Ney and Hill Award Winners Named The 2000 winners of the Navy Captain Edward F. Ney Memorial Awards and the Marine Corps Major General W.P.T. Hill Memorial Awards for outstanding food service in the Navy and Marine Corps were recently announced by Navy Secretary Richard Danzig. Formal presentation of the awards will be made during the International Food Service Executives Association (IFSEA) conference on Friday, April 7, 2000, in Chicago, Ill. This year the Ney Awards program was expanded to recognize afloat participants from both the Atlantic and Pacific. The ashore awards program was revised to score all general messes on established criteria and award three-star through five-star ratings to each. Afloat galley winners in the Atlantic Fleet are:
Afloat galley winners in the Pacific Fleet are:
This year's Ney five-star award ashore general messes are:
Hill first place awards:
Hill runner-up award:
The Ney awards were established in 1958 and the Hill Awards in 1985 by the Secretary of the Navy and IFSEA to improve and recognize quality food service in the Navy and Marine Corps. IFSEA is a food service industry trade association whose members include executive chefs, operators, and dietitians. consultants, managers and owners of catering firms, restaurants, hotels, and clubs. The Ney and Hill awards recognize overall food service excellence by evaluating key areas in customer service, restauranteurship, cleanliness and management. An independent team that reviewed food preparation, management, administration, equipment safety, sanitation, plastic waste and disposal evaluated each category. The evaluation teams were made up of senior Navy and Marine Corps mess management specialists and representatives from IFSEA. NAVSUP's primary mission is to provide U.S. naval forces with quality supplies and services. With headquarters in Mechanicsburg, Pa., and employing a worldwide work force of more than 9,000 military and civilian personnel, NAVSUP oversees logistics programs in the areas of supply operations, conventional ordnance, contracting, resale, fuel, transportation, and security assistance. In addition, NAVSUP is responsible for quality of life issues for our naval forces, including food service, postal services, Navy Exchanges, and movement of household goods. Naval Supply Systems Command news release 11-00, dated March 3, 2000. March 2000
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