The Lay Apart Store

To invent, you need a good imagination and a pile of junk

Thomas Alva Edison

Recently, I launched into one of those spring-cleaning campaigns that I undertake once every few weeks. Bordering on Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), the urge to clean up by wantonly throwing out stuff every now & then has been a malady I have been afflicted with for many years. I am reminded of an incident from long ago when I was at the receiving end of one such cleanship overdrive. I believe it has lessons for our homes and workplaces as well.

For the Executive Officer (EXO) of a small ship, storage space for tens of thousands of articles that go into keeping a warship ‘shipshape’ is always a premium. Every department has a tendency to hoard things onboard ‘just in case’. Then there is the bureaucratic challenge of returning defunct or life-expired items back to the depot – a tedium euphemistically called ‘survey’. Both these factors combine to ensure ships are stuffed year-on-year with more than a fair share of junk – a serious fire hazard and constant source of worry for the EXO & CO.
To tackle this menace, the navy came up with a novel concept called Lay Apart Store – a small space ashore (equivalent to a garage) allotted to each ship where such items can find short-term storage before they are returned to the depot. Noble intention indeed but with a small hitch. Survey is a cumbersome procedure and there are always more items to survey than can possibly be surveyed in the ever-shrinking time that operational ships spend in home port. Resultant situation? Lay Apart stores are always overflowing with items, particularly in the days preceding important ‘look good’ events such as Annual Inspection when the ship has to be stripped of all junk. Part laziness part systemic, the hoarding syndrome keeps festering till some senior officer cracks the whip and calls for ‘Rounds’ (inspection) of the Lay Apart Store – a nightmare for EXOs, especially if it comes as a surprise.

Soon after taking over the reigns of Eastern Fleet, our Fleet Commander had included Lay Apart Store among his KRAs. In a fleet used to playing second fiddle to the ‘operational’ sword-arm Western Fleet, pursuit of such trivia was nothing unusual. To further aggravate matters, he had announced the creation of an additional shore-based facility called ‘Paint Store’ where the copious amount of paint allotted to ships would have to be stored – again with the noble intention of reducing fire hazard on ships. However, under the regime of the day, an overriding requirement of both these stores was to look as austere and empty as possible (falsely indicative of promptness on the ships’ part to survey old items). Anything more than a few neatly labeled paint cans, the odd block & tackle or a reel of extra berthing hawser was frowned upon – clearly, an uphill task for the EXO unless matters improved at the depot, or innovative window dressing measures were employed.
So when sadistic opportunists sitting in Fleet HQ announced surprise rounds of Lay Apart Store and Paint Store a week before our ship’s annual inspection, I knew we were headed for an unmitigated disaster. With just two hours for rounds to commence, the Commanding Officer and his able deputy suddenly had a two-front war thrust on them. We quickly mobilized the ship’s company into two teams to ‘attack’ both stores and empty them of the very things they were designed to hold in the first place. Strange are the ways of the navy, but who had the time or cheek to question? It was an ‘all hands on deck’ situation. Our resourceful Gunnery Officer quickly arranged a 3-tonner (a large military-grade truck) to hold the contents of both stores till such time the storm passed. With other ships in harbour also scurrying to hide away skeletons from their LA Store, large trucks were suddenly in hot demand.
Within the next few hours, several vehicles, small and large, started plying around the dockyard hiding contents of their respective LA stores. On our part, we had a shambolic truckload of stuff that included old Remington typewriters, obsolete signaling devices, 486-era computers, Motorola radio sets, steel wire ropes, tons of cleaning material etc. Last of the junk was being feverishly tossed onto the truck when the Admiral’s flag car pulled up in front of our LA store with the bugler sounding ‘Alert’. Almost on key, a discarded steel vessel from the ship’s galley rolled over from our truck to the pavement below; the metallic sound shattering the pin drop silence created by the admiral’s arrival. The bizarre & frenetic activity came to an abrupt halt.
What happened next is best left to your imagination. I think the admiral had his first & genuine ‘wtf’ moment in many years!
Within a few hours of admiral’s rounds, the fleet of trucks hiding many ships’ junk returned to disgorge their illicit cargo back into the stores. To cut a long story short, everybody passed muster except us – all because of a few minutes’ delay in doing the Houdini.

The sheer impracticality of keeping a Lay Apart store in ‘window dressed’ condition while doing little to facilitate or simplify survey process at both ends, in this case, is symptomatic of the importance we sometimes attach to ‘good order & discipline’ (a phrase borrowed from naval lexicon) without investing in sound processes. Noble intentions not backed up with mechanisms that encourage end-users to adopt best practices can remain, well, just noble intentions. Well-meaning initiatives intended to improve people’s lives or enhance operational efficiency sometimes end up becoming an albatross around our necks.

At home, I used to insist that the guitar is always put back inside its case after use and kept in the designated corner (where it would look nice & orderly) till we realized that the boys were now shunning the guitar altogether to avoid the ‘extra work’ of securing it after use. Ditto with my OCD-driven insistence that books be always arranged in that particular order in this particular corner of that particular bookshelf. Once freed of these shackles, the reading habit flourished, books lying almost always within an extended arm’s reach in our house. I also remember incidents of ships preserving their labour-saving devices for the Admiral’s inspection while chipping away with the same old chipping hammers that were to be replaced by labour-saving devices. Thankfully, even this syndrome is behind us I am told.

Recently, I learnt of an HR initiative in an aviation company which mandated annual appraisals among their company pilots. This required pilots to have short-term and long-term goals, along with a host of other ‘appraisal jargon’ borrowed from a completely non-aviation setup. Needless to state, pilots were seething at being measured with the wrong tape. Why complicate matters when successful & timely completion of revenue sorties, flying hours, safety record, biannual check rides etc. more than suffice as performance metrics? Another well-intentioned initiative with a misplaced application.

By shifting the focus to the upkeep of Lay Apart store rather than its pure utility, both the ship and HQ lost the plot & people had to resort to all kinds of deceit to measure up to the wrong benchmark. Get the drift?

Sometimes a little disorder is required to break new ground. Creativity and good order may not be the best of friends.

Do you agree?

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©KP Sanjeev Kumar, 2017. All rights reserved.

Image courtesy www.vaultgarage.com

10 thoughts on “The Lay Apart Store

  1. KP hilarious… Sent me down the memory lane. I recollect with great pleasure that we ‘escaped’ that day as my truck got dispatched on time..
    I am pleased to report that our wonderful service (with loads of humour in uniform moments) has come a long way from those times…We have indeed evolved into a very modern and professional force.
    Your post is as good as it each time…. Continue to keep us enthralled with your lucid writing skills…

    1. Well, our disorder cupboard was the Lay Apart Store…till the authorities caught up with us! Thanks for reading, Jyothsna 🙂

  2. Then there are those EXOs who will re invent the wheel during lay apart store rounds by designating a currently onboard equipment as ‘useless’ and find something ‘useful’ in the lay aprt store and get the latter back onboard. Nevermind the fact that the previous ExO must have had reasons for consigning the latter to the lay apart store !! Can totally imagine the look on the Admiral’s face during that wtf moment.

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