Anchorage studies impact of possible JBER troop reduction

JBER soldiers return
Soldiers from the 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne) return to Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson after a 10-month deployment to Afghanistan in October 2012. (Photo by Justin Connaher/U.S. Air Force)

The Municipality of Anchorage is conducting a comprehensive study on the impact of the potential troop drawdown at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, and hosted a sparsely attended community meeting on the topic in east Anchorage on Tuesday evening. The Department of Defense will decide soon if it will remove more than 2,600 active duty army soldiers from the base.

If the soldiers and their 3,000 family members do leave, the municipality wants to be ready. They are gathering community comments through focus groups, surveys and community meetings. They hired Northern Economics to create an economic model that would show the potential impacts on businesses, schools, social services and housing markets.

“It will be a lot of microanalysis,” explained Susanne Fleek-Green, the mayor’s chief of staff. It involves “going to businesses, going to neighborhoods, going to community councils to better understand how the economy is affected by our strong forces here at JBER and what we can do to help make those business more resilient if there is a force drawdown.”

Fleek-Green said the data will be useful even if the potential drawdown doesn’t happen. The city will better understand where service members and their families are living, shopping and volunteering, and where military spouses are working. Community members at Tuesday’s public meeting also suggested looking at how the drawdown could impact civilian contractors who work on base.

Don Crandall, who lives in Mountain View, said the local businesses in his neighborhood will be negatively impacted because it’s so close to JBER. But he said there could be an upside.

“We do have a severe housing shortage in Anchorage and in Mountain View. Rents are very high. Vacancy rates are very low. So this might reduce some of the pressure on that,” he said.

He also suggested military hospital beds could be repurposed as detox facilities.

Another of the 20 community members in attendance said he fears that troop reductions will lead to fewer services for veterans, like medical facilities.

The $180,000 study is funded by the Department of Defense’s Office of Economic Adjustment. The city plans to finish and present it in May.

There will be another community meeting Wednesday night at Gruening Middle School in Eagle River.

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