CARSON CITY, Nev. –
The Nevada National Guard held a groundbreaking ceremony Friday to start construction on the Nevada Army National Guard Qualification Training Range. U.S. Sen. Jacky Rosen and Congressman Mark Amodei and Brig. Gen. Randy Lau, Nevada Army Guard commander, attended the event. When completed, set for 2027, the range will become the only Department of the Army approved qualification range in the state of Nevada.
“The new range will allow Nevada Soldiers to meet military marksmanship standards without having to leave the state — finally giving Nevada Guardsmen and women access to an in-state Army weapon qualification range that meets Army requisites,” said Brig. Gen. Randy Lau, Nevada Army National Guard commander. “I want to thank our Congressional delegation for their unwavering support throughout this process. Without them, this would not be possible.”
“They’re working together, training together. It’s only going to just benefit our community of Hawthorne, our service community, our National Guard, but I would say our entire country,” said U.S. Sen. Jacky Rosen, who played a major role in getting the funding necessary for this range as a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Since 2019, the Nevada Army Guard has sent more than 1,500 Soldiers to neighboring states annually for marksmanship qualifying, incurring substantial costs for travel, lodging and meals. Units spend up to four training days annually qualifying at out-of-state ranges. The four days equated to more than 15 percent of the unit’s allocated training days and significantly impacted the Soldiers’ ability to train on other tasks.
The new $20 million Hawthorne Army Depot Record Fire Range facility will include 16 lanes for rifle training, 15 for pistol, four machine gun lanes (up to M240) and seven buildings. Four full-time U.S. Army, federal employees will maintain operations at the range.
Click here for link to Sen. Rosen press release.
For KOLO 8 news story, click here.