Garrison Commanders are the center of gravity in the fight against COVID-19

By Scott MalcomMay 19, 2020

Lt. Gen. Douglas Gabram (left), commanding general, U.S. Army Installation Management Command, lays out IMCOM's measured approach to transitioning stateside garrisons to reduced Health Protection Conditions to Gen. Gustave Perna, commanding general, U.S. Army Materiel Command, during a video teleconference May 18 at Fort Sam Houston, Texas. A consistent theme of the discussion was the value of garrison leaders quickly and efficiently sharing best practices for all installations to benefit from during the fight against the coronavirus.
1 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Lt. Gen. Douglas Gabram (left), commanding general, U.S. Army Installation Management Command, lays out IMCOM's measured approach to transitioning stateside garrisons to reduced Health Protection Conditions to Gen. Gustave Perna, commanding general, U.S. Army Materiel Command, during a video teleconference May 18 at Fort Sam Houston, Texas. A consistent theme of the discussion was the value of garrison leaders quickly and efficiently sharing best practices for all installations to benefit from during the fight against the coronavirus. (Photo Credit: Joshua Ford) VIEW ORIGINAL
Gen. Gustave Perna (displayed on two screens), commanding general, U.S. Army Materiel Command, dials in virtually for his major subordinate command update with U.S. Army Installation Management Command and its commander, Lt. Gen. Douglas Gabram (front right) May 18 at Fort Sam Houston, Texas. Perna conducts these MSC updates quarterly as a "conversation between commanders" and to execute mission command of AMC's 11 major subordinate commands.
2 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Gen. Gustave Perna (displayed on two screens), commanding general, U.S. Army Materiel Command, dials in virtually for his major subordinate command update with U.S. Army Installation Management Command and its commander, Lt. Gen. Douglas Gabram (front right) May 18 at Fort Sam Houston, Texas. Perna conducts these MSC updates quarterly as a "conversation between commanders" and to execute mission command of AMC's 11 major subordinate commands. (Photo Credit: Joshua Ford) VIEW ORIGINAL

By Scott Malcom

U.S. Army Installation Management Command

JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO, FORT SAM HOUSTON, Texas ─ Gen. Gus Perna, Commanding General of Army Materiel Command, addressed Installation Management Command leaders around the world during a video teleconference from IMCOM headquarters.

Perna uses quarterly updates to conduct “conversations between commanders” an execute mission command for AMC’s 11 major subordinate commands. IMCOM has been part of AMC since March 2019.

Perna normally travels to conduct mission command face-to-face, but he held this session by VTC as part of DoD’s overall effort to help stop the spread of COVID-19.

Empowering garrison commanders to protect installations while effectively responding to the pandemic and maintaining readiness has been AMC and IMCOM’s primary focus the last two months.

“Garrison commanders are the center of gravity in this fight,” said Lt. Gen. Douglas M. Gabram, IMCOM’s commanding general. “Their leadership has been decisive; they are leading the Army through this at the tactical level.”

Gabram went on to frame IMCOM’s primary operating principle in the COVID environment as “Protect yourself, so we can protect the force, so the force can protect the Nation.”

Several garrison commanders highlighted challenges on or around their installations and the innovative solutions that overcame them. One consistent theme was the value of quickly and efficiently sharing best practices so all could benefit. For example, garrisons in Korea and Italy encountered the virus before those in North America. Their sharing of lessons learned about cleaning, tracing and putting effective control measures in place facilitated prompt and effective actions at stateside installations.

Col. Dan Vogel, the garrison commander of USAG Italy in Vicenza, described the transition strategy his team created in coordination with local governing bodies to lay out their phased recovery strategy. Their approach is “Go slow to go fast,” or an informed, methodical process to bring teammates back to work and re-open garrison services.

Gabram adopted this plan as IMCOM’s framework for transitioning individual installations to the next phase. “Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery,” he said.

“You learned some hard lessons and you learned them very quickly. I am very proud of you and your team” commended Perna.

The Fort Benning garrison commander, Col. Matt Scalia, shared how his team re-organized to keep the basic training pipeline open. They developed processes to execute their training mission safely and facilitate movement of Soldiers to their Advanced Individual Training destinations.

Each commander who spoke mentioned a key element of their successful response was communicating transparently, factually, clearly, and consistently.

In his closing comments, Perna acknowledged IMCOM’s hard work and significant accomplishments over the past year since joining the AMC team. “You were leading our way through establishing the Strategic Support Area as part of our new doctrine (Multi-Domain Operations). You then moved right into leading the Army through our Housing Campaign. From there you developed our much needed Facility Investment Strategy that will solve Army problems and save millions of dollars. Then COVID hit.”

“Any one of these could drive another organization to its knees, but not here” concluded Perna. “Now that we’re blocking, tackling and getting things in place, we are well-positioned to take it to the next level. Press!”

LINKS

U.S. Army Materiel Command

https://www.amc.army.mil

U.S. Army Installation Management Command

https://home.army.mil/imcom