Hutchinson cancels exercise for Guard

Inability to test 4,000 troops for virus halts 2-week training at Fort Chaffee

Maj. Gen. Kendall Penn, adjutant general of the Arkansas National Guard, said Wednesday that he reached out to Gov. Asa Hutchinson, who “concurred” with his recommendation that training scheduled to start this weekend at Fort Chaffee be canceled since federal funds could not be spent to test all of the soldiers and airmen arriving for the exercises.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Metthe)
Maj. Gen. Kendall Penn, adjutant general of the Arkansas National Guard, said Wednesday that he reached out to Gov. Asa Hutchinson, who “concurred” with his recommendation that training scheduled to start this weekend at Fort Chaffee be canceled since federal funds could not be spent to test all of the soldiers and airmen arriving for the exercises. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Metthe)

Because of the inability to provide covid-19 testing for each of the 4,000 or so guardsmen who were to report for training at Fort Chaffee this weekend, Gov. Asa Hutchinson announced Wednesday that he was canceling the exercise.

The Exportable Combat Training Capability will not take place because "the federal rules did not allow testing for each guardsman," Hutchinson said at a Wednesday news conference.

The annual training was scheduled to begin Saturday and last through July 17.

Last week, Hutchinson told reporters that the training period for the state's soldiers and airmen would go forward based on the authorization of the National Guard Bureau in Washington.

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Maj. Gen. Kendall Penn, the adjutant general of the Arkansas National Guard, said during Wednesday's news conference that the governor's decision to cancel training boiled down to a "fiscal law constraint." In other words, federal funds could not be spent to test all of the soldiers and airmen arriving at Fort Chaffee.

The guardsmen who were going to be tested were those who showed symptoms, as well as those in direct contact with those who were symptomatic. Penn said he wanted all of them tested, but that couldn't happen.

"We realized it was going to be a problem and began planning the what-next," he said. Penn added that he reached out to Hutchinson who "concurred" with his recommendation that training be canceled.

The Exportable Combat Training Capability program, commonly referred to as XCTC, is a series of training exercises between active duty soldiers and guardsmen. It is intended to enhance the skills and readiness of Guard units in anticipation of future deployments.

Arkansas is one of several states that has grappled with how or whether to hold large-scale training exercises during the coronavirus emergency.

Originally, the Arkansas Guard planned to have the soldiers contained in groups of 30 to 50 and to sanitize all of the training equipment between uses by different groups. Each member also was going to be given two cotton masks and hand sanitizer.

In the end, Hutchinson and Penn wanted more safety measures and couldn't get them, officials said.

Since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, guardsmen and airmen have had to follow strict safety protocols. Lt. Col. Brian Mason, a Guard spokesman, said last week that safety was a priority during the activation of more than 570 guardsmen for civil disturbance missions across the state in response to protests over the police treatment of Black Americans.

At the end of the mission, everyone was tested for the virus. Only one tested positive, and that soldier was asymptomatic, Mason said.

Hutchinson said Wednesday that future training would continue.

"[This] doesn't meant we're going to stop training our National Guardsmen," he said, "But this exercise has been canceled."

Bob Oldham, a Guard spokesman, said that several guardsmen remain on active duty during the pandemic.

A "handful" of them are assisting with the distribution of personal protection equipment across the state while another small group is continuing to provide grounds maintenance at the Arkansas State Veterans Cemetery in North Little Rock, he said.

Oldham also confirmed that another 20 guardsmen are still assisting the state Health Department with contact tracing.

They've been providing assistance during the past two weeks.

CORRECTION: Maj. Gen. Kendall Penn, the adjutant general of the Arkansas National Guard, said during a news conference that a decision to cancel guard training at Fort Chaffee boiled down to a “fiscal law constraint.” Penn was misquoted in an article about the cancellation.

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