Posts Tagged ‘Commander Ray Odierno’

Military headquarters in Va. losing 2,300 jobs

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

SUFFOLK, Va. — The general of a military headquarters known as the U.S. Joint Forces Command said Wednesday that 2,300 workers in Virginia will lose their jobs as part of the Pentagon’s plan to trim bureaucracy and cut costs.

The command employs nearly 6,000 military and civilian personnel, with the bulk of those working at its headquarters in southeast Virginia. About three dozen positions at Creech Air Force Base in Indian Springs, Nev., about 45 miles northwest of Las Vegas, will be cut. The base is home to a squadron operating unmanned aircraft over Iraq and Afghanistan.

Another 25 to 30 percent of the command’s work force in Tampa, Fla. will also be eliminated.

The command’s mission is to train troops from all services to work together for specific missions.

The Pentagon ordered it be eliminated as part of far reaching budget cuts. The command has a budget of just under $1 billion, and its closure is expected to save about $430 million a year as many of its elements are reassigned. The command’s elimination is expected to be completed by the end of August, although some personnel reassignments won’t be completed until 2012.

“The changes are significant,” Gen. Ray Odierno said. “Going forward,we are not simply trimming down each staff element. We are making a major departure from past organization design,procedure and mindset to more effectively execute the core functions and sustain the jointness we’ve worked so hard to achieve in the past.”

Contractors will be among those hardest hit, with the number nationwide dropping to 500 from 2,500.

Officials in Virginia lobbied to retain some of the command’s job functions, and Republican Gov. Bob McDonnell applauded the reorganization plan.

Virginia will retain about 1,900 jobs between operations in Norfolk and Suffolk. Roughly 500 of the command’s jobs will remain between Ft. Belvoir and the Dahlgren Naval Surface Warfare Center in northern Virginia.

“While Joint Forces Command will still close, we were successful in retaining 50 percent of the command’s positions in the region,” McDonnell said in a statement.

The elimination of the command will free up plenty of office space. The command occupies 21 buildings in Norfolk and Suffolk. Once the command closure is complete, JFCOM will be down to four buildings. It wasn’t immediately clear who would occupy the soon-to-be empty buildings, but McDonnell said officials would work to make sure they were filled.

JFCOM Commander General Ray Odierno speaks out on JFCOM changes

Monday, January 10th, 2011

NORFOLK — JFCOM Commander General Ray Odierno spoke out today regarding the end of JFCOM. Odierno says in the next 30 to 45 days, nearly half of JFCOM’s military, civilian, and contracted employees in Hampton Roads are going to learn they will be out of a job.

Odierno says, “Things are tough these days and now here I am responsible for potentially 1900 people no longer being able to be employed. Whatever the number is here, that’s quite a burden.”

Odierno says he’s working with Defense Secretary Robert Gates to keep at least 1900 of the more than 3800 jobs associated with JFCOM in Hampton Roads.

“What we want to do is help ease that burden and help them get jobs in other areas, and we’ll do that the best of our abilities,” Odierno says.

The command’s closure is part of a national defense effort to save $78 billion over five years.

Odierno says, “I can’t specifically speak about this region, but I will say there’s a lot more coming.”

He says that once the plan to dismantle JFCOM is approved in the next month or so, JFCOM will cease to exist as we know it in the next 12 to 15 months. “It won’t be a command, per say, that’s left behind,” Odierno says.

Certain functions, like joint training, will stick around under other military organizations.

Still, 5,100 additional jobs created in Hampton Roads because of JFCOM hang in the balance.

Odierno says he does expect to eliminate more contractors than Department of Defense civilians. The command flag at JFCOM will be lowered in nine months.