Media Advisory: Coast Guard icebreaker to hold change-of-command ceremony
U.S. Coast Guard sent this bulletin at 06/18/2019 12:22 PM EDT
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Media Advisory: Coast Guard icebreaker to hold change-of-command ceremony
WHO: Coast Guard Cutter Healy
WHAT: A change-of command ceremony where Capt. Greg Tlapa will be relieved by Capt. Mary Ellen Durley
WHEN: 10 a.m. Wednesday
WHERE: Pier 36, 1519 Alaskan Way S, Seattle, WA 98134
SEATTLE – The crew of Coast Guard Cutter Healy is scheduled to receive a new commanding officer Wednesday at 10 a.m. during a change-of-command ceremony at Coast Guard Base Seattle.
Capt. Mary Ellen J. Durley is scheduled to relieve Capt. Greg B. Tlapa as commanding officer of the Coast Guard Cutter Healy during the ceremony, presided over by Vice Adm. Linda L. Fagan, commander, Coast Guard Pacific Area.
Durley previously served as the chief, Office of Navigation Systems at Coast Guard Headquarters, where she was program manager with responsibility for aids to navigation, vessel traffic services, navigation standards and marine planning within the U.S. maritime transportation system.
Tlapa will report to the Coast Guard’s 9th District in Cleveland as the chief of response.
Under the command of Tlapa, a Phoenix native, Coast Guard Cutter Healy exercised the nation’s only arctic icebreaking capability and supported national-level scientific research, completed during two Arctic West Summer deployments, totaling seven unique science missions.
Tlapa is a permanent cutterman with more than 12 years sea service including afloat tours aboard the Coast Guard Cutters Acacia, Red Beech, Cypress, Hickory and Healy.
Coast Guard Cutter Healy is a medium icebreaker and the nation’s premiere high-latitude research vessel. Healy is the only U.S. military surface vessel that deploys to the ice-covered waters of the Arctic. In addition to science operations, Healy is capable of conducting a range of Coast Guard operations such as search and rescue, ship escorts, environmental protection and the enforcement of laws and treaties in the Polar Regions. Healy provides access and presence throughout the Arctic region to protect U.S. maritime borders and to safeguard the maritime economy. Homeported in Seattle, Healy is the largest ship in the U.S. Coast Guard at 420-feet long with a displacement of over 16,000 tons and a permanent crew of 87.
The change-of-command ceremony is a historic military tradition. The event, which has remained unchanged for centuries, includes a reading of the command orders in the presence of all unit crew members to ensure continuity of command.
Media are invited to attend the ceremony and may RSVP with Lt. j.g. Samuel Wood at (206) 217-6300 or Samuel.J.Wood@uscg.mil
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