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Airman 'close to home' while deployed
Airman 1st Class Marita McCoy (376th Expeditionary Logistics Readiness Squadron traffic management office) holds a picture of her stepmother and father on the flightline on March 31, 2012 at the Transit Center at Manas in Kyrgystan. McCoy's stepmother works with the Defense Biometrics Identification Systems and her father is a 376th Expeditionary Operations Group air traffic control instructor. McCoy is deployed from Whiteman Air Force Base, Mo. (U.S. Air Force photo/SenClose ior Airman Lynsie Nichols)
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Airman 'close to home' while deployed

Posted 4/2/2012 Email story   Print story

    


by Senior Airman Lynsie Nichols
376th Air Expeditionary Wing Public Affairs


4/2/2012 - TRANSIT CENTER AT MANAS, Kyrgyzstan (AFNS) -- Not everyone has the pleasure of saying they served a deployment with their family, but Airman 1st Class Marita McCoy does.

McCoy is assigned to the 376th Expeditionary Logistics Readiness Squadron traffic management office and is deployed here from Whiteman Air Force Base, Mo. Her father and stepmother are both contract employees who live in Kyrgyzstan and work at the Transit Center at Manas.

"This is my first deployment, and I was lucky enough to experience it with my father and stepmother," she said. "Who can say they deployed and their family was there with them? I am so grateful for this opportunity."

McCoy said the mission is similar to home station, but the experience is different.

"At home, I was the shipment planner and had a lot more duties," she said. "It's a different experience here, but I enjoy it because I learn more about my job every day."

McCoy said she enjoys the convenience of being able to see her dad, who is a 376th Expeditionary Operations Group air traffic control instructor, and her stepmother, who works with the Defense Biometrics Identification Systems, which is a part of 376th Expeditionary Security Forces Squadron here.

"This deployment has been like a home away from home," McCoy said. "Anytime I need to talk to my family, they are an email or a call away. I also enjoy having lunch with them whenever they are available."

With four months remaining on her tour, McCoy said she would love to get off base and experience some more culture.

"I've had the opportunity to see another culture in person," she said. "It makes me appreciate all that I have. I want to find more time to do humanitarian assistance projects and fundraisers here."

McCoy said she is glad that the Transit Center was her first deployment.

"I have had some good experiences," she said. "I get to meet different people every day and learn about other people's jobs. "I look forward to having new experiences during the remainder of my time here."



tabComments
4/4/2012 3:35:22 AM ET
Sgt Peanut you understand they're in Kyrgyzstan right You also understand Kyrgyzstan is next to China right They didn't join her on this deployment they just happen to be working overseas at the same location. No reason to take your bitter rage out on Airman McCoy ...
JG Buzanowski, Southwest Asia
 
4/3/2012 10:46:16 AM ET
It is fantastic that she has the opportunity to experience her first deployment in a foreign country like Kyrgyzstan with her family. It is such an important hub and her role is directly involved in those processes. Great for Merita and her family
Fellow Airman, USA
 
4/2/2012 9:23:27 PM ET
With so many stateside contingency TDYs aka 'deployments' to dozens of bases this type of story is much more commonplace than it may seem. Members receive deployment credit while racking up rewards points at big chain hotels. And it is not uncommon for their families to join them on such deployments.
Sgt Peanut, neither here nor there
 
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