by John Turner
341st Missile Wing Public Affairs
11/12/2014 - MALMSTROM AFB, Mont. -- Repairs
at the 341st Missile Wing's 15 launch control centers are being
attended to more expediently and thoroughly now, thanks to a specialized
team recently created within the 341st Maintenance Group.
Designated as the Survivable Systems Team, this small section of
maintainers was assembled to dispatch rapidly to the missile field and
perform work in underground LCCs. This ensures that tasks like blast
door maintenance, hydraulic and pneumatic systems upkeep, and operator
chair replacements are prioritized separately from missile and launch
facility maintenance.
"Our sole job is to work on capsule maintenance," said Tech. Sgt.
Sheldon Mason, NCO in charge of the team. "This team is predominantly
set up to go out on a moment's notice for LCC maintenance."
The team's first solo dispatch--described by Mason as its 'maiden
voyage'--was Oct. 16. In the course of a 14-hour workday the four-man
SST visited two missile alert facilities. The team repaired two
crewmember seat pans, identified an air leak in a system, performed an
unscheduled shoring of the suspended floor in A-01's LCC, and repaired
C-01's LCC blast door. The team also advised missile combat crews and
MAF facility managers on LCC equipment and periodic maintenance
procedures.
"Both sets of crews treated SST like kings, especially when they began
working on the [missile combat crew commander] chairs," said Col. Ken
Speidel, 341st MXG commander, who accompanied the team to observe the
historic first dispatch.
"By the end of the day, the SST guys were pretty excited about their new
work center and the impact they were having on capsule crews, as well
as the appreciation shown in return by the crew members," Speidel said.
The SST is one of several initiatives this year that have resulted from
Air Force Global Strike Command's Force Improvement Program. FIP is an
aggressive, grass-roots feedback program designed to quickly provide
senior Air Force leaders with actionable recommendations for improvement
by conducting one-on-one interviews and surveys with Airmen.
The three intercontinental ballistic missile wings at Malmstrom, Minot,
and F.E. Warren Air Force Bases were approved to each stand up an
SST--effective immediately--in response to FIP. Each wing has been
authorized six personnel. Additionally, AFGSC has designated $300,000
for tools and equipment for these new sections.
The SST shop was culled from the 341st Maintenance Operations Squadron's
mechanical and pneudraulics section and is aligned under the 341st
Missile Maintenance Squadron's facilities flight, the section
responsible for maintenance at MAFs. This creates a unique situation as
MAPS technicians are from the Missile and Space Systems Maintenance
career field, Air Force Specialty Code 2M0X2, and as missile maintainers
have always reported to the 341st MMXS generation flight. Meanwhile,
the facilities flight has traditionally been the realm of the Missile
and Space Facilities career field, AFSC 2M0X3.
"We're the first X2s to work under the facilities flight," Mason said.
"It was kind of a big deal as far as the Air Force was concerned."
In addition to SST's primary task of LCC maintenance, the shop continues
to support missile maintenance teams by performing periodic inspections
on self-contained breathing apparatuses. Maintenance teams dispatching
to LFs are required to have two SCBA units in their trucks when
dispatching to missile launch facilities.
Malmstrom's SST currently has five members including Mason. Tech. Sgt.
Robert Jovin is the team's trainer and is currently the sole qualified
team chief. Senior Airman Joe Gonzalez, already an experienced qualified
technician, will eventually be qualified as a team chief. Airmen 1st
Class Joseph Hall and Austin Bridges, both fresh to the career field,
complete the shop's roster for now. The final manning authorization is
projected to be filled in the near future.
Jovin said that having a small team specializing in LCC maintenance has benefits.
"Because we have so few people in the shop, this allows us to build a
stronger team," he said. "We're dispatching with the same group every
day. Everyone is receiving the same training and you have the same
communications, so the job is being done the same way every time."
Although the team is a new entity, operations have gone smoothly because
Mason, Jovin and Gonzalez are familiar with each other from MAPS, Jovin
said. Mason was the assistant NCOIC of that section.
"Being under Sergeant Mason, I'm used to the way he works," Jovin said.
"We're on the same page on how we want to do maintenance and how we want
to set up the shop. We have the same vision. That allows me to train in
the field and team chief from the field without worrying about what's
going on in the shop."
Just as the team was assembled from scratch, SST's permanent work center
is also being built from the ground up. Mason and his team have been
busy remodeling a bay in Bldg. 1439 that has been inactive for years.
There was 'a learning curve' as the team scrambled to collect equipment
and install computers borrowed from other shops.
"It's kind of a new thing for everybody because we're a completely new
section," Mason said. "Standing up a new section isn't something that
comes along very often."
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