Reserve Signal Soldiers save big dollars installing
communication cables
by Mr. Michael M. Novogradac (Hood)
Photo Credit: Mr. Michael M.
Novogradac (Hood)
Cable Installers Sgt. Geraldo Benavides (left) from
Midland, Texas, and Spc. Amber R. Rudd from Odessa,
Texas, cut fiber cable to prepare it for splicing,
using an arc fusion splicing apparatus, which
basically sparks and melds two fiber ends. The two
are Reserve Soldiers from the 820th Signal Company
(Tactical Installation Network) out of Seagoville,
Texas, and are helping save the Operational Test
Command close to $97 thousand installing
communication cables in its headquarters on West
Fort Hood, Texas.
Photo Credit: Mr. Michael M.
Novogradac (Hood)
Cable Installer Sgt.
Manuel Hernandez from Lubbock, Texas, pulls fiber
optic cable through conduit at Operational Test
Command. A Reserve Soldier from the 820th Signal
Company (Tactical Installation Network) out of
Seagoville, Texas, Hernandez is helping OTC save
close to $97 thousand installing communication
cables in its headquarters on West Fort Hood, Texas.
WEST FORT HOOD,
Texas -- Nine Signal Soldiers from a Seagoville, Texas
Reserve unit are helping save big bucks in communication
cable installation here.
Platoons of the 820th Signal
Company (Tactical Installation Network) are rotating in
and out at the Operational Test Command during their
annual training.
Cost savings are close to $97
thousand.
The cable installers are routing
new copper and fiber cables while moving communication
gear out of a small 8-by-12-foot room with no heating or
air conditioning.
The equipment has been known to
shut down unexpectedly at times because of heat and
humidity, according to Jason D. Barrett, OTC's deputy
chief of network and cyber security.
"We've had to put a stand-alone
air conditioner in there to keep the equipment cool,"
Barrett said. "When we put the A/C in there, the next
thing you know is, we have condensation with water
collecting in a bucket. So you have water in a bucket
with electrical equipment, and it becomes a safety
hazard."
Getting the Soldiers to Fort Hood
for their AT was simple. Barrett, originally from Tyler,
Texas, is a Reserve Signal officer who commanded the
820th between 2014 and 2015 when he was a captain.
Now, Barrett is the executive
officer for its higher headquarters, the 98th
Expeditionary Signal Battalion, of the 505th Signal
Brigade.
Essentially, the 820th's presence
means their salaries, transportation and lodging is paid
for. Cost savings come in because OTC doesn't have to
pay any of those costs.
"OTC bought all the supplies --
all the fiber and the copper cables, and we have all the
tools," Barrett said. "The 820th brought a lot of their
tools, so all we needed was their manpower to get all
this done."
The 820th's Soldiers belong to one
of only five such companies in the Army: two active duty
units, two Reserve, one National Guard -- and they all
take turns replacing each other on deployments.
Barrett said some of the 820th's
Soldiers have deployed anywhere from five to seven
times. "What they're doing here is identical to what
they'd be doing when they go down range," he said.
According to Staff Sgt. Carlos H.
Gonzalez, the 820th's platoon sergeant from Odessa,
Texas, his Soldiers are receiving the best possible
training while here.
"It's good training for our
Soldiers to maintain proficiency in their job skills,"
he said. "In our case that is terminating fiber --
terminating what we call CAT5, which is the lines for
your computers and telephone lines."
Gonzalez works in a hospital as a
physical therapist. Other Soldiers are policemen; one is
part owner of a food catering business, while others are
college students.
"Being Reservists, we don't all
work at this kind of work outside of the military," he
said.
"We're lucky enough to have with
us, Sgt. Manuel Hernandez from Lubbock, Texas, who does
this kind of work in the civilian sector, and he is very
good at it," Gonzalez said. "So we try to utilize all of
his training and all of his knowledge to help us to
learn more and to make sure our missions become
successful."
Barrett expressed great
appreciation for the 820th's skills and work ethic.
"If we relied on contracting this
work," he said, "it could be a four- or six-month
process even to get started, because of proposals, and
bids, and selecting someone to do it.
"These Soldiers? They are so
experienced and well-trained, that there is nothing they
can't do with copper and fiber cables."