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BRAC Latest News 


BRAC 2005 - Tick-tocking to midnight

July 22, 2011, By Dennis K. Bohannon

AS Army Chief of Staff Gen. Martin E. Dempsey and other senior leaders define what the Army will look like in 2020, another group in the “D” ring of the Pentagon focuses on a black digital clock labeled “BRAC 2005 DEADLINE.”

Since 2007, the clock has been the dominant feature in the assistant chief of staff for Installation Management conference room. It reminds those who manage the 102 congressionally approved Army Base Realignment and Closure recommendations that time is ticking to complete the $11 million-per-day program and finish 1,147 separate Army actions to meet legislative mandates.

BRAC Transforms Aberdeen Proving Ground Mission

Source: defense.gov, Mar 7, 2011; American Forces Press Service By Donna Miles

 

ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md., March 7, 2011 – With just over six months left to implement the Base Closure and Realignment Commission plan, the sweeping transformation it has sparked here is well under way and slated to be completed on time and under budget, officials reported.

 

The BRAC plan took effect in November 2005, and impacts more than 800 military installations. It involves closing some, consolidating or realigning others, and ultimately relocating some 123,000 military members and civilian employees. By law, all these actions must be completed by Sept. 15, 2011.

 

The plan is bringing major growth to Aberdeen Proving Ground -- more than 6,500 people and more than $1 billion in new construction to accommodate the new workers, Army Col. Orlando W. Ortiz, the garrison commander, told American Forces Press Service.

 

But it’s also bringing a fundamental change to the post’s historic mission, and how the Army ensures its warfighters have the most advanced equipment and systems possible to succeed on the battlefield.

The U.S. Army Ordnance Center and School, the major tenant that defined Aberdeen Proving Ground’s very identity for nearly a century, already has moved to Fort Lee, Va. There, it is part of the new Sustainment Center of Excellence, another BRAC initiative.

 

As officials here closed a page on their post’s legacy, they were busy preparing to open an exciting new one that would transform the installation into a hub of cutting-edge communications and electronics technology.

Aberdeen Proving Ground has long been heavily involved in the Army’s research, development, testing and evaluation mission, explained Army Col. Andrew Nelson, deputy garrison commander for transformation. But by consolidating many disparate and geographically separated organizations that supported those processes here at one post, BRAC is “bringing it to the next level,” he said.

 

“Aberdeen Proving Ground has been, but will be to a greater extent, one of the Army’s major hubs of research and development of new technologies, and the testing and evaluation of those new technologies that lead to fielding new systems to support the warfighter,” Nelson said.

 

“This is the center of all of that -- the technology development that is leading to soldiers being better equipped and better supported in the operational environment where they are,” he said. “It’s the clothes they wear, the radios they speak through, the computer system that tracks where individual vehicles and soldiers are on the battlefield, to having [unmanned aerial vehicles] that give them the best intelligence of what the enemy is doing.

“That is what Aberdeen Proving Ground already is, and what it will be about,” Nelson said. “Everything we do here is all about ensuring that the individual soldier and the combat leader have the best possible equipment and systems and technology that is giving them the advantage on the battlefield.”

 

The biggest group of new arrivals to support this expanded mission is a collection of activities referred to as “the C4ISR materiel enterprise” that focuses on command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance.

 

The lion’s share of its 7,200 people are coming from Fort Monmouth, N.J., which is closing under BRAC and transferring most of its functions to Aberdeen. The new arrivals hail from Fort Monmouth’s Communications and Electronics Command and Communications-Electronic Research, Development and Engineering Center and several of their program executive offices. Others are arriving from related activities at Redstone Arsenal, Ala.; Fort Huachuca, Ariz.; and Fort Belvoir, Va.

 

CECOM established a forward presence at Aberdeen in 2007, and officially uncased its colors here in October 2010. A steady stream of its workforce began arriving this past summer, some directly from Fort Monmouth, some from temporary swing space at Aberdeen and others, new hires replacing workers who chose not to relocate.

Today, about 60 percent of the new C4ISR team already has made the move to Aberdeen Proving Ground, settling into the state-of-the-art research and development campus known as the “C4ISR Center of Excellence.”

Meanwhile, construction crews are putting the finishing touches on the second phase of the C4ISR project, which Nelson said is expected to be completed this month or next. The entire C4ISR complex, once complete, will include 13 buildings and more than 2.5 million square feet of new space.

 

The next-largest group of newcomers to Aberdeen, numbering just over 600, hails from the Army Test and Evaluation Command headquarters and Army Evaluation Center, both in Alexandria, Va. While construction was wrapping up on its new headquarters, Army Maj. Gen. Genaro Dellarocco opted to move directly to Aberdeen, rather than temporarily to Alexandria, when he assumed command in October. Working in swing space at Aberdeen, he’s paving the way for the rest of the headquarters elements to follow, while supervising subordinate commands that were already based at Aberdeen when the BRAC recommendations were announced.

 

In addition, BRAC is consolidating a variety of other organizations at Aberdeen. These include the Joint Program Executive Office for Chemical and Biological Defense from Falls Church, Va.; Air Force Non-Medical Chemical-Biological Defense Development and Acquisition, from Brooks City Base, Texas; the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research from Forest Glen, Md., the Army Research Institute from Fort Knox, Ky., and the Army Research Laboratory’s Vehicle Technology Directorate from Langley, Va., and Glenn, Ohio.

 

The BRAC initiative also has brought a broad range of defense contractors to Aberdeen Proving Ground, where many are operating in a new 416-acre complex just outside the gate.

 

Ortiz credited detailed planning that started before the ink had even dried on the BRAC 2005 recommendations with ensuring the post is ready to receive the new arrivals.

 

The planners worked closely with inbound organizations to identify their exact requirements, and with state and local officials to ensure surrounding communities were prepared for the influx.

 

And, able to take advantage of an economic slump that made bidding on the 17 major construction projects required at Aberdeen Proving Ground highly competitive, they realized huge cost-savings in implementing BRAC.

“In our fiscal year 2010 program, we were awarding contracts at 60 to 70 percent of what the government estimate was [in 2005],” Nelson said. “That’s a big savings, money the Army didn’t have to invest here.”

 

The first major construction project, a new gate with five vehicle inspection lanes, was completed in May 2009. As the other projects took shape around the installation, less obvious to casual observers were the tremendous infrastructure improvements required to support them. These included multiple-lane gate accesses, roadways, water, sewer and electrical line and miles and miles of fiber optic cabling.

 

Exciting as these new developments are, Ortiz said he’s made a concerted effort to ensure Aberdeen’s 70-plus previous tenants don’t get short shrift.

 

“We don’t want haves and have-nots,” he said.

 

So the post has undertaken a massive plan to upgrade existing facilities and demolish many of its old World War I- and II-era buildings. Ultimately, plans call for demolishing 188 facilities and 775 housing units over the next five years. As these efforts continue, Nelson said he expects lots of activity at Aberdeen during the spring and summer months as workers move into new or renovated facilities. July is expected to be particularly busy.

 

With the clock ticking down, Ortiz said he’s confident Aberdeen Proving Ground is on track to fully comply with the Sept. 15 BRAC deadline.

 

“We’ve already integrated a sizeable number of the new workers and the buildings that aren’t already completed are very far along,” he said. “The conditions are pretty well set.”

 

The plan is going so well, in fact, that Ortiz expects Sept. 16, the first workday after the BRAC deadline, to be “just another day at work” at Aberdeen Proving Ground.

 

“I honestly do not believe that on Sept. 16, folks are going to notice anything different,” he said. “As the locals will tell you, for us, BRAC has already happened. The magic of that Sept. 15 date has long come and gone.”

 

So instead of fixating on the BRAC deadline, Aberdeen Proving Ground is focusing on its new, expanded mission, Ortiz said.

 

“What we’re focusing on is the future,” he said.”That’s where we really need to go.”

 

U.S. Army photo by Sean Kief 

People, Mission First in BRAC Moves

FORT BELVOIR, VA – When Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) recommendations were announced in May 2005, there were 24 different relocations and closure components that affected the Army Materiel Command (AMC). To execute this mission, the Command focused on balancing its critical world-wide logistical support mission while ensuring its soldiers, civilians and their families were prepared for a major reorganization that affected approximately 11,000 of its 70,000 people.

“To balance the mission and retain the institutional knowledge and skills of our people, we set out in 2005 to ensure we could keep as many people as possible, while accepting the fact that not everyone would make the transition to the new duty assignments,” said Kate Kelley, AMC BRAC Office chief. “We immediately arranged for temporary space at Redstone to get as many folks on board in Alabama as possible.”

BRAC Moves Near Completion, but Impact Far From Over

Huntsville Times – In 2011, BRAC will be finished, but not over.

Though the deadline for relocation of more than 4,500 federal positions to Redstone Arsenal under the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure decision is in September, defense and aerospace companies are expected to expand or locate in the area for years to come, creating another 5,000 jobs to support the work on the arsenal, said Joe Ritch, chairman of the Tennessee Valley BRAC Committee.

Officials predict huge economic impact

SOURCE: thedailysentinel.com Feb 23, 2008

Jackson County could see at least 100 new jobs between now and 2011 with the expansion of the Redstone Arsenal as part of the BRAC 2005 plan, according to officials during the Tennessee Valley Regional Growth Coordination Plan's (TVRGCP) Sub-Regional Visioning meeting held Thursday at First Southern Bank in Scottsboro.

Contract Announcement - Feb 25, 08

ARMY

Lear Siegler Services, Inc., Gaithersburg, Md.

2008 BRAC Update For Huntsville, Alabama

SOURCE: PRWEB February 9, 2008

 

The Base Realignment and Closures (BRAC) relocation of 4700 jobs to the Huntsville Alabama area are on track and scheduled to be complete in 2011. Families moving with the BRAC relocation will find favorable housing costs, low cost of living, and inexpensive property taxes in the Huntsville Alabama real estate market. From a financial point of view, transferees from Washington DC, northern Virginia or Atlanta should find enough relief to make the move worth their while.

 

2005 BRAC Nears Completion at Redstone

Huntsville/Madison County Chamber of Commerce’s “Initiatives” Magazine- After nearly six years of preparation, construction, and recruiting, the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) decision will be completed on September 15, 2011, having moved several military commands and thousands of civilian jobs to Redstone Arsenal.

 

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