April 22, 2020 | BY Marisa Alia-Novobilski , DOD News
With a focus on high priority, critical operational needs
and ensuring airmen's health and safety, the Air Force Materiel Command
continues to maintain support to the Air Force across all mission areas in the
face of COVID-19.
"Our No. 1 priority is taking care of airmen and their
families. They are the foundation of AFMC," Air Force Gen. Arnold W. Bunch
Jr., the AFMC commander, said. "I am really proud of what our airmen are
doing across the mission. We've never been [in a pandemic] as an Air Force. The
team is really leaning in to innovate and get missions done."
With more than 85,000 military and civilian airmen operating
at centers and installations across the United States, AFMC manages installation
and mission support, discovery and development, test and evaluation, and
life-cycle management services and sustainment for every major Air Force weapon
system and platform. The command is critical to ensuring Air Force readiness
across the mission set.
However, as COVID-19 continues to infiltrate the communities
in which AFMC airmen live and operate, prioritizing those items key to
near-term readiness is important to ensuring sustained support for the long
term while ensuring the right health and safety protections are in place for
essential operations.
"We are looking at critical milestones in our missions
and balancing them with needs in the field. We are taking smart looks at what
we need to execute now while ensuring we sustain our force for the longer term,
so as risk goes down, we can ramp back up," Bunch said.
As the command continues to execute both COVID-19-related
and everyday missions across the spectrum, the importance of communication and
collaboration have emerged as key drivers of success. Recent examples include
the success of the Air Mobility Command-led aeromedical mission using the
Transport Isolation System and the test community's performance during an F-35
canopy test.
Teams at the Air Force Research Laboratory worked closely
with members of Air Mobility Command to provide training to operators for the
Transportation Isolation System, recently used to transport three COVID-19
patients from Afghanistan to Ramstein Air Base, Germany, for treatment.
The TIS is an infectious disease containment unit designed
to minimize risk to aircrew and medical attendants while still allowing
in-flight medical care for patients afflicted by contagions such as COVID-19.
Two airmen from the AFRL U.S. School of Aerospace Medicine's Center for
Sustainment of Trauma Readiness Skills trained operators on disease and
infection prevention and control, personal protective equipment and risk
management during patient transport, setting the stage for safe execution of
this and future TIS flights.
A recent joint effort between members of the Air Force Test
Center, F-35 Lightning II Joint Program Office, Lockheed Martin, Martin Baker,
BAE Systems and leadership at the Holloman Air Force Base High Speed Test Track
in New Mexico led to the successful test of an F-35 static ejection seat using
a canopy transparency from a new manufacturer.
The test's purpose was to demonstrate that the ejection seat
could penetrate through the canopy without severely injuring the pilot should
the Transparency Removal System, a charge designed to fracture the cockpit
canopy acrylic prior to ejection, fail to activate. This was a critical
milestone for the F-35 enterprise as it works to qualify a second vendor to
ensure sufficient canopies are available to meet the global fleet's demands.
"These unique times require us more than ever to rely
on strong communication and collaboration with our partners across the joint
enterprise," Bunch said. "Maintaining open and clear lines, and being
willing to take calculated risk for high priority missions, is crucial to our
ongoing success in both our everyday missions and in the fight against
COVID-19."
While the long-term impacts of COVID-19 to the AFMC mission
are largely unknown, the command continues to execute its critical Air Force
responsibilities in line with health and safety guidance while continuing to
support the whole-of-government response to the pandemic.
"We're adjusting to a whole new normal, and I am really
proud of what our airmen are doing," Bunch said. "Our installation
commanders are making the best decisions for our airmen, and we're making sure
to hit high-priority, critical items and as many other items as we can while we
sustain our force for the long term."
(Marisa Alia-Novobilski is assigned to Headquarters Air
Force Materiel Command.)
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