Color-Coded Aircraft Carrier

Page 1

The Shuttle

USS Enterprise (CVN 65)

Newsletter Edition

“We are Legend”

March 15, 2012 Issue

Color-Coded Aircraft Carrier By Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Gregory White USS Enterprise, At Sea- While underway for its 22nd and final deployment, the flight deck of aircraft carrier USS Enterprise (CVN 65) was, as usual, occupied with not only a variety of aircraft, but also an array of colorful shirts during flight operations March 14. The Air department is one of the largest departments on an aircraft carrier. It consists of many different rates and is divided into six different divisions. Each division has different responsibilities and the easiest way to identify Sailors from each division is by the color of the shirts, or “jerseys,” they wear. “The reason for the different colors is familiarization,” said Aviation Boatswain’s Mate (Fuel) 3rd Class Devon T. Johnson, assigned to Enterprise’s Air department. “That way you know what everybody does, so in case of a question or a problem, you can easily find someone to talk to or locate the division and get things taken care of.” Directors and Shooters wear yellow shirts. Shooters also wear a green cranial and are responsible for preparing aircraft for launch. Directors wear a yellow cranial and communicate with

Photo by MCSN Brian G. Reynolds

pilots using hand signals to maneuver aircraft into position on the flight deck. Sailors wearing blue shirts are responsible for things such as chocking tires on aircraft and making sure that the aircraft are tied down and secured when need be. COLORS continued on page 3

Senior Leaders Sign Surface Forces Readiness Manual Into Policy By Lt. Jan Shultis, Naval Surface Forces Public Affairs SAN DIEGO -- The Surface Forces Readiness Manual (SFRM) became the new standard of Surface Forces readiness when it was signed into policy at Commander, Naval Surface Forces headquarters March 9. Adm. John Harvey, commander, U.S. Fleet Forces Command, presided over the ceremony, during which Vice Adm. Richard Hunt, commander, Naval Surface Forces, and Rear Adm. David Thomas, commander, Naval Surface Force, U.S. Atlantic Fleet, officially endorsed the policy. “The Surface Forces Readiness Manual is a standard of preparation for forward operation,” said Harvey. “This is a flexible plan that reacts to ‘real world’ capabilities to produce ‘real world’ fleet

readiness, and represents a philosophical construct that will drive us into the future.” The SFRM, which replaces the Surface Forces Training Manual, is designed to integrate material assessments and maintenance actions with training, maximizing each ship’s readiness posture. Unlike the trainingfocused Training Manual, the SFRM encompasses readiness across what is referred to as the ‘PESTO’ pillars personnel, equipment, supply, training, and ordnance - throughout all phases of the Fleet Readiness Training Plan (FRTP). “An initiative of this scope is a great achievement that has been a long time in coming, and reflects the commitment

of our waterfront leadership,” said Hunt. “I believe that the SFRM strategy will produce ships and crews better prepared to execute our Surface Warfare tasking, meet operational commitments, and enable ships to reach their expected service life. This directly supports the CNO’s tenets - warfighting first, operate forward, and be ready.” SFRM guidance outlines a standard, predictable path to readiness. A sequenced, “building block” approach emphasizes consistent material assessment standards and simple shipboard reporting across all functional areas. Supporting instructions provide detailed process information to allow for execution throughout all phases of training, including exit criteria to move to the next phase.


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