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Schatz Provisions To Protect Hawai‘i Shipyard Workforce, Authorize $1.6 Billion For Infrastructure Projects, Create New Diplomatic Post To Engage With Pacific Island Nations Included In Defense Bill

Provision To Study Health Impacts From Red Hill Fuel Leak Also Included In NDAA

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Brian Schatz (D-Hawai‘i) secured the inclusion of several provisions to the annual National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), including measures to protect Hawai‘i’s shipyard workforce as a part of the crucial Australia – United Kingdom – United States (AUKUS) submarine partnership, authorize $1.6 billion in infrastructure projects, and create a new presidentially-appointed and Senate-confirmed diplomatic post to the Pacific Islands Forum.

“These provisions will help strengthen our national security, support those who serve, and promote greater engagement with our friends and partners in the Indo-Pacific,” said Senator Schatz.

Schatz-secured provisions include:

  1. Studying health impacts from Red Hill fuel leak – legislation to collect data, study, and help better understand the health impacts of those exposed to water contamination from the Red Hill fuel leak and to conduct critical oversight of the Department of Defense as it conducts this study.
  2. $1.6 billion for water and port infrastructure projects, including:
    1. $20 million for a new water storage tank at Aliamanu Military Reservation
    2. $23 million for a clearwell to store filtered water and booster pump Fort Shafter
    3. $33 million to improve wells, water storage tanks, a water pump station at Helemano Military Reservation
    4. $37 million for a water distribution line, water storage tanks, and a water pump station at Schofield Barracks
    5. $134 million at Marine Corps Base Hawai‘i to upgrade and improve MCBH’s Water Reclamation Facility
    6. $5.4 million to improve an air traffic control tower at Wheeler Army Airfield
    7. $1.3 billion to enable the construction of Dry Dock 5
    8. $15 million to improve the waste water treatment plant at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam
  3. Protecting Hawai‘i’s shipyard workforce –  a provision to develop and increase the submarine industrial base workforce by allowing the DoD to reinvest funds secured from the transfer of submarines to Australia under the historic AUKUS partnership in recruiting, training, and retaining key specialized labor at shipyards in Hawai‘i and across the country.
  4. Investing in facilities and infrastructure to support submarine repairs – a provision that allows DoD to reinvest funds secured from the transfer of submarines to Australia under the historic AUKUS partnership to upgrade facilities, equipment, and infrastructure used by shipyard workforces in Hawai‘i and across the country to repair and maintain submarines.
  5. Establishing a new diplomatic post to engage with Pacific Island nations – a provision creating a Senate-confirmed Special Envoy to the Pacific Islands Forum.
  6. Fighting child sexual exploitation – a measure requiring the DoD to report on progress in their efforts to enhance the capability of military criminal investigation organizations to prevent and combat child sexual exploitation.
  7. Expanding access to family and medical leave for veterans working as federal employees – a provision to allow federal employees who have served in the armed forces eligibility to take Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) Leave, including paid parental leave, sooner.

Other highlights for Hawai‘i include provisions to upgrade the electrical grid at Kalaeloa; study the housing needs of military families and the impact on housing supply in the surrounding communities; and create a new coordinator to engage with communities and the state, as negotiations on land leases begin. 

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