Army civil engineers began a $9 million underground pipeline project at Altus AFB, Okla., to channel JP-8 fuel directly to the flight line from the base’s fuel storage farm, announced base officials in a release. “We’re putting [in] roughly 14,500 linear feet of eight-inch steel pipe to connect the south tank fuel farm to the north fuel farm,” said Randy Tisdell, Army Corps of Engineers project manager at the Jan. 23 groundbreaking. Since Altus’ underground system was decommissioned in 2005 because of cracking and seepage, trucking fuel to the flight line has required an average of 1,562 deliveries and 780 man-hours a year, according to Altus’ Jan. 24 release. Restoring the underground supply will “save us money and it will be saving us manpower,” noted Bron Howard, 97th Civil Engineering Squadron engineering chief. Construction is scheduled to be completed in May 2014, states the release. (Altus report by A1C Levin Boland)
The Air Force’s plans for its portion of joint all-domain command and control have taken a major step forward. The service awarded an indefinite delivery, indefinite quantity, multiple-award contract worth up to $950 million to 27 companies. The IDIQ deal will give 27 contractors the opportunity to compete for work…