Jump to content

Whisky

Registered User
  • Posts

    13
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Whisky

  1. I finished up an AMLO assignment fairly recently.  You can look in Talent Marketplace  during the bidding window under 621 MSOS to see the majority of AMLO positions. This Squadron is located at McGuire under the CRW and EC and has ADCON over the AMLOs. This includes a few locations in Europe, the Pacific, as well as the bulk of positions that are CONUS at Army or Marine bases. There are a few positions in Europe and the Pacific that are ADCON under USAFE and PACAF.  Those positions tend to be exec heavy. I'd personally go for a 621 MSOS AMLO billet.  The positions under the MSOS vary greatly depending on unit. All AMLOs will be LZSO and DZCO trained, and perform DZ and LZ ops, frequency varying depending on unit. There's also quite a bit of work done with Army or Marine units in helping them Coordinate SAAMs, look up regs, communicate with TACC or AMD, prep cargo on occasion, and work as AMC Mobility liaisons during exercises.  Usually you'll sit in an Army or Marine G4 office, and also work with their G3s and G5s.

    Feel free to PM me if you'd like more specific locations, info or experiences. I can email you at your af.mil with an AMLO 101 PowerPoint that includes locations.  I wanted to at least reply and advertise the AMLO position as a good deal for the right people. With the stand-up of the 621 MSOS, promotion rates have been better overall. They usually are looking for 3rd assignment or IPs in their MWS at least.

    There is one deployment shared by the squadron in the middle east, 4 months long, and then various TDYs to support ops in Europe or exercises elsewhere.

    • Like 1
  2. As someone stationed in Japan that has seen a lot of military members denied for EFMP, I personally would call the gaining location myself and see what care is available at the location, and if it is covered and available, I would do everything possible to make the EFMP application as "clean" as possible.  Obviously you want to make sure your wife is taken care of and appropriate care is available, and hopefully she is doing well.  But I've seen people denied EFMP for very silly things, in my opinion.  A couple of weeks ago I was TDY in Hawaii and an Army Major we visited with was denied to bring his family to Hawaii, because his daughter had seen a counselor a couple times for depression. His wife is a medical professional, a nurse I think, and there's obviously plenty of care available in Hawaii. He was denied by EFMP and did a 2 year unaccompanied tour instead of a 3 year accompanied tour, his daughter who is now 18 feels guilty for stopping the PCS, and is moving out to Hawaii on her own for College next year anyway.

    In my opinion, EFMP has become a bloated, power hungry entity that abuses their power and doesn't care so much about the health of the force, but rather covering their a$$ for liability sake. They'll say no to reduce risk and liability for the DoD, vs looking to find healthcare solutions.

    Take that for what it's worth, but it's just one example of many similar examples I've seen in Japan.  

     

     

  3. On 5/14/2021 at 9:33 PM, BeefBears said:

     

    I also think AFPC has been intentionally quiet on the subject because they have no idea how to handle it. 

    I actually think this a major reason they haven't implemented the 5 year window.  They don't know how to handle the continuation/ twice passed over piece.

  4. 5 hours ago, jazzdude said:
    7 hours ago, CaptainMorgan said:

    Lump sum option pays the full amount, then a reduced amount each year for the length of the contract. I took an 8-year at 30k with 100k lump. It worked out to 100k the first year, then 20k a year for the next 7.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

    This was how it was explained to me before I signed. I guess that means finance is 0/2 so far on getting my bonus payments correct

    Huh, well let us know what your finance says. Seems like every finance can have a different answer on some things. I did the lump sum as well and received 35k for the following year and the contract amount was reduced by 35k respectively. Maybe I need to go to finance too. When I re-read the ACP wording, it seemed ambiguous about later installments, with only the 35k mentioned so I assumed that was how they were doing it. 

  5. 41 minutes ago, jazzdude said:

    Well, looks like I'll have to reach out to finance and fix this years bonus payment. Looks like they did deposit the whole $35K in one payment this year, but I took a lump sum up front so my annual payments should've been reduced this year.with

    With the lump sum option, I believe they do the lump sum first year, then 35k per year for the remaining years until the contract amount is paid.  So 35K year two (minus taxes) and so on for the remaining years until the contract amount reaches zero.  That would mean the 10 year contract amount would be paid to you in full the first 5-6 years of your contact in 35K yearly increments.  Which is actually better for investment.  It's confusing wording, but pretty sure that's how it works.

  6. I was a 17 guy at Travis awhile ago and had several friends over at the CRG and have several friends at the CRG now.  It's pretty diverse in what kind of jobs are available. Some of the squadrons are set to go basically stand up an expeditionary airfield anywhere. You could potentially deploy somewhere and be running DZs and LZs or possibly be in charge of multiple E's running an LZ. These squadrons are also often tasked with disaster relief. Going into Puerto Rico after a hurricane and getting an airport up and running for example. There's also a pretty big portion of them that run AOCs during disasters or contingencies.  I haven't heard any people at CRG not being busy. Lot's of exercises if they aren't doing real world ops. Travis has a squadron that specializes in South America ops, and McGuire has one that does a lot of Africom ops. The Beeliners have several CRG IPs that fly a lot of locals and carry their weight or more for local sorties. There are several C-17 guys that also just fly the minimum and maintain currency the best they can. It's a way to keep flying if you wanted.  From what I've heard, McGuire guys have a little harder time attaching to fly at the 6th. They still do, but several guys are attached to fly at Charleston from the sounds of it.

    Last point, from what I've heard there's a little rift between Phoenix guys and normal CRG guys. I've heard a couple say that the Phoenix guys get all the strats, leadership opportunities and awards while the non Phoenix guys are treated without the white gloves and tender care. I'm not on a leadership track so I wouldn't care about that, but if you care about that kind of thing it might be worth considering getting there via the Phoenix program.

  7. 2 hours ago, Mox said:

    Awesome. Thanks everyone for the input. Definitely a couple things to consider moving forward. My employer today stated that I didn’t qualify for MLOA because I’m still active duty and thus don’t qualify for USERRA protection. Said USERRA applies to Guard/Reserves and I would have to apply for PLOA. Still sifting thru the legal stuff to see if it’s valid. 

    Definitely look into it more. Your employer is incorrect. The laws for MLOA cover active duty.  We had several guys in our C-17 squadron that came back to active duty for 3 years and are on mil leave with major airlines. If you're on hold just waiting for training for your airline indefinitely, I can't see why the airline would have an issue.

    My guess is the furloughs and bankruptcies are on their way for the airlines unfortunately. Even with bailouts. The flights look so much worse than after 9/11.  At least the gas is cheap for them though.

    Take a look at the link Smokin posted. It also has provisions in there for national emergencies etc, which may help your case given the current Corona crisis.

  8. 12 hours ago, brickhistory said:

    I think your math is inflated by several digits, but as I premised, what is the cut line?

    Some, worst case in my opinion, 20,000-30,000 in the U.S., another 50,000 worldwide deaths or a literal stopped economy, both ours and Western Europe?  BTW, China is cranking its factories back up and Russia never stopped.

    We are printing money by the non-metric sh1t ton-load and the stock market is still tanking.  Small businesses do not have the reserves to stand more than 1-2 weeks of not getting customers.  Even if we opened for business tomorrow, thousands of mom-and-pop's are gone.  They'll eventually be replaced assuming there's still an economy to make it worthwhile to try.

    As I said, I don't have the answer(s).  More/gooder medical supplies/meds, yea!  Shutting everyone up behind closed doors?  Not so sure.

    And I'm (using the royal "I," not me personally) losing my first, second, fourth, sixth, and seventh amendment rights because somebody said so.  Is that us?

    I'm agin that.

    I agree with Brickhistory here. 40,000 people die on highways in the US every year.  We don't shut those down, we accept a certain level of risk and try to reduce the deaths. I'm not saying we shouldn't do anything to mitigate risk and try to reduce the curve, but I think history will judge that we were too aggressive on this. That the cure was more dangerous than the disease. Worldwide depression seems very likely with our current course of action. Pour money into the healthcare system and a vaccine with the economy continuing to function and pay for it if instead. 

    I also may be mistaken, but I think the CFR will be drastically reduced in the future, when they finally start mass testing. So many people are asymptomatic, and they're strict with who they test. As a result, the number of critically ill and deaths  to cases is artificially high because the denominator in that ratio is very under reported worldwide.

    Of course every time someone loses a loved one, it's tragic. But I think we can do the best we can to protect the vulnerable, without shutting down the country completely.

    • Upvote 1
  9. 23 hours ago, brickhistory said:

    Separate but related, it will interesting to see how big the baby boom generated from the industrialized world's self-isolation will be.

    Will replace all the morts plus some, I bet.

    It will be interesting. I vote we call this new generation "Coronials" and in thirteen years we'll refer to them as "quaranteens."

    • Like 2
    • Upvote 1
  10. Have you tried calling Cobra Kai? Me and 3 other bros from the squadron got our ATPs there 2 weeks ago. They are busy, so that may explain the delay in returning e-mail, but they are not a fly by night operation. I would try to call as well. 2 former German ENJJPT IP's. The Baron is a nice plane to fly and all of us felt very well prepared for the check ride.

    A buddy of mine and I just did Kobra Kai back in July and would recommend it.  You don't get a type rating, but it was quick and got the job done.  Day one-academics Day two-you fly and then watch your buddy fly from the back. Day three-same as day two. Day four checkride.  There was a lot of information crammed into a week, but they did a great job preparing you for the checkride.  I'm currently in RPA's and got an extra ride to warm my hands up on day one, so they're accommodating.   All of the students were used to planes with much more automation, but we all were well prepared for the checkride.  If they don't answer your email, I'd definitely call them. Martin is the lead instructor there and he'll get back to you or usually answer when you call.

×
×
  • Create New...