Guard gets federal money to rebuild
Construction projects are put on fast track
Monday, July 10, 2006 TP/NOLA.com
By Paul Purpura
West Bank bureau
Using Defense Department money to pay for an unprecedented construction spree, the Louisiana National Guard has fast-tracked a $480 million building program to replace several facilities damaged by Hurricane Katrina and launch other projects that were in the works before the storm.
The financing was included in the Defense Department's fiscal 2006 military construction budget, which requires no matching money from Louisiana to rebuild the state-owned facilities, said Lt. Col. Doug Mouton, the Guard's director of construction and facilities.
With the money secured through the Department of Defense, the Guard will not have to compete with local communities for other state or federal money to rebuild its facilities, said Mouton, who also commands the 225th Engineer Group, based in Pineville.
"It was one of our highest priorities," Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., said Friday of securing the money for military facilities. "We were really extraordinarily successful in this first major effort."
The construction program is the largest in the history of the National Guard nationwide, Mouton said. The $480 million includes construction, architectural and engineering costs, furnishings and equipping buildings with fiber optics for communications, he said.
Landrieu, a member of the Senate Appropriation Committee's military construction subcommittee, which oversees military installations worldwide, said bases serve as "engines that help bring back communities."
Gov. Kathleen Blanco, commander in chief of the Louisiana National Guard, echoed Landrieu's view Thursday when she announced that Jackson Barracks will get a $200 million makeover, of which $173 million is federal money.
"An investment in Jackson Barracks will provide a catalyst to the surrounding communities," Blanco said. "It will spark new life in the areas most devastated by Katrina."
Weeks after Katrina, the Guard began assessing damage to its facilities statewide. Design planning began in January, and now the Guard is preparing to award construction contracts, Mouton said.
The expedited process was made possible by a new state law that allows the Louisiana Military Department to begin construction even while plans are in the design phase, Mouton said. The "design/build" process, used widely by the Defense Department, was crucial because the Guard had to use the federal money before the fiscal year ends Sept. 30, or else lose it.
"The timeline is mind-boggling," Mouton said. "Every (project) will be under contract by the end of August, 30 days ahead of deadline."
The work is expected to be complete by August 2009.
A look at the projects:
-- $110 million for the Hammond Northshore Regional Airport, which will be the home of the Army Guard's 1st Battalion, 244th Aviation Regiment and its fleet of 20 UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters, whose facilities at the New Orleans Lakefront Airport were heavily damaged by Katrina's wind and surge.
The Guard has leased 122 acres at the Hammond-owned airport, where officials plan to build a 164,000-square-foot Army aviation support facility that includes hangars. The $110 million investment includes a $35.8 million, 114,000- square-foot "readiness center," what the Guard now calls its armories.
Hammond will be the permanent home to part of the 204th Air Traffic Service Group, displaced by Katrina from Jackson Barracks, as well as a detachment of aviators who operate the Guard's C-12 corporate jet.
Since the Guard's lease at the Lakefront Airport has ended, the facilities have reverted to the Orleans Parish Levee Board, which will repair the hangar and building the Guard used, airport director Randolph Taylor said. "We're going to restore it and use it," he said.
-- $17 million to build a readiness center for the Marrero-based 2225th Multi-Role Bridge Company, which has 190 soldiers. The 50,000-square-foot facility will be located near the Jefferson Parish Emergency Operations Center on Ames Boulevard.
-- $14 million for a readiness center in Covington. The nearly 30,000-square-foot building will be the new home to Company A, 205th Engineer Battalion, which has about 90 soldiers.
-- $14 million for a 40,000-square-foot readiness center in Reserve for the 175 soldiers of the 1084th Transportation Company. The Guard last month finalized a lease agreement with the St. John the Baptist Parish government for the land on which the center will be built.
-- $12.9 million for a 27,000-square-foot field maintenance facility at Camp Villere, near Slidell, that can support 739 soldiers. The facility replaces one at Jackson Barracks in New Orleans, Mouton said.
-- $137.9 million in military construction money for new buildings at Jackson Barracks, including $43.8 million for the 1st Battalion, 141st Field Artillery Regiment; $39.1 million for a new Joint Forces Headquarters; $25.4 million for the 61st Troop Command; $19 million for infrastructure improvements; and $10 million for gate houses and fences.
Another $37 million in state money will be used to restore historic antebellum homes, the Jackson Barracks Military Museum and other projects at the 100-acre base on the Orleans-St. Bernard parish line.
-- $14.6 million for a new readiness center in Bogalusa, home to the 205th Engineer Battalion headquarters, designed to support 114 soldiers.
-- $31 million for a 70,000-square-foot Joint Forces Headquarters building at Camp Beauregard in Pineville. The headquarters will serve as a detachment to the Joint Forces Headquarters at Jackson Barracks, Mouton said.
-- At least $10.5 million in federal money, not included in the military construction budget, is being used to repair facilities that received damage from Hurricanes Rita and Katrina in central and southwestern Louisiana, Mouton said. That amount "is growing," he said.
La. National Guard will build new facilities in Hammond, leaving behind complexes at Lakefront Airport.