By Air Force Tech. Sgt. Amber Williams, 165th Airlift Wing
SAVANNAH, Ga., Sept. 29, 2017 — For the first time in its
history, the Air Dominance Center, a training facility at an Air National Guard
base here, is being used in an operational capacity in support of hurricane
relief operations.
The is postured as a training facility for units to conduct
air-to-air combat training missions for fourth- and fifth-generation fighters
for the Air National Guard and the active duty Air Force, as well as for the
Navy and Marine Corps.
"We usually have airlift aircraft arrive for exercises
along with the fighter jets -- usually to transport personnel and equipment to
maintain the fighters," said Air Force Chief Master Sgt. Brian Saxon,
chief enlisted manager of the Air Dominance Center. "The 165th Airlift
Wing has a ramp that is painted for C-130 Hercules parking. The ADC, on the other
hand, has a ramp painted for fighter jets. This means the airfield management
and transient alert crews really have to be highly skilled to watch for things
like wingtip safety and clearances."
Around-the-Clock Manning
The ADC has staff manning the personnel support for
contingency operations line. The base's dining facility and billeting office
are being manned 24 hours a day.
"When we were first told that we would be going into
24-hour operations, my first thought was, 'Yes! This is what I joined the guard
for,'" said Air Force Master Sgt. Tameitra Bryant, the center's financial
management superintendent.
"I couldn't be more proud of our team," said Air
Force Col. Emmanuel Haldopoulos, commander of the Air Dominance Center.
"We've perfected the exercises that we host. But there was no playbook for
our most recent mission. We relied on our team's hard-work, experience,
creativity, and determination of the airmen of the ADC and the 165th AW to make
it happen."
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