by Airman 1st Class Zade C. Vadnais
18th Wing Public Affairs
2/11/2014 - KADENA AIR BASE, Japan -- Marines
from the 9th Engineer Support Battalion are participating in a
six-month training program here with Airmen from the 18th Logistics
Readiness Squadron that will teach them new skills they can take back to
their peers.
The idea for the program hatched from a conversation between Master Sgt.
Jason Bowman, 18th LRS fuel operations section chief, and Gunnery Sgt.
Damian Sinanon, 9th ESB, 3rd Marine Logistics Group, Bulk Fuel Company
first sergeant last year.
"I attended the advanced course at Camp Hansen and when I was in the
academy I met Marines that did my job," said Bowman. "I met a gunnery
sergeant and we started talking about the different opportunities each
branch has and he told me 'My guys never get to work with aircraft, do
you think we could bring them down there to train?' and it just kind of
took off."
The training program, one of the first of its kind, is designed to
familiarize Marines with aspects of their job that they normally
wouldn't encounter, in addition to working in a joint environment. To
facilitate this, the five Marines participating in the program are
embedded with the 18th LRS, meaning they're staying in dorms with their
Air Force peers and eating meals with them at the dining facility on
Kadena.
"We're training with the Air Force to see what they do here," said Cpl.
Daniel Ramirez, 9th ESB, 3rd MLG, BFC bulk fuel specialist. "Back at
Hansen, we're more of a ground-support unit, so I've never seen anything
like this."
The six-month program gives Marines 4,800 hours of training, rotating
them between distribution, fuels hydrants, fuels laboratory and
cryogenics training.
Boasting the largest refueling fleet and only operational cryogenics
production plant in the Air Force, the 18th LRS Fuels Management Flight,
winner of this year's Raymond H. Gross award for Best Fuels Management
Operation in PACAF, is the perfect place for these Marines to learn new
aspects of their job.
The participating Marines aren't the only ones benefiting from the
training program. The Airmen they train with, as well as Air Force and
Marine Corps leadership, are gaining valuable experience that can be
applied to future joint efforts.
"Having this opportunity to experience what our Marine partners do and
vice versa is absolutely critical to the future of the military," said
Chief Master Sgt. Daniel Janssen, 18th LRS fuels manager. "We're going
to continue to push more toward a joint environment as we grow as a
force and I think this is very, very important."
"The way we currently deploy and the state of operations that we have
overseas means there's no longer just an Air Force base or a Marine
Corps base," Bowman said. "The fact that our Airmen and these Marines
are able to work together here is going to make them more proficient at
working together in a wartime scenario."
Once the Marines complete the training, they'll be expected to pass
their new knowledge on to their peers with the ultimate goal of being
able to perform both aircraft and ground refueling procedures.
"As soon as they get back to Hansen they're going to be much more
knowledgeable on fuel handling procedures," Bowman said. "When they're
tasked to deploy in support of hurricane relief or a wartime mission
they're going to be able to fill a multitude of positions for the Marine
Corps."
So far, the program has proven to be invaluable, providing professional
development while giving Marines and Airmen the opportunity to build
camaraderie through training together.
"We've brought them in and made them part of the family we have here,"
Janssen said. "We certainly look forward to having them here and making
us better."
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
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