109th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment
CANADIAN FORCES BASE PETAWAWA, Ontario -
Soldiers from the Pennsylvania Army National Guard’s 131st Transportation
Company, transported Canadian Army vehicles from Petawawa, Ont., to Toronto as
part of Steadfast Warrior, a training exercise between the Pennsylvania Guard
and the Canadian Army’s 32nd Canadian Brigade Group.
“I know in theatre we do a lot of
blended operations,” said Canadian Army Capt. Jacquie Field, a logistics
officer with the 32nd CBG, and a Sudbury, Ontario native. “For the central
region, or where we are from, I don’t know that we have ever had Americans
lift-stuff for us before. So, to me that was an inaugural kind of thing.”
But for many of the Soldiers of the
131st Trans. Co., transporting the trucks was business as usual, said Army Sgt.
Jorge Aviles, a team leader with the unit.
“The 131st is often tasked to transport
large equipment like Humvees and Bradleys across Pennsylvania that made this
mission very similar,” he said.
On arrival to Petawawa the 131st Trans.
Co. trucks carried equipment for the Pennsylvania Army Guard Soldiers training
with Canadians.
The preparation not only for the
movement to Canada, but to get clearance for the trucks to move to Toronto
needed approval not only through the American side, but the Canadian side too,
said Field.
Field said she worked through her higher
headquarters and alerted all the individuals needed to help support the
movement.
“Then it was dealing with people
repairing our vehicles to make sure that they were ready to lift,” she said.
“And, then when that kind of stuff was taken care of, [the Pennsylvania Army Guard]
did their business and we stayed out of the way.”
Securing the Canadian Army’s Light
Support Vehicle Wheeled to the trailers they would be transported on gave newer
members of the unit a chance to gain experience with different vehicles, said
Aviles.
“There are a few different ways to chain
equipment down to a trailer,” he said.
But,
no matter the vehicle being chained down, there are common techniques
that Aviles stressed to his Soldiers.
“I prefer to harness the vehicle by its
axle to eliminate the chance that the vehicle will bounce or move and loosen
the chain,” he said, explaining one of those techniques.
For Staff Sgt. Kelly Eitreim, acting convoy
commander for the Toronto mission and a squad leader with the 131st Trans. Co.,
the mission’s success was based on the time element too. Arriving in Toronto on
Sunday evening and leaving before rush hour prevented the trucks from getting
bogged down in traffic.
The Soldiers arrived back at Petawawa
from Toronto in under six-hours, and received high praise from their Canadian
counterparts.
“They are consummate professionals, very
positive and energetic,’” said Field. “You can tell that they are specialists
in their field. I believe 28 minutes is what…it took to unload their trucks.”
With their trucks unloaded and more work
to be done back in the States, the Soldiers from the 131st Trans. Co. boarded
their trucks and made the journey back to the United States set to return to
collect the equipment upon completion of the exercise.