Council does not attest
to the accuracy
or authenticity of the information provided.
The Commonwealth
Competition Council
is an independent state council.
EMBRACING THE
SPIRIT OF OPPORTUNITY
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