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Friday, fEBRUARY 6, 2015
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Osprey Landing taking off
1SOSFS Airman
first to complete
ATF Odor test
PAGE 3
Page 2
AFSOC medics
evaluate device
Page 4
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Friday, February 6, 2015 | Hurlburt Warrior | Page Page | Hurlburt Warrior | Friday, February 6, 2015
New Hurlburt housing project taking shape
ContactUs
Tracey Steele
Editor
315-4472
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By KELLY HUMPHREY
Northwest Florida Daily News
Susan Fabozzi
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315-4450
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2 Eglin Parkway NE,
Fort Walton Beach, FL 32548
Airman 1st Class Andrea Posey | USAF
A construction worker installs siding on one of the homes.
over the next five years. The
estimated cost of the total
project is $50 million.
Osprey Landing is designed for senior non-commissioned officers. The
homes are all three- or fourbedroom, ranging in size
from approximately 1,900 to
2,200 square feet.
“We’re very proud of
these houses,” said Bob McDonald, the director of construction for Corvias. “They
are some of the most energy
efficient homes we’ve ever
built.”
The homes in Osprey
Landing will have sodded
front lawns and sprinkler
systems, and will have
fenced back yards. Unlike
Hurlburt’s current military
housing, which is more than
50 years old, the new houses
will include two-car garages
instead of one-car carports.
The neighborhood,
which can only be accessed
through the base’s Soundside entrance gate, will in-
clude a volleyball court, a
pavilion, sidewalks and nature trails.
McDonald predicts that
the first families will move
into Osprey Landing in
June.
1SOSFS Airman first to complete ATF Odor test
By Airman 1st Class
Andrea Posey
1st Special Operations Wing
Public Affairs
S
taff Sgt. Terrell Beasley,
1st Special Operations
Security Forces Squadron
military working dog handler, is the first Air Force Special Operations Command military dog handler to complete
the Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms
and Explosive, National Odor
Recognition Testing. NORT is
familiarizing, training and certifying detector dogs on the most
common explosives involved in
Homeland terrorist threats.
The Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, National Canine Division
trains explosives and accelerant
detection dogs for federal, state,
local, international law enforcement and fire investigation
agencies. Congress has recognized the NORT certification as
the proficiency standard used
for effective canine explosives
detection, according to ATF.
Beasley traveled to the superdome in New Orleans, La.
to complete the training and
testing.
Beasley’s canine partner
had to be taught and tested on
seven odors he’d never been
exposed to before. The process
usually takes two months; however, this training was completed in just three days.
“Knowing your dog’s behavior is crucial, if you want
to meet their standards,” said
Beasley. “My team’s success
is a testament to the training I
receive at my kennel.”
Beasley feels it is vital to
take advantage of opportunities
presented outside of work, and
important for outside agencies
to witness Hurlburt dog teams’
capabilities.
“I wanted to complete this
training to advance myself and
my dog,” said Beasley. “We
were the only military team in
attendance, so our presence
alone was a big deal.”
Beasley said the training
gave him a better understanding of what his dog is capable of
and what they can accomplish
together. He believes this training will benefit Hurlburt because his military working dog
is familiar with new explosive
scents that will allow him to
keep people safe and continue
the mission.
IT’S TIME TO
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When you join the Air National Guard, you can cross-train for a new career.
With more than 200 specialties to choose from, you’ll have access to the
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Hurlburt Pharmacy now accepts e-scripts
By 1st Special Operations Medical Group
Hurlburt Pharmacy now accepts electronic
prescriptions from off-base providers.
Electronic prescriptions are sent over a
secure network immediately to the pharmacy
with no need to drop off a paper prescription.
Patients can request that their off-base providers send an e-prescription directly to the 1st
Special Operations Medical Group, which will
be activated once they check in at the pharmacy
window.
At this time, Hurlburt Pharmacy does not
accept electronic prescriptions for controlled
substances and still requires prescriptions for
these types of medications to be written on
tamper-resistant paper. Feel free to contact the
pharmacy for any questions at (850) 881-2133.
1134246
Year No. 9, Edition No. 6
Airman 1st Class Andrea Posey | USAF
Corvias Military Living employees give a tour of the new homes being built in Osprey Landing.
1134384
Hurlburt Warrior is published by the
Northwest Florida Daily News, a private
firm in no way connected with the U.S.
Air Force.
This publication’s content is not
necessarily
the official
view of, or
endorsed
by, the U.S.
government,
the Department of Defense, the Department of the
Air Force or Hurlburt Field. The official
news source for Hurlburt Field is www.
hurlburt.af.mil.
The appearance of advertising in this
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Air Force, Hurlburt Field or the Northwest
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or patron. Editorial content is edited,
prepared and provided by the Northwest
Florida Daily News.
Airman 1st Class Andrea Posey | USAF
Staff Sgt. Terrell Beasley, 1st Special Operations Security Forces Squadron military working dog handler,
stands with his dog at Hurlburt Filed, Jan. 29.
Osprey Landing is taking off.
The new military housing
area under construction on
the south side of U.S. Highway 98 is starting to look like
a neighborhood. Of the 63
houses planned for the community, 12 are in the framing
stage and another 20 or so
have slabs poured.
At least four of the homes
already have siding. Looking on from the street, you
can almost imagine a military family living inside.
Corvias Military Living
began construction on the
neighborhood last fall. The
project is just the first phase
of what will ultimately be 404
new military houses built
Friday, February 6, 2015 | Hurlburt Warrior | Page Page | Hurlburt Warrior | Friday, February 6, 2015
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Senior Airman Joseph Tapp, 1st Special Operation Medical Support Squadron lab technician, tests the capabilities
of the EPOC, a portable blood analyzer, on Hurlburt Field,
Dec. 17, 2014. During the evaluation, personnel conducted various tests on the EPOC to see how it matched
to the iSTAT, a blood analyzer model currently employed
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850-374-0553 • Open 7 days
Give Parents a Break
is from 9 a.m. 3 p.m. Feb.
14. An Air Force Aid Society sponsored program
that provides childcare for
spouses of deployed members, single parents, or families under stress. Requires
a referral by a First Sergeant, Chaplain, CDC or the
A&FRC. A&FRC/884-5441
The purpose of this
certification is to formally
recognize senior enlisted
members advanced level
of education, experience
in leadership/management and professional
accomplishments. For information visit CCAFs website http://www.au.af.
mil/au/ccaf/certifications.
Youth Baseball and
Spring Clinics
Youth Baseball registration is now through Feb. 28
for ages 5-12. The cost is $50
per child. Practices begin
the second week of March,
games start April 4. This is
a combined Hurlburt Field
and Eglin Youth Sports
league. Youth must have an
up-to-date physical.
Youth Spring
Break Clinics
2118308
$
In our ongoing quality
improvement by Council of
Accreditation (COA), the
School-Age program needs
parents to assist in the
Quality Improvement Team
(QIT). The team is required
to meet once a quarter,
dates & times to be agreed
upon. If you wish to participate on the QIT team, email
[email protected] at your
earliest convenience. We
would like to have our meeting in Feb. 2015, date TBA.
For information, check out
the FSS Wire.
CCAF’s Manager
Certification
magnoliagrillfwb.com
Individual
Give Parents a
Break
Registration is open now
– March 13 for Tennis and
Archery Clinics. Cost is $25
per youth per clinic. There
are 2 sessions available
starting in March. Youth
February First
Friday
February First Friday is
from 4-7 p.m. Feb. 6. Let the
good times roll at our Mardi
Gras themed First Friday.
Free food while supplies
last, bouncy houses and
games for the whole family.
The Soundside/884-7507
Presidents’ Day
5K Run
Presidents’ Day 5K Run
is Feb. 12. Check in 6 a.m.,
run starts at 7 a.m. Run begins and ends at the Aderholt Fitness Center. The
event is free. Aderholt Fitness Center/884-6884
The Lincoln Special
The Lincoln Special is
from 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. Feb.
12. Bowl 2 games for $5 including shoes. Hurlburt
Lanes/884-6941
Sunday Family Day
Special
Sunday ’s are quality family time at the Golf
Course. Groups play for
$39, Sunday after 1 p.m.
Groups consist of 2 to 4
golfers, with one golfer being under 18 years old and
related to one of the group
members. Gator Lakes Golf
Course/884-2251
2-Hole, 2-Person Scramble. Shotgun Start at 10
a.m. Register now – Feb.
13. $23 per person includes
cart, green fee, lunch and
prizes. Gator Lakes Golf
Course/881-2251
2-Person Scramble
2-Person Scramble is
set for Feb. 21 with an 8
a.m. Shotgun Start. Register now – Feb. 19. Entry
is $15, plus green and cart
fees. Lunch will be provided. Gator Lakes Golf
Course/881-2251
Sweetheart Scotch
Doubles
Sweetheart Scotch
Doubles is at 5:30 p.m.
Feb. 21. Grab your sweetheart, or regular bowling
partner, and bowl for $20
per couple. Registration
is open from Feb. 2 - 20.
Teams will alternate balls
within the same frame.
Hurlburt Lanes/884-6941
CLEP/DSST Testing
resumed
Testing is at 8 a.m. and
11:30 a.m., Tuesday and
Thursday at the Base Education Center, Room B. Call
or stop by with questions
884-6724.
VA website
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see how little cooling the
EPOC requires compared
to the iSTAT,” said Tech. Sgt.
Daniel Ingles, 1st Special
Operation Medical Support
Squadron lab technician.
Ingles noted the iSTAT
cartridge has to be used
within minutes of being removed from cooling temperatures. The EPOC card can
be left unrefrigerated for up
to 24 hours after removal.
“Having a card that can
be left unrefrigerated for longer periods means deployed
medics won’t have to carry
extra refrigeration equipment just to use the EPOC
card,” said Lt. Col. Luna Marybeth, 1st SOMDSS diagnostics and therapeutic flight
commander. “This means
our medics have a smaller
footprint in the field.”
In coordination with the
Air Force Medical Evaluation Support Activity, the
final decision on whether or
not to actually implement
EPOC blood analyzers is
slated to be made after final formal testing later this
year.

In the near future, Air
Commandos may be able to
provide fast blood analysis to
their fellow wingmen on the
battlefield.
Medical personnel from
the 1st Special Operations
Medical Group and Air
Force Special Operations
Command recently began
evaluating the Alere EPOC,
a portable blood analyzer, on
Hurlburt Field.
Portable blood analyzers
are able to perform basic
blood analyzers can assist in
prioritizing some casualties,
and additionally guide treatments until the patient can
get to surgery or evacuated
to a higher level of medical
care.”
During the evaluation,
personnel conducted various operational tests on the
EPOC to see how it matched
to the iSTAT, a blood analyzer model currently employed throughout the Air
Force.
“We’re conducting [evaluations] of the EPOC to see
if it’s a feasible tool for our
SOF medical community,”
said Joseph Montalvo, Air
Force Special Operations
Command medical Technology manager. “The overall
goal is to be lighter and leaner, and in this case bring our
medical capabilities closer
to the point of injury.”
One of the biggest differences between the devices
noted by Hurlburt medical
personnel was in the test
cartridges used to analyze
blood samples.
“It was surprising to
Programs/884-6355
Drive
1st Special Operations Wing
Public Affairs
lab tests outside of medical
facilities such as measuring
blood gases and electrolytes
in several minutes using a
minimal amount of blood.
In the special operations
medical community, its main
uses are trauma and airway
management.
“The more information
we have, the better we can
take care of someone,” said
Tech Sgt. Britton Adams,
1st Special Operations Support Squadron independent
medical technician. “Being
at the forefront of deployed
environments, we may have
limited capabilities and
equipment. Some basic labs
assessments provided by
2118544
By Staff Sgt.
Kentavist P. Brackin
From staff reports
Gulf Shore
AFSOC medics evaluate innovative diagnostics device
warrior Briefs
Friday, February 6, 2015 | Hurlburt Warrior | Page Page | Hurlburt Warrior | Friday, February 6, 2015
coverage gaps because
contractors set physician
fees too low. Relying on
commercial insurance
would improve access,
speed referrals for specialty care, save millions of dollars in administrative costs
and leave beneficiaries
more satisfied, the commission predicts.
The commission would
leave unchanged TRICARE for Life, the golden
supplement to Medicare
that elderly retirees have
prized for a dozen years.
Working-age military
retirees and families, however, would fare less well.
Initially they would have to
pay five percent of health
plan premiums. That cost
share would grow by one
percentage point a year
over 15 years so that retirees under age 65 eventually
pay 20 percent of health
insurance costs. The costs
would stop when eligible
for Medicare and TRICARE for Life.
Commissioners say
beneficiaries, from during
their site visits and public
hearings, expressed a desire for more health care
choices than the ponderous
TRICARE program can
provide.
The retirement plan
they propose for new entrants and for any current
members drawn to its
features would still provide
an immediate although
reduced annuity after 20 or
more years’ service. But
among its new features
would be a Thrift Savings
Plan with government
matching of member conSee commission page 7
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from military and veterans
associations. One would impact many of the more than
423,000 members who have
elected to transfer GI Bill
benefits to family members
in return for serving longer.
The transferred benefit now
includes a housing stipend
equal to monthly housing
allowance locally for a midgrade enlisted member.
The commission says that
stipend shouldn’t be paid to
family member students after June 2017 even if it was
part of the original deal.
Next week: Commissioners present and defend
these proposals and more
before the Senate and
House armed services
committees.
Tom Philpott is a syndicated
columnist. You may write to him
at Military Update, P.O. Box
231111, Centreville, VA 201201111; or at [email protected].
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to be careful consumers
of health care. They are
not today, the report says.
TRICARE Prime users, for
example, make 55 percent
more outpatient visits than
do civilians enrolled in
HMOs who have to cover
co-pays out of pocket.
Participating insurance
plans would have to include
military treatment facilities
in their provider networks.
Patients and plans would
be enticed to use on-base
care with offers of reduced
co-pays and fee reimbursements, particularly for
complex medical cases that
keep wartime skills sharp.
TRICARE administrative costs are excessive,
the report says, and yet too
many beneficiaries don’t
get timely care or quality care. Also, TRICARE
provider networks have
2111944
Tom
Philpott
Program (FEHBP) for
civilians. Indeed the Office
of Personnel Management,
which administers FEHBP,
would also run the military
plans. But rather than
saddle active duty families with the same costs
paid by civilians – roughly
28 percent as premiums
– they would receive a new
two-part Basic Allowance
for Health Care (BAHC)
to cover at least most of
their new health insurance
costs.
One part would be paid
to the selected insurance
plan directly and cover
member premiums for an
average-priced plan. Part
two of BAHC, to cover
co-pays and deductibles,
would go to members to
use as they choose. The
intent of those dollars is to
incentivize military families
of Survivor Benefit Plan
payments for thousands of
widows who also receive VA
Dependency and Indemnity
Compensation (DIC). But
it would give retirees the
option of paying higher SBP
premiums to ensure that
their surviving spouses, if
deemed eligible for DIC,
would also receive full SPB.
Commission ideas to
“safeguard” the Post-9/11
GI Bill could spark some
of the sharpest protests
2077822
On retirement,
current
force members could
stay under
their High3 plan. But
the commission
forecasts
40 percent
of them, if given a chance,
would replace that plan
offering no benefits before
20 years’ service with a
“blended” plan that lowers
annuities for careerists
but offers some retirement
savings to the 83 percent
of service members who
leave short of 20 years.
That menu of health
insurance offerings to the
military would be similar
to the Federal Employees
Health Benefits Insurance
and subsistence. They also
unanimously recommend
streamlining, not dismantling, commissary and exchange systems to preserve
current on-base shopping
discounts.
Other recommendations
would strengthen support
of families with more childcare and improved access
to services for special needs
children.
The commission doesn’t
endorse ending the offset
2111751
The Military Compensation and Retirement Modernization Commission is
urging President Obama to
endorse and Congress to
enact sweeping changes to
military health insurance
and retirement options to
“empower” service members to make choices that
would drive down compensation costs.
The panel’s final
report makes 15 recommendations that, if fully
implemented, would cut
personnel spending for the
departments of Defense
and Veterans Affairs by $12
billion a year. The most surprising idea is to replace
the triple-option TRICARE
program for military
families and working-age
retirees with a selection of
commercial health insurance plans.
tributions up to five percent
of monthly basic pay. This
would be portable like 401k
plans in the private sector.
TSP would vest after only
two years and members
could roll it into civilian
employer 401ks on leaving
service.
Also, 12 years into a military career, members would
receive a lump-sum “continuation” payment, equal to at
least two-and-a-half months
of basic pay, more if they
have a critical skill. To take
the cash, members would
have to agree to serve four
more years. Presumably
16 years in, most careerists
would decide to serve for
at least 20 years to gain the
immediate annuity. But
with the new plan retiring
members would have more
choices.
They could draw an immediate annuity based on 2
percent (not the current 2.5
percent) of average basic
pay for each year served; or
accept a lump sum amount
and a smaller annuity; or
accept a full cash out and
forego any military annuity
until they age into social
security.
At that point, military
retired pay would start and
equal the retired pay of their
peers who elected to draw
full annuities since time of
retirement.
The nine-member commission, including two
retired generals and four
former members of Congress, endorses current
basic pay tables and the
tradition of paying tax-free
allowances for housing
2111748
2096211
Commission: offer choices, see compensation costs fall
commission From page 6
2011-2014
Gift Cards Available Online at
AsYouLikeItSalon.com
2011-2012
Page | Hurlburt Warrior | Friday, February 6, 2015
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subject
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Fair
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Act
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makes it illegal to advertise “any preference,
limitation or discrimination based on race,
color,
religion,
sex,
handicap, familial status
or national origin, or an
intention, to make any
such preference, limitation or discrimination”
Familial status includes
children under the age
of 18 living with parents
or
legal
custodians,
pregnant women and
people
securing
custody of children under
18.
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
advertising for real estate which is in violation
of the law. Our readers
are
hereby
informed
that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper
are available on a equal
opportunity
basis.
To
complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at
1-800-669-9777.
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gorgeous ,newly
renovated 2000sf for
NCO/OFF,
pets okay.
(305) 803-9158
Txt fl78276 to 56654
4076 Indian Bayou
North, Destin. 2557
sq ft, 3br/2ba + office. Single story, all
brick, 1998 home on
.82 acres, New
HVAC in 2013, oversize garage, beautiful garden, very private & quiet,
$469,750. Call Lisa
850-830-2331
Text FL55994 to 56654
Shalimar-1, 2, 3 & 4 Br
$649-$899 Water Incl.
Pool, Laundry CH/A No
Dog Mon-Sat 651-8267
Text FL11610 to 56654
Gulf Breeze
2984 Ranchette Sq
3br-2ba,
.48
Acres,
1467sq ft., $160,000.
Call 850-733-0397
Text FL09545 to 56654
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747-5020
Car, Truck & SUV Accessories
Floor Mats
Soft Bed Covers
Hard Bed Covers
Window Visors
Since 1988
Toolboxes
Steps Bars & Running Boards
WWW.ACCENTTOPS.COM
Accent Tops & Trailers
657 BEAL PARKWAY
862-2400
2089230
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Quality Hi-Fi Stereo
Equip, Guitars,
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Record Collection,
Antique Radios. Old/
New 850-314-0321
543-7025
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Class for 1 week. 850-502-5521
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