Fort Monmouth: Signal Interruption
Transcription
Fort Monmouth: Signal Interruption
VIEWPOINT Each year, OSA jointly sponsors two Congressional Fellows—one in conjunction with the Materials Research Society (MRS) and the other with the International Society for Optical Engineering (SPIE). The 2006 fellows Ben Gross and Jamie Link work in the offices of Representative Joseph Lieberman (D-Conn.), Credit Rush Holt (D-N.J.) and Senator VIEWPOINT respectively. Ben and Jamie have spent much time addressing issues at the forefront of Congressional debates. Ben has been examining the implications of the government’s decision to close Fort Monmouth, an Army center for telecommunications and electronic research. The crux of Jamie’s effort has been on the National Innovation Act, which is intended to help the United States maintain its competitive edge by bolstering math and science education and retaining manufacturing capability. Following are editorials on these key topics. Please note that these viewpoints are those of the writers; they do not necessary reflect the opinions of OSA or OPN. 12 | OPN September 2006 MRS/OSA Congressional Fellow Ben Gross Fort Monmouth: Signal Interruption I n 2005, the U.S. Base Realignment communications gear, networking and Closure (BRAC) Commission systems, sensor technology, fuel cell and made an unfortunate miscalculation: battery technology and roadside bomb It decided to close the Army’s premier countermeasures, just to name a few. telecommunications and electronics Fort Monmouth is the backbone of research, development, testing and the Army’s land Command, Control, evaluation (RDT&E) facility at Fort Communications, Computers, IntelMonmouth, N.J. ligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Congress appointed the BRAC in (C4ISR) mission, which is to be trans2005 to streamline military operations. ferred from Monmouth County, N.J., to The commission was asked to create a the Aberdeen Proving Ground (APG) in comprehensive plan to eliminate or reMaryland by no later then 2011. structure military resources for improved At first glance, the move to APG efficiency, subject to approval by the appears sensible. By consolidating Department of Defense, the President two RDT&E facilities, the Army and Congress. hopes to increase efficiency by sharing Working as a science fellow in the administrative resources, equipment office of Rep. Rush Holt (a physicist and and laboratories. However, what many former Congressional science fellow), fail to understand is that APG is largely I help Congress to a heavy equipment and navigate the implicaweapons testing facility, According to a tions of the closure not a computer science of Fort Monmouth. and electrical engineering National Defense This may seem like research facility. The stateUniversity (NDU) an unlikely task for a of-the-art labs and facilities science fellow, but Fort at Fort Monmouth do not study, the costs Monmouth directly exist at APG, nor is there of transferring employs more than a C4ISR culture like the functions to the 1,500 civilian scientists one that has evolved at and engineers and Fort Monmouth over its new facility were supports a network of 89-year history. underestimated locally based contracApparently, the BRAC tors. The massive list of believed that the transfer by the BRAC technology developed of C4ISR research from Commission by and serviced at Fort Fort Monmouth would Monmouth includes up to $1.2 billion. require merely moving www.osa-opn.org OSA its workforce to expanded facilities at Aberdeen. Unfortunately, this thinking belies a terrible misunderstanding about Fort Monmouth’s highly qualified, welleducated and experienced workforce: An internal survey shows that fewer than 20 percent of employees intend to move. Monmouth County has a relatively high standard of living (the median new home price is $750,000), and many Fort employees and contractors simply do not want to move to Aberdeen. The result for the Army’s mission means it will have to replace its current workforce in the middle of a conflict in the Middle East. According to a National Defense University (NDU) study, the costs of transferring functions to the new facility were underestimated by the BRAC Commission by up to $1.2 billion. The same NDU study estimates that it will take SPIE/OSA Congressional Fellow Jamie Link Not All Politics Is Local W hen I arrived in Sen. Lieberman’s The group is split down party lines, with office last fall, in what has been roughly equal numbers of Republican called one of the most partisan Congressand Democrat backers, and they run the es in history, I braced myself for a year gamut from fiscal conservatives to cenof bickering across party lines and over trists to members on the far left. Indeed, state priorities. In fact, my you’d be hard pressed to experience has turned out find any Senators who Innovation and quite differently. would describe themselves I have spent the past competitiveness as “anti-innovation.” nine months working on Innovation and comare national the National Innovation petitiveness are national issues that Act (NIA), a bipartisan issues that resonate with effort by Senators Ensign constituents in all 50 states resonate with and Lieberman to mainin a very concrete and constituents in tain America’s competitivevisible way. Every state has ness in the 21st century. school children who are all 50 states in There are 24 co-sponcurrently outperformed in a very concrete sors of the NIA, almost math and science by their and visible way. a quarter of the Senate. peers in India and China 10 years to bring C4ISR functionality back to 2005 levels. This is time the military does not have. Like too many decisions in Washington, the closure of Fort Monmouth underscores how few policymakers understand the distinctions between vital areas of research, and how many fail to appreciate the value and experience of research scientists and engineers. — Ben Gross (and in much of Europe for that matter), and they all have small manufacturers that struggle to remain competitive with their offshore counterparts, which can obtain labor at one-tenth the cost. Many of the provisions in the National Innovation Act address these issues. There is no state that would not benefit from student scholarships and grants to universities, and none that could not utilize services that would help our country retain its manufacturing capability and the innovation infrastructure that surrounds it. Every American should share the desire to build a nimble and adaptable 21st century workforce and maintain our competitive edge in the global marketplace. Despite the broad appeal of this issue, it has taken the energy of many people to gather support for the bill and carry it through the legislative process. In a system that is designed to allow only a tiny fraction of bills introduced to be signed into law, there is hard work involved every step of the way. Nonetheless, there is a reasonable chance that a competitiveness package will pass this year with strong bipartisan support. Competitiveness is an issue that is international in its scope and implications. When Sen. Lieberman talks about the National Innovation Act to his constituents in Connecticut, he can say with confidence that the legislation is “good for the state, and good for America.” Fortunately, so could any other member of the Senate. — Jamie Link OPN September 2006 | 13