Majority of Navy Personnel May Stay Remote Indefinitely, Lindsey tells ADC

May 6, 2021

COVID-19 presented an opportunity to make the Naval workforce more efficient, Vice Adm. Yancy Lindsey, commander of Navy Installation Management Command, told ADC Live Thursday.

“The majority of our staff’s been teleworking for the last year essentially,” he said. “And we found many areas we were actually more productive and can better execute our mission from a telework, remote work perspective than we are when we require employees to come in and sit in a building and an office and do that work.”

He said the Navy’s post-pandemic work plan may mean that 60% to 65% of employees “never need to step foot in a Navy building again,” which helps employees, cuts down on overhead costs and opens the talent pool, he added.

Lindsey also stressed that resiliency against weather events continues to be a Navy priority.

“Navy Installation Command is working with our subordinate commands to make sure that they can resist, take a licking and keep on ticking, so to speak.”

May 6, 2021

Recent News

Register Now for ADC Connect, Focusing on the Future of Partnerships

Register Now for ADC Connect, Focusing on the Future of Partnerships

Registration is now open for ADC Connect, “a unique opportunity to be ‘in the room’ as we define the future of partnerships,” according to the event website. The half-day event in Washington, D.C. July 25 will include a discussion of ADC’s role in community-military...

DOD Accepting FY25 REPI Challenge Proposals

DOD Accepting FY25 REPI Challenge Proposals

The DOD Readiness and Environmental Protection Integration (REPI) Program has released an RFP for REPI Challenge grant funding for fiscal year 2025, according to a Monday announcement. “The REPI Program designed the REPI Challenge to help meet its ambitious...

Murray Will Push for More Domestic Spending if Defense Budget Goes Up

Murray Will Push for More Domestic Spending if Defense Budget Goes Up

There’s some bipartisan talk on Capitol Hill of raising the fiscal year 2025 defense budget above the levels agreed to in last year’s spending deal. But the top Democratic appropriator said last week that “stronger investments” are needed in the national security...

PAST STORIES