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

    Property disposal field offices to close

    BATTLE CREEK, MI, UNITED STATES

    04.29.2021

    Story by Jacob Joy 

    DLA Disposition Services

    BATTLE CREEK, Mich. – Defense Logistics Agency Disposition Services recently announced it will shutter most of its property disposal field offices by the end of fiscal 2022.

    Despite widespread small site closures, support services will continue unabated, and an overall reduction of customer wait time is expected. Many DLA Disposition Services field activities will enjoy capability increases as 60 full-time employee positions are shifted to enhance under-resourced locations and Fort Campbell expands into a full-service small field site.

    The permanent closures will affect DLA’s small property disposal sites at the following locations:

    Aberdeen Proving Ground
    Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany
    Fort Benning
    Fort Bliss
    Blue Grass Army Depot
    Naval Base Kitsap
    Patrick Space Force Base
    Joint Base Charleston
    Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point
    Naval Air Station Corpus Christi *
    Naval Support Activity Crane
    Fort Dix
    Fort Drum
    Dyess Air Force Base
    Malmstrom Air Force Base
    Naval Station Great Lakes
    Naval Construction Training Center Gulfport
    Redstone Arsenal
    Fort Jackson
    Kirtland Air Force Base
    Fort Knox
    Nellis Air Force Base
    Offutt Air Force Base
    Tinker Air Force Base *
    Fort Polk
    Pease Air National Guard Base
    Quantico
    Rock Island Arsenal
    Fort Snelling
    Fort McCoy
    Fort Stewart
    Tobyhanna Army Depot
    Vandenberg Air Force Base
    Watervliet Arsenal
    Wright-Patterson Air Force Base

    (Sites denoted with * will retain agency environmental specialists at those locations only)

    The realignment of reverse logisticians from field offices to larger field activities is the result of extensive analyses that found field offices handle just 2.8% of the network’s total workload while consuming about 13% of the command’s labor costs. The repositioning of manpower is expected to save nearly $2 million over a two-year period while lowering customer wait time by almost a full day on average and increasing annual property receipts by about 125,000 items.

    Six field offices will remain open, covering a critical geographic or operational gap that field activities could not efficiently absorb. Those locations are at Naval Submarine Base New London, Whiteman, Ellsworth AFB, Scott AFB, Minot AFB, Holloman AFB and Fort Buchanan in Puerto Rico. Fort Campbell will redesignate as a field activity.

    DLA Disposition Services Director Mike Cannon briefed logistics leaders from each of the armed services and sought military customer feedback before enacting the plan. DLA Director Vice Admiral Michelle Skubic officially approved Field Office Realignment in early April and employees at affected sites were recently notified of impending closures after consultation with employee union representatives.

    “I would love to have a property disposal specialist out there at every single military installation there is,” Cannon said. “Is it great to have people out there? Absolutely. But it’s costly. Closing offices is not fun to do, but in this environment, it’s a necessity.”

    Cannon said the costs DLA Disposition Services needed to shrink as its contribution to DLA’s overall budget reduction goals was equivalent to losing nearly 20 full-time field positions. He said eliminating customer-facing jobs would diminish the command’s ability to deliver the level of property disposal help and expertise warfighters have come to expect.

    “I am unwilling to arbitrarily cut people to save money,” Cannon said. “Our best path forward is to keep all of the positions we have – because we aren’t getting any more – and put them where the work is, while striving to provide the same attention, the same training and the same expertise to our military customers as we have consistently for decades.”

    Site closures will occur on a case-by-case basis. DLA Disposition Services site and regional personnel will reach out to customers to help them understand timelines for local closure and how to continue turning in property, screen excess equipment, deal with scrap and hazardous materials and schedule transportation.

    Disposal service representatives will remain engaged and ready to help answer questions. Digital DSR remains a one-stop online location for property searches, item turn-in tools and scheduling for disposal. Robust Receipt-In-Place capabilities will allow DOD customers to take unwanted property off their books without having to haul anything to a DLA site.

    “We will continue to provide property disposal and reuse training across all levels and transportation will still be scheduled within 21 days,” Cannon said. “Our field site reps are outstanding at what they do, and I know they will take care of our warfighters. The only thing that may have changed is where their desk is located.”

    More information on site closures will soon become available through the DLA Disposition Services website and via normal customer support channels. Installations will be notified as actual closure dates are determined. Questions on closures can also be sent to the DLA Disposition Services Field Office Realignment Team at dladispsvcsfor@dla.mil.

    LEAVE A COMMENT

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 04.29.2021
    Date Posted: 12.02.2021 11:45
    Story ID: 410317
    Location: BATTLE CREEK, MI, US

    Web Views: 49
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN