Plans made to fight for base
- Share via
Dave Brooks
National Security is a second priority for Christopher Collins. The
soon-to-be-enrolled Edison High School freshman doesn’t understand
exactly what goes on at the Los Alamitos Joint Forces Training Base,
but he knows the place is renown for its high-tech swimming facility.
“I plan to go out for water polo and everyone knows that’s one of
the best places to play,” he said. “Even the national teams train
there.”
In 1998, the National Aquatic Center set up shop at the facility
and brings in scores of high school water polo teams that compete at
the military base.
That connection with the community could be a key factor in
protecting the Los Alamitos base during an upcoming round of federal
base closures. In May, the Pentagon will release its recommendations
regarding the potential closure of 100 of the nation’s 425 military
facilities as part of the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure rounds.
“We need to take a proactive stance on this issue and posture
ourselves in a way to protect the base,” said Los Alamitos advocate
Bill Orten. “The secret is to never get on the closure list. Once you
get on the list, it’s very difficult to get off.”
Assemblyman Tom Harman said the likelihood of the base closing is
small because of the role it plays in national security. Los Alamitos
employs about 800 full-time service men and women and 4,000
reservists and national guardsmen who use the base for weekend
training. It’s the only facility in Los Angeles and Orange counties
with a military airfield and is the base Air Force One uses when the
president visits California.
The base is also home to a new counterterrorism unit known as the
Chemical, Biological, Radiological Nuclear Explosion Enhanced
Response Force Package. The group is a 120-member task force that
acts as first responders to terrorist attacks, providing search and
rescue, medical aid and decontamination services.
“Our first wave of 22 members must be ready to go when called
within two hours,” said Col. John Bernatz, the team’s director. “The
second part of the team, 25 to 30 members, needs to be on the scene
within four hours. If it’s a major incident, the rest of the team
will be on scene in 24 hours.”
The presence of the team and the bases impact on the community
will likely capture the attention of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who
has formed the California Council on Base Support and Retention to
lobby Washington to protect state military facilities. California has
62 bases that account for 270,000 jobs.
“With the leadership position he is in, I don’t see him allowing
closure of that base,” Harman said. “But we still need to go through
the drill and actively lobby for Los Alamitos.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.