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    Humans Of HOA- Staff Sgt. Jaime Valdez

    Human of HOA spotlight; Staff Sgt. Jaime Valdez, journey to becoming a Warrant Officer

    I wake up in the morning, go to warrant officer school, and assist in the organization and
    planning of human resource collection for mobilization of a unit. Once home, I care to my ten-
    year-old with special needs. After she is in bed, I finish homework for school.

    This is the life of Arizona Army National Guard Staff Sgt. Jaime Valdez after she decided to
    start the transition from enlisted to warrant officer all the while preparing for a deployment.

    Valdez’s first introduction to the world of Warrant Officers was from her best friend Chief
    Warrant Officer 4 Lupecelia Leon, a pilot who deployed with Valdez during her first deployment
    in 2016. During this deployment, they realized their mothers knew them when they were infants.
    Leon had always encouraged Valdez to reach for more and initially told her to go for warrant
    officer.

    After being in for 10 years, Valdez did not feel like she had much influence to make change,
    though she loved being a non-commissioned officer. She saw Warrant Officers as the middle
    ground between worlds.

    “[Warrant officers] connect with the command staff, mentor the enlisted and guide the command
    team,” said Valdez.

    When she decided to attend school, she had a goal and a plan; increase her Armed Services
    Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB) score and work on her physical fitness. Valdez hired a
    tutor to assist her in increasing her ASVAB score. She struggled with the verbal and mathematics
    portion, as English is her second language.

    Despite her struggle with the language, she persevered increasing her score by 27 points on the
    first try.

    “A lot of people doubted my abilities, the MEB never doubted, felt like home,” said Valdez.

    After applying, in June 2023 she was federally recommended for Warrant Officer candidacy. She
    began Warrant Officer school in May 2024 and graduated August 2024.

    During her time at School, she studied hard, worked on building up her strength by rucking, and
    increased her Army Combat Fitness Test (ACFT) score from 450 to 548 points, almost hitting
    the maximum of 600.

    The most difficult part of everything was being able to find a balance between home, work and
    the schoolhouse. She planned and coordinated all of the pre-mobilization for the 158 th Maneuver
    Enhancement Brigade as they prepared for their deployment to Africa. During this time she also
    drilled with the schoolhouse.

    “I love chaos, I like to organize it. Everything we do in the HR realm is like a project. I like
    seeing a project to its finality,” said Valdez.

    Valdez mentions a great motivator were her friends she met through the Warrant Officer
    Candidate School who had the same passion for making a difference. Two other soldiers from
    the human resource department went through the program with her, and together they
    perservered.

    As the human resource department NCO in charge for the on Camp Lemonnier Djibouti-Horn of
    Africa, she is able to hone the skills she learned from the WOCS course. With her newly gained
    acumen, she researches not only Army, but other branches when sending memos and regulation.

    When asked about this deployment, Valdez said she, “Loves the opportunity to grow and learn.”

    Valdez is working on her bachelor’s degree while she is in Africa, with four classes left of her
    Human Resource Management degree from Grand Canyon University. She is set to graduate
    while also preparing to pin Warrant Officer on when she gets home from deployment.

    Valdez is waiting for an open slot which happens to be opening soon. Her mentor, Chief Warrant
    Officer 3 Joshua Allen will be retiring after the deployment, opening a space for her to become a
    Warrant Officer.

    “[Valdez’s] overall potential is unparalleled. Quality and drive are unmatched in her leadership
    expertise and technical expertise, her attention to detail sets her apart from her peers,” says
    Allen.

    Allen has helped form Valdez into the Warrant Officer she wants to become. She’s learned about
    setting standards and demonstrating how to have a balance with her leadership abilities when it
    comes to enlisted service members and officers. According to Allen, Valdez represents
    everything a Warrant Officer should be.

    “[Valdez’s] overall potential is unparalleled. Quality and drive are unmatched in her leadership
    expertise and technical expertise, her attention to detail sets her apart from her peers,” says
    Allen.

    After she pins on Warrant Officer, Valdez’s goal is to spend more time with her daughter. After
    three deployments and long days working on her Warrant Officer candidacy, she says turning her
    work brain off when she gets home to spend time with her daughter is her priority. She wants to
    shift focus and dedicate more time to her daughter and her daughter’s education.

    Valdez’s advice to anyone wanting to go the Warrant Officer route is, “have the mentality of, if
    you want to do it, do it, if you don’t do it, no one is going to do it for you. Look at the
    predeterminations and work your way up, start as early as possible.”

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 02.20.2025
    Date Posted: 03.24.2025 02:06
    Story ID: 491109
    Location: DJ

    Web Views: 9
    Downloads: 0

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