Empowering Sustainment Through Financial Excellence | Article

Empowering Sustainment Through Financial Excellence | Article









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An attendee reviews the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army for Financial Management and Comptroller FY25 Campaign Plan at the TRADOC Resource Management Professional Development Workshop at Fort Eustis, Newport News, Virginia, on Oct....








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An attendee reviews the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army for Financial Management and Comptroller FY25 Campaign Plan at the TRADOC Resource Management Professional Development Workshop at Fort Eustis, Newport News, Virginia, on Oct. 22, 2024.
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Pictured left to right: Misti Waters, Deputy Director, Strategic Operations Integration Cell (SOIC), ASA (FM&C), LTG Paul Chamberlain, Military Deputy, ASA (FM&C), Robert Cook, Principal Deputy, ASA (FM&C), and COL Molly Weaver, Director, SOIC,...








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Pictured left to right: Misti Waters, Deputy Director, Strategic Operations Integration Cell (SOIC), ASA (FM&C), LTG Paul Chamberlain, Military Deputy, ASA (FM&C), Robert Cook, Principal Deputy, ASA (FM&C), and COL Molly Weaver, Director, SOIC, ASA (FM&C), review audit data during a Command Audit Execution Review briefing at the Pentagon on June 26, 2024.
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The battlefield is changing. By 2040, the speed of operations, technological advancements, the unpredictability of near-peer adversaries, and the fiscal reality of limited resources will require the Army to be agile, creative, and strategic. The Army and the financial community will undergo transformation in our combat formations and in our sustainment forces. With data analytics and innovation driving transformation, the Army is reimagining sustainment and financial management to support the transformation of our operational forces. Transformation in our finance community is guided by the five-year Army Financial Management Strategy 2028 (AFMS28), designed to enhance financial and business processes, purchasing power, and financial readiness across the force.

The Fiscal Year 2025 (FY25) Campaign Plan advances AFMS28 with innovative strategies, technologies, and a proactive approach — where anticipation replaces reaction, and readiness remains constant. Army Financial Management & Comptroller professionals are instrumental to this transformation, working alongside Soldiers in support areas and headquarters to ensure operational and fiscal readiness that supports each mission. Every piece of equipment, every meal, every mission — each relies on the readiness the financial community ensures. The FY25 Campaign Plan builds on previous lessons, positioning Army Financial Management to drive mission success with the tools and strategies necessary for future challenges.

Paving the Path with Impactful Achievements

Three years of executing AFMS28 have already brought several critical achievements to the financial management community. These achievements include several new and refined processes that provide the workforce with clear and unifying guidance. We also continue to roll out new systems on the leading edge of technology while retiring legacy systems. Some examples of these achievements include the following:

  • Creation of the Army supplemental to DoD Instruction 1300.26, DoD Financial Management Certification Program. As the first Army-level policy for the DoD Financial Management Certification Program, this guidance establishes a standardized approach to training and certifying Army financial professionals, promoting consistency and accountability across all levels of service. 
  • Deployment of the Resource Manager’s Workspace (RMW) spend plan capability. The RMW tool went live with initial capabilities in FY24, enabling major Army commands to transmit their spend plans directly to the Army Budget Office. This capability is a crucial step toward Army-wide adoption of RMW, which will streamline the Planning, Programming, Budgeting, and Execution System across the Army. Once fully integrated, RMW will improve efficiency, support auditability, and reduce reliance on outdated tools. 
  • Retirement of the Standard Operation and Maintenance Army Research and Development System (SOMARDS). By retiring SOMARDS, the Army took a critical step in phasing out legacy systems, replacing them with modern, data-driven tools that enhance reporting accuracy and streamline data integration across commands. 
  • Publishing updates to Army Regulation 11-2, Risk Management and Internal Control Program, and Department of the Army Form 11-2, Internal Control Evaluation Certification. The updates to this foundational regulation and form enhance the Army’s internal controls and audit preparedness. This change provides clear, actionable guidelines for managing and documenting risk, establishing a stronger internal control environment Army-wide. 
  • Launch of the Audit Integration Executive Council (AIEC) and Headquarters Department of the Army Audit Executive Order 261-23. Establishing the AIEC and publishing the Army auditability plan are significant steps toward a fully auditable Army. These initiatives provide centralized oversight, streamlined audit practices, and guided audit integration across commands, reinforcing the Army’s dedication to transparency and accountability. 
  • Completion of the Continuous Monitoring Program (CMP). The CMP finalized critical dashboards and metrics, with all test results included in the FY24 Annual Statement of Assurance submission. The program also conducted over 100 process walk-throughs and documented more than 130 key controls, enhancing the Army’s ability to document and monitor control activities consistently. 
  • Streamlined processes through Robotics Process Automation (RPA). Six new automations were introduced in FY24. These automations not only increase efficiency but allow personnel to focus on high-priority mission tasks, minimizing time spent on repetitive, manual processes. Total savings from RPA exceed 119,000 work hours annually. 
  • Professional development expansion via SharePoint. The one-stop-shop SharePoint site for training and resource development attracted over 64,000 visits in FY24, underscoring its value as a tool for continuous professional development. This resource supports the growth of a skilled, adaptable workforce, ensuring financial managers are equipped with current knowledge and best practices. 

These accomplishments are foundational to AFMS28, creating efficiencies, reducing redundancies, and increasing the agility of the Army’s financial management operations. Together, they provide the framework to carry the Army financial management community through FY25 and beyond.

Securing Financial Readiness for the Future

The FY25 Campaign Plan accelerates progress by empowering the financial workforce, streamlining processes, and aligning with the Army’s broader goals in transformation and sustainment. Every decision made within the Army has a direct impact on our Soldiers, and it is the financial management community’s responsibility to ensure those decisions are made with clarity, precision, and foresight, and are fiscally informed. This is achieved through four lines of effort:

  1. Enabling the financial management workforce with tools and training. The FY25 Campaign Plan prioritizes preparing our people for future challenges. Army Financial Management & Comptroller professionals are more than just number crunchers — they are problem solvers and strategic enablers of mission success. Programs such as the Defense Financial Management Certification equip our workforce with advanced skills in artificial intelligence, data analytics, and financial leadership, enabling them to support commanders with real-time insights and accurate forecasts. 
  2. Effectively resourcing the Army. Resources are the backbone of Army operations, and our financial teams ensure commanders have the visibility needed for sound resource decisions, whether for daily operations or long-term sustainment. RMW enhances real-time tracking of programmed execution, helping leaders anticipate future needs. As RMW evolves, it becomes more than just a budgeting tool — it ensures that Soldiers on the ground receive timely support. 
  3. Improving financial operations and achieving sustainable auditability. Financial accountability is a cornerstone of AFMS28. Committed to achieving a favorable audit opinion by 2028, we are building a culture of operational accountability where resources are maximized, and every financial decision is transparent. Working with the Army Audit Agency and other stakeholders, we address audit findings and enhance internal controls. Through proactive collaboration and advanced data analytics, the Army anticipates issues before they arise, reducing waste and boosting efficiency. 
  4. Enhancing and embracing essential financial management systems. The FY25 Campaign Plan focuses on modernizing the Army’s financial systems, with platforms such as the General Fund Enterprise Business System and Advana, ensuring smooth, secure, and efficient financial operations. Through Enterprise Business System-Convergence, the campaign plan integrates financial and logistical data across the Army, making it accessible and actionable for financial leaders Army-wide. Ongoing improvements to RMW and other systems ensure the Army’s resource management adapts to meet the demands of an evolving battlefield. 

Forging a Future of Financial Readiness

The FY25 Campaign Plan reflects the Army Financial Management & Comptroller community’s commitment to meeting future challenges. By investing in people, processes, and systems, we are ensuring we have a vital role in Army sustainment efforts. Our mission is clear: support every Soldier, every commander, and every Army leader by maintaining financial readiness at every level. Guided by AFMS28, we are forging a future of financial operations that are efficient and accountable, and we are ready to lead Army financial management forward.

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The Honorable Caral E. Spangler serves as the Assistant Secretary of the Army (Financial Management and Comptroller) (ASA[FMC]), the principal advisor to the Secretary of the Army on all matters related to financial management and comptrollership. She has over 39 years of government service. She previously served with the U.S. Marine Corps (USMC) as the Assistant Deputy Commandant for Program and Resources; as the Principal Deputy ASA(FMC); as the Deputy for Budget, Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (Financial Management and Comptroller); and as the Assistant Deputy Commandant for Resources (USMC). She has a Master of Public Administration degree from Syracuse University.

LTG Paul A. Chamberlain serves as the Military Deputy for Budget, Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army (Financial Management and Comptroller). He previously served as Director of Army Budget, Headquarters, Department of the Army; as the Director of Operations and Support in the Army Budget Office; and as the commanding general of the U.S. Army Soldier Support Institute at Fort Jackson, South Carolina. His military education includes the Signal Officer Basic Course, Infantry Officer Advanced Course, Special Forces Officer Qualification Course and Language School, Command and General Staff College, and the Industrial College of the Armed Forces – National Defense University (ICAF-NDU). He was commissioned into the Army in 1988 from Clemson University and was assigned as a signal platoon leader. He has a Master of Business Administration degree from Syracuse University and a Master of Science degree in national resource strategy from ICAF-NDU.

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This article was published in the winter 2025 issue of Army Sustainment.

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