An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | July 13, 2011

W. Virginia Guard, active Army work together for equipment reset

By Amy Walker Program Executive Office Command, Control, Communications-Tactical

ELEANOR, W.V. - The Army’s Project Manager Warfighter Information Network-Tactical teamed up with the National Guard and the state of Maine to upgrade key communications equipment, a mutually beneficial partnership highlighting the efficiency of a united force.

“These partnerships are a physical substantiation of ‘one team, one fight,’” said Army Col. William C. Hoppe, project manager for WIN-T, which is assigned to the Program Executive Office Command, Control, Communications-Tactical. “It doesn’t matter if you are active [duty], Guard or Reserve … you have to be able to fight together with the same kit, and these efforts are another example of how we have pulled that together.”

Hoppe toured the sites and presented achievement awards to key personnel at the West Virginia Army National Guard maintenance facilities in both Eleanor and Point Pleasant, W.V., on June 7, 2011, and also at the state-owned Maine Military Authority, or MMA, in Limestone, Maine, on May 23, 2011.

Both West Virginia Army National Guard and MMA supported PM WIN-T by providing modification upgrades of the High Capacity Line-Of-Sight shelter system, with the Guard resetting the system’s generators as well.

“The most important thing about the work provided by the West Virginia National Guard and the Maine Military Authority was quality,” said Army Lt. Col. Raymond Compton, product manager for WIN-T Increment 1. “That level of professionalism and quality ensures that we give Soldiers highly reliable equipment.”

Providing services similar to a home Internet connection, WIN-T Increment 1 – the Army’s current tactical communications backbone – provides at-the-quick-halt, over-the-horizon (satellite), high-speed, high-capacity voice, data, and video communications to units on the battlefield.

Augmenting the WIN- T over the horizon SATCOM network, the HCLOS Radio program provides the tactical line of sight transmission equipment and is currently being upgraded with additional capabilities.

In support of this effort, the West Virginia Army National Guard retrofitted 28 AN/TRC-190(V)1 audio transmission shelters and 176 PU-797 HCLOS variant generators.

“For every brigade combat team, every battalion, every division and corps headquarters, the TRC-190 is a critical component to their communications – they can’t operate without it,” Hoppe said. “I want to let you know that this is a big deal in terms of PM WIN-T being able to provide a quality product, and you have done a phenomenal job.”

During his tour of the Guard’s Point Pleasant facility, where the generators were upgraded, Hoppe examined the metal data plate attached to each piece of equipment, which notes that the equipment was reset by the West Virginia Army National Guard, the date of reset, and provides contact information.

“You have so much pride in your work that you are willing to put your name on it, and that says a great deal about the quality of the work and the character of the people doing it,” Hoppe said.

“The West Virginia National Guard represented an outstanding opportunity for PM WIN-T to partner with an organization that is Soldier-managed, Soldier-focused, and extremely capable to react in a compressed timeframe,” said Timothy Fitz Maurice, project lead for Product Manager WIN-T Increment 1 HCLOS/TRC-190. “They produced quality repeatable results in a timely manner and at an affordable cost to the government.”

The West Virginia Army National Guard is certified by the International Standards Organization, whose quality management standards are designed to help organizations ensure they meet the needs of customers and stakeholders.

“We hold ourselves to a high standard of operations by streamlining our processes, and providing like-new products in a cost-effective and timely manner,” said Army Lt. Col. Joseph Peal, deputy chief of staff logistics, West Virginia Army National Guard. “Several of our managers have received training in Lean Six Sigma and have taken what they learned to their programs and staff.”

LSS is a comprehensive process improvement methodology that has been deployed by the Army to boost efficiency and quality while eliminating non-value-added activities

The West Virginia Army National Guard has 11 facilities in the state with three more scheduled to open in the next few months, potentially saving the government $87 million per year in reset costs by providing its services in partnership with other U.S military organizations such as PM WIN-T, Peal said.

“We have come a long way since I first came to the Army in terms of how the Guard, Reserve and active (component) work together,” Hoppe said. “I think we are a more formidable force because of it, and to me that is the significance of this partnership.”

While the West Virginia Army National Guard reset the HCLOS shelter’s V1 configuration, the MMA retrofitted 60 of the V3 configuration, converted the tactical shelters to the correct configuration and refurbished the shelters as well as the Humvees that support them and also installed all of the equipment.

“Two things about this effort are most important. Number one: cost savings; and number two: having quality, delivery time and everything else fall into line,” said Timothy McCabe, MMA director of business development.

For MMA, this effort helped to diversify its base of expertise. Prior to the partnership with PM WIN-T, it specialized in large volumes of vehicle systems – Humvees, trucks, construction equipment – for as many as 2,000 vehicles in one year, he said.

The partnership with PM WIN-T allowed MMA to expand into the electronics and the installation end of the business, McCabe said.

“Both the West Virginia National Guard and the Maine Military Authority gave us another quality source to work on needed line-of-sight systems for OEF [Operation Enduring Freedom] and OND [Operation New Dawn],” Compton said. “The quality of their workmanship and pride in their jobs says everything.”

“Your hard work and dedication contributed directly in providing improved line-of-sight communication capabilities to the Soldier and execution of the WIN-T Increment 1 mission,” Hoppe said to the workers at MMA. “Your outstanding efforts will enable the United States Army to achieve modularity, information security superiority and mission success on the battlefield.”

 

 

Related Articles
U.S. Army Command Sgt. Maj. Tim Englund, a master spur holder assigned to the 303rd Cavalry Regiment, Washington National Guard, inspects a gold spur during a ceremony at Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti, Jan. 9, 2026. Englund has earned both silver and gold spurs and has helped facilitate multiple Spur Rides throughout his career. Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Kenneth Tucceri.
Washington, Oregon Guard Soldiers Inducted Into the Order of the Spur
By Sgt. Vivian Ainomugisha, | Jan. 26, 2026
CAMP LEMMONIER, Djibouti – Soldiers from the Washington Army National Guard, including those assigned to the 303rd Cavalry Regiment and the 81st Brigade, along with attached Soldiers from the Oregon National Guard, were...

Florida Army National Guard Soldiers assigned to Troop A and C Troop, 1st Squadron, 153rd Cavalry Regiment, including liaison monitoring teams and Religious Support Team chaplains, train alongside Tennessee Army National Guard Forward Support Medical Platoon (MEDEVAC), General Support Aviation Battalion aircrews and Florida Army National Guard 715th Military Police Company during civil disturbance response, leader engagements and joint air-ground operations Jan. 16, 2026, during a culminating training exercise at Fort Hood, Texas. The exercise highlighted total force integration as cavalry, medical, military police and religious support elements synchronized mobility, crowd management, escalation control and partner engagement to provide real-time situational awareness and achieve mission success in complex environments. Photo by Staff Sgt. Seth LaCount)
National Guard Multi-State Task Force Completes Training Exercise
By Capt. Balinda ONeal, | Jan. 26, 2026
FORT HOOD, Texas – Soldiers assigned to Task Force Gator, a multi-state National Guard formation, completed a Culminating Training Event from Jan. 12–17, marking a key milestone in the task force’s preparation for an upcoming...

U.S. Army Spc. Kaitlin Cavanaugh and Sgt. Omar Sewell conduct maintenance on the forward rotor of a CH-47 Chinook helicopter, which was battle damaged from a hard landing while serving in Iraq, in the maintenance bay of the Connecticut National Guard's 1109th Theater Aviation Support Maintenance Group in Groton, Conn. June 22, 2021. The Theater Aviation Support Maintenance Group recovered this helicopter from Kuwait and performed a complete overhaul of the aircraft to get it back into the Army's operational fleet. Photo by Timothy Kloster.
Connecticut Guard Home to Specialized Aircraft Maintenance Facility
By Timothy Koster, | Jan. 23, 2026
GROTON, Conn. – At the Connecticut National Guard’s 1109th Aviation Classification and Repair Depot, or AVCRAD, workers refurbish and maintain the U.S. Army’s fleet of rotary-wing aircraft, a unique job that can save the...