The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 08.09.2004, Síða 2

The White Falcon - 08.09.2004, Síða 2
The Naval Media Center’s radio program, “Talk of the Town” airs Wednesdays at 2 p.m. on K104FM, Thunder 1530, and Roller Channel 9. Wednesday, September 1, NASKEF Command Master Chief CMDCM(SW) Mike Johnson and JOl Alex Carfrae from the Naval Media Center were the guests. Here are some of the community issues they discussed: I understand that we live in a foreign country and don’t have the same availabilities we have in the United States. However, is it too much to ask that the commissary keep the shelves stocked when it’s open? I was shopping on Sunday and most of the shelves were empty. I had 13 items on my list and four of them (sour cream, canned tomatoes, individual piz- zas, and bagels) weren’t available in any brand. Can’t the commissary schedule its stock workers better so someone is always available to replenish products? And, if not having products available is the problem, is there a way to order more of the products the community wants instead of products we don’t? Also, please check the expiration dates on products. The past three times I’ve been to the commissary I’ve picked up products with expired dates. [From Jim Marino, Commissary Store Director] I would like to apologize for the inconvenience of not having some of the products that you want to buy on those times that you shop at the store. During this summer months, we have experienced a severe shortage of personnel, particularly at the warehouse and stocking crew that affected our ability to keep a well stocked store. Recently, we have been able to hire three at the warehouse and four new employees for the night stocking crew. Most of the U.S. and local national employees that went on leave are now back to work, so you should see a significant improve- ment as we continue to unload and stock the backlog of incoming containers. Please feel free to ask assistance from one of my staff or any of the store management if you did not find a particular products on the shelves as the products may be at the back storage area or have just been unloaded from a container. Products that are expired or pass sale by date are available for reduce price up to 50 percent as long as it is still wholesome and fit for resale. Questions about quality of our products can be address to the U.S. Army food inspector at 2786. I went shopping at the commissary a week ago and noticed that more than half the fruit on the line had mold on them. I understand that they have to be flown in from the states but why can’t the people who work there take them off the line ones mold starts growing on them. Mold does spread. And instead of flying fruit from the states why can’t we bring in fruit from the stores out in town. I would be willing to spend that extra dollar for fresh fruit than wasting my money on old moldy fruit. [From Jim Marino, Commissary Store Director] We regret your bad experience with our produce, and we definitely can do a better job in policing the produce line. Your concern has been communicated to our new produce manager and her staff. The commis- sary receives only one produce flight a week. Normally, the quality of produce has deteriorated by the time we receive it on Monday as the shipment was delivered to Defense Subsistence Office (DSO), Tidewater, for airlift to Keflavik the Friday of the previous week. Buying pro- duce locally is an expensive alternative, not just for the commissary, but also for customers. From time to time, we buy local bananas and other items that we need by the end of the week and it is very expensive. Depending on the Kronur rate, the cost per pound of bananas could be as high as 96 cents per pound as compared to 34 cents per pound from DSO Tidewater. In addition, as a DOD agency, we are mandated by DOD regulations to pur- chase our produce supplies from DSO. During the past month, the internet service has been hit-or-miss at best. Since August 17 I’ve tried to log on to the internet only to have my computer connect to the server then not be able to connect to a browser or my e-mail. When MWR made a change to the server the instructions for updating our system settings were sent to us the day before the change happened. Not all of us check our MWR accounts daily and several of us went without our Internet service all weekend until we could get the administrator to send a copy of the instructions to our military accounts. This past weekend, at least a dozen of us were able to log on to the Internet once but not for the rest of the weekend. What is MWR doing to prevent this from happening again? How is MWR going to compensate its inter- net users for all the time we haven’t had access to its service? [From Dennis Merkel, MWR Director] Thank you for your input, although your time line seems a bit exaggerated. The dial-up Internet service was down from Friday through Sunday of last week, not for a month. The system wasn’t fully down...in fact, we were down to 60 modems from our normal number of 300, and as you can imagine this affected many of our ISP subscribers. This situation was caused by some technical problems experienced during the switchover from dial- up to ADSL service. More technical issues may follow as this transition is complicated. MWR will do its best to avert any problems beforehand. As far as discounts go, MWR is planning to credit those customers who were inconvenienced by the fault. Is it fair to give credit to those who even didn’t use the Internet over weekend at all? We’re not going to comment on that except to say we decided to give a credit to all in this case. The tech- nical problem experienced was unexpected. MWR has a set policy for downtime and according to that policy, we are not required to refund or credit any customers, but still decided to do so. MWR’s IT personnel will be closely monitoring the dial-up servers and hopefully this problem will not continue. Why did German MTV go away? It had really good hard rock videos on certain nights. It was formerly Channel 38, but with the new channel line-up, it has quietly disappeared. Is there a chance of getting it back on Channel 38, since it is just a test pattern now? Recently, AFN announced the beginning of two new services, AFN Family and AFN Movie. As part of that, it was necessary for us to rework our channel lineup. We took the opportunity to do a full channel review and MTV Germany was the one channel that we removed. MTV Germany was our one remaining analog chan- nel. The problem with this analog channel for both the viewer and our engineers was that the reception tended to degenerate anytime the weather conditions deteriorated. Some of the programming normally scene on MTV such as Punk’d, Dismissed, etc. will now also be showing up on our new AFN Spectrum Channel. Look in next week’s edition for the results of the next “Talk of the Town.” E-mail your questions to nmcfeedback@naskef.navy.mil or call the Naval Media Center during the broadcast at 4615. Page 2 The White Falcon September 8, 2004

x

The White Falcon

Beinleiðis leinki

Hvis du vil linke til denne avis/magasin, skal du bruge disse links:

Link til denne avis/magasin: The White Falcon
https://timarit.is/publication/382

Link til dette eksemplar:

Link til denne side:

Link til denne artikel:

Venligst ikke link direkte til billeder eller PDfs på Timarit.is, da sådanne webadresser kan ændres uden advarsel. Brug venligst de angivne webadresser for at linke til sitet.