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132nd Wing members enhance deployment readiness at Sentry Aloha

  • Published
  • By Staff Sgt. Michael J. Kelly
  • 132nd Wing Public Affairs
Airmen with the 132nd Wing deployed to Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam in Honolulu, Hawaii, February 10-23, 2018, for Exercise Sentry Aloha to develop their deployment readiness skills alongside their active duty and Hawaii Air National Guard counterparts.

Airmen from the civil engineering, emergency management, fire emergency services, communications, security forces, force support squadron and medical sections trained in a variety of environments and scenarios with local active duty and Guard members.

The Emergency Management (EM) team trained approximately 466 active duty, Guard, and Reservist Airmen in Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear (CBRN) attack survival skills. The training included proper use of CBRN equipment, simulation of different disaster scenarios, decontamination training, and self-aid and buddy care.

“Getting to see the different perspective each instructor brings really helps pinpoint better ways to help people survive, especially those deploying,” said Tech. Sgt. Rachel Albee, 132nd Wing Emergency Management.

EM had access to equipment and facilities unavailable their home station which allowed them to effectively train Airmen for disaster scenarios. The efforts of EM were instrumental in deployment readiness of the Hawaii Airmen and were greatly appreciated.

“They integrated well with our flight members and provided much needed support in the readiness surge getting Airmen deployment ready,” said Master Sgt. Kareem Fuertes, emergency manager, 154th Wing, Hawaii Air National Guard.

Instructors from the 132nd Security Forces Squadron’s combat arms training and maintenance (CATM) team oversaw the weapons training and qualification for deploying Hawaii Airmen. The training was conducted in new, state of the art indoor range which allowed for a greater diversity of shooting scenarios and allowed for faster qualification time.

“It was great being able to see how it works and talk to the CATM group here to find out the pros, cons and all the maintenance that is needed if we were able to obtain one,” said Tech. Sgt. Savannah Page, CATM instructor, 132nd SFS.

The 132nd Medical Group trained on administrative systems and also worked real-world medical operations at Tripler Army Hospital in Honolulu, Hawaii. The training included a rare hands-on Aerovac training mission, the on and off loading of patients in critical condition from aircraft. The training, which most ANG members seldom receive except in deployed locations, presented many challenges which Airmen used to prepare themselves for future missions.

“The biggest obstacle for the training is the unpredictability of the actual flights,” said Staff Sgt. Kelsey Searls. “Aircraft availability, stability of the patients, weather, paperwork: all of it can change the flight times at any moment, making training on actual aircraft and running live missions, sometimes impossible to get during an annual training tour.”

The 132nd Communications Flight worked on a variety of projects on base including inventorying equipment, disposing of outdated computer hard drives and tapes as well as preparing underground network cables for use in base operations. They also upgraded the base’s computer systems and software.

“It was great getting to work with new people in a total force integrated environment,” said Senior Airman Ben Trotter, spectrum operations technician, 132nd Communications Flight. “We provided manpower which organized their assets as well as training for us which will make us a more efficient communications flight.”

Communications Flight Airmen disposed of over 200 computer hard drives, inventoried and processed in approximately 250 computers, updated the software on 40 computers and fixed approximately five thousand feet of network cable.

The 132nd Force Support Squadron’s services Airmen provided meals at the Hale Aina Dining Facility on Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam. The Airmen were able to take inventory of the produce and supplies of the dining facility which helped them gain more knowledge of accountability systems.

“Working hand-in-hand with the active duty was rewarding as was the mutual exchange of ideas and knowledge of the services field which will make our shop better,” said Chris Newton, services shift leader, 132nd FSS.

The services Airmen also helped prepare a special meal for the base in honor of Black History Month. In total, the 132nd FSS served approximately 5000 meals to active duty, Guard and Reserve Airmen. They also conducted the physical training tests of approximately 500 Airmen.

Sentry Aloha exercises are held to provide the Air National Guard, U.S. Air Force and other Department of Defense agencies an opportunity to execute current, realistic, integrated training specifically designed to develop combat operations and skill sets.