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Educators from Kansas City, Mo., and Milwaukee, Wis., mingle with active duty Marines on the flight line during an educators’ workshop aboard Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, Calif., Feb. 29. While the educators toured the air station, they visited the library, The Great Escape and the education center, walked through a barracks room and explored an MV-22B Osprey, F/A-18 and an Aircraft Rescue and Firefighting fire truck.

Photo by Cpl. Sarah Fiocco

Miramar personnel teach educators about military

29 Mar 2012 | Cpl. Sarah Fiocco Marine Corps Air Station Miramar-EMS

Educators from Kansas City, Mo., and Milwaukee, Wis., peeked into the jobs, benefits and lifestyles of military personnel during an educators’ workshop aboard Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, Calif., Feb. 29.

Educators visited Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego, MCAS Miramar and Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton in a week’s time to see the different missions of each military installation. The workshop gave the educators the tools needed to inform their students about the military.

“This opportunity opened their eyes to our world,” said Staff Sgt. Justin Park, a drill instructor with Fox Company, 2nd Recruit Training Battalion aboard MCRD San Diego and an escort during the workshop. “They have a clearer picture of the benefits the military offers, as well as the transition that occurs from civilian to Marine.”

While the educators toured the air station, they asked a panel of active-duty Marines questions, visited the library, The Great Escape and the education center, walked through a barracks room and explored an MV-22B Osprey, F/A-18 and an Aircraft Rescue and Firefighting fire truck.

“This was a good experience for them,” said Cpl. Jessica Wilkinson, a Milwaukee, Wis., native who participated on the panel. “A lot of high school kids don’t consider the military a good career path. The educators can go back and tell them about the benefits and their experience here.”

The workshop allowed educators to see the Marine Corps in a hands-on learning environment.

This experience gave educators the knowledge and vision to help students make a career decision in the military, added Lisa Duncan, a guidance counselor from Kansas City, Mo.

Duncan said the most useful knowledge she walked away with was the vast educational opportunities offered to active-duty service members.

"You have education counselors here and school [opportunities] available on base,” she explained. “I knew the opportunities, but I didn’t know how readily available they were.”

After a week of observing military life on multiple military installations, the educators can return to school, answering students’ military-related questions with a greater understanding of the Marine Corps.


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