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Military SciencesMilitary Forces and Organizations

Army Training: Improvements Are Needed in 5-Ton Truck Driver Training and Supervision

Authors: GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE WASHINGTON DC
Abstract:
The Army has around 97,000 "medium tactical wheeled vehicles" (about 57,000 5-ton trucks and 41,000 2-1/2-ton trucks) in its fleet. The M939 accounts for more than half its 5-ton trucks. The truck is used to carry personnel or pull equipment under all weather and road conditions, including rain, snow, ice, unpaved roads, sand, and mud. The active Army uses formal and informal programs to train 5-ton truck drivers. The formal program is aimed at military personnel whose official primary occupation will be "88M Motor Transport Operator"-or truck driver. The program lasts 6 weeks and is taught in schools at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, and Fort Bliss, Texas. Fort Leonard Wood trains about 90 percent of all 88M students. Fort Bliss for the most part trains the "overflow" of students that Fort Leonard Wood cannot accommodate. The formal instruction program calls for about 1 week in the classroom and 5 weeks of hands-on training. Students who complete the program do not immediately receive a license to drive a 5-ton truck; they are licensed at their next duty station after undergoing additional training and testing there. The Army Transportation Center and School at Fort Eustis, Virginia, is responsible for the content of the instruction program used by the formal training schools. It aligns under the Army Training and Doctrine Command at Ft. Monroe, Virginia.

Limitations: APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE
Pages: 26
Report Date: APR 2001
Report Number: A197883
Keywords relating to this report:
*ARMY TRAINING
*DRIVERS(PERSONNEL)
*DRIVERS_PERSONNEL_
*MILITARY VEHICLES
*TRUCKS
ALL WEATHER
ARMY EQUIPMENT
ARMY PERSONNEL
SUPERVISION
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