News>Feature - "A very special group" -- JPED arrives
Photos
Staff Sgt. Luis Quinones speaks to the media about inventory process April 14, 2011, at the new Joint Personal Effects Depot at Dover Air Force Base, Del. The equipment displayed simulates the actual gear that is processed at JPED. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
Virginia Garcia, left, and Dawn Senidoleitch demonstrate how to catalog and document personal effects April 14, 2011, at the new Joint Personal Effects Depot at Dover Air Force Base, Del. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
Chief Warrant Officer 3 William Couch displays the contents of a footlocker to simulate the manner in which a servicemember’s effects would be presented to their family April 14, 2011, at the new Joint Personal Effects Depot at Dover Air Force Base, Del. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
A mural, designed and constructed by members of the Joint Personal Effects Depot, is displayed April 14, 2011, in the JPED facility at Dover Air Force Base, Del., in dedication of fallen servicemembers and their families. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
Troy Harden demonstrates how a personal effects container is scanned to display the contents within on April 14, 2011, at the Joint Personal Effects Depot facility at Dover Air Force Base, Del. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
Col. Mark Camerer, left, Lt. Gen. Thomas Bostick, Lt. Col. Kelly Kyburz, 1st Sgt. Alfred Venham, Maj. Gen. Bo Temple and Mr. Stephen Mockbee stand for the ribbon cutting, April 14, 2011, signaling the opening of the Joint Personal Effects Depot at Dover Air Force Base, Del. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
4/19/2011 - DOVER AIR FORCE BASE, Del. -- Dover Air Force Base welcomed its newest tenant unit with a much awaited ribbon cutting ceremony April 15, 2011.
The Joint Personal Effects Depot was originally stood up by the Army Human Resources Command immediately following the events of 9-11. It is the facility where the personal effects of killed, wounded or missing members from all military services including the Coast Guard, Department of Defense civilians and contractors, as well as embedded media are sent. These personal effects are photographed, inventoried, and prepared to be returned to their owners, or to their next of kin.
The JPED was relocated from Fort Myer Va., in March 2003 to its current location at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md.
In July 2008, construction began on JPED's new home at Dover Air Force Base, Del. Construction of the state-of-the-art, $17.5 million facility was completed in March 2011. The JPED recently commenced split-operations between the APG facility and the Dover facility, with the final relocation to be completed in June 2011.
On hand to participate at the ribbon cutting ceremony were Lt. Gen. Thomas Bostick, U.S. Army Deputy chief of staff, Maj. Gen. Merdith (Bo) Temple, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers deputy commanding general, Stephen Mockbee, Bancroft Construction Company, founder and president, Col. Mark Camerer, 436th Airlift Wing commander, Lt. Col. Kelly Kyburz, Commander, JPED commander, and 1st Sgt. Alfred Venham, JPED 1st Sgt.
Presently, the JPED family is comprised of more than 155 civilian contractors, one Department of the Army civilian and 34 servicemembers (28 Army, three Air Force, and three Marines). "This team that we have is a very special group," said Colonel Kyburz.
The new facility is co-located on the Mortuary Affairs campus with the Charles C. Carson Center for Mortuary Affairs, historically known as the "Dover Port Mortuary," and the Armed Forces Medical Examiner System facility. This new location allows for better coordination of each organization's efforts to service our nation's wounded and fallen servicemembers.
According to Col. Richard "Tony" Teolis Jr., director of the Casualty and Mortuary Affairs Operations Center, the relocation of the facility from APG to Dover AFB will aid in the processing time of personal effects, as well as financial savings from eliminating cost of receiving the personal effects at Dover AFB and then transporting them to APG for processing.
The facility is also known for the role it plays in the lives of the fallen members next of kin. "These items mean so much to these families, in different ways, because it's oftentimes the last tangible thing they might have," said Colonel Kyburz.