An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | July 18, 2007

Changing with the Guard

By Mike Molina Air Reserve Personnel Center Public Affairs

DENVER (AFPN) - Seventy Air National Guardsmen are slated to begin working at the Air Reserve Personnel Center later this year for the first time in its history.

The new Guardsmen are a result of the center taking on personnel services for the Air National Guard, increasing the ARPC's workload to nearly one million customers.

"We are consolidating our work force from the field to ARPC and bringing the workload here," said Lt. Col. Donald Johnson, an Air National Guard adviser to the commander at ARPC. Colonel Johnson is helping spearhead the transition of Guardsmen in the field to their new jobs at ARPC.

Two Guardsmen are already en route to ARPC, leaving 68 positions available. The announcements for those positions will close Aug. 2.

Guard personnel members working at ARPC are a significant milestone for the center and the Air National Guard, he said.

"This will be the largest group of Air National Guard personnelists in the United States working together to support the total air Reserve component," Colonel Johnson said. "It's going to be a totally integrated organization."

Nearly 50 of the new Guardsmen will work in ARPC's Directorate of Personnel Services.

"This is huge," said Dave Aldrich, the DPS director. "Typically we have these stove pipes -- Guardsmen do Guard work. Now, they're going to do (air Reserve component) work."

The Guardsmen will be on four-year active-duty tours, meaning their service is identical to active-duty Airmen.

"We're going to embed these folks in the work force," Colonel Johnson said. "When you walk through the building you're not going to know the difference between active, Guard or Reserve."

Colonel Johnson said the new Guardsmen will improve the relationship between ARPC and their customers and the Air Force's concept of total force.

"It creates a better unity between Air National Guard and the Air Force Reserve. It strengthens that bond," he said.

(Courtesy Air Reserve Personnel Center News Service)

 

 

Related Articles
U.S. Army Maj. Gen. Craig Strong, left, Nebraska’s adjutant general, and Gen. Jacob John Mkunda, chief of defense forces for the Tanzania Peoples’ Defence Forces, sign a formal letter of intent in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, March 12, 2026. The agreement officially links the Nebraska National Guard and Tanzania through the National Guard Bureau’s State Partnership Program. Photo by Staff Sgt. Gauret Stearns.
Nebraska National Guard and Tanzania Formalize State Partnership
By Staff Sgt. Gauret Stearns, | March 27, 2026
DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzania – In a move that significantly expands U.S. security cooperation in East Africa, military leaders from the Nebraska National Guard and the Tanzania Peoples’ Defence Forces officially formalized their...

A Florida Army National Guard Soldier is exposed to oleoresin capsicum (OC) during a certification event at Camp Blanding Joint Training Center, Fla., March 25, 2026. Soldiers with the 265th Air Defense Artillery Regiment and 116th Field Artillery completed an obstacle course immediately following exposure. Participants navigated a course using physical defense and control techniques before apprehending a simulated subject. The event tested Soldiers’ ability to apply proper techniques while under the physical effects of OC. Photo by Staff Sgt. N.W. Huertas.
Florida Guardsmen Maintain Readiness Under Exposure, Stress
By Staff Sgt. Neysa Huertas Quinones, | March 27, 2026
CAMP BLANDING JOINT TRAINING CENTER, Fla. – Soldiers and Airmen of the Florida National Guard conducted the first joint Oleoresin Capsicum, or OC, spray certification in decades to maintain readiness when exposed to...

U.S. Air Force Maj. Daniel Cybulski, an infectious disease physician with the Center for Sustainment of Trauma and Readiness Skills Omaha, U.S. Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine, consults with Tanzania People’s Defence Force medical personnel during patient consultations as part of a medical readiness exercise during Justified Accord 2026 at Msata Military Training Base in Msata, Tanzania, March 9, 2026. The first medical readiness exercise of its kind in Tanzania prepared U.S. military health professionals to provide care outside traditional clinical settings and to improve interoperability with African partners. Justified Accord 2026, led by U.S. Army Southern European Task Force, Africa (SETAF-AF), is U.S. Africa Command’s largest exercise in East Africa. Photo by 1st Lt. Tucker Chase.
Nebraska Guard, Tanzania Test Medical Readiness During Justified Accord 2026
By 1st Lt. Tucker Chase, | March 27, 2026
DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzania – Nebraska Air National Guard personnel and U.S. Army military medical professionals tested the Medical Currency Application for Readiness Tracking 2.0, a digital, field-medicine tracker, for the first...