News

U.S. Air Force Logo United States Air Force

Airmen continue training for quick response

  • Published Feb. 22, 2007
  • By Tech. Sgt. Dwight Hawkins
  • Air Force News Agency
TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AFNEWS) --   When a tsunami devastated parts of Southeast Asia in 2005, Airmen from a special Air Force unit were ready to help. 

It's the job of the Airmen of the 615th Contingency Response Wing at Travis AFB to respond to crisis situations around the world at a moment's notice. They establish an aerial port, maintenance functions and command and control operations anywhere they are needed.

To stay ready they are always training, said Lt. Col. Charles Myrick, the chief of expeditionary operations for the 573rd Global Support Squadron.

"If we have a contingency worldwide we're able to move assets -- whether they are Army, Air Force or Marine assets," he said. "We can move those around the world."

It takes about seven C-17 Globemaster III transport aircraft to carry the more than 100 people and tons of equipment that make up a contingency response group. The group must be ready to deploy in less than 12 hours after receiving a tasking.

"So they're able -- in a moment's notice - to assess a base, first of all, then set up operations to kind of bridge the gap between contingency and sustainment operations," Colonel Myrick said.

Contingency response groups need several other functions to operate, including security forces, finance and contracting. But it was not always that way. In the past, groups had to rely on other bases for many of the people they needed. Now those areas are part of each of the three groups around the world that make up the Travis AFB wing.

Colonel Myrick said Travis AFB Airmen were there to help in the aftermath of the natural disaster that hit the Gulf Coast in 2005.

"They responded for hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Our CRG's went to different locations to help out," the colonel said. 

Comment on this story (comments may be published on Air Force Link)

Click here to view the comments/letters page

Related Links

  • Travis Air Force Base, Calif.

  • Kentucky Airmen lead way for ANG contingency response

    Dec. 4, 2006
    The Kentucky Air National Guard is now the home of the first and only contingency response group in the Air National Guard. The 123rd Contingency Response Group -- an "airbase in a box" -- will now provide a continual capability to provide everything necessary to open a runway, load and unload
  • 615th CRW plays role in joint exercise

    Feb. 2, 2006
    Airmen with the 615th Contingency Response Wing here participated in a joint forcible entry exercise, or JFEX, at Pope Air Force Base, N.C., Jan. 21 to 28. JFEX is designed to enhance cohesiveness between the Air Force and Army by executing large-scale heavy equipment and troop movements. The
  • AMC assists initial earthquake response

    Oct. 13, 2005
    The Air Force deployed more than 45 members from the 621st Contingency Response Wing here to Islamabad, Pakistan Oct. 10 in the wake of a 7.6-magnitude earthquake that struck the country Oct. 8. Members of 621st Contingency Response Group Element deployed to support humanitarian airlift operations
  • AMC aircraft, people continue hurricane relief efforts

    Sept. 7, 2005
    In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Air Mobility Command has moved thousands of military support people, civilian emergency responders and evacuees, and has delivered tons of emergency equipment and supplies supporting relief operations.To handle the increased air mobility operations into and out
  • AMC response groups establish airfield operations for hurricane relief

    Sept. 2, 2005
    In support of massive relief operations to help victims of Hurricane Katrina, several elements of the Air Mobility Command Contingency Response Group deployed to Louisiana and Mississippi Aug. 30 and 31 to establish air mobility operations.On Aug. 30, a four-person assessment team from the 615th
  • Air Force provides humanitarian relief to Pakistan

    Oct. 13, 2005
    In the days following the massive earthquake that struck northern Pakistan Oct. 8, Air Force aircraft have flown numerous relief missions into that region.C-17 Globemaster IIIs and C-130 Hercules positioned in that part of the world already supporting Operation Enduring Freedom were the first Air
  • Air Force evacuated thousands, ready to assist in wake of Rita

    Sept. 24, 2005
    Anticipating Hurricane Rita’s landfall, the U.S. Air Force evacuated nearly 2,000 Gulf Coast residents Thursday to safe haven locations across the country’s southeast, placed skilled teams of professionals into strategic positions and now continues to lean forward to meet the needs of the affected
Department of the Air Force Logo