by Senior Airman Jason Wiese
90th Missile Wing Public Affairs
9/9/2014 - F.E. WARREN AIR FORCE BASE, Wyo. -- As
a direct result of Air Force Global Strike Command's Force Improvement
Program, funding for new equipment purchases and other initiatives have
been greenlit for the F.E. Warren Air Force Base mission.
FIP is an aggressive, grass-roots feedback program designed to quickly
provide senior Air Force leaders with actionable recommendations for
improvement by conducting one-on-one interviews and surveys with Airmen.
It is an opportunity to foster positive changes within the command.
Funding will aid maintenance, security and helicopter operations, as well as other initiatives.
"The funding dispersed to our wing will be invaluable to our operations
in the field," said Col. Tracey Hayes, 90th Missile Wing commander.
"Whether it's making sure a maintainer has the part he or she needs to
keep our ICBMs operational or providing our defenders thermal imagers so
they have proper situational awareness while conducting nighttime
operations, these funds will allow our Airmen to perform their missions
even better than before."
For instance, Airman 1st Class Travis Hughley, 90th Maintenance
Operations Squadron Mechanical and Pneudraulic Shop technician, said
maintainers are required to keep certain ICBM components readily
available for use in maintenance operations, and before recent FIP
changes, delays in ordering parts made it difficult to meet those needs.
New funding for ICBM maintenance operations will allow maintainers to more easily have the parts they need on hand.
"If we don't have the things we need to do our job, it can keep other
people from doing their jobs as well," said Airman 1st Class Taylor
Deniz, 90th MOS MAPS technician.
"We all rely on each other," Hughley said.
The recent changes show AFGSC leaders are committed to making the changes they promised.
"Due to FIP, Airmen understand that their leaders want to hear their
concerns and are willing to do the work necessary to make real, tangible
changes in a critical Air Force mission," Hayes said. "Our commanders
and supervisors value input from all levels."
Seeing FIP changes improves the trust Airmen have in the program,
especially those who have ideas to improve the mission, said Airman 1st
Class Meghan Roy, 90th Missile Security Forces Squadron.
"I think Airmen won't believe anything until we actually see it," she said. "I saw a lot of my ideas get addressed."
These changes will not be the last to be addressed.
"The Force Improvement Program philosophy is to continually improve
AFGSC's nuclear deterrence mission and culture for our Airmen," Hayes
said. "FIP has led to changes that have already occurred, which came
directly from our Airmen at the tactical level. The nuclear force can
expect future improvements based not only on their roughly 300 initial
recommendations, but also the recommendations we continue to receive."
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