by Airman 1st Class Malcolm Mayfield
90th Missile Wing Public Affairs
12/30/2014 - F.E. WARREN AIR FORCE BASE, Wyo. -- The
90th Security Forces Group officially added another 37 Airmen after
completion of their Unit Orientation Training, or Phase 1 training,
December 23, 2014.
The new personnel report directly to the 90th Missile Security Forces
Squadron. Additional Airmen will arrive in the future for the rest of
the security forces group.
Along with other units, security forces has suffered from a lack of
manning. These new Airmen are the mid-section of an influx of Airmen
coming in to fill the ranks of security forces.
Coinciding with Force Improvement Philosophy initiatives, the three
missile wing bases' [90th Missile Wing, 91st Missile Wing and 341st
Missile Wing] security forces groups pursued a missile field security
realignment plan.
"The plan allowed for continued combat readiness and redistributing
personnel to meet mission requirements," said Master Sgt. Vincent
Bolden, 90th MSFS weapons systems security non-commissioned officer in
charge.
Coupled with this reorganization was the arrival of first-term Airmen
from technical training into the 90th MW security forces units.
"We currently do not have enough manning for every flight to post out
100 percent," said Master Sgt. Robert Wilson, 90th MSFS flight chief.
"In order to make up for that, we pull what we call a standby;
essentially, our Airmen are made to work an extra one to two days with
other flights to meet mandatory posting requirements."
This improvement affects the morale of the Airmen in security forces as
well as readiness of the security forces groups within 20th Air Force.
"When you are on your fourth or fifth day in a row of 12 hour shifts,
you get to a state where you may not be as alert or motivated to do your
absolute best. This affects readiness as this is when mistakes start to
happen; vehicle accidents, forgetting gear, not following proper
procedures, etc.," Wilson said.
Bolden said FIP was the tool that brought about the needed reality to
Air Force senior leaders that manning was suffering, and prolonged
degradation would make matters worse for the mission.
"[People] alone can positively affect the ICBM mission, but these new
Airmen need to be trained, certified in their duty positions, and
progress in upgrade training," Bolden said. "The additional [personnel]
will afford relief in instances where Airmen pulling 'standbys,' or
additional days in the field, no longer have to do so."
More manning allows for additional training opportunities. These new
additions to security forces also help in mission-related situations.
"Training workloads are going to soar as we train and equip our new
Airmen," Bolden said. "Frontline supervisors will feel the effects as
they assume greater responsibilities over their new subordinates. None
of these tasks are new to our missile field leaders, but to assume these
responsibilities in high volume would challenge the best of us. The
manning increases have been a topic for months though, and all were
eager to accept the challenge."
Even with the additional responsibilities these new Airmen bring,
leadership in security forces welcomes the increase in personnel.
"The more security forces Airmen we have, the more we can have out in
the field ready to respond to any threats," Wilson said. "It also
increases the pool of security forces we have to draw from for our
backup forces and the support forces that will be bringing out
resupplies."
Helping to create a better Air Force, FIP has been leading the way to
make changes at the missile wings, thus making the ICBM mission a more
safe, secure and effective means of defending America.
The additional security forces personnel along with the other
initiatives, such as the Model Defender initiative, which strives to
better equip security forces to defend our ICBMs, and the special duty
assignment pay for certain enlisted career fields with primary focus in
the missile field, are large changes to the already ever changing Air
Force and signifies a move in the right direction.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment