By Headquarters Air Combat Command Public Affairs, /
Published December 10, 2015
JOINT BASE LANGLEY-EUSTIS, Va. (AFNS) -- Air Combat Command
officials announced the results of their study into the remotely piloted
aircraft (RPA) community in an attempt to normalize operations and ensure
long-term mission success.
Initial recommendations from the command's ongoing Culture
and Process Improvement Program (CPIP) were derived from nearly 2,500 inputs
from Airmen across the RPA community as well as staff analysis and budgetary
planning. The result was over 140 tasks the Air Force is undertaking to improve
RPA operations. The CPIP initiative supports current and previous efforts to
normalize operations and is the first of its kind with this level of
collaboration and top-level interest across the Air Force.
Over the years, Air Force leaders have made or pushed for
substantial base-level investments in support of RPA Airmen and their families.
Earlier this year, an initiative led by the secretary of the Air Force reduced
RPA operations from 65 to 60 lines daily, while temporarily managing pilot
assignments to stabilize the career field until the remote pilot training
pipeline could be expanded. The draft 2016 National Defense Authorization Act
includes language that expands the Air Force's bonus authority for remote
operators and aligns RPA operator entitlements with those for other rated
positions. The service is working a plan to apply that authority.
In addition, Air Combat Command has established and held the
first meeting of a general officer-led working group that will provide guidance
and gain consensus across commands to enhance the development and execution of
a strategic vision for the RPA enterprise.
Moving forward, Gen. Hawk Carlisle, the ACC commander, has
directed his staff to develop detailed implementation plans for the following
activities:
- Approximately double the number of RPA flying squadrons.
- Create a new wing to normalize organizational and command
and control structures relative to other weapon systems.
- Standardize the squadron, group and wing structure.
- Assign RPA units in new locations to potentially include
overseas locations.
- Decrease the heavy burden of persistent in garrison combat
operations by increasing RPA manning and associated resources by 2,500-3,500
Airmen.
- Define career tracks for officer and enlisted RPA
operators and maintainers.
- Study the promotion and professional military education
selection rates for RPA officers.
- Study the feasibility of a single specialty code for RPA
maintenance personnel.
- Streamline processes to better enable Reserve component
forces to support the mission.
"Our RPA enterprise was born in combat and recently
surpassed 20 years of service, many of which were executed at surge
levels," Carlisle said. "We owe it to our Airmen to remove the daily
stressors that are responsible for the challenging environment they are
operating in."
An integral part to improving the organizational and command
and control structures for remote aircraft is examining where to base new
organizations to sustain the enterprise for the long term, according to the
general.
"As we strategically analyze the RPA community, we need
to take a hard look at our operating locations," Carlisle said.
"Expanding our RPA basing to potential sites such as Davis-Monthan (Air
Force Base, Arizona), Langley (AFB, Virginia), and a few overseas locations is
a discussion we need to entertain as we stand up a new wing. We would look to
take advantage of the synergy between RPA operations and command and control or
intelligence processing, exploitation and dissemination nodes."
Carlisle emphasized that "of course we must follow the
established strategic basing decision process."
"Resourcing these changes is not within ACC's direct
control," Carlisle noted. "So we will have to work with the
Department of Defense, the White House and Congress on the resources to get
this done."
"RPAs have changed the game on the battlefield with their
persistence and ability to both build situational awareness and close the kill
chain," Carlisle said. "Ultimately, CPIP is about establishing a
coherent, Air Force wide strategic plan that enables us to continue to provide
this incredible capability to the joint force by moving the RPA community
toward the sustainment model we've established for other Air Force weapon
systems."
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