Washington, Jan 22 : Air Force leaders will cut flying hours by nearly 20 percent and
prepare for a possible end to all noncombat or noncritical flights from late
July through September if Congress can't agree on a budget and billions of
dollars in automatic cuts are triggered.
In an Air Force internal memo,
Air Force Secretary Michael Donley laid out broad but grim steps the service
will be taking in coming days and weeks to enforce a civilian hiring freeze,
cancel air show appearances and flyovers, and slash base improvements and
repairs by about 50 percent.
Beyond those immediate actions, Donley and
Gen. Mark Welsh, the Air Force chief of staff, said in the memo that the service
will make plans to chop aircraft and depot maintenance by about 17 percent and
initiate widespread civilian furloughs if there is no resolution to the budget
issue by March. The cut in flights would reduce flying hours by more than
200,000, the memo said.
In a similar memo, the Navy said it faces a $4
billion shortfall in its operations and maintenance accounts and called for
"stringent belt-tightening measures" if a new budget is not passed and the
military has to operate with the same funding it got for the previous fiscal
year.
Navy Secretary Ray Mabus, in the memo, said a number of actions
must be considered to seek cost savings, including postponing the
decommissioning of ships, if necessary. Other possible steps included a civilian
hiring freeze, termination of temporary employees, cuts to base improvements or
repairs and reductions in travel, information technology and administrative
spending.
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and other military leaders have
been predicting dire consequences if Congress fails to pass a new budget and
automatic cuts take place. The Pentagon is facing a spending reduction of nearly
$500 billion over a decade. An additional $110 billion in automatic spending
cuts to military and domestic programs will take effect in early March if no
agreement is reached.
In a briefing with Pentagon reporters, Donley said
the Air Force is not targeting a particular amount in savings to achieve, but is
taking steps to curtail spending where possible at this point without having an
irreversible effect on the service and not impacting the nation's ability to
wage war.
The Air Force accounts, Donley said, will bear about up to 20
percent of the Defense Department reductions
Asked about Panetta's
directive to possibly cancel ship, aircraft and depot maintenance in the third
and fourth quarters of this fiscal year if there is no budget solution, Donley
said the Air Force will review each type of aircraft and its
requirements.
"We're trying to take prudent actions now that are as
reversible, recoverable as possible," Donley said. "We're trying to protect
maintenance for aircraft and weapons systems sustainability as long as we can
into the fiscal year."
Welsh said commanders will make decisions on how
best to curtail flying and that the Air Force will try to protect training
flights as long into the year as it can.
But, he noted, "if sequestration
hits and the multibillion-dollars reductions fall on the last two quarters of
the fiscal year, there is no way not to impact training, flying hours and
maintenance, which are things, right now, we are trying to protect as long as we
can."
Officials said that civilian pay is about 40 percent of the Air
Force's operations and maintenance budget. Panetta has made it clear that if
there is no budget agreement, the civilian workforce will face sweeping cuts and
unpaid furloughs.
There are about 800,000 civilians across the Defense
Department, and nearly 1.4 million in the active-duty military. The Air Force
numbers about 330,000 active-duty service members and about 143,000 fulltime
civilians.
Ends
SA/EN
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