Send in the Choppers?

Here’s a report from recent hearings for proposed Marine Corps helicopter expansion plans that were held on Hawai’i island:

http://bigislandweekly.com/news/send-in-the-choppers.html

Send in the Choppers?

Tuesday, December 6th, 2011

Marines unveil EIS for more helicopters here.

By Alan D. McNarie

The Marines were back in town last week, holding meetings in Waimea and Hilo to get public input on a plan to base three more squadrons of attack aircraft in the islands and train them at areas including Hawai’i Island’s Pohakuloa Training Area. As usual, they got an earful from Native Hawaiians, peace activists and concerned citizens. But they also got support from a few parents of past and former military personnel, who wanted the Corps to provide its personnel with the best training possible.

The plan would bring up to two Marine Medium Tiltrotor (VMM) squadrons and one Marine Light Attack Helicopter (HMLA) squadron to the islands, where they would be based on O’ahu and train there and on other islands. The VMM squadrons would bring with them a total 24 MV-22 Osprey tiltrotor aircraft, which take off and land vertically like helicopters and fly like airplanes; a relatively recent and controversial addition to the Marine Corps Arsenal, they replace large troop-transport helicopters and have superior range and speed, but bring with them a troubled reputation for crashes, malfunctions, delays and cost overruns during their development. But when one resident brought up a troubling report about the aircraft’s performance, a Marine spokesman said those problems had largely been solved by improved parts and supply.

“Every mission that we’ve been asked to do with the V22, we have been able to do.”

The HMLA squadron is armed with 15 AH-1 Cobra attack helicopters and 12 UH-1 Huey utility choppers. Hueys and Cobras have been flying with the Marines since Vietnam, but the airframes have gone through a series of updates, and the Marines are planning to replace neither with a radically different vehicle in the near future. A helicopter pilot who accompanied the Marine Team at Hilo told Big Island Weekly that while the new AH-1Z version of the Cobra has better range, performance and electronics than the current choppers, its logistics and personnel needs would be about the same.

Coming along with the aircraft would be approximately 1,000 active-duty military personnel, 22 civilian personnel (contractors and government employees), and 1,106 civilian dependents, mostly stationed on O’ahu.

On the Big Island, most of the impacts of the new squadrons would be felt, literally, at Pohakuloa. The squadrons will be using the firing range and various landing sites there, and “New construction or improvements to existing landing zones and other facilities” are expected to occur. Marine officials assured BIW that the landing sites they had identified for use in training were within PTA itself. One map on exhibit at the meetings showed possible landing zones marked in red within the training area, but also showed five landing zones, including Mauna Kea State Park, marked in black outside the PTA boundaries. Marine officials told BIW that those sites were on the map for “reference” only.

[…]

Residents expressed concerns that powdered DU, which has been linked to cancer and other ailments, could be kicked up by continued use of the Pohakuloa firing range and drift to residential areas and Waikoloa Elementary School.

“Less than one percent of the base has been surveyed, so how do you know that you’re not going to be impacting DU?” pointed out Albertini. “To say that this is outside the scope of this EIS is bogus, because you don’t know where the DU is.”

One resident wondered if DU and other heavy metals from the firing range could also get into the local groundwater supply, and noted that that the possible effects of Pohakuloa activities on groundwater were not addressed in the EIS.

In response, a Marine official admitted that “”there has never been an investigation,” of the aquifer under Pohakuloa, though the Army has gotten funding to sink two test wells.

“Nobody knows where that water is,” he said. “We will, know, probably, by 2012.”

The EIS itself raised some concerns about impacts on historic and cultural sites, though most of the ones identified were on O’ahu. The document identified no pre-contact cultural sites on the Big Island and only two historic ones: the fence wall from ranching days and “the old Kona to Waimea Government Road.” PTA has an ongoing program to protect known cultural sites. But Native Hawaiians have long complained that most of the PTA firing range has never been surveyed. At the Hilo meeting, one resident cited the lament of a Native Hawaiian who complained that he’d repeatedly been denied permission to collect “the bones of his ancestors,” which were lying exposed on the range and had been broken into smaller and smaller pieces over the years.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Another story on chopper crash in Wahiawa

Posted on: Thursday, May 28, 2009

Army helicopter crash at Hawaii base kills 2

Two-seater was landing after maintenance flight, Army says

By William Cole
Advertiser Staff Writers

WAHIAWA – Two Army pilots whose unit is preparing for deployment to Iraq died yesterday after their helicopter crashed during a training flight at Wheeler Army Airfield, officials said.
Advertisement

One soldier was pronounced dead at the scene, and the second died at Wahiawa General Hospital.

The two soldiers were the only people aboard the helicopter, a two-seat OH-58D Kiowa Warrior helicopter belonging to the 25th Combat Aviation Brigade. They were conducting a general maintenance test flight when it crashed in the base airfield and hangar area, the Army said.

The soldiers’ names are being withheld until 24 hours after their families have been notified.

A Hawai’i National Guard member who was at the scene said he could not readily identify the type of helicopter that had crashed because the damage was so severe. The helicopter appeared to have burned, although Col. Matthew Margotta, commander of U.S. Army Garrison Hawai’i, could not confirm there was a fire.

The cause of the accident is being investigated, the Army said in a news release.

“Our prayers and condolences are with the families of the pilots,” U.S. Army Garrison Hawai’i said in the release.

The 34-foot-long Kiowa helicopter is one of the smallest in the Army inventory. It is used primarily for reconnaissance but can fire missiles, rockets and machine guns.

Margotta told reporters at Wheeler that the helicopter was on “a routine maintenance test flight” and was landing when it crashed about 3:30 p.m.

“The pilot still had control of the helicopter when it landed,” Margotta said.

Both pilots on board were killed, he said.

No other information about the flight was disclosed.

Asked to talk about risks in flight operations, Margotta said, “Obviously when you fly helicopters and these guys are trained to go to combat and that’s what they’re preparing to do right now. So there are certain risks that’s inherent in what they do and they accept those risks.”

The active duty 25th Combat Aviation Brigade, with its 2,400 soldiers, is preparing for a fall deployment to Iraq and many of its members are returning from training at Pohakuloa Training Area on the Big Island and at the National Training Center in California.

The aviation brigade flies the scout attack Kiowa Warrior, UH-60 Black Hawks and twin-rotor CH-47 Chinook helicopters.

The aviation brigade had about 100 helicopters from Wheeler in Iraq on a deployment that ended in September of 2007.

In final preparation for their deployment to Iraq later his year, the 25th Combat Aviation Brigade trained throughout the Hawaiian Islands and at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, Calif., from April 25 through May 3.

Col. Michael Lundy, who commanded the aviation brigade, said soldiers conducted more than 669 flights flying over 2,200 hours.

The Hawai’i Army National Guard has 10 CH-47 Chinooks at Wheeler. It also has some OH-58 Kiowas, but they are based out of Hilo along with Black Hawk helicopters.

Reach William Cole at wcole@honoluluadvertiser.com.

Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090528/NEWS08/905280339

Helicopter crash kills two

20090528_nws_crash2

CARROLL COX / SPECIAL TO THE STAR-BULLETIN

The wreck of a U.S. Army Kiowa Warrior helicopter lay on the tarmac at Wheeler Army Airfield yesterday after a crash that killed both pilots. Army officials are investigating the cause of the accident, which occurred while the helicopter was performing exercises above the main runway.

Copter crash kills 2 pilots

A maintenance test flight ends in fiery explosion on the tarmac

By Gregg K. Kakesako and Leila Fujimori

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, May 28, 2009

Two 25th Infantry Division aviators were killed yesterday afternoon when their OH-58D Kiowa Warrior helicopter crashed in flames at Wheeler Army Airfield near Schofield Barracks.

Watch video about this crash.

TRAINING FATALITIES
There have been two other major 25th Division helicopter crashes on Oahu:

» March 5, 1996: The pilot and co-pilot of an AH-1 Cobra gunship were killed at Schofield Barracks when the craft’s engine failed.

» Feb. 12, 2001: Six soldiers were killed and 11 injured when two Black Hawk helicopters collided during a night training exercise over Kahuku in Hawaii’s worst Army training accident.

They were the only two soldiers aboard the two-seat, 42-foot-long helicopter when it executed a “hard landing” about 3:30 p.m. while conducting a general maintenance test flight, Army officials said.

A civilian worker from the airfield who spoke on condition of anonymity said he was inside an office when he heard two explosions and went outside and saw the helicopter on fire.

Honolulu fire Capt. Earle Kealoha said firefighters responded to a call of a downed aircraft at 3:34 p.m. But when they arrived four minutes later, federal fire crews already had the fire under control.

The names of the two soldiers were withheld pending notification of relatives. Helicopter pilots are typically officers or warrant officers.

It was the third fatal helicopter crash at Schofield Barracks since 1996. The cause of the accident is under investigation, the Army said.

“Our thoughts and prayers go out to the families of the two pilots,” said Col. Matthew Margotta, commander of Army Garrison Hawaii.

Margotta characterized the incident as a hard landing because “the pilots still had control of the aircraft when it landed.”

When asked if hard landings usually end up this way, he responded with a firm “No.”

The crumpled wreckage, the rotors bent from impact, lay on the east end of the airfield about 350 yards from Kamehameha Highway, visible in the distance to passing motorists. Foam that firefighters apparently sprayed remained visible, indicating that a fire had broken out.

“The Kiowa helicopter was carrying two pilots,” Margotta told reporters gathered across the highway from the airfield.

“Unfortunately, both pilots were killed in the accident.”

Carroll Cox, who was tending his garden across from the airfield, said someone with direct knowledge of the aircraft told him the helicopter was performing “auto rotating,” which is a simulated emergency landing.

The high-performance helicopter, whose reconnaissance missions can require it to fly terrain-hugging “nap of the earth” routes, is manufactured by Bell Helicopter Textron and had been slated to be replaced by the Comanche helicopter. But the Comanche program was scrapped in 2004.

Unlike earlier versions of the OH-58, which date back to the Vietnam War, the D model is an armed scout.

The helicopter was assigned to the division’s 25th Combat Aviation Brigade, which is preparing for a 12-month deployment to Iraq scheduled to begin in October. The unit flies CH-47 Chinooks, UH-60 Black Hawks and OH-58 Kiowa Warriors.

The unit served an Iraq combat tour in 2006-07 and in Afghanistan in 2003-04.

The brigade just completed a comprehensive training period here and at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, Calif., in the Mojave Desert in preparation for deployment to Iraq.

At the Big Island’s Pohakuloa Training Area, the brigade said, it logged more than 2,000 hours, encompassing 669 flights without an accident.

The brigade commander is Col. Michael Lundy.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.starbulletin.com/news/hawaiinews/20090528_copter_crash_kills_2_pilots.html

Military chopper makes emergency landing on North Shore

http://kgmb9.com

Military Chopper Lands on North Shore

Written by KGMB9 News – news@kgmb9.com
January 05, 2009 06:23 PM

Schofield Barracks is releasing more information about the helicopter that went down at 5:30 Monday evening.

The Army says two soldiers from the 2nd Squadron, 6th Cavalry Regiment, 25th Infantry Division smelled fumes in the aircraft and landed.

The OH-58 Kiowa touched down on an old airstrip between Haleiwa Beach Park and Laniakea.

No one was hurt. The helicopter was not damaged.

A military helicopter had to make an emergency landing on Oahu’s North Shore Monday night. It happened just after 5:30pm, when the chopper landed on Kamehameha Highway in Haleiwa. Officials with the Federal Aviation Administration say no injuries have been reported. A crew is on the scene, so stay with KGMB9 and KGMB9.com for more details as they become available.

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