Naval Station Everett, under Coury's command since 2010, should be
well positioned for the future as the Navy moves 60 percent of its ships
to the Asia-Pacific region by 2020. The question is how new federal
budget constraints under sequestration will affect those plans and the
Navy's desire to increase its ship count from 286 to 295 by then, Coury
said.
Sequestration has meant lots of belt tightening as the Navy
focuses on "mission-critical" items, he said. That means no more
overtime pay and reductions in groundskeeping, utilities and morale,
welfare and recreation services for sailors.
The budget turmoil
also forced Coury to eliminate community outreach efforts this year, so
the base won't have its annual open house and ship tours in July.
"We are adapting and we will succeed," Coury said.
But
for the Navy's 200,000 civilian employees, 14 upcoming furlough days
will equal a 20 percent discretionary pay cut, he said. The Navy
recognizes that hardship and is working to minimize it.
Naval
Station Everett's three frigates, USS Ford, USS Rodney M. Davis and USS
Ingraham, will be decommissioned in coming years and will be replaced by
three destroyers, Coury said. The plan was announced last year, but the
Navy hasn't finalized the moves while sequestration forces it to juggle
dollars.
Another wild card: The Base Closure and Realignment
Commission will meet in 2015 and 2017 to consider which military bases
to keep and which to recommend for closure.
Regardless, "Naval Station Everett stands fully quipped to meet that transition," Coury said.
Despite
the new budget reality, Coury said Naval Station Everett and its ships
are moving ahead with intensive energy conservation efforts as part of
the Navy's Great Green Fleet. The USS Nimitz demonstrated the use of 100
percent biofuel for its jet wing during recent RIMPAC exercises in
Hawaii, he said. Last year, the USS Ford became the first Navy ship to
sail on a biofuel blend.
Shoreside, Coury has been leading
environmental stewardship efforts. The base has plans to install a wind
turbine and electric-vehicle charging stations. Its diesel-powered
vehicles run a B20 biofuel blend and its gasoline-powered vehicles run
on E85 ethanol. Energy consumption around the base has been reduced by
28 percent to 90 percent and its buildings rate among the top 25 percent
most efficient in the world.
"We're doing our part to conserve," Coury said.
After
Coury finished his speech, Port of Everett executive director John Mohr
asked how Everett could "BRAC-proof" Naval Station Everett from
possible closure.
Coury couldn't make specific suggestions, but
he said the community's support of Snohomish County's second-largest
employer, which pumps about $318 million into the local economy, is
critical to keeping Naval Station Everett open and the county's support
of the base and its sailors is "tremendous."
"But again, I must remain apolitical on the issue," he said. Everett Mayor Ray Stephanson expressed an optimistic tone.
"This
is the base that most bases try to become," he said. To call Naval
Station Everett "'the sailors' choice' isn't just a mantra. This is the
No. 1 base for where all sailors want to be assigned."
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