by Airman 1st Class Victor J. Caputo
22nd Air Refueling Wing Public Affairs
10/7/2013 - MCCONNELL AIR FORCE BASE, Kan. -- The
22nd and 931st Operations Support Squadrons were recently awarded the
Air Force Association 2013 Verne Orr award in Washington, D.C.
The award, which is named in honor of Verne Orr, the 14th Secretary of
the Air Force, is meant to recognize the mission oriented unit that most
efficiently used their personnel, and it is the total force integration
of the active and Reserve operations support squadrons that brought it
to McConnell.
"It is, by and large, a fully integrated team in the OSS," said Lt. Col.
Martin Daack, 22nd OSS commander. "While some units in my squadron,
like the tower and airfield management, don't have Reserve counterparts,
the active duty Airmen in flights such as aircrew life equipment work
side-by-side with their Reserve partners."
While some of the integration was initially met with resistance, the two
units are now so intertwined that it is almost impossible to
differentiate between Reserve and active duty in multiple shops.
"If an aircrew member comes up to the window at AFE to check out their
helmet for a flight," said Daack, "there may be a Reservist or there may
be an active duty person there, and it is completely transparent. You
would have no idea who's active and who's Reserve unless you knew them
personally."
It is because of this unique design the Airmen in the OSS are still able to provide global reach since the government shutdown.
"With the furlough of all my civilian employees, the 931st Air Refueling
Group has had to curtail our flying operations with little or no lead
time," said Col. Mark Larson, 931st ARG commander. "Our active duty
counterparts were able to step in and immediately assist in re-planning
missions to provide support to our scheduled receivers, thus salvaging
many missions and providing necessary training."
The innate ability of the two squadrons to efficiently accomplish the
mission led to many other awards throughout the last year, including
multiple major command and Air Force level victories. The combined OSS
team won five out of seven available fuel savings initiative awards at
last year's Airlift/Tanker Association convention, said Larson.
The OSS is being used as an example of how a TFI unit should work in the anticipated arrival of the KC-46A tanker.
"It is because of the success we experienced in the OSS that we are
anxiously seeking opportunities to combine our flying squadrons in
preparation for the hopeful arrival of the KC-46A," said Larson. "I am
continually using them as an example of how to do 'Total Force' the
right way."
While the "on-paper" aspects of the squadrons is already outstanding,
Larson emphasized that it is the actual, in-person operations that make
the OSS stand out.
"As a pilot, I see firsthand the efficiencies created by work sharing
and leveraging our respective strengths every time I fly," he said. "It
is a one stop shop regardless of whether you are active duty or a
reservist. Our processes are standardized and efficient; the OSS model
is the way forward."
Tuesday, October 08, 2013
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