News>Prime BEEF squadron combines Air Force, Army engineers
Photos
Army Staff Sgt. Matt Tones performs carpentry work on a guard shack Aug. 31, 2011, at Ali Base, Iraq. Airmen and Soldiers work closely together to help transition equipment and buildings to Iraqi government. Tones assigned to the 389th Engineer Brigade. (U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Cecilio Ricardo)
First Lt. Holly Bigelow (left), Army Staff Sgt. Christopher Morian (middle) and two Soldiers set up concertina wire to protect a refurbished building Aug. 31, 2011, at Ali Base, Iraq. Bigelow is the 467th Expeditionary Prime BEEF facility team engineer, and Morian is an electrician assigned to the 389th Engineer Company. (U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Cecilio Ricardo)
Senior Airman Julian Alberni discusses building designs with 1st Lt. Nicholas Lopez Aug. 31, 2011, at Ali Base, Iraq. Prime BEEF Airmen here primarily create surveys and design work while the 389th Engineer Company Soldiers implement the designs. Alberni is an engineering journeyman assigned to the 467th Expeditionary Prime BEEF Squadron, and Lopez is the 467th EPBS project manager. (U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Cecilio Ricardo)
by Senior Airman Chuck Broadway
9th Air and Space Expeditionary Task Force/Air Component Coordination Element- Iraq Public Affairs
10/3/2011 - ALI BASE, Iraq (AFNS) -- In today's joint operating environment, service members from different military branches are routinely unified to complete a mission.
The 467th Expeditionary Prime Base Engineer Emergency Force Squadron here combines Airmen and Soldiers to build facilities and structures needed throughout the entire Iraq joint operations area.
"I can take my Air Force assets, mix them with Army assets and get to whatever job that needs to be done across the IJOA in a relatively short amount of time," said Lt. Col. Larry Harris, the 467th EPBS commander. "There's no job we can't complete."
The Army's 20th Engineer Brigade controls parts of the 467th EPBS, while the 467th EPBS controls the day-to-day operations of the Army's 389th Engineer Company, according to Harris. The EPBS is the only Air Force engineering entity in the IJOA with full tactical control over an Army unit.
This unique joint operation has created a successful foundation which members of each unit have grown from, he said.
"We've learned valuable lessons placing our Air Force and Army engineers in the same buildings and shops, giving them the same assets to do the job," Harris said. "Once you take your blouse off, you really don't know who is Army or Air Force. It's just a bunch of engineers getting the job done."
Working as a team, each unit has its role in accomplishing the mission, he said. The Airmen, who primarily make up the facility engineering teams, are traditional engineers and specialists who complete initial surveys and design work. Once a plan is drawn up, the design is handed to the Army to complete the build.
"You learn a different culture working with the Army," said Master Sgt. Herman Ybarra, the 467th EPBS water and fuel systems maintenance lead. "We've taught each other to buy into the process of a job and take charge of it. We're highly mobile experts in our career field, and (what we're able to do) is really impressive."
Currently, the 467th EPBS has teams covering 18 different locations, performing duties such as developing base master plans, perimeter surveys, physical security upgrades and constructing living quarters.
"A lot of what we're doing is building new construction, and that's an engineer's dream," Harris said. "Unfortunately, as the mission keeps changing, we have to change the squadron."
Recent changes include providing assistance with equipment removal from the IJOA.
"We're moving nine years of stuff through Ali Base," said Master Sgt. Tracy Johnston, the 467th EPBS facility engineer team NCO in charge. "It's incredible to see all the trucks loaded and heading out. It's really historic."
So far, there hasn't been a task the unit has failed to complete, Harris said, and he feels his team will continue to excel.
"When you put Air Force engineers and their special skills together with a group of Army engineers who bring their everyday skills into the fight, you're talking about a real powerhouse team," Harris said. "When you find the right mixture, you're going to continue to build upon it and get the mission done."