Meeting of the National Commission on the Structure of the Air Force, 76117-76119 [2013-29794]
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 241 / Monday, December 16, 2013 / Notices
(b) The Secretary of the Navy’s
Advisory Subcommittee on Naval
History shall be composed of not more
than 15 members and shall provide
independent advice and
recommendations on matters pertaining
to preserving the heritage and legacy of
the Naval Services and disseminating
their rich history to the Service and the
American public. Advisory topics may
include professional standards,
methods, program priorities,
cooperative relationships in Marine
Corps and Navy’s historical research
and publication programs, museums,
archives, archeology, libraries,
manuscript collections, rare book
collections, art collections, preservation,
and curatorial activities. The
subcommittee shall consist of civilians
who have broad managerial experience,
vision, and understanding in one or
more of the following areas: military
and maritime history, archives,
museology, art, library science, and
information technology.
The estimated number of meetings is
one per year.
The Panel’s Designated Federal
Officer (DFO), pursuant to DoD policy,
shall be a full-time or permanent parttime DoD employee, and will be
appointed in accordance with
established DoD policies and
procedures.
The Panel’s DFO is required to be in
attendance at all Panel and
subcommittee meetings for the duration
of each and every meeting. However, in
the absence of the Panel’s DFO, a
properly approved Alternate DFO, duly
appointed to the Panel according to DoD
policies and procedures, will attend the
entire duration of all of the Panel or
subcommittee meeting.
The DFO, or the Alternate DFO, will
call all of the Panel and its
subcommittee meetings; prepare and
approve all meeting agendas; adjourn
any meeting, when the DFO, or the
Alternate DFO, determines adjournment
to be in the public interest or required
by governing regulations or DoD
policies and procedures; and chair
meetings when directed to do so by the
official to whom the Panel reports.
Pursuant to 41 CFR 102–3.105(j) and
102–3.140, the public or interested
organizations may submit written
statements to the Secretary of the Navy
Advisory Panel membership about the
Panel’s mission and functions. Written
statements may be submitted at any
time or in response to the stated agenda
of planned meeting of Secretary of the
Navy Advisory Panel.
All written statements shall be
submitted to the Designated Federal
Officer for the Secretary of the Navy
VerDate Mar<15>2010
13:51 Dec 13, 2013
Jkt 232001
Advisory Panel, and this individual will
ensure that the written statements are
provided to the membership for their
consideration. Contact information for
the Secretary of the Navy Advisory
Panel’s Designated Federal Officer can
be obtained from the GSA’s FACA
Database—https://
www.facadatabase.gov/.
The Designated Federal Officer,
pursuant to 41 CFR 102–3.150, will
announce planned meetings of the
Secretary of the Navy Advisory Panel.
The Designated Federal Officer, at that
time, may provide additional guidance
on the submission of written statements
that are in response to the stated agenda
for the planned meeting in question.
Dated: December 11, 2013.
Aaron Siegel,
Alternate OSD Federal Register Liaison
Officer, Department of Defense.
[FR Doc. 2013–29772 Filed 12–13–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 5001–06–P
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Office of the Secretary
Meeting of the National Commission
on the Structure of the Air Force
Director of Administration and
Management, DoD.
ACTION: Notice of Advisory Committee
Meetings.
AGENCY:
The Department of Defense is
publishing this notice to announce a
closed Federal advisory committee
meeting of the National Commission on
the Structure of the Air Force (‘‘the
Commission’’).
DATES: Date of Closed Meetings:
Tuesday, December 17, 2013, from 10:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
ADDRESSES: 2521 South Clark Street,
Suite 525, Crystal City, VA 22202 and,
as necessary, a secure video
teleconferencing line.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mrs.
Marcia Moore, Designated Federal
Officer, National Commission on the
Structure of the Air Force, 1950 Defense
Pentagon, Room 3A874, Washington,
DC 20301–1950. Email:
marcia.l.moore12.civ@mail.mil. Desk
(703) 545–9113. Facsimile (703) 692–
5625.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose of Meetings: The meetings are
being held under the provisions of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act
(FACA) of 1972 (5 U.S.C., Appendix, as
amended), the Government in the
Sunshine Act of 1976 (5 U.S.C. 552b, as
amended), and 41 CFR 102–3.150. The
SUMMARY:
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
76117
meeting scheduled for December 17,
2013 is the fifth in a series of five
meetings held for the Commissioners to
consider information and data from a
variety of sources that will be presented
and aggregated by employing several
data, analytic and decision support tools
that contain classified information.
Three prior closed meetings were held
in November 2013 and the fourth was
held on December 10, 2013. The five
meetings were approved with similar
agendas. The December 17, 2013 is
being held to finalize and write
recommendations.
Agenda: The agenda items for both
meetings are:
—The role of airpower in the postAfghanistan national security
situations likely to be encountered by
the Air Force capabilities and Airmen
and the implications for the structure
of the Air Force. This discussion will
be organized into three categories.
The ‘‘Away Game,’’ will involve
emerging demands on Air Force
capabilities such as: Intelligence,
Surveillance and Reconnaissance,
Remotely Piloted Aircraft, Space,
Cyber, Special Operations, and
Building Partnership Capacity.
Commissioners will also explore the
implications of rising demands and
expectations for the ‘‘Home Game’’ in
missions such as Homeland Defense,
Homeland Security, and Defense
Support to Civil Agencies. This will
include implications for the structure
of the Air Force from the growing
threat of the ‘‘Away Game’’ involving
simultaneous attacks on the
Homeland. The third area of
discussion will be on the continuing
growth of demand on traditional Air
Force core functions including: Air
Superiority, Air Mobility, Global
Precision Attack, Nuclear Deterrence
Operations, Command and Control,
Personnel Recovery, Agile Combat
Support, Training and Education, and
other specific mission sets such as
security forces, civil engineering and
science and technology.
—Projections and assumptions about
future resource levels that will be
available to organize, train and equip
the Air Force. This will include
assumptions about how the Budget
Control Act and Sequestration
legislation will affect Total
Obligational Authority and associated
planning, programming and budgeting
flexibility. Commissioners will also
consider the impact of strategic
choices on Air Force capabilities and
force structure options derived from
the selection of national priorities
among modernization, technology,
E:\FR\FM\16DEN1.SGM
16DEN1
pmangrum on DSK3VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
76118
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 241 / Monday, December 16, 2013 / Notices
recapitalization, readiness, capacity
and force structure. In this discussion
Commissioners will consider the
various approaches to how to
calculate and apply cost methods and
data to questions of force structure.
—The root causes of legislative and
bureaucratic development of the force
structure issues that led to the
creation of the Commission in 2013.
They will consider how these issues
are rooted in the American militia
heritage and the history of the Air
Force since 1947. This discussion will
extend to accounting for the sociocultural dimensions of force structure
issues ranging from the fundamental
relationship of the American people
to their military and to sub-cultures
within the Air Force.
—How to institutionalize the shift in the
fundamental role of the reserve
components from a strategic reserve to
an operational reserve with associated
expectations. Commissioners will also
consider the force mix options they
are prepared to assess in terms of
relative weight of force structure in
each of the components.
Commissioners will consider whether
to recommend that the Department of
Defense invert the force sizing
planning paradigm from sizing to
meet the expected wartime surge to an
approach that begins with the Steady
State Requirement then resource the
components to provide the nation
with a meaningful surge capacity for
the strategy. They will also address
considerations for measuring and
assessing Active, Reserve and Guard
Effectiveness—both cost and mission
effectiveness.
—Alternative approaches to how the
nation should direct, control and
guide the active, reserve and National
Guard Air Forces, including:
Whether, and if so how, to simplify
Title 10, Title 32 and other
governing legislative authorities;
How to re-balance the current mix of
Active, Reserve and Guard
components into and across any
and all mission functions;
Whether, and if so how, to reorganize
the Air Force Active, Reserve and
National Guard into less than 3
components;
Can the Air Force move to a periodic
readiness schedule without creating
a ‘‘hollow force;’’
Does component ‘‘ownership’’ of
aircraft matter anymore and how
can the Associate Unit paradigm be
adapted to the future;
Approaching future force integration
of new systems capabilities by
means of a Concurrent Proportional
VerDate Mar<15>2010
13:51 Dec 13, 2013
Jkt 232001
resourcing method across the
components to replace today’s
priority of equipping the Active
Component first;
Accelerating the adoption of a
‘‘Continuum of Service’’ model to
facilitate the ability of Airmen to
move from any component into
another at multiple points in their
career path without prejudice;
Enhancing the total force through
equalized opportunities across the
components for professional and
technical education and shared
experiences.
Recognizing in promotion and
selection processes differing but
equivalent ends, ways, and means
of professional development
Fundamental shift in policy goals for
‘‘Deploy-to-Dwell,’’ ‘‘Mobilizationto-Dwell,’’ and associated metrics
for the post-Afghanistan period, as
well as how deployment credit will
be accounted.
Reconsider the nation’s needs for
Overseas Basing and the capacity of
continental United States’
infrastructure afforded by
investments in Reserve and Guard
basing capacities available to the
Total Force.
Meeting Accessibility: In accordance
with section 10(d) of the FACA, 5 U.S.C.
552b, and 41 CFR 102–3.155, the DoD
determined that the Tuesday, December
17, 2013 meeting will be closed to the
public in its entirety. Specifically, the
Director of Administration and
Management, with the coordination of
the DoD FACA Attorney, has
determined in writing that this meeting
will be closed to the public because it
discussed classified information and
matters covered by 5 U.S.C. 552b(c)(1).
Written Comments: Pursuant to 41
CFR 102–3.105(j) and 102–3.140 and
section 10(a)(3) of the FACA, the public
or interested organizations may submit
written comments to the Commission in
response to the stated agenda of the
closed meeting or the Commission’s
mission. The Designated Federal Officer
(DFO) will review all submitted written
statements before forwarding to the
Commission. Written comments should
be submitted to Mrs. Marcia Moore,
DFO, via facsimile or electronic mail,
the preferred modes of submission. Each
page of the comment must include the
author’s name, title or affiliation,
address, and daytime phone number.
All contact information may be found in
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
section. While written comments are
forwarded to the Commissioners upon
receipt, note that all written comments
on the Commission’s charge, as
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
described in the Background section,
must be received by 5:00 p.m. on
December 13, 2013 to be considered by
the Commissioners for the final report.
This deadline for emailed and faxed
comments has been extended from
November 29, 2013. The postmark
deadline to mail comments was
November 8, 2013.
Due to difficulties finalizing the
meeting agenda for the scheduled
meeting of the National Commission on
the Structure of the Air Force for
Tuesday, December 17, 2013, the
requirements of 41 CFR 102–3.150(a)
were not met. Accordingly, the
Advisory Committee Management
Officer for the Department of Defense,
pursuant to 41 CFR 102–3.150(b),
waives the 15-calendar day notification
requirement.
Background
The National Commission on the
Structure of the Air Force was
established by the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013
(Pub. L. 112–239). The Department of
Defense sponsor for the Commission is
the Director of Administration and
Management, Mr. Michael L. Rhodes.
The Commission is tasked to submit a
report, containing a comprehensive
study and recommendations, by
February 1, 2014 to the President of the
United States and the Congressional
defense committees. The report will
contain a detailed statement of the
findings and conclusions of the
Commission, together with its
recommendations for such legislation
and administrative actions it may
consider appropriate in light of the
results of the study. The comprehensive
study of the structure of the U.S. Air
Force will determine whether, and how,
the structure should be modified to best
fulfill current and anticipated mission
requirements for the U.S. Air Force in
a manner consistent with available
resources.
The evaluation factors under
consideration by the Commission are for
a U.S. Air Force structure that—(a)
meets current and anticipated
requirements of the combatant
commands; (b) achieves an appropriate
balance between the regular and reserve
components of the Air Force, taking
advantage of the unique strengths and
capabilities of each; (c) ensures that the
regular and reserve components of the
Air Force have the capacity needed to
support current and anticipated
homeland defense and disaster
assistance missions in the United States;
(d) provides for sufficient numbers of
regular members of the Air Force to
provide a base of trained personnel from
E:\FR\FM\16DEN1.SGM
16DEN1
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 241 / Monday, December 16, 2013 / Notices
which the personnel of the reserve
components of the Air Force could be
recruited; (e) maintains a peacetime
rotation force to support operational
tempo goals of 1:2 for regular members
of the Air Forces and 1:5 for members
of the reserve components of the Air
Force; and (f) maximizes and
appropriately balances affordability,
efficiency, effectiveness, capability, and
readiness.
Dated: December 11, 2013.
Aaron Siegel,
Alternate OSD Federal Register Liaison
Officer, Department of Defense.
[FR Doc. 2013–29794 Filed 12–13–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 5001–06–P
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Office of the Secretary
Meeting of the National Commission
on the Structure of the Air Force
Director of Administration and
Management, DoD.
ACTION: Notice of Advisory Committee
Meetings.
AGENCY:
The Department of Defense is
publishing this notice to announce a
closed Federal advisory committee
meeting of the National Commission on
the Structure of the Air Force (‘‘the
Commission’’).
DATES: Date of Closed Meetings:
Tuesday, December 10, 2013, from 10:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
ADDRESSES: 2521 South Clark Street,
Suite 525, Crystal City, VA 22202 and,
as necessary, a secure video
teleconferencing line.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mrs.
Marcia Moore, Designated Federal
Officer, National Commission on the
Structure of the Air Force, 1950 Defense
Pentagon, Room 3A874, Washington,
DC 20301–1950. Email:
marcia.l.moore12.civ@mail.mil. Desk
(703) 545–9113. Facsimile (703) 692–
5625.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Purpose of
Meetings: The meetings are being held
under the provisions of the Federal
Advisory Committee Act (FACA) of
1972 (5 U.S.C., Appendix, as amended),
the Government in the Sunshine Act of
1976 (5 U.S.C. 552b, as amended), and
41 CFR 102–3.150. The meeting
scheduled for December 10, 2013 is the
fourth in a series of five meetings held
for the Commissioners to consider
information and data from a variety of
sources that will be presented and
aggregated by employing several data,
analytic and decision support tools that
pmangrum on DSK3VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
13:51 Dec 13, 2013
Jkt 232001
contain classified information. Three
prior closed meetings, held in
November 2013, were approved with
similar agendas. Two additional
meetings, including this one, are being
held to finalize and write
recommendations. The fifth meeting
will be held on December 17, 2013.
Agenda: The agenda items for both
meetings are:
—The role of airpower in the postAfghanistan national security
situations likely to be encountered by
the Air Force capabilities and Airmen
and the implications for the structure
of the Air Force. This discussion will
be organized into three categories.
The ‘‘Away Game,’’ will involve
emerging demands on Air Force
capabilities such as: Intelligence,
Surveillance and Reconnaissance,
Remotely Piloted Aircraft, Space,
Cyber, Special Operations, and
Building Partnership Capacity.
Commissioners will also explore the
implications of rising demands and
expectations for the ‘‘Home Game’’ in
missions such as Homeland Defense,
Homeland Security, and Defense
Support to Civil Agencies. This will
include implications for the structure
of the Air Force from the growing
threat of the ‘‘Away Game’’ involving
simultaneous attacks on the
Homeland. The third area of
discussion will be on the continuing
growth of demand on traditional Air
Force core functions including: Air
Superiority, Air Mobility, Global
Precision Attack, Nuclear Deterrence
Operations, Command and Control,
Personnel Recovery, Agile Combat
Support, Training and Education, and
other specific mission sets such as
security forces, civil engineering and
science and technology.
—Projections and assumptions about
future resource levels that will be
available to organize, train and equip
the Air Force. This will include
assumptions about how the Budget
Control Act and Sequestration
legislation will affect Total
Obligational Authority and associated
planning, programming and budgeting
flexibility. Commissioners will also
consider the impact of strategic
choices on Air Force capabilities and
force structure options derived from
the selection of national priorities
among modernization, technology,
recapitalization, readiness, capacity
and force structure. In this discussion
Commissioners will consider the
various approaches to how to
calculate and apply cost methods and
data to questions of force structure.
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
76119
—The root causes of legislative and
bureaucratic development of the force
structure issues that led to the
creation of the Commission in 2013.
They will consider how these issues
are rooted in the American militia
heritage and the history of the Air
Force since 1947. This discussion will
extend to accounting for the sociocultural dimensions of force structure
issues ranging from the fundamental
relationship of the American people
to their military and to sub-cultures
within the Air Force.
—How to institutionalize the shift in the
fundamental role of the reserve
components from a strategic reserve to
an operational reserve with associated
expectations. Commissioners will also
consider the force mix options they
are prepared to assess in terms of
relative weight of force structure in
each of the components.
Commissioners will consider whether
to recommend that the Department of
Defense invert the force sizing
planning paradigm from sizing to
meet the expected wartime surge to an
approach that begins with the Steady
State Requirement then resource the
components to provide the nation
with a meaningful surge capacity for
the strategy. They will also address
considerations for measuring and
assessing Active, Reserve and Guard
Effectiveness—both cost and mission
effectiveness.
—Alternative approaches to how the
nation should direct, control and
guide the active, reserve and National
Guard Air Forces, including:
Whether, and if so how, to simplify
Title 10, Title 32 and other
governing legislative authorities;
How to re-balance the current mix of
Active, Reserve and Guard
components into and across any
and all mission functions;
Whether, and if so how, to reorganize
the Air Force Active, Reserve and
National Guard into less than 3
components;
Can the Air Force move to a periodic
readiness schedule without creating
a ‘‘hollow force;’’
Does component ‘‘ownership’’ of
aircraft matter anymore and how
can the Associate Unit paradigm be
adapted to the future;
Approaching future force integration
of new systems capabilities by
means of a Concurrent Proportional
resourcing method across the
components to replace today’s
priority of equipping the Active
Component first;
Accelerating the adoption of a
‘‘Continuum of Service’’ model to
E:\FR\FM\16DEN1.SGM
16DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 241 (Monday, December 16, 2013)]
[Notices]
[Pages 76117-76119]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-29794]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Office of the Secretary
Meeting of the National Commission on the Structure of the Air
Force
AGENCY: Director of Administration and Management, DoD.
ACTION: Notice of Advisory Committee Meetings.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Defense is publishing this notice to
announce a closed Federal advisory committee meeting of the National
Commission on the Structure of the Air Force (``the Commission'').
DATES: Date of Closed Meetings: Tuesday, December 17, 2013, from 10:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
ADDRESSES: 2521 South Clark Street, Suite 525, Crystal City, VA 22202
and, as necessary, a secure video teleconferencing line.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mrs. Marcia Moore, Designated Federal
Officer, National Commission on the Structure of the Air Force, 1950
Defense Pentagon, Room 3A874, Washington, DC 20301-1950. Email:
marcia.l.moore12.civ@mail.mil. Desk (703) 545-9113. Facsimile (703)
692-5625.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose of Meetings: The meetings are being held under the
provisions of the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA) of 1972 (5
U.S.C., Appendix, as amended), the Government in the Sunshine Act of
1976 (5 U.S.C. 552b, as amended), and 41 CFR 102-3.150. The meeting
scheduled for December 17, 2013 is the fifth in a series of five
meetings held for the Commissioners to consider information and data
from a variety of sources that will be presented and aggregated by
employing several data, analytic and decision support tools that
contain classified information. Three prior closed meetings were held
in November 2013 and the fourth was held on December 10, 2013. The five
meetings were approved with similar agendas. The December 17, 2013 is
being held to finalize and write recommendations.
Agenda: The agenda items for both meetings are:
--The role of airpower in the post-Afghanistan national security
situations likely to be encountered by the Air Force capabilities and
Airmen and the implications for the structure of the Air Force. This
discussion will be organized into three categories. The ``Away Game,''
will involve emerging demands on Air Force capabilities such as:
Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance, Remotely Piloted
Aircraft, Space, Cyber, Special Operations, and Building Partnership
Capacity. Commissioners will also explore the implications of rising
demands and expectations for the ``Home Game'' in missions such as
Homeland Defense, Homeland Security, and Defense Support to Civil
Agencies. This will include implications for the structure of the Air
Force from the growing threat of the ``Away Game'' involving
simultaneous attacks on the Homeland. The third area of discussion will
be on the continuing growth of demand on traditional Air Force core
functions including: Air Superiority, Air Mobility, Global Precision
Attack, Nuclear Deterrence Operations, Command and Control, Personnel
Recovery, Agile Combat Support, Training and Education, and other
specific mission sets such as security forces, civil engineering and
science and technology.
--Projections and assumptions about future resource levels that will be
available to organize, train and equip the Air Force. This will include
assumptions about how the Budget Control Act and Sequestration
legislation will affect Total Obligational Authority and associated
planning, programming and budgeting flexibility. Commissioners will
also consider the impact of strategic choices on Air Force capabilities
and force structure options derived from the selection of national
priorities among modernization, technology,
[[Page 76118]]
recapitalization, readiness, capacity and force structure. In this
discussion Commissioners will consider the various approaches to how to
calculate and apply cost methods and data to questions of force
structure.
--The root causes of legislative and bureaucratic development of the
force structure issues that led to the creation of the Commission in
2013. They will consider how these issues are rooted in the American
militia heritage and the history of the Air Force since 1947. This
discussion will extend to accounting for the socio-cultural dimensions
of force structure issues ranging from the fundamental relationship of
the American people to their military and to sub-cultures within the
Air Force.
--How to institutionalize the shift in the fundamental role of the
reserve components from a strategic reserve to an operational reserve
with associated expectations. Commissioners will also consider the
force mix options they are prepared to assess in terms of relative
weight of force structure in each of the components. Commissioners will
consider whether to recommend that the Department of Defense invert the
force sizing planning paradigm from sizing to meet the expected wartime
surge to an approach that begins with the Steady State Requirement then
resource the components to provide the nation with a meaningful surge
capacity for the strategy. They will also address considerations for
measuring and assessing Active, Reserve and Guard Effectiveness--both
cost and mission effectiveness.
--Alternative approaches to how the nation should direct, control and
guide the active, reserve and National Guard Air Forces, including:
Whether, and if so how, to simplify Title 10, Title 32 and other
governing legislative authorities;
How to re-balance the current mix of Active, Reserve and Guard
components into and across any and all mission functions;
Whether, and if so how, to reorganize the Air Force Active, Reserve
and National Guard into less than 3 components;
Can the Air Force move to a periodic readiness schedule without
creating a ``hollow force;''
Does component ``ownership'' of aircraft matter anymore and how can
the Associate Unit paradigm be adapted to the future;
Approaching future force integration of new systems capabilities by
means of a Concurrent Proportional resourcing method across the
components to replace today's priority of equipping the Active
Component first;
Accelerating the adoption of a ``Continuum of Service'' model to
facilitate the ability of Airmen to move from any component into
another at multiple points in their career path without prejudice;
Enhancing the total force through equalized opportunities across
the components for professional and technical education and shared
experiences.
Recognizing in promotion and selection processes differing but
equivalent ends, ways, and means of professional development
Fundamental shift in policy goals for ``Deploy-to-Dwell,''
``Mobilization-to-Dwell,'' and associated metrics for the post-
Afghanistan period, as well as how deployment credit will be accounted.
Reconsider the nation's needs for Overseas Basing and the capacity
of continental United States' infrastructure afforded by investments in
Reserve and Guard basing capacities available to the Total Force.
Meeting Accessibility: In accordance with section 10(d) of the
FACA, 5 U.S.C. 552b, and 41 CFR 102-3.155, the DoD determined that the
Tuesday, December 17, 2013 meeting will be closed to the public in its
entirety. Specifically, the Director of Administration and Management,
with the coordination of the DoD FACA Attorney, has determined in
writing that this meeting will be closed to the public because it
discussed classified information and matters covered by 5 U.S.C.
552b(c)(1).
Written Comments: Pursuant to 41 CFR 102-3.105(j) and 102-3.140 and
section 10(a)(3) of the FACA, the public or interested organizations
may submit written comments to the Commission in response to the stated
agenda of the closed meeting or the Commission's mission. The
Designated Federal Officer (DFO) will review all submitted written
statements before forwarding to the Commission. Written comments should
be submitted to Mrs. Marcia Moore, DFO, via facsimile or electronic
mail, the preferred modes of submission. Each page of the comment must
include the author's name, title or affiliation, address, and daytime
phone number. All contact information may be found in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section. While written comments are forwarded to
the Commissioners upon receipt, note that all written comments on the
Commission's charge, as described in the Background section, must be
received by 5:00 p.m. on December 13, 2013 to be considered by the
Commissioners for the final report. This deadline for emailed and faxed
comments has been extended from November 29, 2013. The postmark
deadline to mail comments was November 8, 2013.
Due to difficulties finalizing the meeting agenda for the scheduled
meeting of the National Commission on the Structure of the Air Force
for Tuesday, December 17, 2013, the requirements of 41 CFR 102-3.150(a)
were not met. Accordingly, the Advisory Committee Management Officer
for the Department of Defense, pursuant to 41 CFR 102-3.150(b), waives
the 15-calendar day notification requirement.
Background
The National Commission on the Structure of the Air Force was
established by the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2013 (Pub. L. 112-239). The Department of Defense sponsor for the
Commission is the Director of Administration and Management, Mr.
Michael L. Rhodes. The Commission is tasked to submit a report,
containing a comprehensive study and recommendations, by February 1,
2014 to the President of the United States and the Congressional
defense committees. The report will contain a detailed statement of the
findings and conclusions of the Commission, together with its
recommendations for such legislation and administrative actions it may
consider appropriate in light of the results of the study. The
comprehensive study of the structure of the U.S. Air Force will
determine whether, and how, the structure should be modified to best
fulfill current and anticipated mission requirements for the U.S. Air
Force in a manner consistent with available resources.
The evaluation factors under consideration by the Commission are
for a U.S. Air Force structure that--(a) meets current and anticipated
requirements of the combatant commands; (b) achieves an appropriate
balance between the regular and reserve components of the Air Force,
taking advantage of the unique strengths and capabilities of each; (c)
ensures that the regular and reserve components of the Air Force have
the capacity needed to support current and anticipated homeland defense
and disaster assistance missions in the United States; (d) provides for
sufficient numbers of regular members of the Air Force to provide a
base of trained personnel from
[[Page 76119]]
which the personnel of the reserve components of the Air Force could be
recruited; (e) maintains a peacetime rotation force to support
operational tempo goals of 1:2 for regular members of the Air Forces
and 1:5 for members of the reserve components of the Air Force; and (f)
maximizes and appropriately balances affordability, efficiency,
effectiveness, capability, and readiness.
Dated: December 11, 2013.
Aaron Siegel,
Alternate OSD Federal Register Liaison Officer, Department of Defense.
[FR Doc. 2013-29794 Filed 12-13-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 5001-06-P