Defense News: Readout of Vice Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Lisa Franchetti’s Meeting with Commander, Royal Canadian Navy Vice Adm. Angus Topshee

Source: United States Navy

Vice Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Lisa Franchetti met Commander, Royal Canadian Navy Vice Adm. Angus Topshee in the Pentagon today to discuss opportunities to increase interoperability and integration between the two navies.

The leaders reaffirmed the strength of the U.S. Navy-Royal Canadian Navy relationship and discussed Royal Canadian Navy anti-submarine warfare efforts, operations in the Indo-Pacific, and efforts to increase Arctic operations and presence.

The U.S. and Royal Canadian Navies regularly operate together. Notably, both navies participated in this year’s Large Scale Global Exercise, Formidable Shield, and Baltic Operations exercise, as well as supported numerous international joint operations.

Franchetti and Topshee last met in September at the U.S. Navy’s International Seapower Symposium in Newport, Rhode Island.

Defense News: Navy Provides Update on Drinking Water Tests

Source: United States Navy

In coordination with EPA and DOH, the Navy collected drinking water samples for on-island Rapid Response Testing (RRT) and Drinking Water Long-Term Monitoring (LTM) water samples for off-island testing. All results received so far meet federal and state safe drinking water standards.

The DOH provided the Navy with information for six residents who contacted EPA about concerns with their drinking water. The Navy collected drinking water samples for RRT at five of the six homes and LTM samples at four of the six homes. The Navy is awaiting resident response for scheduling availability of a 6th RRT sample and two additional LTM samples.

The RRT tests did not detect Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons (TPH) at any of the five homes.

For the LTM testing, one home showed no detection of TPH in the drinking water, while low levels of TPH were detected in the samples from the other three homes. All detections, however, were well below the incident-specific parameter (ISP) established by EPA and DOH as part of the approved LTM Plan. The Navy provided the results to the residents, EPA and DOH Oct. 27.

TPH can be found in any petroleum-based products including oils from plumbing repairs, household, biological and industrial products such as mothballs, cooking oils, lotions, lubricants, greases, etc.

Although LTM samples taken from three of the four homes show low levels of TPH, all results were below the regulator-established ISP and do not indicate the presence of JP-5 in the JBPHH drinking water distribution system. When there is a detection of TPH, a chromatographic comparison, or fingerprint analysis, is conducted by an EPA-certified laboratory to determine if JP-5 is present in the sample. JP-5 has not been detected in these samples. Since the start of the Navy’s LTM program in March 2022, fingerprint analyses have not found evidence of JP-5 in the JBPHH drinking water distribution system.

The Navy continues to test residential and non-residential buildings on the JBPHH drinking water distribution system according to the LTM plan that was created and approved by the Interagency Drinking Water System Team (IDWST), composed of representatives from the DOH, EPA, Navy and Army. Under the interagency-approved LTM plan, the Navy water system is in a two-year, regulated period of LTM that began in March 2022 and is scheduled to end in March 2024. The water in the Navy’s system comes from the Waiawa shaft, which is approximately 6 miles from Joint Base Pearl Harbor Hickam. The Navy received validated test results of non-detect of TPH for a sample taken on Thursday, Oct. 19, 2023.

The Navy continues to conduct periodic outreach events across JBPHH to inform users and residents served by the JBPHH water distribution system on the process and success of the LTM program. Residents and users on the JBPHH water distribution system are encouraged to report drinking water concerns to:

– Navy Rapid Response Team – 808-449-1979.

– DOH Safe Drinking Water Branch – 808-586-4258 or SDWB@doh.hawaii.gov;

– EPA Desk Line – 415-947-4406

For more information on these actions, go to the news section of http://www.navy.mil/jointbasewater.

Additional information on the Navy’s LTM program may be found at http://jbphh-safewaters.org.

Defense News: NPS Stackable Graduate Certificates Give Student Naval Aviators A Head Start

Source: United States Navy

This summer, NPS began offering distance learning (DL) certificates to more than 100 Student Naval Aviators (SNAs) who are in the pipeline to attend flight school at Naval Air Station Pensacola, Fla. Pursuing full-time academic certificates optimizes the ensigns’ waiting time and gives them a leg up on promotion requirements later in their careers. It also helps extend reach and access to NPS education for the Naval Aviation community, which has long been under-represented at NPS due to a rigorous training timeline.

“Naval Aviation had a need in that we had a wait of multiple months for our student aviators. And in that time, we decided, hey, we’ve got to do something productive with them,” said Rear Adm. Richard Brophy, Chief of Naval Air Training. “So reaching out to the Naval Postgraduate School seemed like a logical choice, and thankfully, the Postgraduate School quickly stepped up and said, yes, we can help fill that need.”

The SNAs were essentially in a holding pattern between earning their undergraduate degrees and beginning flight school. NPS set up a specialized graduate educational opportunity for these ensigns as they awaited training in Pensacola, offering them an opportunity to earn multiple certificates through remote education.

“Working entirely via distance learning over two quarters, they will earn two certificates, one in an area of operations analysis and the other in an area of STEM,” said Dr. Joe Hooper, NPS Vice Provost for Academic Affairs (VPAA). “This is a good pilot in a different way of doing business, where we can offer flexible, ‘stackable’ certificates leading towards advanced technical graduate degrees for warfighting officers in a way that works with their career path.”

Historically, SNAs have been assigned to miscellaneous temporary duties throughout the Naval Aviation enterprise, but this was not necessarily the most productive or cost-efficient way for these young officers to spend their wait time.

“The thought was that if we could provide them courses towards an academic certificate, that would be a very valuable use of their time,” said Dr. Matthew Carlyle, Operations Research (OR) Department Chair. “It would keep them engaged and leverage their recent educational experience.”

“Students coming right out of their undergraduate degree are very technically capable and can handle a lot of the material that we offer in our certificates,” Carlyle added.

Fortunately, NPS has a robust, well-established capacity and experience with DL education, dating back to the mid-1990s; this capacity was further refined throughout the COVID-19 pandemic and developed into a new portal, NPS Online. As a result, conversations between NPS and the Naval Aviation community began in mid-May to explore starting a stackable DL certificate program during the summer quarter.

Retired U.S. Navy Capt. Steven Pilnick, OR Senior Lecturer and Associate Chairman for Distance Learning, began coordinating with the VPAA’s office and Naval Aviation officials in Pensacola to ensure students were placed in the right certificate track according to their individual academic background and interests.

“We jumped on it very quickly; it was a very fast train,” he said. “Much of what was unique here is that Naval Aviation asked us to offer certificate programs for their entire population of backlog of ensigns. Through the VPAA’s leadership we were able to get department chairs, funding and infrastructure involved to massively ramp up the largest cohort we’ve ever had.”

Graduate certificate programs typically require four courses, so each SNA will take a total of eight courses over the summer and fall academic quarters – a full-time workload from an academic perspective.

“The department had to come up with creative ways to rapidly staff up for unplanned instructional labor,” Pilnick said. “We should give credit to some of the OR instructors, who were heroes and volunteered to add students to their workload and stretch the limit beyond what had been done before.”

Once the SNAs begin flight school and launch their naval aviation careers, they will find it difficult to pursue academic interests – attending school is time spent outside the cockpit.

Taking advantage of the wait time to earn the certificates now will give them a leg up down the road, especially when it comes to promotions, according to Ensign Louis Ketchman.

Following his commissioning in May 2023, Ketchman reported to Pensacola in the summer, though his flight school class won’t begin for months. In the meantime, he’s pursuing combat systems and systems analysis certificates.

“It’s a decent challenge,” he said. “We just got out of college, so we’re used to taking 18-20 credits at a time, but it’s all new material.”

Ensign Freddie McAlister, on track to earn certificates in data science and combat systems engineering, was planning on eventually pursuing his master’s degree, with the goal of first becoming a naval aviator and eventually an astronaut.

“Once I do get these certificates, I’ll be able to work on my master’s later in my career,” he said. “It lines up perfectly because to become an astronaut, I need a master’s in a STEM program, so honestly it’ll work pretty well.”

The program also aligns with Secretary of the Navy Carlos Del Toro’s vision for relevant, continuous education, as outlined in the recently released Naval Education Strategy.

“Continual learning is critical to the success of any officer’s development, and so is having a venue like NPS that gives us those opportunities,” said Brophy. “What I needed as a lieutenant is not what I need now as a commander or a captain. And so having that evolving type of education, I think, will be critical for the success of our Navy.”

NPS’ ability to respond quickly to the needs of the fleet is a unique capability, and one that reflects favorably on the institution, according to Carlyle.

“It’s a nice illustration of how we can cooperate not only with our sponsoring agencies, but also with our core clients, our core personnel in the Navy that we want to serve,” he said. “With that coordination, we can provide them with an excellent educational value.”

That value in meeting the Navy’s unique needs for graduate education, and the fact that NPS is able to do classified research as well, is something that and you can’t do anywhere else, according to Brophy.

“Could I do this in outside institutions? Probably not, because I doubt we would have this type of flexibility. And I also wouldn’t have it from the standpoint of the warfighting focus,” Brophy said. “For us to win in combat requires us to think deeply about combat. Not all institutions allow you to do that, and NPS does.”

Defense News: Research and Development Business Opportunities for Small Biz with ONR

Source: United States Navy

More than 225 representatives of technology-focused small businesses joined a webinar, Oct. 23, to learn the ins and outs of the contracting process for awards through the Office of Naval Research.

Alonzie Scott III, Director, Mission Support, welcomed the participants, urging them to stick around for some valuable insight on how to move forward with their proposals for Broad Agency Announcements (BAA).

“I’m really excited that we have all these folks from the different commands within the ONR portfolio and our small business folks online today,” he said. “I’m very, very excited that PTAC [Procurement Technical Assistance Center] got involved with us and look forward to having a fantastic webinar.”

The Office of Small Business (OSB) at ONR initiated the webinar with the help of Virginia PTAC, an APEX Accelerator program that is partially funded through the Department of Defense (DoD) and administered by George Mason University. Lisa Wood, statewide director of the Virginia PTAC, moderated the event after giving an overview of the PTAC program, which offers free training and counseling to current and potential government contracting companies.

The PTAC program has about 100 offices across the United States, so the Virginia PTAC covers just the state. However, Simonoff said the webinar, ““R&D Business Opportunities for Small Biz with ONR” was open to any U.S. based small company and it was heavily promoted in the weeks leading up to the webinar.

Judging from the amount of questions asked – and answered – during the two-hour webinar, Simonoff said she believed many of the participants were getting answers for the first time about how to do business with ONR.

“Working with a government agency can be difficult for any company so imagine how daunting it must be for a small business to figure out not just the paperwork involved, but how to fill it out properly in order to win a government contract” she said.

“That’s why the Office of Small Business Programs (OSBP) and SBIR exists at ONR. And programs like PTAC. But before a small business can take advantage of these avenues – they have to know about them,” Simonoff said. “I’m engaging industry and I’m trying to engage ONR program officers with the idea of using small business when the ONR mission is supported. So, I’m an influencer.” she said.

That influence appears to be working. The webinar featured presentations from all five ONR departments about their research and development, and what programs or projects that may be open to opportunities for small business. ONR representatives included department leads from Ocean Battlespace Sensing; Warfighter Performance; Naval Air Warfare and Weapons; Sea Warfare and Weapons; Command, Control, Computing, Communications, Cyber, Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance and Targeting.

The Naval Research Laboratory Small Business Office, the Department of the Navy Technology Transfer Program, and Small Business Innovation Research/Small Business Technology Transfer (SBIR/STTR) also participated in the webinar.

Although the webinar focused heavily on research and development, Simonoff said there are two streams of contracts for small business at ONR – science and technology, and support services. While the webinar offered information about both types, science and technology services were emphasized, as well as where to find information online about funding opportunities.

ONR’s Office of Small Business Programs advises contracting officials and program managers, as well as small businesses owners, on the contracting process for small business awards. It advocates and advises on behalf of small business contracts, including those of small, disadvantaged businesses, historically underutilized businesses (HUBZone), veteran-owned small businesses, service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses, women-owned and minority-owned small businesses.

Defense News: Defense Attaché’s Visit USS Blue Ridge

Source: United States Navy

The international assembly included topics on theater operations, opportunities for enhancing multinational cooperation, as well as sharing knowledge on methods for joint responses.   

“Securing a free and open Indo-Pacific doesn’t happen without the diplomatic efforts of experts who understand the value and can make combined operations within 7th Fleet possible,” said Capt. Tuan Nguyen, 7th Fleet deputy director of plans.

The unique meeting was an opportunity to facilitate dialogue for cooperation multilaterally within 7th Fleet’s area of operations.

“As always, it was a privilege to host representatives of our Allies and partners and exchange frank views and ideas in open discussion,” said Lt. Cmdr. David Norgan, United Kingdom Exchange Officer with 7th Fleet. “This mutual understanding is essential in today’s interconnected, interdependent world in order to perpetuate the international rules-based order that has guaranteed peace for so many years.”

U.S. 7th Fleet is the U.S. Navy’s largest forward-deployed numbered fleet, and routinely interacts and operates with allies and partners in preserving a free and open Indo-Pacific region.