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Road to 350: What Does the US Navy Do Anyway?

Unclear just what the correlation is between American shipbuilding capacity and the demand for civilian mariners. That's a weird headline that belies a poor understanding of the subject matter.
 
Again, he’s not recommending an active naval vessel, but a mothballed vessel repurposed for disaster relief…no hot rocks involved.
Meant to get back to this sooner, but as you said, the idea was for dedicated humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, ie, the ship would be used year round with an emphasis on hurricanes during that time of the year. Figured either State or DOT might have a better chance of funding, anything going through the Pentagon would have a low priority. Perhaps using something like the National Security Multi- Mission Vessels like Empire State VII that DOT is currently building might be better than an older LSD - although the ships only have a single helo pad, they do have roll on / roll off capability.


Also found this feature from USNI when in 1929 the carrier USS Lexington went pierside and supplied power to the city of Tacoma for a month (no hot rocks required)


1763332237210.jpeg
USS Lexington (CV-2) supplying power to Tacoma, January 1930
 
Meant to get back to this sooner, but as you said, the idea was for dedicated humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, ie, the ship would be used year round with an emphasis on hurricanes during that time of the year. Figured either State or DOT might have a better chance of funding, anything going through the Pentagon would have a low priority. Perhaps using something like the National Security Multi- Mission Vessels like Empire State VII that DOT is currently building might be better than an older LSD - although the ships only have a single helo pad, they do have roll on / roll off capability.


Also found this feature from USNI when in 1929 the carrier USS Lexington went pierside and supplied power to the city of Tacoma for a month (no hot rocks required)


View attachment 43917
USS Lexington (CV-2) supplying power to Tacoma, January 1930
Thanks for sharing. Looks like a unique situation that the ship lent itself well to solving.
 
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