Air Force Reserve Command is modifying its air and space expeditionary force cycles. As with the changes announced May 13 for the active duty component, these tweaks are intended to provide more predictability for Reservists with skills in high demand that leads them to be called for overseas duty for longer stints and more often than the Air Force’s normal rotation schedule. Reservists will now fit into one of three bands: A, M, or N. Tempo band A will apply to most Reserve personnel and is considered normal operations. Thus airmen assigned to it should expect to see little to no change in how they deploy. Tempo bands M and N represent mobilization bands for stressed career fields that USAF has already identified, such as logistics planning, vehicle maintenance, aerial port operations, and civil engineering, and for any more designated as such in coming months. Reserve airmen with these skills will move into tempo band M, meaning that they will be on a 1:5 deployment-to-home station rotation, when their active duty counterparts move into a 1:2 dwell rate. Reservists with specialized skills will fall under tempo band N, with a 1:4 deployment-to-home station ratio, when their active duty compatriots go on a 1:1 deploy-to-dwell time schedule. AFRC expects to fully implement the tempo band system by October. (Robins report by SSgt. Drew Nystrom)
A record investment in research and development by the Department of the Air Force will help the United States win the long-term technology race with China, even while shrinking the fleet size before a possible mid-decade Taiwan contingency, Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall said May 17. “With the Air Force,…