by Senior Airman Brittany A. Chase
35th Fighter Wing Public Affairs
2/4/2016 - MISAWA AIR BASE, Japan -- More than 120 Airmen departed Misawa Air Base, Jan. 30, for exercise Cope North 2016 held at Andersen Air Force Base, Guam.
This annual exercise afforded the installation inspector general and
wing inspection team an opportunity to see how efficient the deployment
process is and identify areas for improvement. The 35th Fighter Wing
held its own exercise in conjunction with the deployment to Cope North,
which lasted roughly five days and helped enable the teams to accomplish
existing training requirements, implement recommended improvement areas
and close out existing deficiencies.
With an existing deployment in place, the opportunity to evaluate how
Airmen process through a real world scenario couldn't make things any
more realistic, ultimately helping to make efficient use of wing time.
Using Cope North, Misawa AB showcased its real world deployment
capabilities across the spectrum.
"This exercise is different because in the past it's been a synthetic
scenario," said Maj. Michael Wheeler, a 35th Fighter Wing inspector
general. "Whereas, this is a pre-planned deployment that we were already
supporting so we were able to add in the objectives for the exercise
over what we were already doing."
Wheeler went on to describe that typically a personnel deployment
function line scenario is created to process Airmen for exercises, but
Cope North had an existing PDF. This is a centralized in and
out-processing procedure for Airmen who are mass deploying.
Two of the largest areas being observed were the PDF and the cargo
deployment function. The CDF is responsible for all actions necessary to
receive, in-check, inspect, marshal, load plan, manifest and supervise
loading cargo aboard deploying aircraft or vehicles.
Palletizing was the central focus during the CDF, ensuring all 200,000
pounds of military equipment was safely packed and loaded onto pallets
correctly.
"A lot of the time the units won't have the necessary materials to
palletize properly," said Airman 1st Class Alexander Cummings, a 35th
Logistics Readiness Squadron receiving cargo journeyman. "So they'll
bring things here [that] may be done incorrectly, so we have a section
of people that are able to help them get through the process and get
their [gear] ready to go."
"We're still learning," added Senior Airman Nicole Kittel, 35th
Maintenance Squadron propulsions journeyman. "Getting used to [the
tempo] and trying to figure out our jobs and who needs to be where has
probably been the hardest part of this whole [exercise]."
Once pallets are built-up, a manifest is created making sure every piece is tracked and safely loaded onto the aircraft.
"I will process the paperwork in our computer system compiling a
manifest and making sure Air Mobility Command has everything on record
that they're going to need," Cummings said. "We [then] need to make sure
we have the capability to get everything palletized and loaded onto the
aircraft safely. We also have to make sure all our units have the
necessary equipment they're going to need."
The overall goal during the exercise was to make sure the wing can
effectively and efficiently deploy troops anywhere in the world.
"This is important because we are able to test out ability under a
normal timeline to be able to send our forces out to any region any
time," added Wheeler.
Thursday, February 04, 2016
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