by Tech. Sgt. Cheryl L. Foster
919th Special Operations Wing Public Affairs
7/28/2014 - DUKE FIELD, Fla. -- Active duty and reserve Air Force maintainers took over responsibility for the upkeep and repairs of the 16 C-145As assigned here from Sierra Nevada Corporation contractors, July 1.
Airmen from the 592nd Special Operations Maintenance Squadron and the
919th Special Operations Aircraft Maintenance Squadron became
accountable for the care of the C-145As here and at two deployed
locations. As the Air Force maintainers completed training faster than
anticipated, the contract was moved forward from the original end date
in December.
"As a credit to the trainers, the folks that built the lesson plans, and
the mechanics learning, leadership was able to back the contract up six
months and save the Air Force about $11 million," said Chief Master
Sgt. Brett Elledge, 592nd SOMXS superintendent .
The 592nd SOMXS stood up in June 2013 as an active duty maintenance unit
for the new Air Force Special Operations Command's Aviation Foreign
Internal Defense mission with the c-145As.
Active duty and reserve Airmen work together on the mission through a
practice known as Total Force Integration. Both components share
resources, including aircraft, maintenance and support, to conduct its
mission.
Previously, the 919th owned their aircraft, but with the new AVFID mission standup the aircraft belong to AFSOC.
"Our leadership works well together. That's a big reason for us to be
able to work well together, too," said Master Sgt. Dustin Hurlbut, a
592nd SOMXS specialists section chief.
The two units work side by side on the aircraft, but follow different
chains of command. Reservists provide a level of continuity the active
cannot due to PSCs, according to Master Sgt. Ron Hoeft, a 919th SOAMXS
crew chief.
"I have been here since 1998. I've learned a lot and have a lot to pass on," he said.
Each C-145A has a dedicated crew chief and an assistant dedicated crew
chief assigned to it. One is an active duty Airman and the other is a
reservist with equal numbers between the two components.
Leading up to the July 1 takeover, the biggest challenge the Airmen
faced was becoming qualified to work on the C-145A. There is no
technical school or military guidance for the new aircraft. It was a
civilian-made aircraft with no U.S. military connection until it was
selected for the AFSOC mission.
"It's a daily learning curve. We are writing a new chapter for the Air Force," said Hoeft.
The maintainers had to build the lesson plans and training requirements from scratch.
The 15 active and reserve trainers created a 60-day course, including
classroom and hands on training. They also adapted a 15-day classroom
course to meet the needs of the 919th's traditional reservists.
The trainers and mechanics also had to convert the civilian manual to Air Force standard procedures and regulations.
The changes and processes are continuously fine-tuned daily to ensure
the airframe meets regulations and is safe to fly. As situations occur,
the new issues are annotated and funneled up the chain to leadership for
inclusion in the procedures.
"It's an excellent learning environment for individuals to be diverse.
We have a lot of experience working on aircraft and we've used that
extensively to learn how to adapt to this particular airframe," said
Hoeft.
Even though the changeover just occurred, the Airmen are already deployed in maintenance roles with the aircraft.
Since AVFID mission requires the Airmen to deploy to more diverse and
sometimes dangerous locations, each maintainer must attend the 30-day
air commando course at Hurlburt Field.
This course trains them to be able to defend themselves in hostile
environments where they will not always be protected by a security
detail. According to Elledge, the Airmen of the 592nd SOMXS and the
919th SOAMXS are the only maintenance Airmen in the Air Force required
to attend this class.
To celebrate the successful takeover, the maintainers launched all the C-145As on the flightline.
"We've overcome so much (to get here) and we always have," said Chief
Master Sgt. Pamela Duvall, the 919th SOAMXS superintendent. "I think
that comes from the Talon days and the gunships before that. It's just
the mindset of the Airmen we have."
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