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Col. Frank A. Richie, the commanding officer of Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, presents the 1st place award to 2nd Lt. William Prom, an artillery training officer with 11th Marine Regiment, Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, Calif., after the All-Marine Cross Country championship race here Jan. 8. Prom fishined the 5-mile course in 26:36.

Photo by Cpl. Steven H. Posy

Marines’ fitness means endurance on battlefield

10 Jan 2011 | Cpl. Steven H. Posy Marine Corps Air Station Miramar-EMS

Approximately 50 runners from Marine Corps installations around the world raced on a five-mile course for the All-Marine Cross Country championship, held here Jan. 8.

2nd Lt. William Prom, an artillery training officer with 5th Battalion, 11th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, Calif., won first place with a time of 26:36.

Cpl. Sage Koch, an armorer with 3rd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms, Calif., finished in 27:02 and won second place. Staff Sgt. Tyler Hubbard, the staff non commissioned officer in charge with the fuels division, Marine Corps Base Hawaii, took third.

The five mile race took place on the steep hills and rugged terrain located behind the air station’s flight line.

“I run about 80 miles per week and have done so for the past few months,” said Prom. “This course is a great test of endurance.”

After the race, Col. Frank A. Richie, the commanding officer of Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, presented awards to the top performers.

“Fitness equates to endurance on the battlefield,” said Richie. “This is a phenomenal example of the level of fitness demonstrated by Marines.”

Top runners from Camp Pendleton; Marine Corps Air Station Miramar; Marine Corps Air Station Yuma, Ariz.; Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego; Marine Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms, Calif.; Marine Corps Base Quantico, Va.; Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, S.C.; Headquarters Marine Corps, Henderson Hall, Arlington Va.; Marine Corps Base Hawaii; Marine Corps Base Okinawa, Japan; and Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni, Japan, competed in the event.

“These are the best runners in the Marine Corps,” said Robert Stopp, the athletic director with Marine Corps Community Services here.

The runners train while balancing their busy schedules and travel around the world to compete in these events.

“We are very competitive, but it is difficult to balance deployments and work schedules,” said Col. Steven D. Peterson, the branch head with Headquarters Marine Corps Manpower and Reserve Affairs, Arlington, Va. “They are Marines first and we thank their commands for working with their schedules and allowing them to compete.”


POLICY

The most important starting point for an EMS* is the development of an environmental policy. ISO14001 requires local governments to implement their own environmental policy. The environmental policy acts as a basis for the environmental management system.

PLANNING

ISO14001 requires that an environmental management system is planned properly. It requires the organization to consider the following carefully: Environmental Aspects; Legal and Other Aspects; Objectives and Targets; and an Environmental Management Program.

IMPLEMENTATION

The two requirements for implementation of an EMS is to define, document, and communicate roles, responsibilities and authorities, and to allocate the resources needed to implement and control the EMS.

CHECKING

The key requirement in this EMS step is to regularly monitor and measure key characteristics of activities and operations that could have a significant impact on the environment. Changes to EMS procedures may become necessary in order to deal with nonconformances with the EMS, with mitigating environmental impacts, or corrective and preventive action.

REVIEW

The management review process ensure that information is collected to enable management to carry out proper review. Top management review the need for changes to policy, objectives and targets, and ensure that a commitment to continual improvement is being demonstrated.

Marine Corps Air Station Miramar-EMS