U.S. Army Chemical Materials ActivityU.S. Army Chemical Materials ActivityU.S. Army Chemical Materials ActivityU.S. Army Chemical Materials Activity
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Welcome to the CMA Employee Transition Hub


https://www.cma.army.mil/wp-content/uploads/CMA-Final-Compressed.mp4
 

This website is designed for you, the government employees who work at the U.S. Army Chemical Materials Activity (CMA).  Thank you for your dedication to helping CMA complete its mission of safely storing the chemical stockpile and supporting the stockpile destruction mission; protecting the public, workers and environment near those stockpiles; supporting the international treaty overseeing chemical weapons elimination; and assessing and destroying recovered chemical warfare materiel.

You are CMA’s most important resource. Your skills are critical to our success, and we need to retain as many of you as possible to the end of the stockpile storage and CSEPP mission at Pueblo Chemical Depot, Colorado, and Blue Grass Chemical Activity, Kentucky. Our commitment to you is to help you create your “Bridge to the Future.” We know this is a lot of information, and a lot to think about. That’s why each stockpile site and CMA Headquarters have transition specialists dedicated to helping you develop a career or retirement plan. But the most important person in this process is YOU. Your career goals are as individual as you are.

Leadership at all three locations — BGCA, PCA and CMA HQ — is committed to helping you stay with CMA until mission completion. We will do everything we can to partner with you in creating a bridge to your next job or retirement.

  • U.S. Army Chemical Materials Activity Headquarters
    8435 Hoadley Road (Bldg E4585)
    Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland 21010
    Phone: 410-436-2865
  • Email: usarmy.apg.cma.list.hr-bridgetofuture@mail.mil

Overview

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Planning Retirement

Continuing Federal Service

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  • Home
  • About
  • Leadership
  • What We Do
    • Store
    • Destroy
    • Comply
    • Protect
  • Resources
    • Fact Sheets
    • Employee Transition Hub
    • Employee HR Information Hub
    • Media Center
  • Contact
  • COVID-19 Response
U.S. Army Chemical Materials Activity
Mountain

The mountain has been an element that has graced many of the past depot emblems, representing Pike’s Peak.

Missile

The Pershing Missile in the center represents one of the most prominent missions of the depot in the 1980s.

Hawk

The hawk represents native depot wildlife, the present and future mission of the environmental programs, and was also the name of one of the missile systems supplied by the depot during its missile mission in the 1950s and 60s.

Insignias

The branch insignia of both the U.S. Army Chemical Corps and Ordnance Corps represent the depot’s command structure through its history as both an ordnance and a chemical depot.

Colors & Text

The colors cobalt blue and yellow gold are representative of the U.S. Army Chemical Corps. “Pueblo Depot” is representative of the installation throughout its history. “1942” is the date of establishment. “Safety” and “Service” capture the continued and historical depot missions.

Motto

The motto translates to “A Common Good.”

Sun

The rising sun denotes the dawning of a new day without chemical weapons and the organization’s mission to safely destroy chemical weapons stockpile, thus changing the future of modern warfare.

Wheat

The three stalks of wheat symbolize the harvest of hope that has been secured through industry, cultivation and abundance. It also refers to the unit’s chemical/biological, smoke/obscurant and support to Homeland security industrial base missions at Pine Bluff Arsenal.

Eagle

The double-headed eagle suggests the two CMA methods for stockpile chemical weapons disposal, incineration and neutralization. These methods’ roots are traced back to Project Eagle I (incinerating of mustard agents) and Eagle II (neutralizing nerve agents).

Olive Branch

The olive branch signifies peace and the Activity’s commitment to abide by the stipulations of the Chemical Weapons Convention Treaty and assisting other nations.

Octagon

The octagon alludes to the eight original chemical weapons stockpile storage sites in the United States.