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    1st Army Reserve medevac unit since Gulf War prepares to deploy

    TAMPA, UNITED STATES

    09.03.2011

    Story by Sgt. 1st Class Joel Quebec 

    81st Readiness Division

    TAMPA, Fla. – Although one Yellow Ribbon event for deploying and redeploying soldiers may look pretty much like any other, the one thing that changes is the unit. In this case the unit is F Company, 5/159th Aviation Regiment, a medical evacuation unit out of Clearwater, Fla.

    The F Company is unique in that they are the only medevac unit in the Army Reserve and the first since the Gulf War in 1991. During that conflict the USAR had the 348th Medical Detachment in Orlando which disbanded after the war. One of the members of the 348th was the future first sergeant of F Company 1st Sgt. Oscar Gomez, who will be going on his fourth deployment, has plenty of trust in his troops.

    “We have great soldiers,” Gomez said. “For us failure is not an option.” The F Company commander, Maj. Derrick Davis echoed the first sergeant’s remarks. “We’ve got outstanding platoon sergeants and platoon leaders,” he said.

    The senior leaders of the unit have to have a high level of confidence in their crews since they will be broken up into five groups and stationed at five different locations throughout Afghanistan.

    “The command and control aspect is much more complicated,” Davis said. “So we empower them to be autonomous,” Each platoon leader runs the platoon with advice, if requested, from the commander or first sergeant.

    This Yellow Ribbon, like any other, gives soldiers and families critical information they will need during the upcoming deployment. In between each briefing session, soldiers and families had a break in order to visit each briefers’ table if they needed more specific information on a particular topic and each representative is dedicated to providing the best service to the troops.

    Likewise, F Company is looking forward to providing the best possible service to the troops in Afghanistan. From the time a call comes in to the Tactical Operations Center, the crew on duty, consisting of a pilot, co-pilot, crew chief and a flight medic, has one hour to get the patient from the battlefield to the nearest medical facility. Gomez occasionally goes along as a crew chief and maintains his flight status.

    “I have to be able to do anything I ask my soldiers to do,” he said. Gomez insists on keeping his own skills and knowledge current. “If we fail,” he explained, “we will show the world that the Army Reserve is not ready for a medevac [unit].” It is clear that no member of F Company even considers failure as a possibility. “We are looking forward to bringing everyone back in one piece,” said Gomez. “We have a great unit.”

    Also present at the event was former USARC Command Sgt. Maj. Leon Caffie, now an Army Reserve ambassador representing Florida. Caffie sat at a lunch table and spoke with soldiers and family members of the unit.

    “Our soldiers are the best trained, best equipped soldiers in the world,” he told the family of one of the Black Hawk pilots as if to reassure them their son was in best organization for his skill set. He also emphasized the importance of the Yellow Ribbon events that are a part of the entire mobilization process.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 09.03.2011
    Date Posted: 09.06.2011 13:30
    Story ID: 76530
    Location: TAMPA, US

    Web Views: 451
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN