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100 percent inventory of 12,000 pieces of equipment underway at APS-2 Powidz

By Cameron Porter, 405th AFSB Public Affairs OfficerOctober 23, 2024

100 percent inventory of 12,000 pieces of equipment underway at APS-2 Powidz
1 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Working together as a team to complete the 100 percent inventory of equipment at the Powidz Army Prepositioned Stocks-2 worksite are more than 50 Poland Provided Logistic Support servicemembers, 25-30 Soldiers and Army Civilians, and about 40 contractors, working six days a week from dawn to dusk. (Photo Credit: William Diaz-Wilson) VIEW ORIGINAL
100 percent inventory of 12,000 pieces of equipment underway at APS-2 Powidz
2 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Soldiers, Army civilians and contractors work side-by-side, shoulder-to shoulder to complete a 100 percent inventory of equipment at the Powidz Army Prepositioned Stocks-2 worksite. This includes over 1,500 pieces of rolling stock, 120 storage and shipping containers, and a total of about 12,000 pieces of equipment. (Photo Credit: William Diaz-Wilson) VIEW ORIGINAL

POWIDZ, Poland – Now that operations are underway at the newest, most modern Army Prepositioned Stocks worksite in the world, the next step in the process is inventorying the thousands of equipment pieces, there. This includes Abrams tanks and Bradley fighting vehicles as well as dozens of 20-foot storage and shipping containers full of equipment stock, supplies, shop parts, and tools, and a multitude of other tactical and combat wheeled and tracked vehicles, plus more.

Army Field Support Battalion-Poland began the arduous task of inventorying over 1,500 pieces of rolling stock, 120 containers and a total of about 12,000 pieces of equipment at the Powidz APS-2 worksite in Poland, Oct. 21.

The mission is expected to take about three weeks to complete, but should not exceed a total of four weeks, according to William Diaz-Wilson, the chief of supply at 405th Army Field Support Brigade Support Operations who is working at the Powidz APS-2 worksite on temporary duty.

Working together as a team to accomplish the mission, more than 50 Poland Provided Logistic Support servicemembers are working side-by-side, should-to-shoulder with 25-30 Soldiers and Army Civilians and about 40 contractors, six days a week from dawn to dusk.

100 percent inventory of 12,000 pieces of equipment underway at APS-2 Powidz
A combined team of Poland Provided Logistic Support servicemembers, U.S. Soldiers, Army Civilians, and contractors crack open the first of about 120 20-foot storage and shipping containers full of equipment stock, shop parts, supplies and tools at the Powidz Army Prepositioned Stocks-2 worksite. Army Field Support Battalion-Poland, who has mission command of the Powidz APS-2 worksite, is tasked with conducting a 100 percent inventory of everything at the site in the next three to four weeks. (Photo Credit: William Diaz-Wilson) VIEW ORIGINAL

And augmenting AFSBn-Poland during the 100 percent inventory are personnel from the 405th AFSB’s headquarters as well as all three of AFSBn-Poland’s sister battalions under the brigade. This includes Battalion Benelux, Battalion Africa and Battalion Germany.

“This is a new thing for [the Poland Provided Logistic Support personnel], here. Not only are we working together as a cohesive team, they [the PPLS personnel] are also learning about our equipment and our accountability processes,” Diaz-Wilson said.

“It's a very complex mission because everything that’s in the containers has to be taken out and laid out for the inventory,” Diaz-Wilson said. “Each part, each individual piece, all the equipment, all the rolling stock – everything has to be individually looked at and inventoried, ensuring all serial numbers and identification placards match the master property hand receipt.”

This is extremely important because at the end of this inventory the battalion will have 100 percent accountability of all the equipment that was moved from the APS-2 worksite in Mannheim, Germany, to the Powidz APS-2 worksite in Poland, Diaz-Wilson said.

“The weather is helping because even though in the mornings it's cold, the sun is shining in Poland, and it's a good atmosphere. Everyone is working together to meet the commander’s intent, and everyone is motivated. This is a tremendous accomplishment for the 405th AFSB and AFSBn-Poland,” said Diaz-Wilson.

Diaz-Wilson said Battalion Poland’s supply team, led by Property Book Officer Malinda Fairnot, is doing an outstanding job synchronizing all aspects of the inventory and ensuring all the detailed information is captured. “It’s a mammoth operation,” he added.

The state-of-the-art APS-2 worksite in Powidz encompasses 650,000 square feet of humidity-controlled warehouse space, a vehicle maintenance facility, and various supporting structures, plus 58,000 square feet of munitions storage nearby. It houses an entire modernized armored brigade combat team’s worth of APS-2 equipment.

There are a total of six APS-2 worksites spread across Europe. It is estimated these worksites, like the one in Powidz, can help reduce deployment timelines for an armored brigade combat team or a sustainment brigade from 60 days to as little as a week or two. By providing turn-key power projection APS-2 packages ready to employ at a moment’s notice, the 405th AFSB’s APS-2 program is a key component of U.S. Army Europe and Africa’s power projection, warfighter readiness and logistics support missions.

The 405th AFSB is assigned to U.S. Army Sustainment Command and headquartered in Kaiserslautern, Germany. The brigade provides materiel enterprise support to U.S. forces throughout Europe and Africa – providing theater sustainment logistics; synchronizing acquisition, logistics and technology; and leveraging U.S. Army Materiel Command’s materiel enterprise to support joint forces. For more information on the 405th AFSB, visit the official website and the official Facebook site. Watch this video to learn more about the 405th AFSB's APS-2 program and the Powidz APS-2 worksite.