Senator Jim Webb Says Proposed FY09 Defence Supplemental Comes Up Short

Contact: Jessica Smith, 202-228-5185
Tuesday, May 12, 2009 or Kimberly Hunter, 202-228-5258

With Readiness and Jobs at Risk, Webb & Colleagues Call for Full
Funding of Navy’s $425M Shortfall in Ship Maintenance & Repair

Say Proposed FY09 Defense Supplemental Comes Up Short

Senator Jim Webb (D-VA) and nine of his colleagues in the US Senate today called on the leadership of the Senate Committee on Appropriations to fully fund the Navy’s estimated $425 million shortfall for ship depot maintenance and repair in the Fiscal Year 2009 Defense Supplemental Appropriation.

“If this requirement is not funded through the remaining FY-09 supplemental, we are deeply concerned that the Navy’s near-term readiness and long term fleet sustainment will be placed at greater risk,” the senators wrote in their letter to Appropriations Committee Chairman Daniel Inouye and Ranking Member Thad Cochran. They also stressed that an inadequately funded ship maintenance budget will force ship repair companies to lay off highly skilled workers.

In addition to Webb, the signatories included: Senators Mark Warner (D-VA), Edward Kennedy (D-MA), Patty Murray (D-WA), Maria Cantwell (D-WA), Joseph Lieberman (I-CT), Mary Landrieu (D-LA), Mark Begich (D-AK), Roland Burris (D-IL), and Kay Hagan (D-NC).

The proposed FY2009 Defense Supplemental includes $155.1 million for ship maintenance and emergent repair requirements. With the Navy’s reported unfunded shortfall of $417 million for ship depot maintenance and an estimated $163.3 million needed to repair three damaged ships, the funding proposal leaves the Navy with a $425 million shortfall.

“There are clear indications that the surface fleet is already experiencing troubling readiness degradations according to assessments by the Navy’s Board of Inspection and Survey,” the senators said.

The ship repair industrial base is also experiencing adverse consequences owing to the Navy’s scaling back selected projects in previously scheduled availabilities. Such deletions will only add to the Navy’s backlog of required maintenance in fiscal year 2010. During these difficult economic times, the senators said, “Ship repair companies will have no alternative but to lay off skilled workers. Indeed, such reductions in the work force are already underway.”

Webb added that in today’s economy, it makes no sense to defer projects for any of the Navy’s scheduled ship availabilities. “Our private ship repair yards and subcontractors have sized their work force for the maintenance availabilities they expected to conduct this year. They are ready to work, and we should afford them the same support we have provided to other sectors in our economy in recent months.”

To read the senators’ complete letter to Appropriations Committee Chairman Daniel Inouye and Ranking Member Thad Cochran, please visit: http://webb.senate.gov/pdf/ltrfinalbuild.pdf