Rangers complete readiness training, gear up for recreation season

By Lee Roberts U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District
Published March 17, 2026
Lt. Col. Guillermo Guandique, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District commander, poses for a group photo with the district’s park rangers March 10, 2026, during the annual Park Ranger Workshop at Chattanooga State Community College in Chattanooga, Tennessee. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Lt. Col. Guillermo Guandique, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District commander, poses for a group photo with the district’s park rangers March 10, 2026, during the annual Park Ranger Workshop at Chattanooga State Community College in Chattanooga, Tennessee. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Lt. Col. Guillermo Guandique, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District commander, addresses the district’s park rangers March 10, 2026, ahead of the recreation season during the annual Park Ranger Workshop at Chattanooga State Community College in Chattanooga, Tennessee. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Lt. Col. Guillermo Guandique, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District commander, addresses the district’s park rangers March 10, 2026, ahead of the recreation season during the annual Park Ranger Workshop at Chattanooga State Community College in Chattanooga, Tennessee. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Tim Fudge, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District Operations Division chief, provides updates to the park rangers community of practice March 10, 2026, ahead of the recreation season during the annual Park Ranger Workshop at Chattanooga State Community College in Chattanooga, Tennessee. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Tim Fudge, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District Operations Division chief, provides updates to the park rangers community of practice March 10, 2026, ahead of the recreation season during the annual Park Ranger Workshop at Chattanooga State Community College in Chattanooga, Tennessee. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Safety Specialist Daniel Rennaker and 1st Lt. Annalise Bloom demonstrate how to immobilize an arm using a sling during a session on first aid March 11, 2026, during the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District’s annual Park Ranger Workshop at Chattanooga State Community College in Chattanooga, Tennessee. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Safety Specialist Daniel Rennaker and 1st Lt. Annalise Bloom demonstrate how to immobilize an arm using a sling during a session on first aid March 11, 2026, during the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District’s annual Park Ranger Workshop at Chattanooga State Community College in Chattanooga, Tennessee. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Archaeologist Catharine Wood, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District Planning Branch, gives a presentation about protecting cultural sites and artifacts March 11, 2026, during the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District’s annual Park Ranger Workshop at Chattanooga State Community College in Chattanooga, Tennessee. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Archaeologist Catharine Wood, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District Planning Branch, gives a presentation about protecting cultural sites and artifacts March 11, 2026, during the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District’s annual Park Ranger Workshop at Chattanooga State Community College in Chattanooga, Tennessee. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Lt. Col. Guillermo Guandique, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District commander, recognizes the Noise Exposure Product Delivery Team March 10, 2026, that worked to find and test products, conduct noise sampling, and selected an innovative new device that provides active hearing protection to filter out harmful sounds for rangers that patrol on the lakes and are exposed to engine and wind noise. The commander lauded (Left to Right) John Malone, Daniel Rennaker, John Poston, Dylan Norton, and Lucas Hix March 10, 2026, during the annual Park Ranger Workshop at Chattanooga State Community College in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Ben Clark, not in photo, was also recognized. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Lt. Col. Guillermo Guandique, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District commander, recognizes the Noise Exposure Product Delivery Team March 10, 2026, that worked to find and test products, conduct noise sampling, and selected an innovative new device that provides active hearing protection to filter out harmful sounds for rangers that patrol on the lakes and are exposed to engine and wind noise. The commander lauded (Left to Right) John Malone, Daniel Rennaker, John Poston, Dylan Norton, and Lucas Hix March 10, 2026, during the annual Park Ranger Workshop at Chattanooga State Community College in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Ben Clark, not in photo, was also recognized. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Nashville District’s park rangers pose for a photo March 10, 2026, at the entrance of Point Park in Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, during the annual Park Ranger Workshop. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers constructed this “Corps Castle” in 1905 at the nation’s first National Military Park.  (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Nashville District’s park rangers pose for a photo March 10, 2026, at the entrance of Point Park in Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, during the annual Park Ranger Workshop. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers constructed this “Corps Castle” in 1905 at the nation’s first National Military Park. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Historian Jim Ogden, Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park, leads Nashville District’s park rangers on a tour of Point Park March 11, 2026, at Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, during the annual Park Ranger Workshop. The park rangers benefitted from the National Park Service presentation that demonstrated how storytelling can be impactful and educational.  (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Historian Jim Ogden, Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park, leads Nashville District’s park rangers on a tour of Point Park March 11, 2026, at Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, during the annual Park Ranger Workshop. The park rangers benefitted from the National Park Service presentation that demonstrated how storytelling can be impactful and educational. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Chickamauga Lockmaster Paul Weaver (Center) leads Nashville District’s park rangers on a tour of the active navigation lock March 12, 2026, on the Tennessee River in Chattanooga, Tennessee, during the annual Park Ranger Workshop. The park rangers benefitted from visiting the navigation lock that is being replaced by a larger more efficient lock under construction.  (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

Chickamauga Lockmaster Paul Weaver (Center) leads Nashville District’s park rangers on a tour of the active navigation lock March 12, 2026, on the Tennessee River in Chattanooga, Tennessee, during the annual Park Ranger Workshop. The park rangers benefitted from visiting the navigation lock that is being replaced by a larger more efficient lock under construction. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District’s park rangers pose during a tour of the Chickamauga Lock Replacement Project March 12, 2026, on the Tennessee River in Chattanooga, Tennessee, during the annual Park Ranger Workshop. The park rangers benefitted from visiting the navigation lock that is being replaced by a larger more efficient lock under construction.  (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)
PHOTO DETAILS  /   DOWNLOAD HI-RES 10 of 10

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District’s park rangers pose during a tour of the Chickamauga Lock Replacement Project March 12, 2026, on the Tennessee River in Chattanooga, Tennessee, during the annual Park Ranger Workshop. The park rangers benefitted from visiting the navigation lock that is being replaced by a larger more efficient lock under construction. (USACE Photo by Lee Roberts)

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (March 17, 2026) – In preparation for the 2026 recreation season, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District hosted its annual Park Ranger Workshop March 10–12 at Chattanooga State Community College. More than 50 rangers representing 10 lakes headed to the Erlanger Health Science Center for critical instruction on wilderness first aid, visitor assistance, and encroachment management, ensuring they are fully equipped to handle the complexities of shoreline management, public engagement, and water safety this year.

Lt. Col. Guillermo Guandique, Nashville District commander, expressed his appreciation to the park rangers for their continuous attention and hard work keeping visitors safe at Corps lakes.

The commander said that the Corps of Engineers park rangers are tremendous caretakers of beautiful parks, recreation areas, public lands, campgrounds, and they safeguard visitors, which aligns with the district’s motto, “We Protect People from Water, Protect Water from People and Make Water Useful.”

In 2025, these park rangers oversaw 23 million visitors and 75,000 camping reservations at 25 campgrounds and 281 recreation areas in the Cumberland River Basin in Tennessee and Kentucky. They conducted 325 boat patrol days, 1,878 vessel inspections, and 195 interpretive events for 144,266 contacts to promote environmental education and public safety.

“Every day you are out there on the front line making sure that the public understands what the water can do, and you safeguard them while protecting water resources,” Guandique told the park rangers. “I really appreciate everything that you all do.”

John Malone, natural resources specialist who organized the workshop, said the training provided to the rangers during the workshop enables them to maintain citation authority.

“We try to balance out the required training portion with visitor assistance topics and first aid and updates from senior leaders and subject matter experts with our Real Estate and Operations divisions,” Malone said.

Getting out of the classroom to learn in the outdoors came next. Malone said they participated in a National Park Service tour at Point Park on Lookout Mountain and visited the Chickamauga Lock Replacement Project on the Tennessee River where the Nashville District is constructing a larger navigation lock that will accommodate nine jumbo barges in a single lockage, a massive 800 percent surge in efficiency.

“The tour at Lookout Mountain was quite impressive and allowed rangers to learn more about our district and local community history. I think the biggest takeaway for everyone there was being able to see how interpretation for a ranger is not just limited to providing facts and figures, but how storytelling can be impactful and educational.”

At Chickamauga Lock, Malone said the interaction with the lockmaster and project manager helped the rangers understand more about the engineering and construction facets of the organization, and how this project impacts the overall USACE navigation mission.

The last activity of the workshop involved visitor assistance scenarios and hands-on self-defense training. The scenarios allowed rangers to enhance communication skills, practice enforcing USACE rules and regulations, and to seek compliance at the lowest levels of enforcement.

Gearing up for recreation season

The commander recognized the Noise Exposure Product Delivery Team that worked to find and test products, conduct noise sampling, and selected an innovative new device that provides active hearing protection to filter out harmful sounds for rangers that patrol on the lakes and are exposed to engine and wind noise.

Safety Specialist Daniel Rennaker, Malone, and Park Rangers Ben Clark, Lucas Hix, John Poston, and Dylon Norton received commander’s coins for their efforts to protect hearing.

The Nashville District recently issued this new Personal Protective Equipment to all park rangers and boating instructors to utilize this recreation season. This noise exposure protection initiative also made its way into the USACE Great Lakes and Ohio River Division’s Boating Manual.

Tim Fudge, Nashville District Operations Division chief, commended the hearing conservation team for its debut of new hearing protection for rangers, noting that the recognition is well deserved and overdue.

“This is just something that came up out of the field organically,” Fudge said. “The team brought together representatives from Operations, Safety, and multiple field projects across the district. By combining safety expertise, leadership, and valuable field-level experience, the team developed a practical and effective solution that protects employee’s hearing.”

The public can obtain news, updates and information from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District on the district’s website at https://www.lrd.usace.army.mil/About/Districts/Nashville-District/, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/nashvillecorps and on X (formerly Twitter) at www.x.com/nashvillecorps. Follow us on LinkedIn for the latest Nashville District employment and contracting opportunities at https://www.linkedin.com/company/u-s-army-corps-of-engineers-nashville-district.