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Friday, May 17, 2013 THE RED 7 .NET 7th Group holds Visitors Day PAGE 2 ALSO INSIDE Briefs .............................. 4 Philpott............................6 Commissaries feel hiring freeze, fear new budget cuts PAGE 6 General visits 7th Group PAGE 3

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Page 1: F r i d a y , M a y 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 T H E R E D 7 . n E T …site.nwfdailynews.com/iframedContent/the-red7-newspaper/...2013/05/17  · members can register to win $100 VISA gift cards

F r i d a y , M a y 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 T H E R E D 7 . n E T

7th Group holds Visitors Day

Page 2

aLSO INSIDe

Briefs...............................4

Philpott............................6

Commissaries feel hiring freeze, fear new budget cuts

Page 6

general visits 7th group

Page 3

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By.DUSTY.RICKETTS

Northwest Florida Daily News

EGLIN.AFB — The Army 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne) opened its doors Wednesday, May 15,

to show the public what it does and how it does it.

Visitors Day attracted about 2,000 people to the Special Forces’ cantonment south of Crestview. The event was part of the group’s Red Empire Week, designed to reunite Soldiers with their families after year-long de-ployments to Afghani-stan and to show apprecia-tion for the community.

“My intent, my hope is that we strengthen the special bonding commit-ment between the 7th Special Forces Group, Team Eglin and the Northwest Florida communities,” said Col. Antonio Fletcher, the unit’s commander. “We are truly thankful for the amount of sup-port the 7th Group has received over the past several years. Many of you have given of your time, your energy and in many cases even your money to ensure our families had a positive experi-ence as part of this community.

“The partnership we enjoy with this community and many of the leadership you see here today is unmatched and has greatly im-proved our lives in the 7th Group family,” he added.

The 7th Group moved from Fort Bragg, N.C., to its 500 acre,

$500 million cantonment about two years ago.

Wednesday’s Visitors Day featured about 15 displays for the public to inspect the weapons, ve-hicles and technologies Soldiers use and to let them explain their day-to-day duties.

Lt. Col. James Brownlee, public affairs officer with the 7th Group, said this week was a per-fect time to host a Visitors Day. The first and second battalions recently returned from Afghani-stan. The fourth battalion is there

now and part of the third bat-talion is in South America.

“This is the first time in a very, very long time that we’ve had the major-ity of our Soldiers at home at once,” Brownlee said. “We wanted to do some-thing to

open the doors to the public, to welcome them in, show them a little bit of what we do.”

One of the most moving scenes of the day — and the part that drew the largest and longest applause — was a presentation of military medals organized by the Special Forces Association Chapter 7, a group that supports S oldiers and families of the 7th Group.

Last December, Maureen Johnson returned from church to find her home in Walton County had been burglarized and her late husband Verlon Johnson’s military medals had been stolen. The burglary occurred about two months after his death and about six months after he had received

new medals.Maureen Johnson said her

husband would have appreciated the ceremony.

“He had just gotten them back in June (of last year) after losing them in Hurricane Ivan,” John-

son said. “Having them disappear again was very hard, but he did get to see them again before he died in October.

“He’d be very pleased, very honored (to have them back),” she added.

Page 2 | THE RED 7 | Friday, May 17, 2013

Year No. 3 edition No. 18

The Red 7 is published by the Northwest Florida Daily News, a pri-vate firm in no way connected with the 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne) or the U.S. Army.

This publication’s content is not necessarily the official view of, or endorsed by, the U.S. govern-ment, the Department of Defense, the Depart-ment of the Army or 7th Special Forc-es Group (Airborne). The official news source for 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne) is http://www.soc.mil/.

The appearance of advertising in this publication does not constitute endorsement by the U.S. govern-ment, the Department of Defense, the Department of the Army, 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne) or the Northwest Florida Daily News for products or services advertised. Ev-erything advertised in this publication shall be made available for purchase, use or patronage without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national ori-gin, age, marital status, physical handi-cap, political affiliation or any other nonmerit factor of the purchaser, user or patron. Editorial content is edited, prepared and provided by the North-west Florida Daily News.

Mail2 Eglin Parkway nE,

Fort Walton Beach, FL 32548

News(850) 315-4450

Fax: (850) 863-7834e-mail:

[email protected]

advertising863-1111 Ext. 1322

ConTaCTUsTracey Steele

Editor315-4472

[email protected]

Susan Fabozzinews assistant

[email protected]

.mARK.KULAw.| Daily News

Niceville High School’s Opus One group sings the National Anthem to kick off Wednesday’s event.

.mARK.KULAw.| Daily News

Master Sgt. Anthony Luciano shows a M-110 sniper rifle to Cody Dewitt during Visitors Day at the Army 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne)’s cantonment.. Dewitt was interested in joining the Special Forces.

7th Group opens its gatesabout 2,000 people got a peek at the cantonment during Visitors Day

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Friday, May 17, 2013 | THE RED 7 | Page 3

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Lt. Gen. Charles T. Cleveland presented The Purple Heart Medal to Staff Sgt. Enrique Zelaya , Staff Sgt. Joshua White, Sgt. 1st Class David Valdez and Sgt. 1st Class Joshua Burnette for wounds received in action while in Afghanistan at the Liberty Chapel on May 8. Cleveland is the Commanding General of the United States Army Special Operations Command and visited the 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne) compound.

U.S..ARmY

Lt. Gen. Charles T. Cleveland presented a promotion certificate to Lt. Col. Rafael A. Rodriguez after his promotion from Major at the Liberty Chapel on May 8.

general visits 7th group

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Page 4 | THE RED 7 | Friday, May 17, 2013

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From.staff.reports

aero Club Faa Private Pilot Course

FAA Private Pilot Ground School starts May 27. Class will meet from 5:30 – 8:30 p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays at Embry Riddle Aeronautical Uni-versity (Crestview Campus) 5210B, South Ferdon Bou-levard, Crestview. Open to all 7th Group Soldiers and dependents. Cost is $350 for class and $267 for books/materials. To register, con-tact Michael Pahel at [email protected] or call 850-398-2651.

Khobar Towers Memorial Ceremony

Khobar Towers 17th An-niversary Memorial Cer-emony will be held from 8 – 8:30 a.m. on June 25 at No-mad Way, 33rd Fighter Wing, Eglin Air Force Base.

Chapel LibraryThe Eglin Chapel library

items are now located at the Chapel Center. We have over 250 items to in-clude DVD entertainment, DVD Bible studies, mar-riage seminars on DVD, books on various topics, audio cd’s and a large Veg-

gie Tale collection on DVD. There are also materials for singles and building and maintaining relationships. For information, contact Dan Sullivan at 882-2111.

Fishing Trip set for June 8

The Protestant Men of the Eglin Chapel will host a fishing trip at 7 a.m. June 8 in Destin. Cost is $20 for active duty and $30 for all others. Please RSVP by June 1 to Dennis Moore at 496-9248.

aFCea Scholarship The Emerald Coast

Chapter of the Armed Forces Communications and Elec-tronics Association (AFCEA) will be awarding a total of $9,000 in scholarships: one $2,000 scholarship, two $1,500 scholarships, and four - $1,000 scholarships in August 2013. AFCEA is also accepting nominations from Science teachers with a chance to win a $1,000 STEM scholarship to use in support of your school’s science program. The dead-line for these submissions is July 31. For information, visit http://emeraldcoast.af-ceachapter.org and view the Educational Info section, or e-mail [email protected].

Celebrate the First on First

Street eventCatholic Charities invites

the public to join them on Saturday, June 1 for a family-friendly event that will offer fun for people of all ages.

The “Celebrate the First on First Street” event will take place from 8 a.m. to noon at the Catholic Chari-ties office at 11 First Street S.E. The morning’s schedule will include a “Hidden Trea-sures” rummage sale, arts and crafts, hot dogs, chil-dren’s activities, a fire truck and the “Safe Assured ID” service presented by the Oka-loosa County Sheriff Office. This service is free of charge and includes a free ID kit that contains data that helps law enforcement in the case of a missing child. The mini CD includes a streaming video of your child, digital voice recog-nition information and all ten digital fingerprints.

Catholic Charities is cur-rently accepting donations for

the rummage sale. For more info call Kelly at 850-737-0864.

Cookout for military appreciation

In honor of “Military Ap-preciation Month” 105.5 The Wolf/WYZB and 99ROCK/WKSM, in conjunction with the Lee Automotive Group, are serving up a free steak lunch courtesy of Logan’s Roadhouse for our area’s military members from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. May 17, at Liza Jackson Park.

The Wolf and 99ROCK on-air personalities will serve the free sirloin steaks, tossed salad, over-loaded mashed potatoes and Logan’s rolls to the first 300 current or past military service members. Buffalo Rock Pepsi and Blue Bell Ice Cream will round

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Friday, May 17, 2013 | THE RED 7 | Page 5

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For information or to be a part of the 6th Annual Mili-tary Appreciation Cook-Out, call the office 850-243-2323, The Wolf Studio at 850-244-1055 or the 99ROCK studio at 850-243-3699.

FC Dallas youth soccer tryouts

FC Dallas Emerald Coast, a youth select soc-cer club, will be holding tryouts for the upcoming select season. Tryouts are for both boys and girls teams in the ages U9 to U18. Tryout dates will be May 20-23 at Twin Oaks in Niceville and May 25 at Morgan Sports Center in Destin. Additional infor-mation is available online at www.emeraldcoastunited.com.

brIeFS FrOM Page 4

wASHINGTON (AFNS) — Beneficiaries enrolled in TRICARE Reserve Select or TRICARE Retired Reserve who pay monthly premiums by check must switch to an electronic form of payment by May 31 to avoid losing coverage.

TRICARE will only ac-cept monthly premium payments using recurring automatic payments by credit or debit card, or by recurring electronic funds transfer from a linked bank account. To avoid confusion, beneficiaries should verify that their bank sends EFT payments electronically.

The Defense Manpower Data Center notified current TRR and TRS beneficiaries directly by email, and new

beneficiaries were informed in their welcome package information when enrolling.

Electronic payments streamline account manage-ment and ensure continuous coverage for beneficiaries. Failure to pay premiums by the due date results in ter-mination of coverage.

Beneficiaries can contact their regional contractor to set up automatic payments and get more information.

“There are still a consid-erable number of Air Force reservists in the west region who have yet to establish

their automated payment option with TRICARE for their monthly TRS/TRR premiums,” said James F. Walsh, the Air Force Re-serve chief of Benefits and Entitlements Policy. “Those members who do not have this requirement estab-lished by the deadline will have their coverage sus-pended and possibly termi-nated for 12 months come June 1.”

Contact information for each region is available online at www.TRICARE.mil/contacts..

Beneficiaries sign up for TRICaRE automatic payment by May 31

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850-736-9931email: [email protected]

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Page 6 | THE RED 7 | Friday, May 17, 2013

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Base commissaries face turbulent times as staff vacancies swell under a fed-eral hiring freeze, employee furloughs remain a worry and the Defense Com-missary Agency (DeCA) digests budget guidance for fiscal 2015 that will force new efficiencies on stores and possibly deeper cuts to their operations.

The guidance directs at least a 5 percent ($70 mil-lion) cut to the $1.4 billion annual taxpayer subsidy needed to run 252 base gro-cery stores. It also directs DeCA to develop options to accommodate deeper cuts, as much as one-third of the subsidy, without impacting commissaries overseas.

The commissary benefit has been targeted often over recent decades, usual-ly when budget officials are

told to iden-tify quick savings or a new study concludes military shopping discounts are a costly anachro-nism for a modern

force in an age when most patrons reside off base.

In the gloomy fiscal time of budget sequestration, there are some real, near-term factors threatening commissary services and patron access. There also is the more distant rumble that subsidies for stores might be slashed, which could deeply impact state-side shopping and, critics charge, even fumble a com-mitment to leave commis-

sary operations overseas unchanged.

Watching these events closely is Patrick B. Nixon, a former DeCA director who now is president of the American Logistics As-sociation. ALA represents manufacturers and vendors doing business with base stores.

Nixon said the most immediate threat to com-missaries, where shoppers realize savings of more than 30 percent over com-mercial prices, is a federal hiring freeze that took ef-fect stateside Feb. 4.

A hiring freeze hits com-missaries harder than most other federal workplaces because 40 percent of store workers are military spouses or teenagers. That means high turnover and deeper job vacancy rates

as families move to new as-signments, leaving jobs that can’t be filled and relocating near commissaries that can’t rehire them.

“There are some stores whose staffing level is down below 70 percent because they can’t hire replace-ments,” Nixon said.

He worries that the hir-ing freeze alone could force stores to reduce operating hours.

“We cannot speak to percentages of staffing lev-els right now,” said DeCA spokesman Kevin L. Rob-inson from headquarters at Fort Lee, Va. “However, the hiring freeze has affected us,” he said, noting staff turnover.

“The most significant ef-fect has been our inability to hire store-level positions … to ensure that product is on

the shelf and that cashiers are in place to check out customers,” Robinson said. “So we are working hard to maximize flexibility of our workforce by reschedul-ing employees and shifting them around … to serve our customers during peak shopping periods.”

Commissaries also would be impacted by any Defense-wide civilian em-ployee furloughs. In March, after Congress finally passed a defense appropria-tions bill for this fiscal year, a tentative plan to furlough most Defense employees for 21 days was cut to 14 through September. Since then, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has said plans are being reconsidered.

There is hope Congress will grant enough relief from the across-the-board

cut formula of sequestra-tion that Defense employee furloughs can be avoided through a mid-year budget reprogramming request now working.

If that doesn’t happen, commissaries will be closed an extra day per week dur-ing the furlough period. So if employees are to be fur-loughed 14 days, stateside commissaries would be closed an added day for 14 weeks.

“We are cautiously opti-mistic that they will find a solution to the furlough is-sue and that won’t happen,” said Nixon. “But that’s our major concern right now: furloughs and the hiring freeze.”

For fiscal 2014, the Obama administration

Commissaries feel hiring freeze, fear new budget cuts

Tom Philpott

See buDgeT Page 7

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Friday, May 17, 2013 | THE RED 7 | Page 7

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has proposed full funding for commissaries, which signals strong support for the benefit, Nixon said. But the defense budget request doesn’t reflect $52 billion in cuts from sequestration which will take effect in 2014 if, as expected, Repub-licans and Democrats con-tinue to refuse to negotiate a significant debt–reduc-tion deal.

For fiscal 2015, budget clouds over commissar-ies darken more. Vari-ous internal studies are eyeing the commissary subsidy for budget sav-ings. More significantly, DeCA must follow a new “resource management directive” in shaping its 2015 budget that assumes a 5 percent cut to its an-nual appropriation. Nixon said commissaries likely could absorb a $70 million hit with help from industry partners and by executing new efficiencies.

However, part two of the directive is worrisome, Nixon said. DeCA is to prepare a series of options for reducing the taxpayer subsidy by up to one-third

while fully protecting store operations overseas. That presents a challenge if the intent is to keep stores’ current business model, he said.

The business model, set in law, is to sell goods at cost, collect a 5 percent surcharge from patrons to cover new store con-struction and capital im-provements, and also use appropriated dollars mostly for staff salaries and over-seas transportation costs.

The model can still work if the appropriation is cut 5 percent, Nixon said. But cut more and a system widely recognized as ef-ficiently run will have to cut into the bone by reducing operating hours and clos-ing some stores, starting in about 15 areas with multiple commissaries such Seattle-Tacoma, San Antonio, Washington, D.C., Hawaii, Fayetteville, N.C., and Hampton Roads, Va.

“They didn’t build those commissaries on a whim. The need was there,” said Kathy Moakler, director of government relations for National Military Family

Association. “But if they don’t have the staff to run them, people will get frus-trated. Lord knows we wait in long lines at the commis-sary already.”

If shopper experiences deteriorate with longer checkout lines and crowd-ed parking lots, stateside commissary patrons could shop off base, ignoring commissary discounts. Falling sales stateside would ultimately affect overseas stores, which are more costly to operate, Nixon said. Advocates fear a kind of death spiral to a prized military benefit.

Factors in favor of commissaries weather-ing another budget storm, Nixon said, include strong support from Congress and commitments from the president and first lady Michelle Obama to expand job opportunities and healthy lifestyles for veter-ans and military families.

Tom.Philpott.is.a.syndicated.columnist..You.may.write.to.him.at.military.Update,.P.O..Box.231111,.Centreville,.VA.20120-1111;[email protected]..

buDgeT FrOM Page 6

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