Col. Tom Barrett has handed over command of U.S. Army Garrison Hawaii after two years in command.

“COVID has made ceremonies like this a little different,” Barrett said Tuesday as he addressed a crowd of soldiers and family members in masks during a ceremony broadcast live on Facebook.

Over the past two years Barrett has dealt with volcanic eruptions, a , modernizing aging facilities and most recently a global pandemic.

Similar to a city manager, the garrison commander is in charge of overseeing operations and services across 22 Army installations on Oahu and Hawaii — including Schofield Barracks, Wheeler Army Airfield, Tripler Army Medical Center, Fort Shafter, Fort DeRussy and others.

Col. Tom Barrett gives remarks during a socially distanced change of command ceremony at the Schofield Barracks broadcast live on Facebook. Screenshot/2020

After the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic in March,聽Barrett told community members during a digital town hall on Facebook Live that he planned to 鈥渃ontinue to be as transparent as possible鈥 and 鈥減rovide the most current number of cases during these community updates.鈥

Barrett and his staff continued giving updates until orders came down from the Pentagon to stop reporting numbers publicly on the local level. Though the military still shares numbers with Hawaii state officials, civilian officials also don’t disclose how many of the state’s total cases are military.

The Pentagon’s policy of secrecy has put local commanders in an awkward spot as they try to reassure a sometimes skeptical public. The Army has since resumed large-scale training.

Col. Daniel Misigoy, who most recently served as staff officer with the NATO Rapid Deployment Corps in Turkey, will take on the job from Barrett. For Misigoy it’s a return to Hawaii — before his posting at NATO he was assigned to the 25th Infantry Division from 2015 to 2017.

While Barrett is moving on from his post, he won鈥檛 be leaving Hawaii. His next assignment is at U.S. Indo-Pacific Command at Camp Smith as its new deputy for strategy and policy.

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