ORLANDO, Fla., March 7, 2018 — An airman from McConnell Air
Force Base, Kansas, took home the top prize in the Air Force’s first-ever Spark
Tank innovation competition at the Air Force Association’s Air Warfare
Symposium here Feb. 22.
Master Sgt. Bartek Bachleda, an aircraft refueling boom
operator with the 22nd Air Refueling Wing, won the inaugural Air Force Spark
Tank Competition Cup for his proposal to reengineer the boom operator platform
position for the entire KC-135 Stratotanker aircraft refueler fleet. He asked the
Air Force for $1.5 million to implement his innovation.
“It’s refreshing to see [leaders] encouraging airmen to
innovate,” Bachleda said. “It’s really cool!”
Better Boom Operator Platform
Bachleda’s winning idea is designed to provide a more stable
and ergonomically correct platform for all KC-135 instructor boom operators.
The proposed innovation aims to both reduce back and neck injuries and save the
Air Force $132 million each year in this critical aircrew specialty.
“We were getting neck and back injuries, and it’s been
happening since the 1950s,” he said.
A panel comprised of Air Force senior leaders, including the
secretary of the Air Force, the Air Force’s chief of staff and industry
partners, judged six innovative finalists.
After Secretary of the Air Force Heather Wilson heard
Bachleda’s idea, she gave firm direction to the Air Force’s acquisitions lead.
“Before we leave tonight, I want you to talk to this guy,
figure out his [system] and get this [out] to the airmen,” she said.
Innovation Competition
The Air Mobility Command, based at Scott Air Force Base,
Illinois, and its Phoenix Spark innovation program embraced the call for
innovation after Wilson kicked off the Spark Tank competition last September.
The competition was co-hosted between the Airmen Powered by Innovation Program
and the newly-announced AFwerX Innovation Ecosystem, and was conducted in a
multi-step approach starting with participants submitting their ideas through
their major commands.
AMC was the only command with two innovations selected for
presentation to Air Force and industry leaders in Orlando.
“Innovation is central to our Air Force‘s ability to apply
airpower,” said Air Force Gen. Carlton D. Everhart II, AMC commander. “At a
time when we are challenged with resource constraints, with no rest from our
adversaries, we need to find more effective ways to continue as the world‘s
most dominant Air Force.”
Bachleda encouraged his fellow airmen to keep bringing their
ideas forward.
“I didn’t come here to win,” he said. “I wanted senior
leadership to see this problem in front of them and explain to them that we can
save the Air Force all this money.”
(Air Force Staff Sgt. Rusty Frank, Secretary of the Air
Force Public Affairs, contributed to this article)
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