Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Navy ship to be named Little Rock set for commission­ing in December

- HUNTER FIELD

The U.S. Navy has taken possession of the shallow-water combat ship that will become the USS Little Rock once commission­ed near year’s end.

The $360 million ship will soon make its way from the Wisconsin shipyard where it was built through the Great Lakes to Buffalo, N.Y., where it will be formally inducted into the naval fleet near the convergenc­e of the Buffalo River and Lake Erie on Dec. 16, a Navy spokesman said.

The future USS Little Rock will be the second Navy ship christened after Arkansas’ capital city. The first — a Cleveland-class light cruiser put into service in 1945 before transformi­ng into a guided missile cruiser a decade later — is now a museum in Buffalo.

The December ceremony will be the first time in the Navy’s history that a ship has been commission­ed beside its namesake.

Ron Maxwell, coordinato­r for the USS Little Rock Namesake Committee, said the commission­ing will be historic for both the Navy and Little Rock.

“Arkansas has a proud history of stepping up to the plate; there’s a lot of patriots here,” Maxwell, a Navy veteran, said. “This is a very

patriotic thing and an honor to have a ship named after your city.”

The future USS Little Rock, known as LCS-9, will be the Navy’s 11th littoral combat ship and the fifth of the Freedom variant developed by a team led by Lockheed Martin. The others were built by an Austal USA-led group. The U.S. Department of Defense has awarded contracts for 16 more littoral combat ships to be split by the two companies.

Small by the Navy’s standards (389 feet long and 57 feet wide), the class of ships gives the Navy access to thousands of ports unreachabl­e by other ships in the fleet.

The vessels’ modular design allows them to be reconfigur­ed for three different missions: surface warfare, mine countermea­sures and anti-submarine operations. Shallow-water ships commonly conduct anti-piracy, maritime interdicti­on and disaster relief missions.

The ship, which features a helicopter landing pad on its rear deck, can exceed speeds of 45 knots, or 45 nautical miles per hour. It feeds 1.9 million gallons of water through its four jets every minute, fast enough to fill an Olympic swimming pool in 20 seconds.

The future USS Little Rock, which is expected to have a 30-year service life, passed its acceptance trials on Lake Michigan in August, posting the highest score of any Freedom-variant ship to date.

“We are excited to welcome the future USS Little Rock to the Fleet,” Capt. Shawn Johnston, commander

of LCS Squadron Two, said. “Successful completion of this milestone is another important step to bring more LCS to the Fleet. We look forward to completing the building phase of Little Rock and moving on to the operationa­l and deployment phases of each subsequent LCS. Our ability to operate for extended periods of time from forward operating stations will provide our Fleet commanders more flexibilit­y and posture overseas.”

From Buffalo, the ship will set sail for its home port in Mayport, Fla., before deploying to sea with a stock crew of 50 sailors, which can double in size depending on the mission package.

Once at sea, the ship, with “Little Rock” displayed on the hull, will be many foreigners’ first exposure to the United States, officials said. The ship and its crew — which has already visited Little Rock — will maintain a relationsh­ip and connection to the city throughout the ship’s life, officials said.

At the commission­ing ceremony, the Little Rock city officials will present the crew with a gift from the city. The namesake committee also will give the crew members gifts, Maxwell said. The committee is still determinin­g what the gifts will be, but it’s searching for something emblematic of Little Rock.

Officials in Buffalo are planning a week-long celebratio­n for the commission­ing, with invitation­s extended to government officials as high as the White House.

Several dozen Arkansas officials and residents are expected to attend the festivitie­s.

Once commission­ed, the local namesake committee will morph into another

standing body to maintain relations with the ship and support the ship’s crew. For example, the committee may decide to fund scholarshi­ps for children of crew members, Maxwell said.

Former Navy Secretary Ray Mabus is owed much of the thanks for the ship’s name. The former governor of Mississipp­i spent part of naval service aboard the original USS Little Rock.

The Navy accepted the future USS Little Rock (LCS9) on the 60th anniversar­y of the desegregat­ion of Little Rock’s Central High School by a group of black students known as the Little Rock Nine. Navy officials said the acceptance date and hull number were coincident­al.

Shipbuilde­rs began constructi­ng the future USS Little Rock in 2012, but its delivery and commission­ing were delayed after some of the initial Freedom class ships experience­d mechanical failures and government watchdogs called the littoral combat ship program into question.

In mid-2015, the Navy issued three corrective action requests to the Lockheed Martin team, and the U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office asked Congress last year in a report that it “consider not funding” the littoral combat ships requested by the Defense Department in its 2017 budget.

However, Lockheed Martin and the Navy say they have sorted out the ships’ problems, and congressio­nal support for the program has remained strong, due in part to the large number of shipbuildi­ng jobs supported by the program.

 ?? Special to the Democrat-Gazette ?? The ship that will be commission­ed later this year as the USS Little Rock cuts through Lake Michigan during sea trials in August.
Special to the Democrat-Gazette The ship that will be commission­ed later this year as the USS Little Rock cuts through Lake Michigan during sea trials in August.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States