Official Site of the U.S. Air Force   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

News > Air Force building the future force
 
Photos 
Officials announce civilian workforce hiring freeze
(U.S. Air Force graphic/Corey Parrish)
Download HiRes
Air Force building the future force

Posted 10/12/2011 Email story   Print story

    


by Mitch Gettle
Air Force Public Affairs Agency


10/12/2011 - WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- Changes are coming to the Air Force and officials are working with the Department of Defense to prioritize current and future resources as part of a national priority to reduce spending.

In the spring of 2010 the Defense Department began a comprehensive effort to increase efficiencies, reduce overhead costs, and eliminate redundant functions in order to improve the effectiveness of the DOD enterprise.

This effort focused on reprioritizing how DOD can use resources to more effectively support and sustain the total force and most importantly the warfighter.

According to the Secretary of the Air Force, Michael Donley, the Air Force is following that guidance.

"We have been examining the full spectrum of operations -- from base-level to headquarters -- to develop efficiency initiatives that streamline and right-size the organization and redirect resources where we need them most to forge a leaner, more-effective Air Force," said Donley.

Air Force leaders are also focused on shaping the force within the established budgetary guidelines.

"We can't afford business as usual," said Donley. "We are developing new ways of doing business as we build the Air Force of the future." The future force will reflect reductions in some areas and growth in others, he said.

"We will need to reduce overhead and consolidate wherever possible to meet budget targets," said Chief of Staff of the Air Force Gen. Norton Schwartz. "We will have to make difficult choices."

To begin shaping the workforce to meet future needs, the Air Force implemented hiring controls in May, followed by a 90-day hiring freeze in August, and Voluntary Early Retirement Authority/Voluntary Separation Incentive Program offerings in September. Mandated by the Fiscal 2012 budget, these actions are designed to accommodate the reduced growth in the civilian workforce by allowing the Air Force to consider where new positions will best support future missions and where current tasks need to be eliminated or reduced.

As the Air Force approaches the end of the 90-day hiring freeze in November, and employees approved for VERA/VSIP approach separation by 31 December, the Air Force will consider what additional measures may be required to meet future needs. Air Force members should expect continued workforce shaping measures, affecting military, civilians, and support contractors.
Some of the consolidation and shaping includes organizational changes at the MAJCOM and installation level.

"Air Force organizations and installations of the future may not operate the same tomorrow as they do today," said Schwartz. "In fact, we are considering a restructure of AFMC - our largest employer of civilians - to standardize processes, streamline decision making and align missions for more effective operations. The new structure will focus on reducing overhead costs and redundant layers of management while largely protecting the command's rank and file workforce."

Given the scale of the coming reductions, functional communities are taking a look at their processes seeking opportunities to streamline operations, Schwartz said. Additionally, Air Force leaders have been examining numerous base-level support activities, looking for better ways to support Air Force missions.

According to Schwartz, the Air Force will establish new baselines for many functions across the Air Force.

The Air Force will also focus on providing the essential services members need and taking more advantage of local communities and the valuable services they provide for Airmen and their families. For example, some services commonly available on installations, but are either not financially viable or not often used, may be consolidated or closed in order to redirect resources to other places where Airman and family needs are greater, he said.

The Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force expressed confidence in the ability of Airmen to adapt to change as the Air Force evolves.

"As specifics of these challenges start to take shape, I'm confident our Airmen will exceed all of our expectations," Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force, James Roy said. "In the end, we will remain the world's finest Air Force."

"These are challenging times, but we have a unique opportunity to shape the future of America's Air Force, and we are committed to doing everything possible to balance fiscal responsibility with our investments in our people and the nation's defense," said Schwartz. "I have no doubt our Airmen will rise to the challenges before us.



tabComments
3/28/2012 11:39:56 PM ET
After 24 yrs...I can say that the USAF has had an identity crisis since the end of the cold war. Here is a cost cutting step... roll the USAF back into the army...seriously
Rick, MSgt Retired
 
10/27/2011 2:27:16 PM ET
As an AFMC employee I've experienced cuts of employees with the promise that we'll do less with less, but in fact we're doing the same with less. In some cases, those efficiencies were needed, but in other cases we're still reeling. Work morale has decreased as many scramble with increased stress to meet deadlines. The Federal employee the DoD and the Civilian continue to be targeted while we continue operating inefficiently in other Govt. agencies.
drs, HAFB
 
10/18/2011 11:41:02 AM ET
Sorry but none of your suggestions will work. Why The AF is made by and for commanders and command billets are the most teflon of all manpower slots. There is nothing more important than sustaining promotion possibilities for the officer corps. Made by and for. Start cutting command billets and unit mergings will follow immediately. Until then made by and for.
J.T., Crestview FL
 
10/18/2011 9:43:32 AM ET
Concur with eliminating all NAFs. Concur with USAF Installation Command to independently manage all garrison support functions thus allowing war fighters to focus on and hone war skills then deploy as cohesive combat units to and from any base. Revive a less costly Warrant Officers cadre to fly RPAs with rated COs rotated through as RPA flight and sqdn leadership. Expand Battlefield Airman utility. Shift AD bomber aircraft and role to AFRC spin up as needed.
Motivated Airman, Home Station
 
10/17/2011 8:38:20 PM ET
Sounds like fun.
Dan, Kirtland
 
10/17/2011 4:32:57 PM ET
The AF will continue to get smaller and smaller no matter what leaders tell the troops publicly. No active duty member can say they didn't know that the right sizing process wouldn't continue. If AF senior leadership would truly lead instead of trying to act like businessmen the AF wouldn't be struggling with its budget. Cut the Dog and Pony show theatrics as a way to glorify your duties.
Retired , USA
 
10/17/2011 3:09:08 PM ET
cuts should start at the top. we have to many generals and not enough airman.
common sense, air force
 
10/17/2011 2:21:27 PM ET
Reduce to 4 OTE MAJCOMs Combat Forces Cmd Air Mobility and Expeditionary Cmd AETC and AFMC to include SMC. Eliminate non-combat NAFs 2AF and 19AF and return to Tech Trng Centers. Streamline and consolidate warfighting NAFs merge 5 11 and 13AF 3 and 17AF 8 and 20AF. Move AF-common functions from MAJCOMs to FOAs e.g. FM CE Comm and retain only core MAJCOM OTE tasks. Get MAJCOMs and combat wings out of basing business and stand up USAF Installation Mgmt Cmd like the Army with regional host ABW or ABGs. Civilianize or contract all non-mil deployable UTCs. Return HAF to policy only. Hold units and individuals fully accountable for mission sets.
JAFSO, Saddle Rock CO
 
10/17/2011 11:05:01 AM ET
Sounds like more personnel cuts are on the horizon. Along with those cuts I hope leadership is ready to get serious about cutting ancillary training additional duties and take a hard look at ther frequency of PT tests PHA's and other time wasting non productive mandatory items especially with AFRC.
Bob, Wright-Patt
 
10/17/2011 10:44:30 AM ET
Step 1 Eliminate Numbered Air Forces. The USAF is small enough for the MAJCOM's to fill that role.
Retiring Soon, America
 
10/16/2011 8:55:03 PM ET
Air Force Leadership - you must be aware of this how could you NOT be. If you reduce the people without reducing the mission and the day to day requirements we will not be able to get work done. The Civilian hiring freeze is killing us overseas. Civilians in the US can remain in their positions even if sponsors PCS. Those overseas cannot. The workload left by the vacancies is falling onto our military who are already stretched thin and being asked to do their job plus another full-time one. Then you want to reduce more Or in some jobs falling onto the few civilians remaining who are then covering several full-time positions. By law they should get paid for overtime but of course no one wants to approve it. If positions have always been part of the budget before 2010 they should not be frozen. If positions were created by mandate such as Civilian PT Testers they should be filled. When you refuse to cut things like Tops in Blue Demo Teams Roadshows to highlight pet pr
Gaijin, Japan
 
10/16/2011 4:23:40 PM ET
This sounds more geared towards civilians in AFMC than anything
BS, KS
 
10/13/2011 1:23:24 PM ET
What I thought we were done with the right sizing of the AF and that our leadership was as aggressive as possible to get all the force shaping completed in FY11. I've got enough things to worry about downrange--and now this
Confused, Deployed
 
Add a comment

 Inside AF.mil

ima cornerSearch

tabSubscribe AF.MIL
tabMore HeadlinesRSS feed 
SecAF, community honor Keesler AFB

2012 Football Frenzy underway at AF clubs

Space ops unit takes over newest GPS satellite

Reservists can carry leave balance after training tours

In wake of Sandy, mobility Airmen poised to 'answer the call'

McGuire continues recovery efforts, FEMA base of operations

Hercules flies through the night

Sheppard Airmen spring into action; save woman from burning car

AF accepting distinguished civilian award nominations

Watching 'Sandy'

More than 7,400 National Guard members responding to Hurricane Sandy

Vanguard nominees sought

Weather recon squadron takes last look at 'Sandy'

AF officials eliminate civilian skill code requirements

tabCommentaryRSS feed 
Domestic violence awareness 'experiment'  1

Teal ropes to spotlight sexual assault response  37


Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     Security and Privacy notice     E-publishing