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    'Capital Guardians' protecting the nation’s skies: A day in the life of the 24 hour alert team

    A day in the life of the DC Aerospace Control Alert Detachment

    Photo By Master Sgt. Becky Vanshur | Maintainers with the 113th Wing’s Aerospace Control Alert (ACA) Detachment sprint to...... read more read more

    JOINT BASE ANDREWS, MD, UNITED STATES

    04.02.2015

    Story by Master Sgt. Becky Vanshur 

    113th Wing D.C. Air National Guard

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is the second of a two-part series on the D.C. Air National Guard’s Aerospace Control Alert mission.

    JOINT BASE ANDREWS, Md. – Spend a day here with some of the “Capital Guardians” from the 113th Wing’s Aerospace Control Alert (ACA) Detachment. The D.C. ACA Detachment recently reached a milestone, beyond comparison of other alert teams with 5,000 alert calls, a historic record as the highest in the nation. See the first article of the two-part series.

    5:45 a.m.

    The sun is not out yet. It is 5:45 a.m. and a new shift arrives at the firehouse-like facility to switch out with an exhausted but still attentive team. Pilot Maj. Wyck Furcron, from the 121st Fighter Squadron, 113th Wing, arrives with his flight equipment and an overnight bag that he places in one of the many bedrooms.

    “The entire building is designed to keep us in a home-like environment, so that you can be as relaxed as you need to be,” Furcron said. “When that horn goes go off in the middle of the night, at least you have had a good meal, a little bit of rest and you can now focus on the job that you need to do.”

    The major sets his flight equipment, harness and helmet near an F-16 Fighting Falcon parked inside the hangar bay. He performs an equipment check and joins the maintainers as they inspect the aircraft. After the power-on and quick alignment checks, and other items on his checklist, the aircraft is prepped and ready to be airborne at a moment’s notice.

    12 p.m.

    It is approaching noon, the morning checks are complete, and the team has settled in for the long 24-hour shift ahead. The team can hear the sound of asparagus being sliced from one of the two kitchens as well as the daily news from a nearby television hanging above the couches in the day room. An airman sits in front of his computer, focusing on one of the many training courses required of the ACA team.

    Another airman prints a checklist for the afternoon inspections. He joins two others in the bay and walks around each aircraft to check for leaks, foreign objects or debris. Master Sgt. Curtis Hills, maintenance alert team supervisor, signs inspections checklist forms to release the aircraft for flight.

    Meanwhile, maintainer Tech. Sgt. David Cochran checks the hazardous chemical locker for any expired chemicals. There is laughter down the hall. The repetitious sound of clanking weights is heard, as a lateral pulldown machine is being used in the gym near the second kitchen. Cochran hears the soft sound of a swooshing treadmill belt. The 24-hour alert team cannot leave the building during their shift; an outside run on a sunny day is not an option for these airmen.

    Suddenly the red alarm lights up, illuminating the room with a bright red glow, and a loud horn comes to life.

    “Scramble! Scramble! Scramble!” The loud horn sounds. “I say again, scramble!”

    In mere moments, running airmen fill the hallway, maintainers and pilots alike. They meet at the aircraft bay in the blink of an eye, regardless of what they were involved in just seconds prior to the alert.

    “We respond to any threat that approaches the Washington D.C. area or within a certain distance to the assets we protect,” said Col. W. Mark Valentine, 113th Operations Group commander. “Examples range from a civilian pilot who is lost and unaware they have inappropriately entered protected airspace, all the way up to an armed attack on the United States.”

    Valentine settles in the cockpit of his aircraft, eyes focused on the red alert light. Furcron sits in the second aircraft. Moments later, Valentine can see the ACA building fade away behind him. He is now airborne and on his way to fly adjacent with a civilian aircraft, whose pilot has passed out inside of his cockpit. He will successfully fly with this aircraft for several hours, trying every strategy he can to wake this pilot and prevent a possible catastrophe.

    5:30 p.m.

    The team has returned, mentally exhausted from the real-world alarm red scramble. The 15-man crew regenerates the aircraft to be ready for additional alerts. The two kitchens are filled with airmen preparing and cooking dinner.

    Crew rest is extremely important to this mission. An early bedtime can make a difference in performance if there is an alert during the night. While some bedroom doors may close, indicating lights out by 9 p.m., on any given day other maintainers can be up until midnight due to an ongoing mission. If an aircraft is unfit to fly, the maintainers immediately work on repair. In this critical mission, maintenance issues cannot wait until the next day for resolution.

    “Maintenance is the life-blood of the ACA operation,” Valentine said. “Our maintainers do a fantastic job at keeping these airplanes up to speed so that we (pilots) are safe and there are no safety hazards. But there is always a risk to flying. I try never to walk out the door without kissing and hugging my wife and my kids, because you just never know.”

    After midnight

    There is not a sound in the self-sustaining facility, only silence.

    It is well past midnight when the bright yellow alarm shines onto sleeping faces. The eyes of every airman in the building open, the horn sounds and they are once again on the run. The fighter jets taxi and wait at the end of the runway. Given the possible real-world scenarios of yellow alerts, the jets are prepared to launch for any response.

    The white “all-clear” alarm announces and the aircraft taxi back to the bay. This particular situation was handled without turning into a red alarm event – this time.

    “At the end of the day, one word that would describe this mission is pride,” Valentine said. “It’s an exhilarating feeling every time I run out to that aircraft to do this mission and to be airborne within minutes. There is some fear and some danger in flying these airplanes ... but there is a lot of pride.”

    The next day

    It is sunrise 24 hours later. The commander of the ACA Detachment, Lt. Col. John Vargas, greets Valentine and Furcron as they prepare to leave the unit and go home to their families.

    “It is humbling every day,” Vargas said. “I can’t tell you what a unique area of operation this is because there are just so many elements that join together successfully. That is what makes this team so capable of defending the National Capital Region with great pride.”

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 04.02.2015
    Date Posted: 04.02.2015 12:26
    Story ID: 158946
    Location: JOINT BASE ANDREWS, MD, US

    Web Views: 162
    Downloads: 1

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