The Day

Governor’s Guard oversight is up for debate in Hartford

Units want to be mostly free from the military

- By JULIA BERGMAN Day Staff Writer

Hartford — The Governor’s Guard, the historical foot guard and horse guard units that are part of the state militia, wants to govern itself as a fraternal organizati­on until called upon for active duty.

But the state adjutant general asserts that would undermine his ability to effectivel­y lead the state’s military forces.

The issue was debated at a Feb. 27 public hearing of the state’s Veterans Affairs Committee, which has taken up several legislativ­e proposals relating to control over the four units of the Governor’s Guards and its structure going forward.

One proposal, House Bill 5237, seeks to remove the units from the adjutant general’s control and have the units answer to the governor and state auditors.

“By putting them under the governor, that would delegitimi­ze their role as part of a military organizati­on and delegate them to some kind of ceremonial function,” Maj. Gen. Thaddeus Martin, adjutant general of the Connecticu­t National Guard, testified at the hearing.

Instead, Martin said he is advocating for a proposal, Senate Bill 226, that would allow the adjutant general

to begin the process of authoring individual bylaws for each of the four governor’s guard units, and to look at the possibilit­y of structurin­g the units so they’re similar to other Army National Guard units.

He offered the example of the horse guard providing a search and rescue capability.

“Another potential use would be if the National Guard were overwhelme­d and had to empty out its armories relative to some domestic response, we could mobilize the militia to backfill those positions within those armories to continue some additional level of command and control,” he said.

Dennis Conroy, a former commandant of the First Company Governor’s Foot Guard, said the proposal is an effort by the Military Department “to control these units on a day to day basis — the finances, the armory.”

“Our organizati­on is basically a civilian organizati­on up until the governor through the adjutant general decides to activate our command,” Conroy testified at the hearing. “Up until then it’s like being a member of the Elks.”

According to Conroy, the last time the unit was activated was during the 1955 flood. He acknowledg­ed that many of the members could not pass the physical requiremen­ts to be active duty military personnel, but said there was much they could do if called upon that doesn’t involve combat.

In addition to the First Company Governor’s Foot Guard, there is the Second Company Governor’s Foot Guard, based in Branford, and two horse guard units headquarte­red in Avon and Newtown respective­ly. All of the units have nonprofit organizati­ons to advance their interests. The issue is not new. In fact, many of the proposals before the Veterans Affairs Committee during this short session have been brought up before such as expanding property tax exemptions to certain veterans and renaming Camp Niantic in honor of deceased Army Col. Robert Nett, of Connecticu­t, who received the Medal of Honor for his actions in the Philippine­s during World War II.

The committee will hold another public hearing on March 6 at 3 p.m. in Room 1C of the Legislativ­e Office Building.

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