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After 585th
completed their stint in Vietnam, the unit was inactivated for eight
years, then served in Germany for eight years before being inactivated
again in August of 1988. Today, the 585th Engineer Company has the distinction of being the only active duty Pipeline Construction Company in the United States Army. In May, 2006, the unit conducted an FTX at Fort Pickett, Virginia, where they learned the intricacies of their unique mission. They constructed a 5.4 mile long Inland Petroleum Distribution System (IPDS). The IPDS is a pipeline unit developed by the government in order to provide bulk fuel support to military forces anywhere in the world. The IPDS is lightweight, rapidly deployable, and can interface with a host nation’s fuel source. Engineer units, like the 585th, are responsible for installing the pipeline and constructing the pump stations; quartermaster units operate the total system when it is completed. In addition to their pipeline mission, the company has a secondary mission as a construction unit. They have been actively involved with construction missions on post, including a Renovation Project for 2CR which involved building a six room Aid Station and Pharmacy, two 30-foot Rope Climbs, a Chaplain’s Office, and a Conference Room. The company has also been working with Habitat for Humanity to build 16 houses in Tacoma, a task that benefits the local community and provides their soldiers with invaluable construction experience. Other construction projects are currently being planned. Another trademark of the unit is their avid interest in Combatvies, and on any given day it is customary to see Soldiers from the 585th grappling one another in the field behind their company. SSG Jimenez, coordinator of the program, recently completed a Level 3 Combative Course at Fort Benning, Georgia, and has been schooling soldiers on effective forms of submission. Their dedication is paying off; at a recent Round Robin fighting session in the BN, 585th dominated hands down. Thirteen months after it first stood up, one thing is for sure: 585th Engineer Company, though relatively small and young, is making its mark on the Engineer world in a big way. |
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