Welcome Aboard (January 2009)

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Port of Beaumont Navigation District of Jefferson County, Texas 1225 Main Street Beaumont, Texas 77701 (409) 835-5367 (409) 835-0512 FAX Online at www.portofbeaumont.com THIS ISSUE: (Air)Port of Beaumont Snow as ammo Port scenes Port ready to navigate rough economic seas The head- lines have been dismal in recent months as a bundle of eco- nomic crises ripple through world markets. Despite the downturn, the Port of Beaumont continues full steam ahead with nearly $60 million in strategic improvements—based on sound, bold vision—that will help the port weather the market storms that may appear on the horizon. The last quarter of 2008 saw completion of a new $5.4 million military office building to consolidate military staff at the port into one operations center. The port kicked off 2009 with the arrival of a new, $5.3 million, 140- ton mobile harbor crane. Our $16 million rail expansion project will also get under way this year. By the end of 2009, the port will have a new 650-foot wharf on the east bank of the Sabine-Neches Waterway with an adjoining 20-acre storage yard. The port always actively seeks additional business and these im- provements are attractive assets to potential customers. As these changes take effect we are optimis- tic that the port will be properly posi- tioned to come through this eco- nomic downturn and emerge stronger and in an even better posi- tion to serve our community. David C. Fisher Director, Port of Beaumont Homeport security New military building boasts latest storm– and terror-resistant designs U.S. Rep. Ted Poe (R, 2nd District of Texas) and U.S. Army Col. Craig B. Hymes – com- mander of the U.S. Surface De- ployment and Distribution Com- mand’s 597 th Transportation Group – joined state and local officials to officially open the Port of Beaumont’s new military office building during a Nov. 13 cere- mony. The two-story, 27,000 square- foot building was completed in October at a cost of about $5.4 million. The facility will serve as headquarters for the U.S. Sur- face Deployment and Distribution Command’s 842nd Transporta- tion Battalion. The battalion is part of the command’s 597 th Transportation Group, which is tasked with sup- plying military equipment and resources to sustain U.S. forces in action worldwide. The new building consolidates military personnel at the port and provides training and growth opportunities. The facility’s com- pletion also brings the battalion in compliance with the U.S. De- partment of Defense’s force pro- tection and security require- ments, battalion commander U.S. Army Lt. Col. Marshall Ram- sey said. “In the post-9/11 world, extra security is required of all Depart- ment of Defense activities,” Ram- sey said prior to the ceremony. “Previously, with our split posture and our location next to Main Street, we were not meeting the requirements.” The office building is fortified with the latest anti-terrorist con- struction methods including crash-resistant fencing and gates, said architect Dohn Labiche, principal with the LaBiche Architectural Group, who designed the structure. The building is also has hurricane- resistant window systems and can handle wind loads of up to 150 mph, Labiche said. The office building is one of several projects in the port’s aggressive capital improvement program worth nearly $60 million. Others include a new wharf on the east side of the Sabine- Neches Waterway and a new $5 million 140-ton harbor crane. HEADQUARTERS: Ceremony attendees tour the port’s new military office building in November. The $5.4 mil- lion facility houses the U.S. Surface Deployment and Distribution Command’s 842nd Transportation Battalion. Continued on page 7 Port fortifies military ties with new building Fisher Director’s note

description

Progress report and notable happenings at the Port of Beaumont, Texas.

Transcript of Welcome Aboard (January 2009)

Page 1: Welcome Aboard (January 2009)

Port of Beaumont Navigation District of Jefferson County, Texas ● 1225 Main Street ● Beaumont, Texas 77701 ●

● (409) 835-5367 ● (409) 835-0512 FAX ●

Online at www.portofbeaumont.com

THIS ISSUE:

(Air)Port of Beaumont

Snow as ammo

Port scenes

Port ready to navigate rough economic seas

The head-lines have been dismal in recent months as a bundle of eco-nomic crises ripple through world markets. Despite the downturn, the Port of Beaumont continues full steam ahead with nearly $60 million in strategic improvements—based on sound, bold vision—that will help the port weather the market storms that may appear on the horizon. The last quarter of 2008 saw completion of a new $5.4 million military office building to consolidate military staff at the port into one operations center. The port kicked off 2009 with the arrival of a new, $5.3 million, 140-ton mobile harbor crane. Our $16 million rail expansion project will also get under way this year. By the end of 2009, the port will have a new 650-foot wharf on the east bank of the Sabine-Neches Waterway with an adjoining 20-acre storage yard. The port always actively seeks additional business and these im-provements are attractive assets to potential customers. As these changes take effect we are optimis-tic that the port will be properly posi-tioned to come through this eco-nomic downturn and emerge stronger and in an even better posi-tion to serve our community.

David C. Fisher Director, Port of Beaumont

Homeport security New military building boasts latest storm– and terror-resistant designs

U.S. Rep. Ted Poe (R, 2nd District of Texas) and U.S. Army Col. Craig B. Hymes – com-mander of the U.S. Surface De-ployment and Distribution Com-mand’s 597th Transportation Group – joined state and local officials to officially open the Port of Beaumont’s new military office building during a Nov. 13 cere-mony. The two-story, 27,000 square-foot building was completed in October at a cost of about $5.4 million. The facility will serve as headquarters for the U.S. Sur-face Deployment and Distribution Command’s 842nd Transporta-tion Battalion. The battalion is part of the command’s 597th Transportation Group, which is tasked with sup-

plying military equipment and resources to sustain U.S. forces in action worldwide. The new building consolidates military personnel at the port and provides training and growth opportunities. The facility’s com-pletion also brings the battalion in compliance with the U.S. De-partment of Defense’s force pro-tection and security require-ments, battalion commander U.S. Army Lt. Col. Marshall Ram-sey said. “In the post-9/11 world, extra security is required of all Depart-ment of Defense activities,” Ram-sey said prior to the ceremony. “Previously, with our split posture and our location next to Main Street, we were not meeting the requirements.”

The office building is fortified with the latest anti-terrorist con-struction methods including crash-resistant fencing and gates, said architect Dohn Labiche, principal with the LaBiche Architectural Group, who designed the structure. The building is also has hurricane-resistant window systems and can handle wind loads of up to 150 mph, Labiche said. The office building is one of several projects in the port’s aggressive capital improvement program worth nearly $60 million. Others include a new wharf on the east side of the Sabine-Neches Waterway and a new $5 million 140-ton harbor crane.

HEADQUARTERS: Ceremony attendees tour the port’s new military office building in November. The $5.4 mil-lion facility houses the U.S. Surface Deployment and Distribution Command’s 842nd Transportation Battalion.

Continued on page 7

Port fortifies military ties with new building

Fisher

Director’s note

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SOARING INTO HISTORY: Crew members look on as the Airship Ventures Zeppelin NT takes flight from Lot. No. 10 at the Port of Beaumont on October 17 en route to a layover at the Southeast Texas Regional Airport in Nederland. The moment marked the first Zeppelin flight in U.S. skies since the Hindenburg’s fiery crash at Lakehurst Naval Air Station in New Jersey in 1937. (Photo by Image Specialists)

P O R T E N T E R S A V I A T I O N H I S T O R Y

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A Zeppelin is a type of rigid airship first designed by German inventor Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin. The first Zeppelin flew in 1900, and the airships were used both during peacetime and war until they went out of use at the start of

World War II. The next Zeppelin test flights took place in Germany in 1997. Commercial service began there in 2001.

Source: Zeppelin, online interactive from the University of Colorado at Boulder

TOP: Longshoremen and crews with Deutsche Zeppelin Reederei load the Zeppelin NT onto the M.V. Combi Dock I in Finkenwerder, Ger-many in September. After more than two weeks at sea, the Zeppelin arrived at the Port of Beaumont on Oct. 11. ABOVE: The Zeppelin traveled from Germany to the Port of Beaumont stowed in the cargo hold of the M.V. Combi Dock I. The ship was turned to align with the port’s RO/RO ramp and some containers were removed before the Zeppelin and accompanying parts could be offloaded. RIGHT: Longshoremen offload one of the Zep-pelin’s rudders from the cargo hold of the M.V. Combi Dock I.

ABOVE: Crew members check the ropes har-nessing the Zeppelin NT before they roll it out from the M.V. Combi Dock I. BELOW: Zeppelin pilot Fritz Günther monitors the winds. Wind speeds had to average less than 10 mph for a smooth rollout.

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DON’T CALL IT A BLIMP . . .

A Zeppelin is known as a “rigid air-ship,” meaning the envelope—the giant bladder-like formation that helps the airship float—keeps its shape because of a metallic frame underneath. Inside that frame are bags that are filled with gas to help the airship float.

The term blimp typically refers to non-rigid airships. Blimps depend on the pressure of the gas to keep their envelopes inflated and help them fly. Because there is no metal frame, a blimp’s engines must be mounted to the gondola, or cabin.

Source: Airship Ventures

TOP: The Zeppelin rolls out from the cargo hold of the M.V. Combi Dock I on Oct. 12. Long-shoremen and crews were helped along by a mastwagen, or a truck with a tall post that at-taches to the Zeppelin to anchor it in place. MIDDLE: Workers peel the covering off of a rudder to reveal the Zeppelin’s N-number be-fore hoisting and attaching the apparatus to the airship. BOTTOM: Deutsche Zeppelin Reederei’s maintenance crew attaches a rudder to the rear of the Zeppelin after the airship was anchored in place at the port.

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The crew that worked on the Zeppelin in Germany placed their signatures on a farewell note to the airship. The message reads: “Zeppelin NT SN004 D-LZNT (ex); loaded Sept. 26th on vessel Combi Dock I in Finkenwerder (Germany). Good bye, young lady! See you in America”

Zeppelin pilot Katharine Board stands by as KFDM photogra-pher Jack Fitch counts down to a live shot. Board, pilot Fritz Günther and Airship Ventures president Brian Hall all partici-pated in live television interviews while the airship was docked at the port.

From Southeast Texas, the Airship Ventures Zeppelin NT made six stops at points in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California and capped off its eight-day journey with a flight through Golden Gate Pass en route to its new home in the

San Francisco Bay area. Passenger flight service began in late October. To date, Airship Ventures operates the Zeppelin on flight routes across the San Francisco-Oakland area and Northern California’s wine country.

After a few hours of weather delays, the Zeppelin lifts off about 2 p.m. on Oct. 17 (left) and soars past the flags in front of the administration building.

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TOUCHDOWN: An Airship Ventures crew member reaches to connect one of the Zeppelin’s cables to its mastwagen as another rolls a staircase to the gondola to unload the crew after the airship successfully floated to a rest at the Southeast Texas Regional Airport on Oct. 17. The soft landing ended the first Zeppelin flight in American skies since the Hindenburg disaster in 1937. Crews anchored the airship at the airport for an overnight stay before departing for San Antonio—the first stop on its journey to California.

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CEREMONY

The crane arrived in January. The federal government will lease the building for the next several years, which reaffirms the Port of Beau-mont’s importance in military logistics. The military has been a loyal port customer since 1952. Today, the port is the larg-est military port in the United States and the second largest in the world, and has handled about one half of all the cargo shipped in support of opera-tions in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Continued from page 1

THE REPS: (From left) Aaron Evans, senior business manager, Union Pacific Railroad; Audra Malotte, customer care manager, Union Pacific; Sharon Reeves, general director, Kansas City Southern Railroad; Fran Willis, traffic management specialist, 842nd Battalion; John Pinard Jr., sales manager, BNSF Railway; John Roby, port customer service director

U.S. Rep. Ted Poe talks with KBTV’s Ericka English about the im-portance of the Port of Beaumont’s new military facility as KBTV pho-tographer Chip Fields films the interview. Poe and Col. Craig B. Hymes took time to talk with area media representatives present after the ribbon cutting.

THE VIPs: (from left to right) U.S. Army Lt. Col. Marshall Ramsey, 842nd Transportation Battalion commander, U.S. Army Col. Craig B. Hymes, 597th Transportation Group commander, U.S. Rep. Ted Poe and port board president Pete Shelton look on as invited guests take their seats.

RIBBON CUTTING: (left to right) Port director Chris Fisher; N&T Construction owner Charlie Jabbia; board secretary-treasurer Georgine Guillory; U.S. Army Lt. Col. Marshall Ramsey; Commis-sioner Lee Smith; Don Labiche, architect; Col. Craig B. Hymes; Commis-sioner Nell Clark; board vice president Henry Nix; U.S. Rep. Ted Poe and board president Pete Shelton.

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Port scenes

TALKING HISTORY World War II veteran and Beau-mont resident Louis Knabeschuh (right), does a few lines about his experience as a sailor aboard the USS Lubbock to documentary pro-ducer Rick Mize of the Lubbock Independent School District’s LISD-TV with the M.V. Cape Vincent and M.V. Cape Victory as backdrops on Nov. 8. Mize is creating a documentary about the history of the Lubbock, which was named for the Texas Panhandle city. The U.S. Navy acquired the ship in October 1944. Knabeschuh was aboard the Lub-bock when the ship carried Marines and supplies to the historic storming of Iwo Jima in February 1945 and ferried casualties from that battle to Okinawa following the invasion.

“IT’S GOTTA BE PERFECT!”: Port utility man Kenneth Lynch (left) helps port sales secretary Peggy Burris tie and arrange a red, white and blue bow as they decorate in preparation for the ribbon cutting ceremony at the port’s new military office building in November.

DOUBLE, DOUBLE TOIL AND TROUBLE, PAY THOSE BILLS OR I’LL REDUCE YOU TO RUBBLE: Director of finance Brenda Whitworth was the only brave soul at the Port of Beau-mont to don a cos-tume on Hallow-een. Trade and development direc-tor Ernest Bezdek snapped this photo just before he dashed and hid in his office to avoid her wrath.

Happy Birthday PORT OF BEAUMONT! (But is this your 60th or 93rd?)

The answer is both. The Port of Beaumont Navigation Dis-trict of Jefferson County, Texas — the independent, taxing entity that the port is today — was created by the 51st Texas Legislature in 1949. However, the port traces its roots to a few decades earlier. A new channel along the Neches River linking the downtown Beaumont waterfront with the Port Arthur Ship Channel was completed in 1908. It was by 1916 that local businessmen com-pleted dock facilities and navigation improvements along the river, and steady ship traffic increased at Beaumont.

MILESTONE(S)

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From the archives

WINTER WONDERLAND: A blanket of fresh snow covers the Port of Beaumont, looking north from the present-day Harbor Island Marine Ter-minal, in this photo dated Jan. 12, 1973. (See page 10 for scenes from Southeast Texas’ most recent snow event.)

The Port of Beaumont recognized six employees who have reached anniversary milestones in their service to the port during the annual service and safety awards ceremony in No-vember.

The following employees were honored:

35 years Kenneth Tarnow Maintenance carpenter

30 years Bill Carpenter Deputy port director

25 years Randy Spell Crane operator

20 years Kenneth Hebert Utility man

15 years Creig Blanchard Working foreman

10 years Ernest Bezdek Trade development director

SANTA’S LITTLE HELPERS: Port utility foreman Creig Blanchard (left) and utility man Kenneth Lynch ring the ground near Santa’s feet with Christmas lights to prepare the port for the Christmas holidays.

FOLLOW THE LEADER: A flock of seagulls takes flight after being startled by the horn from the Port of Beaumont train engine nearby. The M/V Advantage is docked at the Main Street Wharves in the background.

HELPING HAND: Longshoremen load pallets of bagged lentils, split peas and flour onto the M/V TSGT John A Chap-man. The food was shipped to Algeria, Ethiopia, Myanmar, Sudan and several humanitarian groups.

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STAFF David C. Fisher, port director Bill Carpenter, deputy director Ernest L. Bezdek, trade development director John Roby, customer service director Kirby Dartez, operations director Al Matulich, dock superintendent Sam Serio, maintenance supervisor Brenda Whitworth, finance director Janet Floyd, human resources manager Norman Reynolds, port authority police chief Mike D. Smith, public relations manager

Comments, questions and suggestions about this publication should be directed to Mike D. Smith, at (409) 835-5367 or [email protected].

Port of Beaumont Navigation District of Jefferson County, Texas

MISSION STATEMENT: The Port of Beaumont Navigation District of Jefferson County, Texas is responsible to the taxpayers of its district for the improvement of navigation and the development of maritime shipping and waterborne related commerce to and from its wharves; and for maintenance, development, extension and improvement of wharf and dock facilities of the Port of Beaumont to promote economic growth in our district, the State of Texas and in the interest of national defense.

BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS C.A. “Pete” Shelton, president H.M. “Henry” Nix, Jr., vice president Georgine Guillory, secretary-treasurer Floy Nell Clark Louis Broussard, Jr. Lee E. Smith

An unusually cold air mass swept into Southeast Texas during the second week of December. On Dec. 11, area residents woke up to a blanket of snow between 3 and 6 inches deep across the region. The snowfall shattered several records for Beaumont: the earliest snowfall on record for the fall/winter season, the most ever for the month of December and the first major accumulation since 1973, according to the National Weather Service.

TOP: The port’s Christmas decorations rise from a layer of snow a few inches thick coats the entrance on Dec. 11. The snow was mostly gone by noon that day. LEFT: Port director Chris Fisher prepares to mount a winter offensive against the photographer. He missed, but may have been taking it easy on the photog-rapher. BELOW: Snowfall left aggregate mounds at the port’s Kinder Morgan bulk termi-nal resembling gleaming mountain peaks.