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Marines with 1st Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion Camp Pendleton, Calif., call mortar strikes during night training at a training site outside of Yuma, Ariz., Aug. 13. Marines conducted combined arms attacks with air and ground assets to enhance proficiency controlling fixed wing and rotor wing aircraft during Scorpion Fire during a two-week training evolution.

Photo by Lance Cpl. Rebecca Eller

Joint training puts the sting in Scorpion Fire

13 Aug 2012 | Lance Cpl. Rebecca Eller Marine Corps Air Station Miramar-EMS

Marines with 1st Air Naval Gunfire Liaison Company and 1st Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion from Camp Pendleton, Calif., conducted combined arms attacks with air and ground assets to enhance proficiency controlling fixed wing and rotor wing aircraft during Scorpion Fire, a two-week training evolution beginning Aug.6, at two training sites outside of Yuma, Ariz.

“We’re out here supporting the wing,” said Capt. Daniel Hipol, platoon commander with 1st ANGLICO Camp Pendleton and a West Palm Beach, Fla., native.

Forward air controllers are the primary focus during the training learning to conduct air attacks, however, not only is the training for the pilots, everyone assisting benefits from the exercise.

“We’re getting a lot out of it,” said Hipol. “We have a lot of simulators back home where we get some practice talking [to the pilots], but until you can actually do something in an actual environment and get out here with real aircraft and talk to them, it’s a tremendous benefit.”

Communication is an important element in the training, if a joint terminal attack controller plots a wrong target on the map an aircraft could potentially drop a bomb on the controllers instead of the target, explained Sgt. Ryan J. Eskandary, a firepower control team chief with 1st ANGLICO and a St. Paul, Minn., native.

As with any training, there is a chance of a friendly-fire incident, but control measures to prevent such accidents are put into place. Control teams use air panels and infrared strobes to mark their position so aircraft know friendly locations, explained Eskandary.

With these control measures in place, friendly fire is unlikely and Marines can be concerned with other hazards such as the environment.

“The biggest risk out here for this type of training is just the environment,” said, Hipol. “It’s hot, but the benefit of that is it prepares us for future deployments, where it’s hotter than this.”

With the extreme heat of the desert, Marines must ensure they are taking the proper precautions to prevent heat related injuries.

Scorpion Fire’s training evolution continues to put the sting in Marines as they prepare for future operations putting rounds on target.


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