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- <text id=93TT1960>
- <title>
- June 28, 1993: Ready, Aim, Shut Down
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 28, 1993 Fatherhood
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DEFENSE, Page 36
- Ready, Aim, Shut Down
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As military bases brace for bad news, three naval shipyards
- fight a fierce rearguard action
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by Sam Allis/Boston and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The gravely serious man in glasses and a dark suit moves and
- speaks like the polished trial lawyer he once was. In the dank
- humidity of an auditorium in the Massachusetts State House,
- he makes his case insistently, weaving numbers and exposition
- into a seamless argument. In the future, he says, 60% of the
- U.S. Navy's shipyard work will involve nuclear-powered vessels.
- More than half the ships in for repair will be submarines; most
- of those will be Los Angeles-class attack submarines. "The most
- experienced shipyard in servicing Los Angeles subs," he declaims,
- "is the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard. Charleston has never overhauled
- a Los Angeles-class submarine. Never. Not one, ever."
- </p>
- <p> This is not just a Portsmouth, New Hampshire, defense advocate
- in action. This is the majority leader of the U.S. Senate, George
- Mitchell of next-door Maine. In rows of seats in the auditorium
- behind him are the entire congressional delegations of Maine
- and New Hampshire, the Governors of both states and 12 busloads
- of Portsmouth shipyard workers and their families. His real
- audience, however, is the group of people sitting at the long
- table across from him. They are members of the presidential
- commission that is deciding which of the country's military
- bases to close or cut back this year.
- </p>
- <p> A conglomerate as large as the Pentagon could hardly escape
- the restructuring that has been the watchword of corporate America
- for a decade. The end of the cold war has reduced the uniformed
- services from 2.1 million members in the mid-1980s to 1.7 million,
- heading down to 1.4 million or fewer. The defense budget will
- decline in real terms by more than 40% between 1985 and 1997.
- This downsizing leaves the U.S. with far more bases, support
- and repair facilities than it needs. But which ones to close?
- Even a relatively small base represents vital jobs and millions
- of dollars to its host community. Closing it will cause economic
- pain to the area and real hardship to many individuals. So naturally
- the cities and states marked for base closings are fighting
- to their last drop of blood, sweat and tears.
- </p>
- <p> To wring the politics out of the process as much as possible,
- last January President Clinton named a nonpartisan outside panel,
- officially called the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission.
- Former Republican Congressman Jim Courter of New Jersey is the
- chairman; its other members, four men and two women, are former
- government officials, retired military officers and business
- executives. In March they received the Pentagon's recommendation
- to close 31 major installations around the U.S. Since then they
- have added 47 others for "consideration." They plan to announce
- their decisions this week and pass their list to Clinton, who
- is allowed to make one request for revisions but then must approve
- or reject it as a whole.
- </p>
- <p> Until then, the battle to stave off closures goes on. The bases
- under consideration are Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps
- installations, including such well-known ones as Miramar Naval
- Air Station and Presidio of Monterey in California and McGuire
- Air Force Base in New Jersey. None of the targeted bases, though,
- has defenders more fervid than the partisans of three East Coast
- naval shipyards: at Portsmouth, New Hampshire; Charleston, South
- Carolina; and Norfolk, Virginia. All three can claim long, distinguished
- service to the U.S. Navy, are particularly proud of being "Navy
- towns" and typify the head-to-head competition for survival
- taking place across the country.
- </p>
- <p> Senator Mitchell was making the case for northern New England,
- his state included. Closing the 193-year-old Portsmouth shipyard,
- he said, would cost more than 5,000 jobs and an annual payroll
- of $270 million. New Hampshire residents had watched neighboring
- Pease Air Force Base, with a $107 million annual payroll, close
- two years ago, and they know Loring Air Force Base in Maine
- will not last much longer. "Basic fairness," the Senator said,
- "dictates a third strike not be dealt on an already troubled
- region."
- </p>
- <p> For their part, the Charleston defenders were not letting Mitchell's
- invidious remarks go unparried. In fact, the venerable South
- Carolina city had cranked up a campaign long before, because
- its shipyard was on the originally proposed Pentagon closure
- list, while Portsmouth and Norfolk were added by the commission
- for consideration only last month. That explains the placards
- the Portsmouth workers were waving at the panel hearing in Boston
- in early June: THE NAVY KNOWS BEST. In other words, close Charleston.
- </p>
- <p> As soon as Charleston saw the Pentagon's list, the city's political
- leaders and Chamber of Commerce launched a public relations
- counterattack. They raised $1 million to pay for a full-time
- staff and Washington-based lobbyists. In 18 days they rounded
- up 140,000 signatures on protest letters. The operation mobilized
- not only the shipyard's employees but also local businessmen
- from auto dealers to restaurateurs.
- </p>
- <p> Adopting offense as a good defense, Charleston decided to go
- after the far larger Norfolk, arguing that the shrinking Navy
- and defense budget called for eliminating a facility with more
- dock space than the Charleston yard. "If you close Charleston
- or Portsmouth," says Elizabeth Inabinet, president of the Charleston
- Chamber of Commerce, "you just don't take out enough capacity."
- </p>
- <p> Charleston's best argument still is the closure's potential
- economic impact. Four other naval facilities in the city are
- also on the list and closing them all would, supporters claim,
- wipe out 27% of the area's jobs and 1 of every 3 payroll dollars
- in the region. In a gust of rhetoric that would make a soap-opera
- writer blush, Mayor Joe Riley Jr. says the city could begin
- to die "and the tumbleweeds of broken dreams and shattered lives
- blow down the street."
- </p>
- <p> Like Portsmouth, the Norfolk shipyard was not on the Pentagon's
- original list and did not at first take its late addition very
- seriously. The yard was founded in 1767 and built the first
- U.S. battleship, the Texas, and the first U.S. aircraft carrier,
- the Langley. The yard employs 10,000 workers and has seven dry
- docks that can handle any ship in the Navy.
- </p>
- <p> At a commission hearing two weeks ago, however, the Norfolk
- supporters got a shock. Though Norfolk is the only one of the
- three yards on the list that can overhaul aircraft carriers,
- commission members pointed out that a private firm, the Newport
- News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co., just down the road from
- Norfolk, would be willing and able to pick up that business.
- In fact, Newport News is short of work and earlier this month
- laid off 1,000 workers.
- </p>
- <p> "Does it make sense," demanded Virginia Congressman Owen Pickett,
- "to close the only naval shipyard in a region that is the home
- port to 149 Navy ships, including five aircraft carriers?" In
- spite of the force of the argument, one member of the presidential
- commission said later, "If Norfolk or Portsmouth thinks we're
- not serious, they are kidding themselves." Courter, the commission
- chairman, told a press conference in Norfolk, "We're not here
- to terrorize the communities," but he added, "This is a very
- serious exercise."
- </p>
- <p> The commissioners heard all the arguments again last week in
- Washington. After three months of hearings, they wound up with
- a marathon three-day session that featured speeches by 56 Senators
- and 153 Representatives, all eager to protect the bases in their
- districts. Then, finally, the commissioners listened to Defense
- Secretary Les Aspin and General Colin Powell, the Chairman of
- the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who advised them firmly to stick
- to the Pentagon's plan for closures. "I believe my original
- recommendations are still correct," said Aspin.
- </p>
- <p> It will not, in fact, be easy for the commission to change Aspin's
- hit list, which could be bad news for Charleston. The criteria
- to be applied are strict, beginning with the military value
- of the bases to be closed, going on to potential costs and savings
- and ending with the impact on local communities. The military
- services have supplied the commission with hundreds of pages
- of analysis and projections. Aspin says his base-closing plan
- will save $3.1 billion annually beginning in the year 2000,
- while eliminating 57,000 civilian jobs.
- </p>
- <p> To add or subtract from the Pentagon's proposed list of 31 major
- bases, the commission must find "substantial deviation" from
- the Defense Department's calculations on the criteria. That
- is, the commission would have to show the Pentagon made major
- mistakes.
- </p>
- <p> The commission's final report must be on the President's desk
- by July 1. He can kill it or send it on, in toto, to Congress,
- but he cannot pick it apart. Congress can accept it by taking
- no action, or reject it by resolution of both houses, a move
- subject to a presidential veto. Given the cutbacks in defense
- spending and the need to close down some bases, the pressure
- to approve the commission's final list is likely to be overwhelming.
- </p>
- <p> "For every Congressman and Senator who is dismayed at having
- a base on the list," says Keith Cunningham, an analyst at Washington's
- nonprofit Business Executives for National Security, "there
- are many more who say, There but for the grace of God go I."
- </p>
- <p> The final irony of the whole 1993 base-closing process, however,
- is that no matter who wins or loses this time around, more closures
- are inevitable. "Base closures," Aspin said, "have lagged behind
- the overall build-down." Future reductions in the military "will
- mean more, not fewer, base closures." As that prediction begins
- to come true in the next round of closings in 1995, the fight
- among the survivors to stay alive will be even fiercer.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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