Naval Base Kitsap

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Naval Base Kitsap
Naval Base Kitsap logo.png
Coordinates 47°43′14″N 122°42′47″W / 47.72056°N 122.71306°W / 47.72056; -122.71306Coordinates: 47°43′14″N 122°42′47″W / 47.72056°N 122.71306°W / 47.72056; -122.71306
Type U.S. naval base/military base
Garrison information
Current
commander
CAPT Alan Schrader
Occupants 13,000 active-duty personnel
13,000 DoD civilian employees
10,000 contractors[1]

Naval Base Kitsap is a U.S. Navy base located on the Kitsap Peninsula in Washington state. It was created in 2004 by merging the former Naval Station Bremerton with Naval Submarine Base Bangor. The Mission of Naval Base Kitsap is to serve as the home base for the Navy’s fleet throughout West Puget Sound and to provide base operating services, including support for both surface ships and Fleet Ballistic Missile and other nuclear submarines having their home ports at Bremerton and Bangor.

Naval Base Kitsap also provides service, programs, and facilities to meet the needs of their hosted combat commands, tenant activities, ships' crews, and civilian employees. Naval Base Kitsap is the largest naval organization in Navy Region Northwest, and it is composed of installations at Bremerton, Bangor, Manchester, Indian Island, and Keyport, Washington. Naval Base Kitsap was the recipient of the 2005 Commander in Chief's Award for Installation Excellence - the Best Base in the U.S. Navy.[2]

Naval Base Kitsap is the third-largest Navy base in the U.S.[1] It features one of the U.S. Navy's four nuclear shipyards, one of two strategic nuclear weapons facilities, the only West Coast dry dock capable of handling a Nimitz-class aircraft carrier and the Navy's largest fuel depot."[1]

History[edit]

Bangor[edit]

Serving the U.S. Pacific Fleet, this Trident submarine base is the one of only two such bases operated by the U.S. Navy. The Trident submarine base at Kings Bay, Georgia, used by the U.S. Atlantic Fleet is the only other. Nearby is Strategic Weapons Facility Pacific (SWFPAC), where submarine-launched ballistic missiles are stored and maintained.

Bremerton[edit]

This installation is home to the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility. In addition to performing drydock and overhaul services for active naval vessels, it is also home to an inactive ship facility for several decommissioned warships, including aircraft carriers.

Naval Base Kitsap is also home to Naval Hospital Bremerton.

Recent history[edit]

In 2010, after purchasing the base's first hybrid bus on April 29, 2010, Naval Base Kitsap purchased two additional hybrid buses, with five others to be delivered by the end of July. The diesel-electric vehicles are the Navy's first hybrids and were funded through the GSA American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) Replacement/Exchange Program and are overseen by NAVFAC, the Navy's non-tactical vehicle program manager.[3]

On Nov. 2, 2009, five protesters, including 82-year-old priest William J. Bichsel, S.J., cut through two fences to reach an area near where nuclear warheads are stored in bunkers. The protesters put up banners, sprinkled blood on the ground, scattered sunflower seeds and prayed until they were arrested; all faced prison sentences.[4] Bichsel was released from federal prison on February 9, 2012.[5]

Units, warships and submarines[edit]

(as of November 2010)[needs update][citation needed]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Kitsap Navy base is getting a new boss". The Seattle Times. January 11, 2011. Retrieved 2011-01-12. 
  2. ^ "Naval Base Kitsap - About > Mission". Retrieved 2009-06-10 
  3. ^ Waller, Darrell (1 July 2010). "Navy Buys First "Green" Buses for Naval Base Kitsap.". US Navy. Retrieved 2011-01-12. 
  4. ^ https://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iCCU_ylE9gQ1k4cDqzFAPc3dV4qQ?docId=7ba9e8af59f64e3187660edcc19fd06e
  5. ^ William Jerome Bichsel, inmate # 86275-020,Federal Bureau of Prisons, U.S. Dep't of Justice, at [1].

External links[edit]