RAAF Base Williamtown explained

RAAF Base Williamtown
Partof:Newcastle Airport
Location:Williamtown, New South Wales
Country:Australia
Type:Military air base
Coordinates:-32.795°N 151.8344°W
Pushpin Map:New South Wales
Pushpin Mapsize:300
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of RAAF Williamtown in New South Wales
Pushpin Relief:1
Pushpin Label:RAAF Base Williamtown
YWLM
Ownership:Department of Defence
Operator:Royal Australian Air Force
Used: present
Iata:NTL
Icao:YWLM
Elevation:310NaN0
R1-Number:12/30
R1-Length:3058m (10,033feet)
R1-Surface:Asphalt
Footnotes:Sources: Australian AIP and aerodrome chart[1]

RAAF Base Williamtown is a Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) military air base located 8NM north of Newcastle (27km (17miles) by road) in the local government area of Port Stephens, in New South Wales, Australia.[1] The base serves as the headquarters to both the Air Combat Group and the Surveillance and Response Group of the RAAF. The military base shares its runway facilities with Newcastle Airport. The nearest towns are Raymond Terrace, located 8km (05miles) west of the base and Medowie, 6.8km (04.2miles), north of the base, which is home to many of the base's staff.

A number of the buildings and other facilities on the base are listed on the Commonwealth Heritage List.[2]

History

RAAF Station Williamtown was established on 15 February 1941 to provide protection for the strategic port and steel manufacturing facilities in Newcastle.[3] The base originally had four runways, each 1100m (3,600feet) in length to meet the needs of the Williamtown Flying School. The school consisted of 62 buildings which accommodated 366 officers and men.

A number of Australian Empire Air Training Scheme squadrons were formed at Williamtown before proceeding overseas and No. 4 Operational Training Unit was located at Williamtown from October 1942 until the unit was disbanded in April 1944. Following World War II, Williamtown was retained as the RAAF's main fighter base and was equipped with squadrons of Gloster Meteor and CAC Sabre fighters.[4] [5]

In 1961, the squadron of Meteors were replaced with the Dassault Mirage aircraft.[4] On-base facilities were gradually expanded post war and through until the late 1960s.

In 1983, the role of Williamtown was upgraded to a tactical fighter base in preparation of the replacement of the Mirages with 75 F/A-18 Hornets in 1989. The following year, Williamtown became headquarters for the Tactical Fighter group and acquired new headquarter buildings, hangars, workshops, stores, medical facilities and a base chapel.[4]

Current base activity

RAAF Williamtown employed approximately 3,500 personnel, including military, civilians and contractors, and generated $150 million per annum by way of salaries in the Hunter Region economy.[3]

Williamtown was home to F/A-18 Hornet fighters (operated by No. 2 Operational Conversion Unit, No. 3 Squadron and No. 77 Squadron), BAE Hawk 127 Lead-In Fighters (operated by No. 76 Squadron), E-7A Wedgetail airborne early warning and control aircraft (operated by No. 2 Squadron) and Pilatus PC-9 forward air control aircraft (operated by No. 4 Squadron). It is also home to the Australian Defence Force Warfare Centre[6] and Surveillance and Response Group RAAF.

RAAF Base Williamtown has sporting fields, recreation facilities, cinema and a fortnightly newspaper[7] highlighting activities around the Base and outside community. RAAF Williamtown is the home to Fighter World, a museum dedicated to Australian fighter aircraft.[8]

In 2014, the Australian Government announced that Williamtown would be the home base for the F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighters; the first of which arrived in December 2018,[9] and enter service with the RAAF in 2020.[10] [11] Redevelopment works to prepare the base for the F-35, including a 2000 ft runway extension, began in January 2015.[12] [13] This runway extension allows fighters to take off without the use of their noisy afterburners, minimising noise for local communities.[14] [15] Fifty-six of the seventy-two F35s will be based at Williamtown.[14]

The use of firefighting chemicals over a sustained period has resulted in contamination of the groundwater in the area surrounding the base, with residents initiating a class action lawsuit and expressing ongoing concern in national media over the impact on their properties.[16] [17] [18] [19] Nationally, there are 90 sites impacted by PFAS contamination, with more internationally.[20] [21]

Units

The following units are located at RAAF Base Williamtown:[22]

UnitFull nameForce Element GroupWingAircraftNotes
1ATS DET WLMNo. 1 Air Terminal Squadron Detachment WilliamtownCombat Support Group95N/A
1CCS DET WLMNo. 1 Combat Communications Squadron Detachment WilliamtownCombat Support Group95N/A
1RSUNo. 1 Radar Surveillance UnitSurveillance and Response Group41N/A
1SECFORNo. 1 Security Forces SquadronCombat Support Group95N/A
2SQNNo. 2 SquadronSurveillance and Response Group42E-7A
2EHSNo. 2 Expeditionary Health SquadronCombat Support GroupN/A
2OCUNo. 2 Operational Conversion UnitAir Combat Group81F-35A
3SQNNo. 3 SquadronAir Combat Group81F-35A
4SQNNo. 4 SquadronAir Combat Group78PC-9
3CRUNo. 3 Control and Reporting UnitSurveillance and Response Group41N/A[23]
26SQNNo. 26 (City of Newcastle) SquadronCombat Support Group96N/AAirbase operations
HQ453SQNHeadquarters No. 453 SquadronSurveillance and Response GroupN/A
453SQN WLM FLTNo. 453 Squadron Williamtown FlightSurveillance and Response GroupN/A
76SQNNo. 76 SquadronAir Combat Group78BAE-Hawk 127
77SQNNo. 77 SquadronAir Combat Group81F-35A
278SQNNo. 278 SquadronAir Combat Group78N/A
381ECSSNo. 381 Expeditionary Combat Support SquadronCombat Support Group95N/AContingency operations
CSU-WLMCombat Support Unit – WilliamtownCombat Support GroupN/A
HQ41WGHeadquarters No. 41 WingSurveillance and Response GroupN/A
HQ42WGHeadquarters No. 42 WingSurveillance and Response GroupN/A
HQ44WGHeadquarters No. 44 WingSurveillance and Response GroupN/A
HQ78WGHeadquarters No. 78 WingAir Combat GroupN/A
HQ81WGHeadquarters No. 81 WingAir Combat GroupN/A
HQACGHeadquarters Air Combat GroupAir Combat GroupN/A
HQSRGSurveillance and Response GroupSurveillance and Response GroupN/A
SACTUSurveillance and Control Training UnitSurveillance and Response GroupN/A
335SQN AAFCNo. 335 Squadron Australian Air Force CadetsAustralian Air Force CadetsN/A[24]
AEWCSPOAirborne Early Warning Control System Program OfficeCapability Acquisition and Sustainment GroupN/A
GTESPOGround Telecommunications Equipment Systems Program OfficeCapability Acquisition and Sustainment GroupN/A
TFSPOTactical Fighter System Program OfficeCapability Acquisition and Sustainment GroupN/A

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. , Aeronautical Chart p. 1
  2. 1/09/064/0028. 21 September 2018.
  3. Web site: Government administration and defence. Newcastle and the Hunter Region 2008–2009. 6–7. Hunter Valley Research Foundation. 3 August 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20091018064515/http://www.hvrf.com.au/pages/design/links/uploaded/govtadminanddefence.pdf. 18 October 2009 .
  4. Web site: RAAF Base Williamtown & Salt Ash Air Weapons Range Williamtown, NSW Heritage Management Plan. Department of Defence. 11 September 2009. 20 April 2010. 32–33.
  5. Under pressure Australian Aviation issue 253 September 2008 pages 30-34
  6. Web site: ADFWC Welcome. Australian Defence Force Warfare Centre. 6 September 2015.
  7. Web site: RADAR Magazine home page. radarnews.com.au. https://web.archive.org/web/20140125200941/http://www.radarnews.com.au/ . 25 January 2014.
  8. Web site: About Fighter World. Fighter World. 6 September 2015.
  9. News: F-35 fighters arrive on Australian soil. Defense News. Nigel . Pittaway . 10 December 2018.
  10. News: Williamtown the winner over Amberley for F-35s . . Australia . 24 April 2014 . 25 August 2017 . Egan, Geoff .
  11. News: Williamtown starts on F-35 facilities . Australian Defence Magazine . Australia . 7 May 2015 . 25 August 2017 . Smart, Philip .
  12. Web site: Williamtown RAAF Base work to start in January. Elias. Charles. 31 December 2014. Port Stephens Examiner. en. 24 May 2019.
  13. Web site: Upgrade of air base takes off. Elias. Charles. 1 April 2015. Port Stephens Examiner. en. 24 May 2019.
  14. Web site: RAAF base Williamtown wants to fly neighbourly as its spends $1.5 billion on facilities. 29 August 2015. News.com.au. 24 May 2019.
  15. Web site: RAAF Base Williamtown runway extension opens. Media. News of the Area-Modern. 30 September 2016. News of the Area. en-US. 24 May 2019.
  16. Web site: Williamtown water contamination becomes key issue in tight electorate race . . Sydney. 20 May 2016 . 25 August 2017 . Streaming audio . Bevan, Matt .
  17. Web site: Williamtown and Oakey residents to receive Fed Govt support . . Sydney. 14 June 2016 . 25 August 2017 . Streaming audio . Bevan, Matthew .
  18. News: Ground water contamination at RAAF Base Williamtown . . Maitland. 4 September 2015 . 25 August 2017 .
  19. News: Residents file toxic water class action over RAAF base . . Australia. 3 November 2016 . 25 August 2017 .
  20. News: Fellner . Carrie . Begley . Patrick . Toxic Secrets: Where the sites with PFAS contamination are near you . 25 June 2018 . . 17 June 2018.
  21. News: Agencies investigating potential water contamination. 8 December 2017. Radio New Zealand. 7 December 2017.
  22. Web site: RAAF Base Williamtown . . Australian Government . 25 August 2017 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140802044404/http://www.airforce.gov.au/RAAFBases/New-South-Wales/RAAF-Base-Williamtown/?RAAF-hGKolBgcjFzkAjuJv83Grq59BEM+C152 . 2 August 2014 .
  23. Web site: Surveillance and Response Group. Royal Australian Air Force. Australian Government. 25 June 2018.
  24. Web site: 3 Wing AAFC – NSW & ACT – Australian Air Force Cadets. Australian Air Force Cadets.