Sentinel town hall meetings planned in Great Falls, Lewistown
The U.S. Air Force is holding two town hall meetings in Montana on Jan. 24 and 25 at 6:30 p.m.
The meetings are planning to provide the local community with information on the Sentinel missile upgrade program.
The town halls are scheduled for:
- Jan. 24 at the Fergus County Fairgrounds in Lewistown
- Jan. 25 at Great Falls High School auditorium
During the meetings, the Air Force will provide an overview of the Sentinel program and its projected impact on the local area, then offer a 30-minute question-and-answer session to answer questions community members have about program.
Multiple major projects ongoing at Malmstrom; preparing for Sentinel
The Air Force is replacing the aging Minuteman III missile system with Sentinel.
Components and subsystems of Minuteman have been upgraded since it first became operational in the early 1970s but most of the fundamental infrastructure uses the original equipment, according to the Air Force.
The land-based nuclear deterrent ICBM system includes 400 deployed missiles, 450 silos and more than 600 facilities across nearly 40,000 square miles over six states, three operational wings and a test location.
To submit questions in advance of the townhall, send them to 341mwpa@us.af.mil or AFGSC.Sentinel.Hotline@us.af.mil, or call the Sentinel Hotline at (307) 773-3400.
Defense bill includes pay raises; funds for Malmstrom, MANG construction; language for Sentinel
At Malmstrom, there will be construction and renovation on base to support Sentinel command, communications, maintenance, training and storage facilities, according to AFGSC.
Off base, the project includes renovating 15 missile alert facilities and 150 launch facilities and constructing 31 communication towers, according to AFGSC.
It will require acquiring easements to install and maintain 1,277 miles of new utility corridors; and install and maintain additional utilities within 1,750 miles of existing utility corridors.
Air Force awards $996 million contract for Sentinel component
For Malmstrom, the project includes establishing two workforce hubs, one in Great Falls and one in Lewistown.
Each hub will be 50-60 acres with 2,500 to 3,000 residents during peaks for three to five years, according to AFGSC.
The hubs will have their own dining facility, gym, recreation center and be completely contained within a fenced area. Northrop Grumman, the contractor, will provide security, patrol the area and control access, according to Malmstrom.
The Air Force will also establish construction laydown/staging areas in Augusta, Denton, Judith Gap, Lewistown, Stanford, Vaughn and Winifred.
Construction on Sentinel project set to begin
Those areas will be about 13 acres in size and in place for three to five years, according to AFGSC.
The Air Force contractor will coordinate with local governments before selecting sites for the temporary facilities and obtain permits as necessary to meet local zoning requirements.
The Sentinel project is progressing and on Jan. 12, the Air Force and Northrop Grumman conducted a static fire test for the Stage 2-solid rocket motor for the weapon system in Tennessee.
This closed chamber test is the second in a series of static fire tests during Sentinel’s development to validate the design and performance of Sentinel’s three-stage propulsion system. The Stage-2 SRM is the second largest of Sentinel’s three stages and the second SRM to fire following the missile’s launch, according to a release from AFGSC.




