FROZEN TUNDRA WARRIORS
Airmen cope with extreme weather to maintain their missions at two North Dakota bases
STORY BY RANDY ROUGHTON
Airmen from the 5th Maintenance Group prepare a B-52H Stratofortress for takeoff on Minot Air Force Base, N.D., Jan. 12, 2015. Aircraft maintenance Airmen provide maintenance and upkeep to the jets, even during the cold winter months. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Brittany Y. Bateman)
Andy Swenson, the 319th Air Base Wing safety manager at Grand Forks AFB, thought of the 264 Critical Days of Winter as his answer to the Air Force’s 101 Critical Days of Summer after he arrived on base 11 winters ago.
“If you’ve ever been off base at a deployed location, you know you’re the odd man out there, and you feel like you’re the target, and your awareness is naturally heightened because of it,” Swenson said. “Well, up here, I think everyone understands that the winter is really the bad guy, and we can’t afford to ever lose sight of that. But those of us who work inside and occasionally go outside have it easy. It’s the cop at the front gate and the civil engineer going from building to building who have it hard.”
Airman 1st Class Patrick Boylan, 91st Missile Security Forces response force leader, performs an outer perimeter check on a launch facility in North Dakota, Feb. 12, 2015. Security forces have several layers of cold weather gear for warmth. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Brittany Y. Bateman)
The missions are different, but both North Dakota bases recognize a different type of war their people must fight more than half of the year – a war against some of the most extreme winter conditions in the nation, which can often last from October, when the land becomes a sea of white after the first snowfall, until May and sometimes early June, when spring finally arrives in North Dakota.
“As Warriors of the North, we take great pride in getting the mission done despite the harsh conditions,” said Col. Paul E. Bauman, the 319th ABW commander at Grand Forks AFB. “Our Airmen are our greatest asset and ensuring their safety in this climate is a top priority. I am extremely proud of the way our Airmen adapt and innovate to accomplish our mission each and every day. I am honored to lead such remarkable men and women.”
A member of the 5th Security Forces Squadron Delta Flight, awaits further instructions during a recapture exercise in the Weapons Storage Area at Minot Air Force Base, N.D. Jan. 30, 2014. Airmen in the area respondto a simulated security incident at a structure in the WSA with their fellow 5th SFS defenders to hone their skills in regards to recapture procedures. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Stephanie Sauberan)
Across the base, Staff Sgt. Victoria Dames, a 319th SFS military working dog handler, showed off the “dog booties” used to protect MWD Arco to keep his paws from being cut by ice and hardened snow. One night, during his first month after arriving at Grand Forks from Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana last winter, Capt. Kendall Benton, the 319th SFS operations officer, spent more than four hours rescuing motorists who had slid into the ditch on an icy Highway 2, between the city of Grand Forks and his home in Larimore.
About 200 miles west at Minot AFB, 94th Missile Maintenance Squadron members fight the elements to keep satellite and land-based communications available for crews working underground at missile sites. Members of the 91st Maintenance Operations Squadron often have to shovel their way just to get to missile sites to do their work a couple of hours from Minot AFB. When winter settles in at Minot, the maintainers sometimes leave the base in morning darkness, and by the time they return about eight hours later, it’s already dark again, the end of another one of North Dakota’s short winter days.
Airmen from the 5th Security Forces Squadron Delta Flight perform a security sweep during a recapture exercise in the Weapons Storage Area at Minot Air Force Base, N.D. Jan. 30, 2014. During every shift, Airmen perform a minimum of one exercise in the WSA to ensure they know the proper procedures should a crisis arise. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Stephanie Sauberan)
“They say our main mission in security forces is to provide uncompromised security for America’s strategic forces,” Houseman said. “That’s what we do, and we try not to let the weather bother us.”
Across base, the B-52 Stratofortresses sit on a flightline usually covered by snow for much of the winter. Maintainers in the 5th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron perform heavy maintenance, such as brake and tire changes on the B-52, taking advantage of work and rest cycles to help each other avoid frostbite and hypothermia. Breaks are encouraged because of the conditions on the flightline. When the conditions reach a certain point, as they did when the base faced minus 45 wind chill temperatures throughout a two-week period in February 2014, maintenance has to be temporarily shut down. Jobs that normally take six hours to complete in warmer weather take twice that time during the winter, said Senior Airman Dylan Walls, the 5th AMS aircraft assistant dedicated crew chief.
Senior Airman Steven Fisher, 5th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron weapons load crew members, prepare to move a Cluster Bomb Unit 103 at Minot Air Force Base, N.D., Feb. 10, 2014. B-52 weapons loaders are trained and certified to load a variety of nuclear and conventional munitions in support of combatant commander requirements. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jonathan Snyder)
While the missions are quite different, with Minot AFB remaining focused on the B-52, and the Global Hawk now the mission at Grand Forks AFB, both bases rely heavily on cold-weather clothing and the wingman concept to protect their Airmen during the harsh North Dakota winters.
Civil engineers keep the flightline cleared of snow, which can be especially challenging after a heavy snowstorm, like the blizzards that usually hammer the state each winter. The squadron is manned 24/7 from the first week of November through early April, with the addition of 15 extra winter overhire civilian employees, said Greg Stoik, the 319th CES horizontal section construction foreman.
“We are maintaining an active runway here, and we have to keep it as such,” Stoik said. “It has to be open at all times, and our mission is to keep the runway and taxiways open so when the Global Hawk and (unmanned aerial vehicles) are prepared, they can go.”
Airmen from the 91st Missile Security Forces “trip-out” to a missile alert facility in North Dakota, Feb. 12, 2015. Security forces have several layers of cold weather gear for warmth. The Humvees they travel in are heated, and they’re able to switch out if necessary so that individuals don’t have to stay in the cold for dangerously long periods of time. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Brittany Y. Bateman)
“The most important thing about security forces is our job doesn’t stop on account of the weather,” Benton said. “We do the exact same job regardless of the weather conditions because we have to. We don’t have a choice. But to mitigate that, we do our extra training – peer and leaders at all levels, we make sure people are dressing and layering appropriately for the cold.”
Just because the state enjoyed a considerably more temperate winter this year, Airmen at Grand Forks and Minot know better than to be complacent.
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