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    24-hour Color Carry to Remember

    24-hour Color Carry to Remember

    Photo By Sgt. 1st Class Nicholas Farina | The 20th Air Support Operations Squadron and other TACP community volunteers stand...... read more read more

    FORT DRUM, NY, UNITED STATES

    04.10.2017

    Story by Sgt. Nicholas Farina 

    27th Public Affairs Detachment

    They are a speckle of blue in a sea of green. Air Force Tactical Air Control Party Specialists operate more commonly alongside Army units than they do among other Air Force personnel. Out of this oddity, TACPs have generated a strong sense of community within themselves. The bond is their duty, and whether deployed or in garrison, distance is not a factor among its community members.

    Every March, TACPs across the globe simultaneously dedicate 24 hours to carrying their colors and counting the miles in remembrance of those in their community who were killed in action or killed in training.

    The 20th Air Support Operations Squadron, whose mission is to advise the 10th Mountain Division on battlefield air operations, took part in this global TACP community event March 30 – 31 inside a half-mile loop around their compound on Fort Drum.

    "It's in memory of our fallen," said Chief Master Sgt. Eric Rankin, the Squadron Superintendent for the 20th ASOS. "The event raises awareness but it also raises funds so we can help our personnel through the TACP association."

    Rankin explained the way it works.

    One person carries the TACP flag at all times during the 24-hour period. They can run, walk or ruck march with it until they need to hand it off. Anybody else can be running, walking or rucking during any given time throughout the event, but the flag is always moving.

    All of the miles from the participants are tracked and added up at the end of the 24-hour period. They start at noon and the flag keeps moving until noon the next day. The entire able-bodied unit and volunteer participants all run together for the first and last hour.

    "We normally turn it into a festivity," said Airman 1st Class Justin Byington, a Joint Terminal Attack Controller for the 20th ASOS. "You’re pretty much given these two days to hang out with your buddies and go run. We keep ourselves physically fit while enjoying our time with one another."

    Byington volunteered for a midnight start time running shift. For the first and last hours of the event, he opted to carry the 20th ASOS physical training log on his shoulders with a partner. It weighs 108 lbs.

    "The second hour walking with the log was the hardest shift," Byington assured. "We had to keep swapping shoulders."

    Byington pointed out the physical efforts of others, highlighting a 55-year-old mother whose son is a TACP member currently stationed in Texas. She traveled with her parents from New Hampshire to Fort Drum to participate in the event. She ran 60 total miles through out the 24-hour period.

    This year, the 20th ASOS had 88 participants. They raised $2,647 for the TACP Association. All together, they traveled 1,307 miles on foot which is the equivalent to walking from here to 20 miles past Fort Riley, Kansas.

    These are the numbers for Fort Drum alone. Rankin reminds that this is a global TACP community event. Every one of the ASOS units run together during the time frame if they are capable of doing so. From Fort Bragg to Fort Stewart to Fort Riley and the TACP schoolhouses, everyone participates.

    Rankin is closely connected with this event because he actually created it while serving in Alaska prior to his tenure at Fort Drum. He also chose the time frame for a reason. Three TACPs were killed in action or killed in training during the month of March. The time frame seemed fitting.

    What also is fitting for the occasion, is that Rankin's very last action with the 20th ASOS would be this event he created. He would go on to PCS to Fort Hood the day after.

    "It's ironic because I've been here three years and it works out exactly the same," said Rankin. "When I PCSed here from Fort Bliss I did the event. Then I out-processed and left to come up here. My very last event here is this as well."

    The 20th ASOS along with the TACPs serving throughout our military get stationed with the Army, but they aren't of the Army branch. They are of the Air Force branch, but they traditionally do not serve alongside the Air Force.

    So how do you define such a military outlier of a unit? The TACP flash gives a good explanation.

    "The TACP colors are blue, green and red," describes Byington. "The blue represents the Air Force and what we bring to the fight. The green represents the Army that we’re backing up and fighting with. The red connects both of them together. It represents the Tactical Air Control Party and the firepower that we can bring when we work as a team."

    Within a sea of green, there is a speckle of blue. It is the 20th ASOS, and they just carried its unit's colors 24 hours straight for a total of 1,307 miles to honor their fallen.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 04.10.2017
    Date Posted: 04.11.2017 09:16
    Story ID: 229837
    Location: FORT DRUM, NY, US

    Web Views: 210
    Downloads: 1

    PUBLIC DOMAIN