home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT1240>
- <title>
- Mar. 22, 1993: Cutting Close to Home
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 22, 1993 Can Animals Think
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DEFENSE, Page 34
- Cutting Close to Home
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The base closings affect the entire nation, but one Congressman's
- district got hit by a surgical strike.
- </p>
- <p>By SOPHFRONIA SCOTT GREGORY--With reporting by David
- Jackson/Oakland and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Ronald Dellums is not the sort of person the Pentagon
- would pick to be chairman of the House Armed Services Committee.
- Known for his radical politics that earned him the nickname
- "Berkeley Berzerkly," he has maintained a steadfastly critical
- military posture during his 22 years as Congressman from
- Oakland, California. It was Dellums who consistently slashed
- away at Defense expenditures, voted to cut the number of B-2
- bombers down to 20 when the Pentagon wanted 130, helped knock
- back the budget for the Strategic Defense Initiative and voted
- to trim U.S. military presence in Europe. His mantra: some of
- the billions spent on defense could be better spent elsewhere--such as on the poor and the disadvantaged.
- </p>
- <p> Last week the Defense Department struck back. Alameda
- County, which he represents, ranked No. 1 on the list of
- recommended military closings released by Defense Secretary Les
- Aspin last week. All five of the naval installations in Dellums'
- district will close, taking with them about 10,000 jobs and a
- $400 million payroll. The Alameda Naval Air Station, Alameda
- Naval Aviation Depot, Oakland Naval Hospital, the Oakland Naval
- Supply Center and the Naval Public Works Center in San Francisco
- are critical elements to the area's economy. The dense network
- of equipment and workers includes three nuclear-carrier berths,
- repair depots, a naval supply center for parts, a public works
- facility, motor pools and over 7,000 housing units.
- </p>
- <p> The shutdowns in Alameda are part of what Aspin has called
- "the mother of all base closings," the most sweeping proposals
- since World War II, and they show how devastating the job loss
- can be. Nationwide, the closings include 31 major military
- installations as well as the curtailment of 134 others--a plan
- that is eventually expected to save more than $3 billion a year.
- Most will occur in California, where three bases in addition to
- those in Alameda will close. The Pentagon says 16,000 military
- and 15,000 civilian jobs will be directly cut in the state, but
- California Governor Pete Wilson says the ripple effect will mean
- that more than 300,000 jobs will be lost--a cruel blow to a
- state already suffering the worst unemployment in the nation.
- </p>
- <p> Across the country, the closings will have both an
- economic and a psychological impact, especially in the short
- term as communities struggle to find ways to convert the
- properties to civilian use. Predictably, politicians from
- affected areas were quick to squawk. "It could bring economic
- devastation to the area," said Senator Ernest Hollings of South
- Carolina, which is scheduled to lose its Charleston Naval
- Station. But Congress has cleverly set up a system that allows
- the Pentagon to push through its closures while insulating
- legislators from much of the responsibility or political
- fallout. In 1990 it established an eight-member bipartisan
- commission to review Pentagon proposals. If the President
- approves the commission's recommendations, Congress must
- consider the package as a whole and can reject it only by a
- majority vote in both houses.
- </p>
- <p> Dellums insists that in theory he's in favor of the
- process. "Twice before, in 1988 and 1991, I voted for closing
- bases," he says. "I helped draft the base-closure legislation
- we're working under. I've never approached this issue as a
- parochial or pork matter." But the Pentagon's new list, Dellums
- insists, smacks of political retribution rather than prudent
- pruning. "This is George Bush's base-closing list, and it's
- George Bush's base-closing commission," says an agitated
- Dellums, clearly distraught at the loss of jobs on his home
- turf. "If you think it's normal to include all five bases in my
- district, you're a hell of a lot more naive than I am."
- </p>
- <p> Like other politicians whose districts are now threatened
- by Aspin's cuts, Dellums is mounting an effort to save his
- local bases. His argument: the Alameda installations, especially
- the nuclear-carrier berths, serve a specific purpose, and it
- would make no sense to close them if the military had to build
- new ones somewhere else to do similar work. The Pentagon
- analysis, Dellums says, "fails to take into consideration the
- synergism of having those bases clustered together."
- </p>
- <p> Up until now, Dellums' military posture certainly hasn't
- hurt him in his district, which he last won by 72% of the vote.
- That is partly because he succeeded Aspin as Armed Services
- Committee chairman and voters believed he would be in a position
- to prevent any of the Pentagon's ire from hitting close to home.
- "He's always been antimilitary, but right now we're looking at
- him as one of our last hopes to save the installation," says
- Mark Hutchings, a fire inspector at the Mare Island Naval
- Complex shipyard in Vallejo.
- </p>
- <p> There's no question Dellums and Alameda will be in for a
- struggle--as will many other cities and towns across the
- country that have vowed to try to fight the base closings in
- their own backyards. Bases are rarely removed from a closing
- list. But the combative Dellums is not ready to surrender.
- Instead he is preparing to take his case to the nonpartisan
- commission. "My constituents have the right to expect every
- decision to be made in fairness," he says, "on solid economic
- grounds and with strategic considerations in mind. It seems to
- me my constituents are being penalized for my political
- principles, and that's unfair."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-