Cargo handlers barge out en route to Southwest Asia.Most deploying units move overweight, overdimensional equipment by motor or rail to get to a port of embarkation The geographic point in a routing scheme from which cargo or personnel depart. This may be a seaport or aerial port from which personnel and equipment flow to a port of debarkation; for unit and nonunit requirements, it may or may not coincide with the origin. Also called POE. . However, a unit at Fort Eustis Fort Eustis is a United States Army facility located in Newport News, Virginia. The post is the home to the Army Transportation Corps, and also home to the U.S. Army Aviation Logistics School. , Va., recently moved these superloads using a more feasible mode--barge. Three barges carrying 32 pieces of Kuwait-bound cargo left Fort Eustis Sept. 5 for the port of Charleston, S.C. The 567th Cargo Transfer Co., bound for a year's duty in Kuwait, helped load their own equipment. Additional support came from the Surface Deployment and Distribution Command, the Fort Eustis Transportation Office, and barge contractor Lockwood Brothers, Inc. of Hampton, Va. Kalmar Rough Terrain Cargo Handlers made up about half of the 567th's barged equipment, along with a dozen other pieces--40-ton cranes, trucks, trailers and bull dozers, said Sgt. 1st Class Louis Cass, the unit's truck master. Another 70 pieces of non-superload equipment were moved to Charleston by commercial motor carrier, he said. Moving heavy and oversize o·ver·size n. 1. A size that is larger than usual. 2. An oversize article or object. adj. o·ver·size also o·ver·sized Larger in size than usual or necessary. Adj. 1. equipment by water is more efficient than moving it by land, said Joan Haynie, Fort Eustis transportation officer. "Superloads require special equipment and permits to move by truck, and specialized rail cars can be difficult to get" she said. "We're fortunate that we have Third Port here on Fort Eustis, which makes movement by barge feasible." The 567th and its sister units often deploy equipment to stateside state·side adj. 1. Of or in the continental United States. 2. Alaska Of or in the 48 contiguous states of the United States. adv. Informal 1. ports using watercraft from their parent unit, the 7th Transportation Group, said Haynie. In September, however, those assets were being used for other missions. Nevertheless, Soldiers from the 567th still took part in the deployment. Cass oversaw the operation at Third Port while others moved and staged the equipment. Lockwood's crane operators and riggers then took over, lifting the equipment onto the barges and tying it down. Patti Bielling, Public Affairs Those public information, command information, and community relations activities directed toward both the external and internal publics with interest in the Department of Defense. Also called PA. See also command information; community relations; public information. Specialist SDDC SDDC Surface Deployment and Distribution Command (formerly Military Traffic Management Command) SDDC Single Data Device Correction Operations Center The facility or location on an installation, base, or facility used by the commander to command, control, and coordinate all crisis activities. See also base defense operations center; command center. |
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