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Installation Management Update
Association of Defense Communities
Mr. Jonathan HunterDeputy Chief of Staff
Installation Management Command14 January 2013
Our mission is to provide Soldiers, Civilians and their Families with a quality of life commensurate with the quality of their service.
INFRASTRUCTURE107,445 Buildings66,000 Other Structures4214 Barracks 355,210 “Spaces” 2205 Historic Facilities16,769 miles of paved road554 Miles of railroad498 CemeteriesAnnual Utility Bill ≈ $942MMilitary Construction
Investment ≈ $3B
MISSION READINESS40 Army Airfields/6 Heliports12 Mission Training Complexes2256 Ranges12,628 Square Miles of Training
Area500 Million rounds of
ammunition$6 Billion worth of training
devices and simulatorsSustainable Range ProgramSoldier Training Support
ProgramMission Command Training
Support Program
ENVIRONMENT15 million acres174 federal threatened &
endangered species12,563 ranges13,508 cleanup sites2,951 permits130,000+ known cultural
resourcesRecycling ProgramSustainabilityEnvironmental Quality ProgramsEncroachment MitigationEndangered Species Act
Compliance
IMCOM Mission Overview
FAMILY PROGRAMS233 Child Development Centers84 Youth Centers74 School Activity CentersRelocation ServicesSpouse Employment Family AdvocacyFinancial CounselingNew Parent SupportArmy Family TeambuildingExceptional Family Member
Program Support
RESILIENCY217 Fitness Centers135 Pools188 Chapels177 Religious Education
Facilities 30 Family Life Centers 563 Substance Abuse
Counselors140+ Job Fairs this year181 Restaurants 81 Bowling Centers 50 Golf Courses
IMCOM Mission Overview
FY10 FY11 FY12 FY138.0
9.0
10.0
11.0
12.0
13.0
14.0
13.2
12.4
11.0
9.5
Funding$Billions
$1.4 B Reduction in FY 12$2.2B Reduction since FY10
IMCOM is successfully reducing in cost and size while continuing to support Soldiers and
Families
Adapting to New Fiscal Environment
Partnerships & Privatization
A success story!
• Housing: Residential Communities Initiative (RCI)
• Lodging: Privatization of Army Lodging (PAL)
• Utilities: Utility Privatization
• Transitioning Soldiers: Dept of Labor & Veterans Affairs
• Survivor Assistance: TAPS, Gold Star Mothers
• Municipal Services: Monterey CA, Sierra Vista AZ
Critical components of our vision for Installations 2020
Why Municipal Partnerships?
• Potential cost savings to government and partner• Improved city services without increased tax burden• Stability for government; not changing contractor every few
years• Leverage core competencies vice duplication of capabilities• Excess capacity may exist in municipality• Strengthens bonds between community and military installation• “Strategic Value” for community • “Success breeds success”
Must be willing to engage head on and fight through every obstacle. The wins are worth the effort!
Fort Huachuca / Sierra Vista AZ Municipal Service Partnership Pilot Program
• Initial plan was City operating the on-post library as “branch” of city library system
• Army spent $392K per year for post library—to deliver substandard library support
• Initial cost to meet City standards $813K, annual operating costs $428K
• City library is exceptional; Post library is sub-standard.• 80% of Fort personnel live in local community.
This could have been the end of discussion as not economically viable to city to participate, but….
• Could Army and City partner to provide library services? • Use the city first class library and close on post library. • Army provides $60K a year to city to support unique Army
requirements. • City library provides library services to city and Fort residents
Result: $350K per year savings for Army and BETTER SERVICE for soldiers and families!
Approved by Asst SECARMY JAN 2007Partnership implemented MAR 07
First city/military partnership for library services in DoD!!!
A New Idea!
Fort Huachuca / Sierra Vista AZ Municipal Service Partnership Pilot Program
Lessons Learned
• Legislative authority is powerful• Treat project development as a discussion between
partners, not a “contract negotiation”• Must understand rate structure to include salaries,
overhead, benefits, and equipment in “pricing” services• Bring contracting and lawyers in early as part of team; city
and govt.• Understand Service Contract Act implications• Must dedicate staff/time to work partnership issues• Municipality and Govt must have “advocate” spearheading
issues, without “buy-in” it won’t happen• Change will create resistance--- plan for it
Must be Commander’s and Mayor/Manager’s priority! COL Jonathan Hunter, IMCOM-SE/jonathan.hunter@us.army.mil/404-464-0760
• Public Works• Utilities• Energy Security• Emergency Services• Library Services• Recreational Programs• Environmental Management• Forestry• Family Programs• Housing• Food Services• Transportation Services
What Partnership Opportunities May Be Right for Your Community or Installation?
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