Long Island Professionals get a taste of NY Army National Guard life thanks to "boss lift" to training site
Long Island Professionals get a taste of NY Army National Guard life thanks to "boss lift" to training site
Camp Smith Training Site, NY (09/19/2019) — Nine Long Island professionals sampled the experience of being a citizen Soldier in the New York Army National Guard on Monday, Sept. 16, thanks to a "boss lift" program sponsored by the Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve program.
The nine were among 20 civilians who were flown to Camp Smith Training Site near Peekskill by UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter.
Once on the ground, they toured the New York Army National Guard's newest maintenance facility, ate Meals Ready to Eat lunch, and experienced the training simulators located at the post.
Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve, commonly known as ESGR, is a federal program designed to help business owners and supervisors understand what the Guard members and reservists who work for them do.
The goal, said Emil Baker, the ESGR outreach director for New York, is to ease the friction that can occur when a Guard Soldier or Airman asks for military leave.
Bringing employers to Camp Smith to get a short taste of military life, is part of that, said Baker.
"It gives them the ability to understand that this is not just play time--the weekends that they go and train--this is an important mission," Baker said.
Baker is the owner of the Big Moose Deli in Hoosick Falls in upstate New York and volunteers with ESGR.
The Long Island guests flew from the Army Aviation Support Facility at Ronkonkoma and back. A second group of ten people from the Albany area flew from the flight facility at Albany International Airport.
Taking part in the event were:
- Jerry Anthis, a service manager for Quogue-Sinclair Fuel Inc.;
- Gina Berrent, administrative director for New York University, Winthrop Hospital;
- Russ Capria, a sergeant in the Suffolk County Police Department;
- Jawad Ghauri, an analyst for PSEG Long Island;
- Lindsay McKinley, senior operations supervisor for PSEG Long island;
- Donald Kipp, a New York Police Department sergeant;
- Kevin Peters, who works with Longwoods Youth Association;
- Emily Samson, a station manager for Enterprise Rent-A-Car;
- Jessica Tham, owner of Tham Home Garden.
Bosses can be nominated by the Guardsmen who work for them. In many instances ESGR invites business owners who have reached out for information about the Guard or reserves, Baker explained.
Gina Berrent, a supervisor at New York University Winthrop Hospital, was nominated to participate by a National Guard Soldier who works for her.
"I was so honored that he even considered me for this," Berrent said.
Kevin Peters, who works at the Longwoods Youth Association, said the two Guard Soldiers who work for him recommended him for the trip."It was an unbelievable chance for me to come here today and I wouldn't miss it for the world," Peters said.
A high-point for the employers was the chance to fire M-4s and M-9 pistols on one of Camp Smith's ranges.
Sgt. 1st Class Frederick Goldacker, a member of the 2nd Battalion, 108th Infantry, and Sgt. Omar Ortega, a Soldier in the 1st Battalion, 69th Infantry, put the civilians through a quick safety class and then got them shooting.
Major Michael Sicinski, a member of the Camp Smith garrison, and 16 Soldiers who volunteered to come in for a duty day, orchestrated the event.
"I wanted to put on a showcase for the coolest stuff and give them the widest range of exposure, the best bang for the buck," Sicinski explained.
"The guys called it going Hollywood," he added.
To do that, Sicinski rolled out the most impressive simulators the New York Army National Guard has at Camp Smith.
The employers experienced the Engagement Skills Trainer, in which they fired M-4s and M-9s at digital targets on standard Army qualification courses, and then conducted simulated missions.
"It was exciting and I hit the targets," said PSEG senior supervisor Lindsay McKinley. "I am a sharpshooter."
The bosses also got a chance to go through the Virtual Convoy Operations Trainer which allowed them to fire an M-2 .50 caliber machinegun from a simulated humvee.
The best and most impressive event, Sicinski said, was the Range-In-A-Box simulator. This system put the civilians in a close combat environment and let them shoot at real physical targets with soft pellet ammunition.
While the civilian guests had a great time in the simulators, the MRE lunch didn't go over as well as he thought it would, Sicinski admitted.
"The MREs were not a big hit," he said.
They're interesting, McKinley, the PSEG supervisor said about the MREs, as she ate chili mac from an MRE packet.
The Soldiers showed the civilians how to use the MRE chemical heaters and discussed the merits of different entrees.
They also pointed out that a key part of the MRE experience was trading items.
Berrent, said that the chicken with tortillas she ate "wasn't so bad," but she opted to top off her lunch with a bag of very civilian potato chips.
"I tried to trade my Reese's Pieces for a Tootsie Roll but I didn't get any," she added.
Most of the Soldiers who put on the ESGR event volunteered to take a day off from their civilian jobs to be there, Sicinski said.
One of those was Staff Sgt. Arthur Harrison, whose drill job is to run the convoy operations trainer.
He was pleased to be able to be part of the ESGR event, Harrison said. "It is kind of important and I am glad this program is here," he said. "This way the employers get to see exactly what people do when they come here to train."
Additional Photographs can be found here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/nyng/albums/72157710887787717/with/48751036432/