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The 80th Training Command (TASS) headquarters is located in Richmond, Va. It is the third largest command organization in the U.S. Army Reserve. The command is made up of more than 7,300 Army Reserve Soldiers assigned to 13 brigade units aligned under three major subordinate one-star divisions with units located nationwide -- from Pennsylvania to Puerto Rico and from the Carolinas and Georgia to California. It has an operational control training relationship with a unit in Hawaii and a support relationship with a unit in Germany.
The Command?s annual economic impact is about $40 to $60 million. In addition to the salaries of full-time civilian and military personnel, this figure also includes pay to Army Reserve Soldiers, money spent locally for the purchase of supplies, services, maintenance support, equipment, facility construction and renovation, and the G.I. Bill college tuition payments to Army Reserve Soldiers attending school.
The 80th trains Army Soldiers in 12 Career Military Fields (CMF) for combat support and combat service support. The three major one-star divisions under the umbrella of the 80th Training Command are the 94th, 100th, and 102nd. The 94th Training Division (Force Sustainment) headquarters is located at Fort Lee, Va. The 100th Training Division (Operational Support) has its headquarters in Fort Knox, Ky. The 102nd Training Division (Maneuver Support) headquarters is at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.
Under the 12 CMFs, 63 Military Occupational Specialties (MOS) are taught at eight TASS Training Centers (TTC), four Regional Training Sites for Maintenance, and two High-Tech Training Centers nationwide.
The 80th also teaches nine Additional Skill Identifiers (ASI), 16 certifications, 25 Senior Leadership Courses (SLC), and 53 Advanced Leadership Courses (ALC). All together, the Command teaches 166 individual courses. The CMFs cover a wide range of instruction, from Engineering to Health Services, and from Quartermaster to Civil Affairs/Psychological Operations.
The Command also provides specified instructor personnel from its school brigades, as directed, to any U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) installation to support MOS-specific training requirements.