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 | April 2, 2014

Sexual Assault Awareness Month kicks off

By Army National Guard Staff Sgt. Michelle Gonzalez National Guard Bureau

ARLINGTON, Va. - With teal-colored combat boots lining a section of the atrium of the Army National Guard Readiness Center here, Soldiers from the Army National Guard kicked off this year"s Sexual Assault Awareness Month on Monday.

"It"s important to seize the opportunity to use an event like this to kick off awareness," said Army Maj. Gen. Judd H. Lyons, acting director of the Army National Guard. "We"re responsible as leaders to set the standard and create that culture of dignity and respect. It doesn"t matter what your rank is."

To Lyons, resources applied toward training create a culture of continuous awareness.

One example: A recent training program that two National Guard noncommissioned officers attended. Sgts. 1st Class Frederick Nicholas, Virginia National Guard, and Michael Kerkhoff, New Mexico National Guard, graduated March 28 from the first iteration of an eight-week pilot program that launched in January at the District of Columbia National Guard"s Regional Training Institute on Fort Belvoir, Va.

The course was launched to better prepare sexual assault response coordinators, victim advocates and trainers of the 80-hour SHARP course.

"Not having in-depth knowledge as the rest of the class was a little challenging," Kerkhoff said about the roughly 30 person class made up of mainly Army SARCs and VAs, "but I think we got caught up to speed pretty quickly."

For Nicholas, the pilot program made the material more tangible and provided a bridge between what program expectations were and what was happening in the SHARP community. "It"s important to get realistic training, and realistic expectations of what"s going to happen," he said.

Through various subject matter experts from offices including the Defense Equal Opportunity Management Institute, the Inspector General and the Army Management Staff College, the course prepared participants to replace the current Mobile Training Team instructors, centralize the curriculum and establish a level of professionalism to the services provided and to the career as a whole.

"All the guest speakers brought a different dynamic and more in-depth knowledge on some of the more technical subjects," Kerkhoff said.

Subject matter experts also allowed students to ask questions and discuss the topics they covered.

"Having subject matter experts available to answer questions was priceless," said Nicholas. "Our knowledge base increased just by listening to some of the questions asked by other participants."

In addition to the subject matter experts, representatives from National Guard Bureau briefly covered the challenges faced by National Guard Soldiers.

"It was eye-opening," Nicholas said. "A lot of the active duty participants were giving us "kudos" because of the challenges and dynamics faced by the National Guard."

Nicholas and Kerkhoff are working at the Army National Guard Readiness Center as the Mobile Training Team, ready to undertake instructing the 80-hour SHARP course to more than 700 National Guard collateral duty victim advocates located throughout the 54 states and territories who still need certification - an effort that will take about 22 class iterations.

The Army National Guard has more than 2,600 collateral duty victim advocates who have completed the 80-hour training.

Sexual assault in the military, an issue that has garnered national attentio, has consistently been a topic of discussion at Guard Senior Leader Conferences and Command Sergeants Major Advisory Council meetings and is a top priority for military leaders at all echelons.

It is a priority that was evident to both Nicholas and Kerkhoff when Army Lt. Gen. Howard Bromberg, the Army deputy chief of staff for personnel, addressed the class.

"Having leadership come down and not just to say "it"s important", but to come down and take time to visit," noted Nicholas, "to me that speaks volumes on how important it really is."

 

 

Related Articles
Air Force Gen. Steve Nordhaus, chief, National Guard Bureau, visits the 49th Missile Defense Battalion, Alaska National Guard, on Fort Greely, Alaska, April 28, 2025. Soldiers of the 49th Missile Defense Battalion operate and secure the ground-based midcourse defense system and are an integral piece of the homeland defense mission to protect the U.S. from intercontinental ballistic missiles using ground-based interceptors.
In Alaska, Nordhaus Sees National Guardsmen Defending the Homeland, Enabling Global Power Projection
By Master Sgt. Zach Sheely | May 1, 2025
EIELSON AIR FORCE BASE, Alaska – From within Alaska’s vast Interior, Alaska National Guardsmen defend the homeland from long-range missile attacks and enable global power projection.Air Force Gen. Steve Nordhaus, the chief of...

Sgt. Jessica Shields, a water purification specialist with the 935th Aviation Support Battalion, Missouri Army National Guard, checks the chlorine levels of the water meant for cooking and cleaning laundry during TRADEWINDS 25 exercise at Teteron Bay, Trinidad and Tobago, April 27, 2025.
Missouri National Guard Water Purification Team Supports TRADEWINDS 25
By Sgt. 1st Class Benjamin Crane, | May 1, 2025
TETERON BAY, Trinidad – Few resources are more critical than clean water for sustaining troops in the field. From cooking meals to maintaining hygiene, a steady supply of safe water is essential to keeping Soldiers healthy,...

Group photo of Delta Company, 341st Military Intelligence Battalion Soldiers standing in front of the Seattle / King County Clinic.
Washington Guard Soldiers Support Clinic Through Language and Compassion
By Joseph Siemandel, | May 1, 2025
SEATTLE – A group of Soldiers from the Delta Company, 341st Military Intelligence Battalion, recently volunteered at a Seattle and King County medical clinic to provide language support for visitors receiving free medical,...