and radio stations, ships newspaper, tours program, and
so forth.
Having a collateral duty PAO as your boss means
you most likely will be in charge of the day-to-day
responsibilities of the office. This situation will vary,
depending on how much time the PAO can devote to the
office.
In some instances, you will receive requests from
individuals outside of the division to volunteer their time
to write stories or help with television or radio
production. There is nothing wrong with this practice,
provided you carefully screen each volunteer.
Additionally, do not assign volunteers work that would
normally be handled by your staff. Volunteers are just
thatthey tend to come and go at will and are not always
reliable.
MANNING
Adequate manning is a constant public affairs office
concern aboard ship. The old Defense Information
School (DINFOS) adage, Youre a sailor first and a
journalist second, holds true today. Fire party, special
sea and anchor, DC/3M and general quarters assign-
ments will drain you of personnel at the most
inopportune moments, as will working parties,
compartment/head cleaning duties and other tasks
affiliated with life aboard a ship.
A vigorous cross-training program will help offset
this problem. As discussed earlier, versatility, not
specialization, is your staff goal, especially at sea. If JO2
Renalin, the X-1 division damage control petty officer
and the current evening news anchor, is called away on
a priority assignment, you can use JO3 OForth or JO2
Katt, the former news anchors, to fill in.
SPECIAL PROJECTS
There are several projects that a public affairs office
manager at sea will tackle, including, but not limited to,
the following: ship commissioning, homecomings,
decommissioning, handling civilian embarks, the
SECNAV Guest Cruise Program and tours.
Commissionings
The commissioning ceremony is one of the most
time honored ceremonies in the U.S. Navy. It is the
ceremonial transition of a ship from its building and
outfitting stage to becoming an operational Navy unit.
If you are assigned to a ships precommissioning
unit, you and the PAO will work closely with the
prospective CO of the ship and possibly regional PAOs
in preparing the commissioning plan, with CHINFO
acting as the overall coordinator. A sample ships
commissioning plan is shown in Appendix V of this
manual.
Remember that at least six weeks before the
ceremony, you and/or the PAO must keep CHINFO and
the Commander, Naval Sea Systems Command
(COMNAVSEASYSCOM) informed of the status of the
ceremony. This is done by completing CHINFO Report
5720-3 (Special Ceremonies Report). The following
pieces of information must be included in the report:
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Date of the ceremony
Location of the ceremony
Name and telephone number of the project
officer
Estimated local starting time of the ceremony
Estimated local completion time of the ceremony
Name, rank and/or title of the principal speaker
Nearest air facility
Indication as to whether the list of military and
civilian dignitaries who have accepted
invitations to attend the ceremony has been
forwarded to CHINFO (if not, provide the
estimated submission date)
Indication of whether a copy of the complete
program has been forwarded to CHINFO (if not,
provide the estimated submission date)
Indication of whether the remarks of the principal
speaker have been forwarded to CHINFO (if not,
provide the estimated submission date)
Indication of whether press kits have been
forwarded to CHINFO (if not, provide the
estimated submission date)
Names of congressional members and/or
delegations which have been invited
Name of sponsor
Heavy media attention should be expected at the
commissioning ceremony. Your press kits should
include the following information:
l Commissioning press release
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