Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Air National Guard delays Alaska unit downgrade

Plan pushed to 2025 to allow for critical study

- By Mark Thiessen

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The Air National Guard has delayed its plan to downgrade the status of about 80 members of its Alaska unit, a move that would have threatened national security and civilian rescues in the nation’s most remote state.

The Alaska Air National Guard confirmed the delay in an email to The Associated Press on Friday.

Efforts by the state’s politician­s and Alaskans “have been instrument­al in getting this delay which will allow everyone involved the time to conduct more thorough research and analysis,” wrote Alan Brown, an Alaska guard spokespers­on.

The Air National Guard headquarte­rs in Virginia did not respond to emails from the AP seeking comment.

The changes to balance top-earning positions among the other 53 state and territoria­l units will still be completed by Oct. 1.

Alaska was slated to convert 80 of the highly paid Active Guard and Reserve members — who are essentiall­y the equivalent of full-time active-duty military — to dual status tech positions, a classifica­tion with lower wages, less appealing benefits and different duties.

Many say they will quit rather than accept the changes, which could include seeing their pay cut by more

than 50 percent.

Local guard leaders argued Alaska needed the personnel in the higher classifica­tion to fulfill its requiremen­ts to conduct national security missions that other units don’t have, such as monitoring for ballistic missile launches from nations such as Russia, North Korea and China.

The Alaska guard also said its ability to fly refueling tankers to accompany United States and Canadian fighter jets when they intercept Russian bombers that come close to Alaska or Canada would be greatly curtailed.

The guard also plays a vital role in conducting civilian search-and-rescue missions in Alaska, sending military helicopter­s and cargo planes

through violent storms to rescue people from small Alaska Native villages when weather prevents air ambulances from flying.

Last year, the guard conducted 159 such missions, including flying to an Alaska island just 2 miles from a Russian island to pick up a pregnant woman with abdominal pains. In one recent rescue, two paramedics parachuted into an Alaska Native village because that was the fastest way to reach a critically ill woman with internal bleeding. Another involved flying to a western Alaska village to pick up a pregnant woman who began bleeding when her water broke and delivering her to a hospital in Anchorage, more than 400 miles away.

If the staff conversion­s went through, the guard estimated the number of rescues would drop to about 50 a year.

The downgrades in Alaska have been delayed until Sept. 30, 2025, giving the service more time to study how the changes would affect its Alaska operations and if the changes should be made at all, according to a joint statement from the state’s congressio­nal delegation.

“The strain this uncertaint­y put on Alaska Air National Guard members — who Alaskans depend on in the most dire of emergencie­s — for them to worry about their jobs, their benefits, their ability to provide for their families, is unacceptab­le,” U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, a Republican, said in the statement.

“Delaying the implementa­tion of the misguided directives is a win — but it should never have come to this,” she said.

 ?? North American Aerospace Defense Command file ?? A Russian Tu-95 bomber, top, is intercepte­d by a U.S. F-22 Raptor off the Alaska coast. The Air National Guard has delayed personnel changes in Alaska until September 2025 that could threaten national security and civilian rescue missions.
North American Aerospace Defense Command file A Russian Tu-95 bomber, top, is intercepte­d by a U.S. F-22 Raptor off the Alaska coast. The Air National Guard has delayed personnel changes in Alaska until September 2025 that could threaten national security and civilian rescue missions.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States