Aerospace and defense news from Central-to-North Mississippi and Central Louisiana region.
Tuesday, December 25, 2018
Shutdown issues darken WH tree
Partial government shutdown complications will ensure the National Christmas Tree stays dark this holiday after a man climbed up in it, and damaged some of the lights, according to NBC4 TV in Washington. The tree is located on the Ellipse just south of the White House. U.S. Park Police had to negotiate with the unidentified man to get him down. The National Park Service announced over the weekend that the tree would stay dark during the holiday, and according to The Hill, because the shutdown has “complicated” its repair. The man was taken to a hospital for psychiatric evaluation, media reported. (Source: Time 12/23/18)
'Hacking for Defense' at USM
University of Southern Mississippi professors Henry Jones and Daniel DeMott, along with mentors from the Defense Department, Homeland Security, and intelligence community, will show USM students how to innovate solutions quickly for national security issues as part of the course “Hacking for Defense (H4D),” which will be taught this summer. USM will be the only school in the Southeast, and one of a handful in the nation, to offer H4D. Jones and DeMott, VP of research at the office of technology development, will teach graduate and undergraduates how to combine the processes, developed on battlefields, with the Lean LaunchPad Methodology. LaunchPad was developed by experts at Stanford and in Silicon Valley of California, Jones told Hattiesburg Business Today. Study topics may include the use of facial recognition in crowds, defeating small unmanned aircraft systems, sensor-to-cloud encryption, and wearable sensors and apps for Navy divers. (Source: Hattiesburg Business Today 12/2018)
Research prof shuts down GTRA
LOWNDES COUNTY, Miss. - A package left on purpose, by an unidentified Mississippi State University research professor, causes the Golden Triangle Regional Airport, to temporarily shutdown. The incident happened at 4:45 on Christmas Eve morning. After investigating, authorities learned the package was left inside the terminal, as part of a study by the MSU professor. The professor was interviewed by Lowndes County Investigators. No charges have been filed. MSU later released a state: ”Mississippi State University regrets any public inconvenience caused by this action on the part of our researcher seeking ambient air samples for public health research. We appreciate (GTRA’s) finding that this was an honest procedural mistake and not a crime.” The abandoned package was found in the upstairs terminal. The terminal was evacuated, and Airport Road blocked off. Lowndes County sheriff’s deputies located the box, and determined it was harmless. The item was placed in the terminal without GTRA’s permission. One flight was delayed. Operations returned to normal by 8:15 a.m. (Source: WTVA 12/24/18)
Sunday, December 23, 2018
No shutdown for NORAD Santas
DENVER – Despite a partial government shutdown, kids will still be able to call in to the NORAD Tracks Santa toll-free telephone number on Christmas Eve. Hundreds of volunteers dressed in Christmas hats and military uniforms will be on duty Dec. 24 to receive children’s calls from around the world who want to know when Santa will be arriving. NORAD Tracks Santa is based out of Peterson AFB, Colo., and funded by DoD’s budget that was approved earlier this year. The call-in line is now in its 63rd year. The tradition came about after a mistaken phone call to the Continental Air Defense Command in Colorado Springs in 1955. CONAD, as it was known then, monitored a far-flung radar network looking for signs of a nuclear attack on the U.S. A Colorado newspaper ran an ad inviting kids to call Santa, but mistakenly listed CONAD’s phones as the hotline number. Some 1,500 civilian/military volunteers answer the phone calls from kids at its 1-877-HI-NORAD number, which infuses the holiday with childlike wonder. "They're all really sweet, small voices," said Madison Hill, a volunteer who helped answer the phones over the past two previous years. (Source: The AP 12/23/18) Golden Triangle Note: Happy holidays Mississippi!
Mattis leaving early, interim named
WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump announced Dec. 23 that Defense Secretary Jim Mattis will leave his post on Jan. 1. Trump named Mattis’ early departure in a tweet, and named Deputy Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan as acting SECDEF. The move comes three days after Mattis resigned in protest over Trump’s decision to pull all U.S. troops out of Syria. Mattis originally said he would stay through February. (Source: The AP 12/23/18) Shanahan’s official DoD biography does not show any military service.
Saturday, December 22, 2018
Friday, December 21, 2018
Peak inside NOLA’s $1B terminal
New Orleans' new $1B airport terminal is entering its final months of construction with most of the work shifting to its interior. The terminal is set to open in May 2019, and was roughly 90 percent complete heading into early December, according to a team overseeing construction. On a NOLA.com tour Dec. 19, the facility was bustling with some thousand workers putting up drywall, wiring security stations, and working from lifts to fine-tune thousands of feet of baggage belts. Airport officials have released construction-progress photos of the 35-gate terminal throughout 2018. In walking the facility for the first time, it’s a striking experience. The scale is enormous with soaring ceilings, massive skylights, and a consolidated security checkpoint area the size of a football field. (Source: NOLA.com 12/21/18)
FAA seeks DAC candidates
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has posted a notice in the Federal Register soliciting qualified candidates to serve on the Drone Advisory Committee (DAC). The committee provides an open venue for the FAA and stakeholders to identify and recommend consensus-based resolutions for issues related to integration of unmanned aircraft (UAS) into the National Airspace System. (Source: Just Helicopters 12/20/18) The FAA must receive nomination packages no later than 5 a.m. CST on Jan. 9, 2019.
AHI delivers H145 to SoCal Air
COLUMBUS, Miss. - Airbus Helicopters Inc. (AHI) delivered a twin-engine H145 helicopter to SoCal Air Services, a venture recently launched by Fred Luddy, founder of ServiceNow, a cloud computing company that Forbes magazine declared: “The World’s Most Innovative Company of 2018”. “We are extremely excited to begin flying our new H145,” said Lundy, and was “immediately drawn to (it) at the Heli Expo trade show in Las Vegas,” he continued. What impressed SoCal about the H145 was its large cabin capacity, high performance, safety features, stylish design, and configuration versatility, all of which make it an invaluable asset to build its business. The H145 was delivered out of AHI’s industrial facilities in Columbus, Miss., and will serve as the lead rotorcraft for SoCal Air Services out of Carlsbad, Calif. The company will operate the helicopter for charter flights, movie work, real estate operations and to support Luddy’s other business interests, including the World Team Tennis League, a sports property he owns with Billie Jean King. (Source: Just Helicopters 12/20/18)
T-45 engine work at NASM
Rolls-Royce Corp. of Indianapolis, Ind., is awarded a $218,747,254 firm-fixed-price undefinitized contract action to provide intermediate and depot level maintenance and related logistics support for in-service T-45 F405-RR-401 Adour engines. Work will be performed at NAS Meridian, Miss. (44%); NAS Kingsville, Texas (44%); NAS Pensacola, Fla. (11%); and NAS Patuxent River, Md. (1%), and is expected to be completed in December 2019. No funds will be obligated at the time of award. Funds will be obligated on individual orders as they are issued. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S. Code 2304(c)(1). The Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division, Orlando, Fla., is the contracting activity (N61340-19-D-0004). (Source: DoD, 12/20/18)
EPA grants: Drop diesel emissions
DALLAS – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced Dec. 21 the availability of grant funding to implement projects aimed at reducing emissions from the nation’s existing fleet of older diesel engines. EPA anticipates awarding about $40M in Diesel Emission Reduction Program (DERA) grant funding to eligible applicants in EPA’s Region 6, including Louisiana, subject to the availability of funds. EPA’s Region 4 applicants from Alabama, Florida, and Mississippi may also make proposals requesting up to $2M in grant funds. Supporting projects that upgrade aging diesel engines, EPA is offering financial assistance to improve efficiency and reduce air pollution throughout the nation, according to EPA Acting Administrator Andrew Wheeler. Diesel-powered engines move about 90 percent of the nation’s freight tonnage, and nearly all freight trucks, locomotives, and commercial marine vessels are powered by diesel engines. (Source: EPA 12/21/18)
Thursday, December 20, 2018
L-3 Vertex contract: $35M
L-3 Communications Vertex Aerospace of Madison, Miss., has been awarded an estimated $35,000,000 firm-fixed-price, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity modification (P00015) to contract (FA8106-17-D-0001) for logistic support of the Air Force C-12 fleet. Work will be performed in Madison; San Angelo, Texas; Okmulgee, Okla.; Buenos Aries and Brasilia, Argentina; Gaborone, Botswana; Bogota, Columbia; Cairo, Egypt; Accra, Ghana; Tegucigalpa, Honduras; Budapest, Hungary; Joint Base Andrews, Md.; Nairobi, Kenya, Rabat, Morocco; Manila, Philippines; Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; Bangkok, Thailand; Ankara, Turkey; Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.; Holloman AFB, N.M.; Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska; and Yokota Air Base, Japan. Work is expected to be completed by Dec. 31, 2019. The estimated cumulative face value of the contract is $70,000,000. Air Force Life Cycle Management Center, Tinker Air Force Base, Okla., is the contracting activity. (DoD 12/19/18)
New inspection for MS nuke plant
There was another unplanned outage at Mississippi’s Grand Gulf nuclear power plant that is giving concerns to federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission regulators over reliability problems at the largest single-unit nuclear power plant in the U.S. The outage is heightening scrutiny over whether problems at Entergy Corp.’s plant may be affecting power markets across the southeast. Operators took the Port Gibson, Miss., area plant offline last week, citing problems with a turbine bypass valve. The Dec. 12 outage came to light Dec. 18 when the NRC announced a special inspection. In November, the NRC wrote a notification letter to Entergy downgrading its safety rating from the safest of four levels to white, the second safest. The letter cited a number of equipment failures, which has led to the supplemental inspection to explore the root causes of the problems. The latest outage was at least the sixth unplanned decrease in output at the plant over the past 15 months, according to NRC documents. Grand Gulf took a nearly six-month outage in 2016-17 aimed at improving performance because it did not, in the words of Chief Nuclear Officer Chris Bakken, “meet our standards of excellence.” Grand Gulf, which began in 1985, is 90 percent owned by Entergy and 10 percent owned by Cooperative Energy, a Mississippi group that supplies power to cooperatives. Entergy’s subsidiaries in Mississippi, Arkansas, New Orleans, and elsewhere in Louisiana have contracts to buy power from the plant. (Source: Mississippi Business Journal 12/19/18)
MDA offering site program grants
JACKSON, Miss. - Economic development groups and local governments can now apply for site development grants under the Ready Site/Premier Site Program(s) administered by the Mississippi Development Authority (MDA). Ready Site/Premier Site is designed to assist public or private non-profit economic development organizations or governments with preparing site-ready locations to attract business development and private capital investment to the state. These grants can be used for improvements to publicly owned industrial property. The grants require a minimum 50 percent match from other sources. Ready Site must have a minimum of 20 acres available for development and that can be site-work ready in six months or have utilities in 12 months. Ready Site grants are available up to $50,000. Premier Site must have a minimum of 100 acres with a labor force able to attract the intended market. A workforce study is required. Premier Site grants are available up to $250,000. MDA will give priority to sites served by railways or with airport or port access. (Source: MDA 12/18/18)
Wednesday, December 19, 2018
Wicker's ocean tech development
U.S. Senator Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) praised the Senate’s passage of his “Commercial Engagement through Ocean Technology (CENOTE) Act” legislation. The bipartisan legislation – introduced with Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii); and Rep. Steven Palazzo (R-Miss.) and Rep. Jimmy Panetta (D-Calif.) companion legislation in the House of Representatives – will advance the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) use of unmanned maritime systems; encourage private sector research and development; and ensure marine data is made available for academic, national security, and commercial interests. The legislation passed the House last week. “Unmanned maritime systems are revolutionizing the way we explore our nation’s oceans,” Wicker said in a media release. This legislation will provide a “much-needed boost to NOAA’s efforts to harness the capabilities of this technology by leveraging the Navy’s expertise.” Unmanned maritime systems are remotely piloted or autonomous vehicles that collect ocean data. The Navy has already committed significant resources towards advancing unmanned systems for national security. NOAA will work with the Navy to bring unmanned systems data collection techniques to the civilian side. Mississippi’s Gulf Coast “Blue Economy” also stands to benefit from increased investment in ocean technology. The coast is “one of the few places in the United States where extensive testing of unmanned maritime systems occurs, according to Wicker. The University of Southern Mississippi and Mississippi State University are excelling in unmanned systems research and both operate on the Gulf Coast. (Source: U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker 12/18/18)
CAFB reps learn about AFWERX
AUSTIN, Texas - Air Force personnel gathered in Austin Dec. 13-14 for a Spark Cell workshop to learn about the Defense Department’s innovation ecosystem, and best ways to design and grow the overall culture of innovation throughout the services. Spark Cell, hosted by the AFWERX-Austin hub team, was designed to help grow the network of willing collaborators and share ideas and approaches that foster a results-driven culture of innovation, and the ability to solve some of the AF’s toughest challenges. AFWERX was envisioned by Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson. “Every Airman has the opportunity to shape the future force and help us maintain our competitive advantage over our adversaries,” said Maj. Tony Perez, AFWERX Spark director. The workshop included classes on innovation fundamentals, tools, team-building, and using Spark Cell lessons learned case studies. Representatives from across Air Education and Training Command (AETC) attended the workshop, including a Spark Cell director from Columbus AFB, Miss. Attendees used the workshop as a “way to tighten our communications and work directly with AFWERX and Pilot Training Next in order to move forward as a team on specific projects and requirements,” said Maj. Ryan Brewer of the Columbus-based 14th Flying Training Wing. Experiencing AFWERX collaboration efforts with industry and learning about contracting and acquisition processes was critical learning of the workshop. (Source: Air Education and Training Command 12/18/18)
Tuesday, December 18, 2018
More T-Birds’ Biloxi show info
The Air Force's Thunderbirds demonstration team will perform over the Mississippi Sound in F-16 Fighting Falcons over a beachfront “stadium” after smaller air shows with precision performances take place at Keesler Air Force Base on May 4-5. Officials announced addition details and performances for “Thunder Over The Sound” air show on Dec. 18. It will be the Thunderbirds’ first show over Biloxi in four years. (Source: Sun Herald 12/18/18)
Foreign military training at Stennis
HANCOCK COUNTY, Miss. – The average Pearl River fisherman would probably be surprised by a team of tactically dressed military in fully-armed boats cruising by in the pre-dawn hours. But regulars are likely used to it. Stennis Space Center is on the east bank of the Pearl, north of I-10 on 200 square miles of land. Most of it is reserved as a buffer zone for NASA, but more there than meets the eye. About 70 percent of Stennis’ tenants are Navy, from a military-technology creating research lab to the Naval Small Craft Instruction and Technical Training School (NAVSCIATTS) where some 600 foreign military personnel train annually, command spokesperson Angela Fry told the Sun Herald. The Security Cooperation schoolhouse is operated under the U.S. Special Operations Command in south Florida. It’s a Defense Department program that provides technical support, financial support, and training to 120 allied nations’ military personnel fighting terrorism back home. (Source: Sun Herald 12/17/18)
MSU nat'l leader in research
STARKVILLE, Miss. - A recent review of U.S. higher education affirms Mississippi State University’s status as one of the nation’s leading research institutions. The Carnegie Foundation released an update Dec. 17 of the influential Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education and Mississippi State is designated as a “Very High Research Activity” doctoral university. This classification represents the highest level of research activity for doctorate-granting universities in the country. MSU is one of only 120 schools to achieve the distinction. MSU also holds the Carnegie community engagement classification. MSU joins universities such as Stanford, MIT, Duke and Johns Hopkins in the very high research activity tier. In addition to its Carnegie classification, MSU is the highest ranked university in the state in the recently released National Science Foundation Higher Education Research and Development Survey for FY 2017; and ranked 64th nationally. Three Bagley College of Engineering disciplines were rated in the top 50: Industrial (33rd), Mechanical (25th) and Aerospace (33rd). The Raspet Flight Research Laboratory has led discovery and innovation in manned flight since 1948. (Source: MSU 12/17/18)
Thursday, December 13, 2018
NO, Gulfport naval aircraft support
The Boeing Co. of St. Louis, Mo., is awarded a $92,361,661 not-to-exceed firm-fixed-price, cost-plus-fixed-fee contract for Phase 1 integrated logistics support for 22 F/A-18E and 6 F/A-18F Super Hornet aircraft in support of the government of Kuwait under the Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program. Work will be performed in St. Louis (85 percent); Fort Walton Beach, Fla. (8 percent); New Orleans (5.5 percent); China Lake, Calif. (.50 percent); Patuxent River, Md. (.50 percent); and Gulfport, Miss. (.50 percent), and is expected to be completed in December 2020. FMS funds in the amount of $38,792,947 will be obligated at time of award, none of which will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. The contract was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S. Code. 2304(c)(1). Naval Air Systems Command of Patuxent River, Md., is the contracting activity. (Source: DoD 12/13/18)
Vertex: Prime seat for SeaPort NxG
MADISON, Miss. - Vertex Aerospace of Madison,
Miss., has been awarded a Prime seat in the Navy's SeaPort Next Generation award
contract vehicle. This portal is designed to provide
an efficient means of
soliciting offers from thousands of multiple award contract (MAC) holders - large and small businesses and pre-approved
team members. SeaPort-NxG
awards were issued to a limited number of businesses. Bids for awards were
evaluated based on the bidding companies' past naval contracts and the technical
aspects of submitted proposals. Vertex currently provides commercial air
services, maintenance, and supply-chain support to six Navy contracts, several
of which the global aerospace company has supported for over 20 years,
including logistics support services for Navy T-34, T-44, C-9, and E-6B programs
at locations such as NAS Pensacola and Whiting Field, Fla. Vertex’s selection will
allow the Mississippi firm to compete for future naval support service
opportunities valued at $5B annually. The Navy will begin using
SeaPort-NxG MACs to award task orders for services in 2019. (Source:
Vertex
Aerospace 12/12/18) Vertex Aerospace is a global aerospace company with
about $1.4B in 2017 sales. Vertex Aerospace is a global aerospace company with
about $1.4B in 2017 sales. The firm employs over 4,200 people in over
100 operating locations world-wide.
Wednesday, December 12, 2018
Garmin earns top AHI supply award
Garmin International of Olathe, Kan., received the 2018 Supplier of Excellence Award by Airbus Helicopters Inc. at AHI's North American Supplier Conference in Texas. Garmin was recognized for its responsiveness and competitiveness in support of the Army’s UH-72A Lakota helicopter program, and for its overall support at the AHI facility in Columbus, Miss. Garmin’s support of equipping these helicopters with its avionics that support flight training, surveillance and reconnaissance, medical evacuations, border security, VIP transport, and disaster response. In all, more than 430 Lakota’s have been delivered to the Army. (Source: Garmin 12/04/18)
Tuesday, December 11, 2018
Gulf Coast Defense Forum event
KEESLER AFB, Miss. - Leaders from Keesler Air Force Base participated here at the Mississippi Gulf Coast Defense Forum on Dec. 3-4. The event connected Defense Department and state leadership to bring key decision-makers to show DoD’s assets, facilitate communication between military bases with their associated community leaders. The forum highlighted issues of mutual concern, addressed gaps in military value and quality of life, and educated key stakeholders on state-wide defense missions. Some 130 people attended the event, including Richard Hartley, Air Force Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Installations, Environment, and Energy; and Phyllis Bayer, Naval Assistant Secretary, Installations, Energy, and Environment; along with keynote messages from U.S. Rep. Steven Palazzo (R-Miss.) and Gov. Phil Bryant. The forum was a product of the Association of Defense Communities, an organization focused on advancing community-military partnerships. (Source: 81st Training Wing 12/07/18)
Harrison-Navy sign first IGSA
GULFPORT, Miss. - Naval Construction Battalion Center (NCBC) Gulfport and Harrison County, Miss., met at the county courthouse Dec. 3 to sign an intergovernmental support agreement (IGSA) that is a first of its kind for a Navy base and a local government in the Navy’s southeast region. The IGSA focuses on Mosquito Surveillance and Abatement Services, which will enable NCBC to purchase mosquito surveillance services from the county at a pre-determined price and on an as-needed basis. The staff at Naval Branch Health Clinic Gulfport normally performs mosquito surveillance on base to get an idea of the mosquito population in order to determine when mosquito spraying should be performed. The IGSA gives the base a backup capability during times when clinic staffing levels make surveillance a challenge, according to Kevin Gillam, NCBC Gulfport community planning and liaison officer. The intent is to save money on both sides. NCBC Gulfport has agreements with the city and county regarding Fire and Emergency Response Mutual Aid Agreements (MAA), but this is the first IGSA to be approved in the Navy's southeast region. (Source: NCBC Gulfport 12/11/18)
NASWF’s Hein is SE sailor of year
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - Air Traffic Controller 1st Class Michael Hein from Naval Air Station Whiting Field, Fla., was named Navy Region Southeast Sailor of the Year. Six sailors from across the southeast, including Navy Counselor 1st Class Sarah Prather of Naval Air Station/Joint Reserve Base New Orleans, were the final nominees for the award across CNRSE’s 18 installations. “[These] Sailors represent the very best of the best throughout the region, and are to be commended for their sustained superior performance," said Rear Adm. Bette Bolivar, CNRSE. Hein served as chief of Whiting’s Flight Planning branch. He supervised his 24-member team in the filing and processing of over 49,000 aircraft flight plans. As leading petty officer, the team managed 165,826 mishap-free flight operations, and 7,000-plus ground controlled approaches. Hein also devoted personal time to deliver meals to families affected by Hurricane Michael, worked with Meals on Wheels, and helped place animals for adoption from the Escambia County Animal Shelter. The six nominees will make up a working group charged with devising policy and processes to drastically eliminate destructive behaviors like suicide, sexual assault, domestic violence and alcohol related incidents. The group will offer their ideas in the spring. Hein will now compete for the Commander Naval Installations Command Sailor of the Year, which recognizes the top sailor across all shore installations in the Navy. (Source: CNRSE 12/11/18)
Monday, December 10, 2018
Sailor returns home after 77 years
Seventy-seven years to the day, a Mississippi sailor was returned home for a proper burial. Calhoun County, Miss., native Aviation Machinist’s Mate 2nd Class Durell Wade was one of 429 sailors killed aboard the battleship USS Oklahoma during the Dec. 7, 1941, sneak attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. He was buried with full military honors at North Mississippi Veterans Memorial Cemetery in Kilmichael on Dec. 7. Among attendees was Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant, several of Wade’s family members, retired and current military personnel and representatives from Naval Air Station Meridian. A funeral detail from NASM also participated in the ceremony. Wade’s remains were positively identified through improvements in DNA identification technology. The technology used is known as mitochondrial and Y-chromosome analysis. The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) used this scientific analysis, along with dental, anthropological and circumstantial evidence to confirm the identities of USS Oklahoma sailors. Among attendees were Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant, several of Wade’s family members, retired and current military personnel and representatives from Naval Air Station Meridian. A funeral detail from NASM also participated in the ceremony. Cmdr. J.P. Falardeau, executive officer of NAS Meridian, spoke to the importance of the event and the greater importance of remembering the attack on Pearl Harbor. “It’s a very humbling experience to be a part of something as truly impressive and meaningful as bringing home a sailor from that infamous day in 1941.” (Source: Starkville Daily News 12/10/18)
Santa arrives at CAFB via T-1A
COLUMBUS AFB, Miss. – Santa Claus and three of his elves made a pre-holiday stopover at Columbus Air Force Base on Dec. 4 for the base’s official lighting of both the Christmas Tree and Menorah. Claus’ entourage arrived via a 14th Flying Training Wing T-1A Jayhawk. The Caledonia (Miss.) High School Choir performed Christmas carols. “This time of year provides amazing opportunities to invest our time connecting with others,” said Wing Commander, Col. Samantha Week. She encouraged participants “to invest with your kids and family … friends and wingmen … (and) “take advantage of every spare moment as it’s a gift.” (Source: Columbus AFB 12/10/18)
Saturday, December 8, 2018
L3 mod contract: $21.8M
L3 Communications Vertex Aerospace of Madison, Miss., was awarded a $21,845,138 modification (P00035) to a previously awarded firm-fixed-price, cost-reimbursable, labor hour, indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contract (N00019-13-D-0007). This modification increases the ceiling and extends the period of performance to provide contractor logistics services and materials for organizational and depot-level services required to support and maintain the TH-57 fleet. Work will be performed in at NAS Whiting Field in Milton, Fla., and is expected to be completed in January 2019. No funds will be obligated at time of award. Funds will be obligated on individual task orders as they are issued. Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division of Orlando, Fla., is the contracting activity. (Source: DoD, 12/06/18)
MSU breaks ground on complex
STARKVILLE, Miss. - Construction on the Richard A. Rula Engineering and Science Complex at Mississippi State University is officially underway after a Dec. 7 groundbreaking ceremony. The new project will provide state-of-the-art facilities for MSU’s James Worth Bagley College of Engineering. The 70,000-square-foot facility will house the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. The $34M building is named after MSU 2019 National Alumnus of the Year Richard A. Rula, an education advocate and leader in the construction industry. The dedicated research and teaching labs will support the department’s technical strengths in the areas of construction, environmental, geotechnical, materials, structural, transportation and water resources engineering. MSU’s Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering graduates professionals who help create and maintain the systems that raise the standard of living, such as clean water, safe roads, proper sanitation and quality buildings. Jackson-based Eley Guild Hardy Architects designed the building. Columbus-based West Brothers Construction is the general contractor. (Source: Mississippi State University 12/07/18)
Friday, December 7, 2018
NASM salutes former Navy OL
In honor of the Dec. 8 Army/Navy football game, NAS Meridian, Miss., salutes one of its own: Lt. Kyle Widhalm, a Naval Academy graduate who played for the Midshipmen as an offensive lineman from 2008-10! GO NAVY!! BEAT ARMY!! (Source: NAS Meridian 12/05/18)
New prez for EMCC
SCOOBA, Miss. - East Mississippi Community College announced Dec. 5 that Scott Alsobrooks will take over duties as president early next year. Alsobrooks has been VP of economic and community development at Pearl River (Miss.) Community College since 2011. He was workforce education director at PRCC for six years before that, previously working at the University of Southern Mississippi. He holds a bachelor's degree in engineering from Mississippi State University and a master's and doctorate from the USM. (Source: The AP 12/05/18)
Thursday, December 6, 2018
Lockheed-Meridian Flight Sim Tech
The Army TADSS Maintenance Program (ATMP) is a seven-year Single Award ID/IQ contract for maintenance, sustainment, operations, and support of Army Training Aids, Devices, Simulators, and Simulations (TADSS), Live-Fire Ranges, and Instrumentation Systems. The ATMP portfolio includes 250,000 live, virtual, constructive, and gaming TADSS located at 422 sites worldwide. The primary customer is PEO STRI in Orlando, FL. PEO STRI’s published vision for ATMP is integrated, one-stop, world-wide maintenance and sustainment for Army Program of Record (POR) TADSS. Lockheed-Martin is advertising for a Flight Simulator Tech III, whose duties would be to repairs electronics in the CH-47F Transportable Flight Proficiency Trainer (TFPS) in Meridian, Miss. The CH-47F TFPS models a realistic flight environment and provides proficiency training of pilots and instructor pilots. (Source: Lockheed-Martin 12/2018)
Crash near Itta Bena preventable
WASHINGTON - Military investigators have concluded that the July 2017 crash of a Marine C-130 transport plane near Itta Bena in the western portion of Leflore County, Miss., was caused by mistakes made six years ago, according to some members of the families of the 16 service members killed. The military has briefed family members. "It kills me inside because my children could still have their dad. I could still have my husband," Ashley Kundrat told CBS News. CBS News spoke to her just after briefers from the Marine Corps told her what caused the crash that killed her husband, Staff Sgt. William Kundrat, and 15 others. The plane was flying at 20,000 feet when a blade on the left inboard propeller flew off and sliced through the fuselage. It caused major structural stress that the right inboard propeller came off and spun into the fuselage. The cockpit was severed from the plane followed moments later by the fuselage. The investigation found tiny pits of corrosion that over time had become a crack that caused the first blade to fail. "We tracked this back when it went through rework around 2011 and it was not detected," said air wing commander Brig. Gen. Bradley James. In 2011, the propeller had undergone a scheduled overhaul at this maintenance center at Robins AFB, Ga. Procedures, if “properly done should have detected that corrosion in 2011," said Brig. Gen. Kohn Kubinec, the current airwing commander. "The corrosion should have been detected. Why it wasn't, we don't know." (Source: CBS News 2/05/18)
Wednesday, December 5, 2018
Spain's new hypoxia-coping system
PARIS – Spanish companies have unveiled a new system for simulating low-oxygen conditions that air force pilots may experience in flight. The technology, made by Indra, one of Spain’s technology companies, and iAltitude, another Spanish firm specializing in high-altitude sports training, is a proposal to cope with the symptoms of hypoxia, which can cause pilots to fall unconscious in mid-flight. Spanish air force pilots have a backup oxygen mask in case oxygen levels drop too low, but if that too fails, pilots have to be able to identify symptoms that precede hypoxia, which can cause loss of consciousness, according to Indra. This new system, which the company claims is “the first of its kind in the world,” consists of normobaric hypoxia equipment made by iAltitude of which Indra has integrated into simulators for the C101 Spanish Air Force training jet at the Madrid-based Aerospace Medicine Training Center. The system regulates oxygen through pilots’ masks, reducing it a little at a time, and recording data to be used by the center to design programs to alert pilots to pre-hypoxia symptoms. Training in hypoxia has mainly been performed in hypobaric and normobaric chambers, but cannot be undertaken simultaneously with flight tasks. The new system means hypoxia tests are now integrated with flight training, while the capabilities of pilots to complete procedures in low-oxygen conditions is continuously evaluated. (Source: Defense News 12/04/18) Gulf Coast Note: U.S. Air Force, Marine and Navy pilots have experienced hypoxia-like symptoms in flight in F-35, F/A-18 Hornets, and T-6 trainer aircraft flown at both NAS Meridian, Miss., and Pensacola, Fla.
Tuesday, December 4, 2018
Last ‘CAVU’ favor from Prez 41
Vice President Mike Pence recalled Dec. 3 how he had asked a final favor from an ailing President George H.W. Bush in August on behalf of his son, Marine 1st Lt. Michael Pence - never expecting that the former president would be able to comply. The younger Pence had just made his first tailhook carrier landing on the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush earning his Wings of Gold as a Marine pilot - after graduation from Naval Air Station Meridian, Miss. The favor: Would the former president autograph a photo for his son? Bush's staff replied, he no longer signs autographs. But within a week, a handwritten letter and a signed photo from Bush arrived in Washington, D.C. "Congratulations on receiving your wings of gold," Bush wrote to Pence's son. "Though we have not met, I wish you many days of CAVU ahead" - a reference to the Navy acronym meaning "Ceiling and Visibility Unlimited" that he adopted as his motto for public service. Pence told the story, upon the arrival of Bush's casket at the Capitol Rotunda, as an example to the former president's basic decency and humility. Bush performed a final public service in the form of a brief respite from partisan politics among factions in Congress and the White House. President Donald Trump and Congress were nearing a tentative agreement to put off a battle on the budget and funding for the border wall until, at least, next week, avoiding a partial government shutdown Dec. 7. (Source: Military.com 012/04/18)
Miss. Superfund public meetings
ATLANTA - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing public meetings on Superfund Sites in Columbus and Grenada, Miss. For Columbus, a cleanup plan to address contaminated soil at the Kerr-McGee Chemical Corporation Superfund Site. The cleanup described in the plan is underway through a voluntary agreement with oversight from EPA and the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ). The cleanup will prepare about 20 acres of the site for reuse as early as next year. EPA will hold a public meeting to present the proposed plan and answer questions about the ongoing cleanup on Dec. 13, from 6-8 p.m., at the Genesis Dream Center in Columbus. EPA is also soliciting public comments on the plan for 30-days beginning on Dec. 7 and ending Jan. 6, 2019. (Source: EPA 12/04/18) Separately, between Jan. 7-17, the EPA will conduct soil and groundwater sampling at residential yards in the southern portion of the Eastern Heights neighborhood associated with the cleanup of the Rockwell Grenada (Miss.) Superfund Site. Prior to sampling, EPA will host two community information sessions on Dec. 13 for residents to learn more about the action. The same information will be presented at both sessions, 9-11 a.m. and 6-8 p.m. at the Grenada City Auditorium. In January, drill rigs will be used to sample soil and groundwater from the ground surface down to the bottom of the first groundwater zone. Using electrical and water-based signals at each location, the drill rigs collect data continuously underground to determine how much contamination is present and where. This information will assist the EPA in determining future cleanup actions. (Source: EPA 12/04/18)
Monday, December 3, 2018
‘Hackin’ the Mish' at CAFB
COLUMBUS AFB, Miss. - Columbus Air Force Base (CAFB) will be hosting "Fight’s On: Airmen Hackin’ the Mish" professional development day for personnel and civilians of the 14th Flying Training Wing on Dec. 7. The event is designed to connect personnel with one another by learning about fellow airmen’s combat missions and experiences in today’s AF, and to help understand how CAFB contributes to those missions. Various career field representatives, including tactical air control, security forces, combat weather, pilots and explosive ordnance disposal, will be speaking. “We selected battlefield airmen … because they are enlisted, non-flyers who have been in combat and can connect with our airmen through their experiences,” said Maj. Thomas Hyde, 14th Flying Training Wing’s Commander’s Action Group chief. Pilots were selected because they can connect to CAFB student-pilots through their flying experiences. The event will be from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Columbus Club and is open to all 14th FTW officers, enlisted and civilians. Questions about the event, please contact the Commander’s Action Group at (662) 434-1410. (Source: 14th Flying Training Wing 11/30/18)
NavMed worries over future cuts
The Navy’s push for a more lethal force, and a 355-ship fleet, could be re-invested from reductions to the service’s medical professionals, USNI News reports after viewing command guidance from the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. BUMED “expects” that a Pentagon plan will reduce the military medical personnel across all services, possibly as early as FY 2020, according to the guidance. The guidance explains that Defense Department (DoD) officials are considering military medical reductions as part of its Program Objective Memorandum (POM) 2020. Each service is to manage their own reductions. “We expect many of the billet cuts” to Navy Medicine (NavMed) and to be “re-invested in other Navy priorities and communities that increase lethality,” the guidance stated. The number of billet cuts being consideration is not known. NavMed has about 63,000 personnel around the world to active duty sailors and Marines, their families and veterans, according to the Navy. The potential of NavMed cuts comes at a time that ‘Big Navy’ leadership is talking about growing the force. Through FY-18, the Navy had 329,851 active duty personnel, according to DoD. It is authorized to have 335,400. The Navy is planning to expand its surface force to 355 ships, which will call for more sailors. “This is what the POM process is for – to review all accounts in determining the best balance of investments,” Navy spokesperson Lt. Lauren Chatmas told USNI News. NavMed leaders expect that potential funding cuts will reduce medical staff capabilities – like expeditionary medical facilities, Graduate Medical Education, and medical training programs – and the scope of services available at facilities, ashore and afloat, across the service, according to the guidance. NavMed plans to fight over those GME and medical training programs. The Navy is months away from finalizing its contribution to DoD’s POM-20. (Source: USNI News 11/30/18) Gulf Coast Note: Regional NavMed facilities include Naval Hospital Pensacola, Fla., and its branch clinics at Meridian and Gulfport, Miss.; New Orleans; Pensacola, Milton, and Panama City, Fla. NHP's GME program for Family Medicine residents was shut down nearly two years ago.
Sunday, December 2, 2018
CAFB’s Spark Cell creative hub
Columbus (Miss.) Air Force Base’s Spark Cell laboratory was designed to be a creative hub for finding solutions to problems, building innovative tools and processes, and learning anything from 3D printing to flying patterns in a T-6 Texan II. The use of the Spark Cell is consistent, and the impact is already being felt with 15 Airmen visiting weekly to work on projects. Its purpose is to cultivate ideas and connect with other innovators so CAFB can create solutions for the betterment of the Air Force. It’s a place for personal and professional development to help the AF and the wing get better, he explained. An example of how to use the space effectively is learning how to program computer applications to create a solution to a problem. Several projects are being worked, but the ‘Check Six’ podcast project was the first completed, according to Maj. Ryan Brewer, 14th Flying Training Wing’s director of innovation. They’re always looking at other opportunities for the podcast to expand from its main T-6 Texan II topics. Another project showing potential at the Spark Cell is the collaboration effort with communications specialists from Keesler Air Force Base, Miss., to create a program that helps edit and create enlisted and officer performance report bullets. “We are doing a lot of neat collaboration with other training bases on a weekly basis,” he said. Spark Cell will be conducting another in-depth 3D printing class on Dec. 5. Opportunities will continue to open in January 2019. Brewer encourages people to start bringing in ideas to Spark Cell meetings every Friday at noon so they can be a part of the innovation team. (Source: 14th Flying Training Wing 11/30/18)
CAP is 77: Exposed XO to aviation
The Civil Air Patrol, the official auxiliary of the Air Force, celebrated its 77th birthday on Dec. 1. The organization has played a major role in the AF’s total force mission and has paved the way for many aviators. Its mission is to support America's communities with emergency response, diverse aviation and ground services, youth development and promotion of air, space and cyber power. Some members of the Columbus (Miss.) AFB’s 14th Flying Training Wing have their grassroots with CAP. Some still have an invested interest in the Mississippi Wing’s Golden Triangle Composite Squadron as it continues as an essential asset to the community and the wing. “I was active in the CAP for two years in college as a senior member,” said Maj. Ben Peacock, executive officer and T-1A Jayhawk instructor pilot for the 14th FTW. As a cadet, Peacock was able to be a part of the social search and rescue team as a ground team member, and a scanner in Cessna aircraft. “It was a lot of great experiences in small airplanes,” he said. “It made me feel like I was able to do something productive outside of college.” It also opens the door for cadets who want to be in the military and gives leadership opportunities. Peacock said his experiences in CAP helped him decide he wanted to join the AF, and opened his eyes to the passion for aviation. Columbus area youth have that same opportunity, as the Golden Triangle Comsite Squadron’s Internal Aerospace Education Program meets Thursdays from 6:30-8:30 p.m. at the CAFB Chapel Annex. The squadron currently has about 20 cadets and 15 senior members. (Source: 14th Flying Training Wing 11/30/18)
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