Senator Roger Wicker has introduced a bill to bolster America’s naval fleet.
Building upon Wicker’s 2017 SHIPS Act, which made it the policy of the United States to reach a 355-ship Navy, the new ‘Securing the Homeland by Increasing our Power on the Seas (SHIPS) Implementation Act’ would authorize the use of multiple cost-saving measures and direct the Navy to procure 39 new ships over the next four fiscal years.
“Our nation’s Navy is still the envy of the world, but our adversaries are quickly catching up. It is time for Congress to get serious about investing in our fleet and give our sailors and Marines the tools they need to stay ahead of those who wish us harm.”
“In the near term, the SHIPS Implementation Act would empower our Navy to reach its 355-ship goal by authorizing the procurement of specific vessels and cutting costs. Over time, my proposal would help to decrease risk for the Navy and provide greater certainty for the industrial base,” Wicker said.
Wicker introduced the initial legislation in 2017 as a result of a Navy-wide “force structure assessment” that solicited inputs from all regional commands about their current and projected needs.
However, Wicker says that even with a reinvigorated shipbuilding effort by the Trump administration over the last 3 years, the Navy’s shipbuilding budget still falls between $4 and $5 billion short of the level required to reach a 355-ship Navy.
Wicker’s SHIPS Implementation Act would expand his 2017 legislation by providing a strategic framework and additional support to help the Navy reach its fleet goal.
Among other provisions, the SHIPS Implementation Act would:
- Direct the Navy to start construction on at least 12 Arleigh Burke-class destroyers, 10 Virginia-class submarines, two Columbia-class submarines, three San Antonio-class amphibious ships, one LHA-class amphibious ship, six John Lewis-class fleet oilers, and five guided missile frigates across FY2021-2025;
- Authorize the award of shipbuilding contracts for three San Antonio-class amphibious ships, one America-class amphibious ship, two Columbia-class submarines, and six John Lewis-class fleet oilers in FY2021;
- Recognize the strategic value of the Columbia-class submarine program by authorizing the use of the National Sea Based Deterrence Fund to support the Columbia-class submarine program with funds in addition to the Navy’s shipbuilding budget;
- Introduce stability to the Navy’s acquisition process by requiring steady shipbuilding rates to be maintained for each vessel class;
- Authorize the use of several cost-saving measures, including multi-year or block buy contract authorities when appropriate; and
- Minimize risk for the Navy by requiring shipbuilding prototyping to occur at the subsystem-level in advance of ship design, to the maximum extent practicable.