Daily Press

New roles on defense panel

Hampton Roads gets a bigger voice on key policy committee

- By Dave Ress Staff Writer

Two Congressio­nal neighbors from Hampton Roads — Reps. Elaine Luria, D-Norfolk, and Rob Wittman, R-Westmorela­nd — are taking on new leadership roles in a key defense policy panel.

Luria was elected vice chair of the House Armed Services Committee this week, while Wittman is stepping up to serve as the Republican­s’ No. 2 on the committee.

Both will continue to serve on the seapower and projection forces subcommitt­ee, which has jurisdicti­on over Navy and Marine Corps acquisitio­n programs, shipbuildi­ng and Air Force bomber, tanker, and airlift aircraft programs.

Luria said expanding the base of industries that maintain Navy ships and supporting shipyard workers is a top priority, as is rooting out racism in the ranks. She also wants to refocus Congress’s and the Navy’s attention on what Navy ships actually can do, how they function and how deployable

they are.

Luria and Wittman agree that the Navy needs more ships, and both said it needs to do a better job with long-term planning for the pacing and financing of

constructi­on.

Luria has said she wants to hear more about how the Navy plans to operate the large increase in unmanned vessels called for in the shipbuildi­ng plan released in the last days of the Trump administra­tion. Both want to step up the pace of the Navy’s 20-year plan to modernize public shipyards, including Norfolk Naval Shipyard.

Wittman said he expects private shipyards will continue to take on some work that traditiona­lly had been slated for the Navy’s own facilities, now that the Navy is trying to ease pressure on the public yards by such moves as assigning overhauls of some Virginia class submarines to Newport News Shipbuildi­ng.

He and Luria agree that the Navy needs to do a better job working with the industries that build and maintain Navy ships.

“If you go along the Elizabeth River today, there’s a ship in every drydock and every slip; two years ago they were empty,” Wittman said. “The companies need consistenc­y.” The two members of Congress also want to take a look at improving the Navy’s Optimized Fleet Response Plan, which sets guidelines for how ships and sailors deploy, how they prepare for deployment and how and when ships are maintained.

Luria and Wittman also agree that the Navy needs to have a credible presence in the western Pacific and Indian Ocean, where China has stepped up its naval operations.

Luria said the nation’s main adversary is China and future conflicts are likely to be naval, which means a building and deploying the right mix of ships to confront that challenge should be a national priority.

Wittman said he’ll be pressing the Air Force to bring an F-35 squadron to Langley Air Force Base, in addition to the F-22s slated to move to Hampton from Florida.

He said he’d also like to see more tanker aircraft rotating through Langley.

 ?? JASON PASTRICK/US NAVY ?? Reps. Elaine Luria and Rob Wittman want to step up the pace of the Navy’s 20-year plan to modernize public shipyards, including Norfolk Naval Shipyard, above.
JASON PASTRICK/US NAVY Reps. Elaine Luria and Rob Wittman want to step up the pace of the Navy’s 20-year plan to modernize public shipyards, including Norfolk Naval Shipyard, above.
 ??  ?? Wittman
Wittman
 ??  ?? Luria
Luria

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