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NAVAL WEAPONS STATION SEAL BEACH &. NAVY MUNITIONS COMMAND, CONUS WEST DIVISION. OVERVIEW BRIEFING 25 October 2007. Navy mission Continued relevance to national security Where WPNSTA SB fits in Navy Munitions Command (NMC) CONUS West Div NMC Det Seal Beach
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NAVAL WEAPONS STATION SEAL BEACH & NAVY MUNITIONS COMMAND, CONUS WEST DIVISION OVERVIEW BRIEFING 25 October 2007
Navy mission Continued relevance to national security Where WPNSTA SB fits in Navy Munitions Command (NMC) CONUS West Div NMC Det Seal Beach WPNSTA history, statistics, environment, recreation community support Future plans (stuff you are likely most interested in) The Brief
THE BIG PICTURE - WHERE DO WE FIT? The Navy Mission The United States Navy provides combat-ready naval forces capable of winning wars, deterring aggression, preserving freedom of the seas, and promoting peace and security. Six Strategic Imperatives: Forward presence Deterrence Sea Control Power Projection Maritime Security Humanitarian assistance/disaster response Access and persistent presence!
THE BIG PICTURE - WHERE DO WE FIT? Support for the GWOT • Interdiction of terror suspects both on land and the high seas (e.g. recent shore bombardment into Somalia) • Direct support for coalition forces on the ground in Iraq and Afghanistan (15,000 Sailors on the ground) • Maritime security operations (boarding suspect vessels) • Protection of vital trade and sea lines of communication (presence deters potential adversaries) • Building and strengthening global relationships (Hospital ship ops, international naval cooperation, etc) Operate, fight and win in blue, green and brown water. Expand the reach and lethality of USMC.
THE BIG PICTURE - WHERE DO WE FIT? Pacific Fleet Area of Responsibility WESTERN PACIFIC USS Kitty Hawk CVSG (6 ships) USS Essex ESG (3 ships) 9 additional ships EASTERN PACIFIC 2 CVSG, 3 ESG 50 ships total PERSIAN GULF USS Enterprise CVSG (6 ships) USS Bonhomme Richard ESG (6 ships) 7 additional ships IN TRANSIT USS John C. Stennis CVSG (5 ships) USS Nimitz CVSG (5 ships) 6 additional ships As of August 6, 2007
NAVAL WEAPONS STATION SEAL BEACH Mission Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach and its detachments provide shore-based infrastructure support to the Navy's ordnance mission and other fleet and fleet support activities. • Navy has restructured installation management: • Base Command: Fire, Security, Admin, PAO, Housing, MWR • Naval Facilities Engineering Command: Public Works, Real Estate, and Environmental • Navy Munitions Command: Ordnance Operations
NAVAL WEAPONS STATION SEAL BEACH Installation Detachments • DET CONCORD – Army bulk shipment point for ordnance/mil cargo On BRAC list. • DET CORONA - Home of Naval Surface Warfare Center, Corona. Performs weapons research and evaluation. • DET FALLBROOK - Helicopter loading (VERTREP) of large amphibious assault ships, home of fleet air-launched missile shop.
Regional Explosives Safety Officer NMC CWD Commanding Officer Commanding Officer OICDetachment Corona Director Detachment Fallbrook Director Detachment Concord ExecutiveOfficer NAVAL WEAPONS STATION SEAL BEACH Command Structure NMC CWD Executive Dir/Ordnance Program Manager CMDCM/ SEA Explosives Safety Program Manager IG PAO Public Safety (Fire/Security/ Emergency Mgmt) Community Supt Programs (BQ/Housing/MWR) NAVFAC Facilities/ Environmental Human Resources Command Admin Explosives Safety Occupational Safety Information Technology NMC CWD Detachment Seal Beach & Fallbrook Annex Revised Oct 2007 OPCON & ADCON - ADCON ONLY - OPCON ONLY -
NAVY MUNITIONS COMMAND Command Structure
NAVY MUNITIONS COMMAND, CWD Locations
NAVY MUNITIONS COMMAND, CWD Det Seal Beach Mission Navy Munitions Command, CONUS West Division, Detachment Seal Beach provides ordnance services to Pacific Fleet operating forces. These services include: • Inspection and storage of Navy and USMC ordnance • Wharf-side munitions loading and unloading of Navy surface combatants and medium-deck amphibious assault ships • Maintenance on selected Navy weapons systems
NAVY MUNITIONS COMMAND, CWD Det Seal Beach Mission Details • WE LOAD: • Missiles • Torpedoes • Decoys • Gun ammo (From9mm To 5-inch) • SHIPS VISIT US: • Before and after deployment • When entering / leaving shipyard • WE MAINTAIN: • Standard, Tomahawk Missiles • Lightweight Torpedoes • Fire Control Radars Average Value of Weapons Stored: $1.8 Billion Average Number of Ships Serviced Per Year: 60
NAVAL WEAPONS STATION SEAL BEACH History • FEBRUARY, 1944 - Construction Begins on Seal Beach Naval Ammunition And Net Depot (NAND). • NOVEMBER, 1944 - Seal Beach NAND Opens. • JANUARY, 1954 - First Guided Missile Service Unit. • JULY, 1956 - Dredging of Channel Allows Wharfside Loading of Ships. • SEPTEMBER, 1962 - Depot Name Changed to Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach to reflect mission change. • JUNE, 2006 – Navy Munitions Command Established
NAVAL WEAPONS STATION SEAL BEACH Installation Statistics Land (Acres) 5,000 Magazines 126 Ordnance Storage (Sq. Feet) 589,000 Railroad Track (Miles) 56 Roads (Miles) 80 Wharf (Sq. Yards) 10,252 Locomotives / Railcars 125 Plant Value ($) $770 Million Personnel (Civilian/Military) 600/120
NAVAL WEAPONS STATION SEAL BEACH Environmental Stewardship • Our mission enhances natural resource conservation: • Only National Wildlife Refuge in a five-county area • Largest year-round red-tailed hawk population in the Western US. • Only known burrowing owl population in Orange County • Agricultural outlease program provides $1 million annually for regional Navy environmental programs
NAVAL WEAPONS STATION SEAL BEACH National Wildlife Refuge • Established August 30, 1972 for protection of Least Tern, Clapper Rail. • 911 Acres of (primarily) salt marsh. • Jointly managed by U.S. Navy, Fish and Wildlife Service. • Base working with community, volunteer groups to enhance refuge. • Public tours given last Saturday of every month at 8:30 a.m.
NAVAL WEAPONS STATION SEAL BEACH Environmental Cleanup • AKA The Installation Restoration Program (IRP) • Six Active Cleanup Sites On Station, Out Of 75 Potential Sites • No Sites With Significant Human Risk Concerns • Community Input Through Restoration Advisory Board (RAB) • More Information: http://www.cnic.navy.mil/SealBeach
NAVAL WEAPONS STATION SEAL BEACH Morale, Welfare And Recreation We have few active duty military to support, but we do have a large retired military population RV Resort Navy Golf Course & Clubhouse Other Services Include Gym, Beach House, All-hands Club, Ticket Office
NAVAL WEAPONS STATION SEAL BEACH Support To The Community • Federal Fire Department Mutual Aid Agreement • Local Police Use of Small Arms Range (30+ orgs) • Navy Golf Course Open to the Public • Sailors, Marines provide 1000s of Volunteer Hours • Community Events Hosting • Local Economic Impact ($/Yr) - $~35 Million
FUTURE PLANNING Asset Management • We are focused on improving space allocation and usage • Space management at every installation is key, we have to challenge the requirements and provide the best solutions • Sustainable designs and adaptive re-use are expected • We're engaged in an aggressive, Navy-wide demolition/footprint reduction effort • Goal is to demo/layup 30 msf by 2010 (of 330 msf Navy-wide) • Intent is to right size as quickly as possible – and stay there • We need strategies and processes in place to ensure we have the right facilities in the right places • Nothing missing & nothing extra = efficiency & cost savings
FUTURE PLANNING Base Development • Navy is building Global Shore Infrastructure Plans (GSIPs) • Underwater, Surface, Air, Warehousing, and Training • Will establish Big Navy vision and strategy first, then feed into local master plans • GSIPs to be administered from East Coast; RSIPs to be administered locally • Marine Corps Master Plans • Base specific or geographic/complex specific (mini Master Plans) • Need to know how much we have and how much we need • Internet Navy Facilities Assets Database is the key data source • Basic Facility Requirements (BFR)s; Engineering Evaluations (EEs); Geo Spatial Information & Systems (GI&S)
FUTURE PLANNING Base Development • Navy & Marine Corps always have a need for various studies and project documentation • Siting; Anti-Terrorism; Noise; Traffic/parking; Installation Appearance Plans; other misc. studies • Project documentation (DD 1391s) • Encroachment Studies: • Assessments of “encroachment” threats to military bases, ranges and military air training routes • May lead to “Encroachment Partnering” • Contracts: • NAVFAC SW has 2 ongoing local 5- year $7.5 M IDIQ Planning contracts • “Large” IDIQ Planning contracts administered from East Coast (GSIPs, GI&S, BFRs)
FUTURE PLANNING Real Estate Enhanced Use Leasing (EUL) - Projects leverage private developer expertise and debt placement for construction, repair, improvements, and maintenance services in exchange for entitlements to Navy Real Estate. Public Private Venture (PPV)–A mutually beneficial business partnership formed between a private company and the Navy that utilizes private sector resources to finance, construct, own, operate, and maintain military housing • Navy and Marine Corps Housing • Bachelor Quarters
FUTURE PLANNING Construction • NAVFAC SW construction program is rapidly rising. Major acquisition actions in include: • Marine Corps Barracks Recapitalization (FY08-11, 42 proj, $1.4B) • Marine Corps Grow the Force Initiative (FY07-11, 50+ proj, $1B+) • Base Realignment and Closure Construction (FY07-10, 31 proj, $325M) • Air Force C-17 Program at Travis (FY06-08, 9 proj, $116M) • DLA Fuel Farm at Pt Loma (FY08, 1 proj, $140M) • CVN Homeporting at Coronado (FY09, 1 proj, $37M) • Naval Coastal Warfare Expansion (FY05-09, 5 proj, $50M) • Marine Special Ops Command Establishment (FY06-08, 6 proj, $87M)
Future Planning Environmental Funding (NAVFAC SW) • BRAC Env - $207.0M - $14.5M for Seal Beach Area next 5 years (Tustin, El Toro, Long Beach, Concord) • Restoration/cleanup (IR)- $76.5M- $21.2M for Seal Beach/Fallbrook next 5 years • Compliance - $14.8M- $3.1M for Seal Beach/Fallbrook next 5 years • Env Planning - $15.6M- $1.5M for Seal Beach Area next 5 years
NAVAL WEAPONS STATION SEAL BEACH Contracting Opportunities • Sandra Craft (Small Business Coord) • Phone: 562-626-6110 • Email: sandra.craft@navy.mil • Gwen Lavender (Contracting Officer) • Phone: 562-626-7967 • Email: gwendolyne.lavender@navy.mil • LCDR Kevin Norton (PWO) • Phone: 562-626-7528 • Email: kevin.m.norton@navy.mil