"Never give in, never give in, never, never- in nothing, great or small, large or petty- never give in except to convictions of honour and good sense. Never yield to force. Never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy." WINSTON CHURCHILL
Wednesday, June 09, 2010
Communities bid National Guard Armories Goodbye
Updated 3h 56m ago
By Tim Evans, USA TODAY
Sgt. 1st Class Rodney Cox works at the New Castle
National Guard Armory. The armory and two others in
Indiana will be replaced by two Readiness Centers in
the Indianapolis area.
By Michelle Pemberton, The Indianapolis Star
New Castle, Ind., Mayor Jim Small was stunned by
the announcement in May that the Indiana National
Guard would close its armory in his town of about
18,000 after having a presence there since 1938.
"They've gone to war from there, and they've been
here when the community needed help," he said. "It's
sad. We're a very patriotic community, and this
hurts."
The closing of the small, aging facility and many
like it across the USA is the result of shifting
demographics, tight state budgets and changes in
the way America's citizen soldiers are being trained
and deployed, says Sgt. Katherine Perez, a National
Guard public affairs officer.
More than 100 armories nationwide have closed or
been targeted for closing in the past five years —
many in smaller communities — and more are
closing this year, USA TODAY research found. Some
are being replaced by larger joint Army National
Guard, Army Reserve and Air National Guard
Readiness Centers.
In Indiana, two additional armories — in Delphi and
Tell City— will close by year's end. Maj. Gen. R.
Martin Umbarger, adjutant general of the Indiana
National Guard, said the state unit is building two
Readiness Centers in the Indianapolis area.
Among other state plans:
•In Kansas, 18 of 56 armories will close this year. A
Readiness Center is planned for Wichita in 2011.
• Oklahoma has closed 40 since 2006 and plans to
close at least 10 more over the next two years. It has
seven Readiness Centers under construction.
• Oregon plans to shut down two by the end of
2011 and is building one Readiness Center.
• Louisiana is closing four and building two
Readiness Centers.
• New York has closed or announced plans to close
11. It has built one Readiness Center, has a second
under construction and is looking for a site for a
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third.
"As great as those armories have been and as hard
as it is to leave those communities, it just doesn't
make sense to keep them open," said Sgt. Leslie
Newport, spokesman for the Indiana National Guard.
"Its more than cost-cutting. We are doing a layer of
teaching that is above what we have had."
The closings come as the Army and Air National
Guard combined report membership is up — from
459,000 in 2000 to 470,000 in 2009.
Some armories close because of a lack of state and
federal funds for maintenance and utilities, Perez
says. Others have closed as a result of changing
population trends where, she said, "towns no longer
support units."
Still others have closed as part of the 2005 Base
Realignment and Closure (BRAC) program, which
funded construction of some of the joint Readiness
Centers, says Hallet Brazelton Jr., deputy in the
National Guard Bureau's Installation Division.
Readiness Centers, like the armories, are managed
within each state. The states make decisions about
construction and location, Brazelton said. The
number of Readiness Centers varies as new facilities
are constructed and old ones are disposed of,
Brazelton says. Over the past 10 years, he says, the
total number has stayed close to 3,000.
That doesn't ease the sting for Small, or for Barb
Bartell, finance officer for the town of Lemmon, S.D.,
a ranching community of about 1,400 where the
armory closed last year.
Bartell said the loss of the armory is another hit to a
town dealing with tough economic times. She said
it's not only the impact on the town's psyche that is
troublesome.
"The Guard members that live around here now have
to drive almost 200 miles for training," she said.
"And as far as getting help from the Guard, which
used to be right out the back door, now they're a
long way away."
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1 comment:
Great read thankks
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