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    Get moving, get fit with Army Civilian Fitness Program

    Get moving, get fit with Army Civilian Fitness Program

    Photo By Brandon Beach | Events like the German-American 5K in Kaiserslautern, Germany are one way that...... read more read more

    KAISERSLAUTERN, RP, GERMANY

    05.01.2015

    Story by Marisa Alia-Novobilski 

    21st Theater Sustainment Command

    KAISERLAUTERN, Germany - For three hours during the work week, Brandon Beach ties on his running shoes and hits the trails near Panzer Kaserne in Kaiserslautern, Germany. He’s training to run a mid-May trail marathon and needs as much time as possible to get ready.

    Physical fitness is important to Beach, who’s also a husband, father and full-time Army civilian at the 21st Theater Sustainment Command. The Army Civilian Fitness Program makes it possible for him to train for the race and still have time to meet his work and family needs.

    “The Army Civilian Fitness Program is great. It allows me to train for races and gets me out of the office for a few hours each week,” said Beach, who likes to run in conjunction with his lunch breaks. “When I get back to my desk, I am refreshed, focused and ready to tackle my work assignments. I feel so much more productive after a run.”

    The Army Civilian Fitness Program is designed to encourage civilian employees to improve their health and fitness through formal physical exercise training and other wellness activity. Army Regulation 600-63, Army Health Promotion, authorizes commanders and supervisors to approve up to three hours of administrative leave per week allowing employees to participate in physical exercise training, monitoring and education for up to six months in duration. The goal is to raise awareness and knowledge of healthy lifestyle choices and the positive affect these play on workplace productivity.

    Just as soldiers need to be fit-to-fight, Army civilians need to be healthy in order to be productive members of the work team. “By encouraging civilians to focus on fitness, health and wellness, we can develop leaders of the future,” said Erika Turner, the Comprehensive Soldier Family and Fitness Program (CSF2) manager for the 21st Theater Sustainment Command. “A healthy workforce is a productive workforce. We encourage civilians to work with their supervisors to use the Civilian Fitness Program benefit. Even just three hours a week can make a difference.”

    Though Army regulations authorize up to three hours a week to pursue physical fitness activity, Turner often hears a variety of excuses as to why a person is unable to participate. One often heard excuse is that the civilian workload is too high to leave time for a person to pursue health and wellness during the duty day.

    This, she said, is a myth. Supervisor support for the program across the Army is strong, and there are no excuses for a person to ignore the opportunity.

    “Supervisors and employees can work together to create a fitness plan,” Turner said. “The plan can become a part of the employee’s Individual Development Plan. We encourage the widest participation in the program and are available to help employees and supervisors at all levels.”

    Physical health and fitness for civilians is part of the 21st TSC’s Ready and Resilient Campaign (R2C) policy. The R2C focuses on building strong leaders, soldiers, civilians, families and communities by promoting well-being and executing safety and risk reduction programs, of which the Army Civilian Fitness Program is a part.

    Effective time management plays an important role. There are opportunities to be more efficient in the workplace, thereby freeing up time for civilians to pursue personal health improvement. Civilians need to seek these efficiencies in the workplace to make time for health.

    Another common excuse many individuals give for not participating in the Army Civilian Fitness Program is a lack of appropriate facilities and equipment to pursue activities.

    However, in the Kaiserslautern Military Community, those excuses don’t hold up. There are on-post fitness facilities throughout the region that are open to active duty military, retirees, dependents and all other military ID holders. Some provide 24-hour, 7-day-a-week access to accommodate even the most demanding schedules.

    Other civilians say that a lack of knowledge of safe training techniques and how to develop a fitness plan prevent them from pursuing participation in the fitness program.

    Nevertheless, fitness experts are available at the fitness and wellness centers to help both novice and experienced individuals develop a training plan, with a focus on proper techniques and ways to exercise safely.

    A visit to the Army’s Comprehensive Soldier Family and Fitness website, http://csf2.army.mil/, is another way that civilians can become more confident and educated about health and fitness. “We encourage our civilians to visit the CSF2 site. It’s a holistic online environment that can really help a person optimize the benefits of the Army Civilian Fitness Program and learn what changes are needed live a healthier life,” said Turner.

    A visit to the site may also encourage civilians who think they do not need to improve health and fitness because they work a desk job, where fitness doesn’t matter, to get on board with the program. By logging into Army Fit and taking the new Global Assessment Tool - GAT 2.0 - civilians can get a baseline measurement of their current health and learn ways to improve it.

    Comprehensive fitness doesn’t just improve physical shape. According to the CSF2 site, the Army Civilian Fitness Program has been shown to help boost morale, improve health and fitness and increase productivity in the workplace. Research by the U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine has also shown that encouraging healthy lifestyles enhances individual well-being and health, readiness, war fighting ability and work performance.

    “Positive health habits lead to a healthy workforce” said Turner. “The stronger you are health-wise, the better you are able to lead and perform.”

    Just as soldiers need to be fit-to-fight, Army civilians need to be healthy in order to be productive members of the work team.

    A healthy, productive Army team of the future can only be built through dedicated well-being activities today.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 05.01.2015
    Date Posted: 05.01.2015 04:30
    Story ID: 161879
    Location: KAISERSLAUTERN, RP, DE
    Hometown: HAZLET, NJ, US

    Web Views: 150
    Downloads: 0

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