Maintenance window scheduled to begin at February 14th 2200 est. until 0400 est. February 15th

(e.g. yourname@email.com)

Forgot Password?

    Defense Visual Information Distribution Service Logo

    Officer returns to Port Hueneme to ‘engineer’ a new future

    Officer returns to Port Hueneme to ‘engineer’ a new future

    Photo By Brian Melanephy | PORT HUENEME, Calif. – Naval Surface Warfare Center, Port Hueneme Division Chief...... read more read more

    PORT HUENEME, CA, UNITED STATES

    08.15.2017

    Story by Brian Melanephy 

    Naval Surface Warfare Center, Port Hueneme Division

    In the early 80s a young, smart and motivated teen from New England was looking down the road to his future – college was his next step.
    Michael Ladner was looking for the best. At first, he had the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in his sights. However, he quickly realized that the cost of an education at the prestigious university was out of his reach.
    Summers in Massachusetts as a child often involved going to the coast – and the ocean had an allure. Looking close to home and close to the water, Ladner found the perfect match – the United States Naval Academy.
    He was selected and entered the academy, becoming part of a group of young patriots who would become the Class of ’89. Their unofficial motto quickly became “out the door in ‘94;” meaning, give five years of service to Uncle Sam upon graduation and then move on to other things.
    The early years of his career went quickly and suddenly it was 1993. Ladner was thinking about getting out until he received an offer he couldn’t refuse. He remembers the phone call vividly.
    “[I] called the detailer and they said ‘we can send you to Monterey, California to go get a master’s degree from the Navy,’ recalled Ladner. “I said ‘wow,’ how do I turn that down?”
    And off he went.
    Toward the end of his two-plus years in Monterey, Master of Science in Physics in hand, Ladner received a lateral transfer to the engineering duty officer (EDO) community and found himself at Naval Surface Warfare Center, Port Hueneme Division (NSWC PHD). It was his first shore assignment where he served as the combat systems ship qualifications trials officer.
    Ironically, Ladner would spend more time underway during this shore tour than he did aboard his first three ships. For the three years he was here he estimates he was at sea for close to 2.5 years.
    From NSWC PHD Ladner moved on to become the first standard missile (SM) program manager’s representative at the Raytheon Missile Systems plant in Tucson, Arizona. From the sea to the sand, he served what unknowingly would not be his last assignment in the desert. From here he moved on to PEO IWS 3.0, where he served as the SM-6 project engineer.
    After his next assignment to OPNAV86 (now OPNAV96), he volunteered to go to Iraq for nine months as an individual augmentee at Joint Crew Composite Squadron-1. There he touched all facets of the fielding and testing of countermeasures to disrupt and disable remote-controlled improvised explosive devices. His efforts were highly successful, resulting in safer travels for service members outside the wire.
    His deployment did not go unnoticed. At the end of his tour, Ladner was hand-picked by the Commander, Naval Sea Systems Command, to be his executive assistant. After this eye-opening experience, he moved on to become the major program manager for PEO IWS 10.0, which evolved into the Ship Self-defense System, Integrated Combat Systems Program Office.
    Ladner then served in consecutive major program manager assignments at PEO IWS 3.0 (Surface Ship Weapons). At the end of these back-to-back tours, he got word he was returning to NSWC PHD as the Chief Engineer and Land and Sea Test Department, Department Officer.
    Happy to be back at the division, Ladner beams with pride when he looks at the wheel-shaped plaque hanging in his office.
    “I am looking at the wheel on the wall, which has all of the chief engineers that have been here at Port Hueneme,” Ladner said. “It’s inspiring for me to think that I am sitting in the same room where I did my Engineering Duty Qualification Board.”
    Ladner cut his teeth at NSWC PHD 20 years ago as a young EDO and now has an opportunity to shape and mold its future from a place at the top.
    “It is now my time to give back to the community, the station [and] NAVSEA for all of the great things they have done for me,” said Ladner.

    LEAVE A COMMENT

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 08.15.2017
    Date Posted: 08.15.2017 11:39
    Story ID: 244923
    Location: PORT HUENEME, CA, US

    Web Views: 701
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN