Showing posts with label military. Show all posts
Showing posts with label military. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 16, 2020

NORAD air defense exercise put military jets over Bethesda, DC early this morning

DC National Guard F-16 fighter jet
Military jets were heard over Bethesda and Northwest Washington for the first time in two weeks early this morning. Around 12:50 AM, a military jet aircraft was audible circling over Bethesda. At 12:57, it began performing maneuvers at an increased speed.

The aircraft then moved away in a southwest direction, where it continued to circle and could still be heard from Bethesda for about 35 minutes. At 1:39 AM, the aircraft returned to fly over Bethesda at a higher speed with more jet engine noise. By 1:50 AM, the jet flew away for good. A military helicopter then circled over Bethesda for about 10 minutes, before it, too, flew off.

What was happening? I investigated, and learned it was a not-well-publicized air defense exercise by the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) over the DC area. The exercise was called Falcon Virgo, and was in support of Operation Noble Eagle, which provides air surveillance over the United States and Canada.

According to NORAD, the aircraft heard last night included Air Force F-16 aircraft, an Army C-12 aircraft, a United States Coast Guard MH-65D Dolphin helicopter, and Civil Air Patrol Cessna 182T general aviation aircraft. I personally heard the F-16 and MH-65D, but I can't say that I heard the two propeller aircraft.

Photo courtesy NORAD

Wednesday, July 04, 2018

Uniformed Services University proposes expansion in Bethesda

The Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, located at 4301 Jones Bridge Road at Naval Support Activity Bethesda, is proposing an expansion of its campus. It would bring an additional 333 existing Naval employees to the campus, a potentially-significant traffic impact on nearby roads, where BRAC projects have already failed to avert rush hour jams related to Walter Reed's growth. The expansion would consist of a multistory education and research lab, and a parking garage.

A required environmental assessment will be conducted by the U.S. Navy, including the environmental impact of a concrete batch plant that would be temporarily required on-site during construction. The Navy will be hosting a public meeting on the expansion plans on July 12, 2018 from 5:00-7:00 PM at the National 4-H Conference Center, located at 7100 Connecticut Avenue in Chevy Chase.

Tuesday, July 03, 2012

VICTORY FOR BETHESDA VETERANS: NIGHT LIGHTING RESTORED AT VETERANS PARK MEMORIAL

Mission accomplished:  After raising the question last week as to why the lighting at the Veterans Park memorial has been off at night for as long as 2 years, I am pleased to report that it has been restored as of last night.

June 24, 2012

July 2, 2012


Not only are the "dancing waters," as David Letterman would call them, illuminated again, but for one night, our urban park has once again come to life.

Instead of shadowy figures slumping in the dark, the crowds were larger, there was much more energy in the area, and less of the after-hours-we're-closed ambiance the park has projected for too long.

Most importantly, the primary purpose of the park - a memorial to Bethesda's soldiers killed in action from World War I to the "Gulf Wars" - has once again taken center stage.  Monday night, I saw many people standing at the memorial and reading its inscription.

I just have to wonder, what took so long?

Why were the night lights off in the first place?

And much like the scandal of the new Bethesda Post Office, where were the members of the county council?  Why does it take a post by a citizen blogger to get things done, when we're paying these folks $100,000 a year?

It appears their lack of familiarity with downtown Bethesda also extends to its veterans' memorial.

I'd be willing to bet that at least half of our carpetbagger council has never even been to Veterans Park.  Heck, I doubt half of them even know it's there!

But then again, this is a council that includes members like George Leventhal, who infamously declared in 2010 that Bethesda had no 5 star restaurants, and that he had to go to Fairfax County to dine out.  And the same council that handed Wheaton's Veterans Park over to a for-profit developer - with no requirement that it be replaced by a new memorial!  An outrageous insult to veterans for which they were never held accountable by local media.

Our elected officials talk a good game about veterans, much like they talk about farmers, jobs, traffic gridlock, and the poor and "vulnerable."  But as I always say, don't listen to what they say; examine what they actually do.  And on each of these topics, you'll conclude their efforts haven't amounted to anything.

They have a veteran-related TV show, but they don't have a problem leaving a veterans memorial dark indefinitely.

The lights are back on, and I invite the county council to stop by and discover Veterans Park, and pay their respects.

Monday, June 25, 2012

IS NOT LIGHTING THE VETERANS PARK MEMORIAL DISRESPECTFUL TO VETERANS?

LIGHTS OUT

Another Robert Dyer @ Bethesda Row Exclusive

One thing that concerns me as summer begins, is the darkness at downtown Bethesda's Veterans Park.  As previously lit in the past, the fountain memorial to Bethesda soldiers who made the ultimate sacrifice was visually impressive, and animated the park as a public space after dark.

July 2010

June 2012


After all, Veterans Park is not just a place to hang out or eat lunch; at its heart, it is a memorial.

Out of sight, out of mind, as they say.  If the memorial is hidden in the darkness of night, how is it reminding visitors of those sacrifices?  You're free to hang out there and enjoy life, because someone else gave theirs so you could.

I also wonder if the flag is adequately lighted at night, as well.  Technically, an American flag flown at night should be properly illuminated.

Is the unlit fountain a cost-saving measure?  Is the lighting malfunctioning, and in need of repair?  Given the unwise spending increases - and massive tax increases - approved by the Montgomery County Council, it would be hard to justify a cut in the lighting of a veterans memorial.  And a troubling statement about misplaced priorities.

It's time to turn the lights back on at Veterans Park.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

VETERANS AND
TRANSIT

Last month, when writing about ridership on Norfolk's Tide light rail being twice the projected number, I suggested it might have something to do with the large military population there.

While most light rail systems across the country are successful, the Tide service is the biggest success so far (assuming planners didn't lowball the projections, which is unlikely, since low numbers don't win federal money). So the large number of men and women who have served in Germany and Japan, for example, might be one explanation for the above-average performance.

The reason I think this hypothesis is valid is that these servicemembers have experienced the convenience of the more advanced transit systems found in European and Asian cities. So when they return here, while our systems (with the possible exceptions of cities like New York and Chicago) seem quaint by comparison, they are more likely to give them a chance.

Further proof of my theory was found in yesterday's Core Values column by WTOP commentator Chris Core. He printed a letter from retired Air Force Col. Chris Krisinger, who had high praise for Munich's frankly incredible transit system. Noting the seamless mobility offered by Munich's S-Bahn (think the Purple Line or MTA Light Rail) and U-Bahn (subway), he underscored the need for convenient rail service to Dulles Airport.

Alas, the sensible and world-class layout described by Col. Krisinger ("the 's-bahn' train arrives at the airport in an underground station that brings passengers right up in between the two main terminals") has already been rejected for the Dulles Metro station.

In fact, the so-called airport station was never under the Dulles terminal, and that made the cheaper compromise station the right choice. Had the argument been over an actual underground station at Dulles, I would have written letters to editors and promoted that option here. Nothing would tell visitors that America leads the world more evocatively than rising into the airport itself upon an escalator from the train platform.

Ironically, Core's original column was boosting a Metropolitan Washington Airport Authority board member's idea of a smaller, Aero Train line that would restore the original vision by taking Dulles passengers from an even more affordable station further away directly into the terminal.

Given the fiscal and practical realities of the moment, that idea is a good one, but it seems to have been discarded by the board.

The truth is that Metro to Dulles is all about the Benjamins for wealthy developers. The stations have no parking, which means a massive portion of potential ridership will be lost from the get-go. The Tysons mall station... ...is not in the mall. That says third world, not world class. And the afterthought treatment given to the station theoretically the raison d'etre for the whole Metro line? These three facts speak for themselves.

So we won't have a world-class Dulles Metro system (but the skyline view of already-impressive Tysons Corner from the elevated trestle will be fantastic at night).

But Col. Krisinger's letter does offer proof of my theory - our military population, such as those commuting to BRAC sites like Walter Reed, Fort Belvoir and the Mark Center, are more likely to use transit than the average American worker.

The question is, can our politicians "grow up" and deliver the world's best transit and highway systems for the world's best men and women in uniform?