CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D.
ELIAS
“WILL CALIFORNIA EVADE NEW BASE CLOSURE ROUND?”
“WILL CALIFORNIA EVADE NEW BASE CLOSURE ROUND?”
When former Defense Secretary Chuck
Hagel asked Congress last year to authorize a new round of military base
closings, alarm bells went off in many parts of California.
For this state has been victimized
more than any other in the two already-completed rounds, which saw the military
fail to realize most of the savings it hoped for, while people and communities
involved took greater hits than predicted.
Sure, there have been positive new
uses of some old bases, from parkland in the Presidio of San Francisco to the
Cal State Monterey Bay campus on the former site of Ft. Ord. But the jobs lost
when those bases closed, plus the ones lost from the Long Beach Naval Shipyard,
the El Toro Marine Air Station, March Air Force Base and many others still have
not been replaced.
Nor have the ripple effects stopped,
as many businesses near those bases disappeared or became far less profitable
than before, employing many thousands fewer than they once did.
That’s why there should have been a
sign of relief around California early this spring, when a U.S. Senate panel
announced it will not back the Defense Department on another base closure
round, despite the usual Pentagon warnings that excess facilities will bloat
budgets and ultimately hurt readiness.
Although California took the brunt of
the two previous rounds of base closings, neither of its senators was part of
this proceeding, mostly because of their committee assignments.
Both previous series of base closures
saw Congress give up much of its control, agreeing to set up Base Realignment
and Closure (BRAC) commissions, then vote yes or no on the entirety of those
groups’ proposals without the possibility of making any changes.
But senators don’t appear to be as
willing to part with their power this time. “Let me just make clear up front
that I continue to be opposed to (a new) BRAC,” New Hampshire Republican Kelly
Ayotte said during a hearing of the Senate Armed Services subcommittee.
“You make everyone nervous when you do
a BRAC because every community across the United States has to hire lobbyists
and lawyers,” added Virginia Democrat Tim Kaine.
The lobbyists are needed to prevent
local economic disasters like those still felt in many parts of California,
which lost far more bases than any other state in the previous BRAC rounds. The
closures are a major reason California ranks just 43rd among all
states in federal per capita spending, getting back only 78 cents for every
dollar its taxpayers put into the U.S. Treasury.
But military officials at the
subcommittee hearing testified that about 20 percent of Defense Department
property is unneeded and the department could save about $2 billion a year if
it closed even more bases.
Yet, those same officials admitted
under questioning that the previous rounds have not saved as much as expected,
while harming military communities across America. While closing 56 major bases
and hundreds of smaller installations cost the military $29 billion, it turns
out the closures have saved a net total of only about $1 billion a year since.
Hardly worth the bother.
The upshot is that California this
time may evade the economic consequences that have followed each spate of base
closings in the early 2000s and the mid-1990s.
Which means that cities around the
Camp Pendleton Marine Corps base in northern San Diego County can breathe
easier today. The same for areas around the Army’s Ft. Irwin desert warfare
training center in San Bernardino County and the Navy’s air station near
Lemoore in the Central Valley. And more.
For while Congress – and almost all
Californians serving there – enthusiastically backed the previous BRAC plans,
things didn’t look so good afterwards. For one thing, California dropped 20
places in its rank among the states in federal spending. Federal salaries paid
to Californians alone fell by $9 billion per year because of the two BRACs, a
huge economic hit.
So even though Californians have so
far had nothing to do with it, all signs point to a long wait before another
BRAC round occurs, with this state among the chief beneficiaries of keeping the
status quo.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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