Unified Cross Domain Management Office (UCDMO)
Adelphi, MD

  Leadership Mission FAQs Contact  
       
 

UCDMO Home

UCDMO Info
News & Site Updates
Director's Corner
About the UCDMO
FAQs

 

Organization
Lifecycle Support
Policy & Standards
Plans & Resources
Customer Outreach


 
         Plans & Resource Division


Mission

The Plans & Resources (P&R) Division is responsible for establishing, implementing, and maintaining the CD Community Roadmap.  
The CD Community Roadmap will be used as the DoD & IC  'way forward' to ensure that CD activities both anticipate and respond to a 
wide variety of operational requirements; are cost effective and secure; able to be deployed to the field in a timely manner; and reduce 
unnecessary duplication of effort.  P&R also coordinates and influences CD investments for research, development, fielding and 
operation of CD mechanisms and services.  The division leads the development of a community-wide strategy to migrate from legacy 
point-to-point (P2P) cross domain connections to cross-domain Enterprise Services.  The division manages the acquisition documentation 
to support the CD lifecycle process and champions investments for CD mechanisms to fill gaps identified by the CD Community Roadmap.

Services

Research current and future cross-domain requirements.

Conduct a comprehensive CD gap analysis.

Lead review of CD capabilities under development. 

Formulate CD Investment Recommendations. 

Develop alignment strategies between CD capabilities, gaps, and requirements 

Produce CD Investment Summary documenting the DoD & IC investment in CD capabilities.

Deliverables

1. CD Community Roadmap v1.1 - June 2008

2. CD Community Roadmap v2.0 - April 2009

3. Investment Recommendations - As needed

4. CD Investment Summary - Quarterly

Information About the Division

Please direct your calls for this division to:  240-373-0796 / DSN prefix 685 and ask to be directed to the Plans and Resources Division.

 

 
   

Use of this U.S. Government system, authorized or unauthorized, constitutes consent to monitoring of this system.
Unauthorized use may subject you to criminal prosecution.
Evidence of unauthorized use collected during monitoring may be used for administrative, criminal, or other adverse actions.