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Home : News : State Partnership Program
NEWS | Sept. 3, 2010

Colorado ANG fire chief deploys to Central Command

By Tech. Sgt. Kevin Coulter, Colorado National Guard

BUCKLEY AIR FORCE BASE, Colo., - A Colorado Air National Guard member is the Air Force's eyes and ears for over 500 firefighters, who are scattered across 16 bases and multiple Forward Operating Bases in nine different countries.

Senior Master Sgt. Deanne Criswell of the 140th Wing, based here, became the Colorado Air Guard's fire chief in 2002. The position also made her the first female fire chief in the wing and the entire Air National Guard.

While this is a historic achievement, her current duties are equally impressive. Criswell is currently deployed to the Middle East as the Air Force's Forward Functional Fire Manager.

Her responsibilities are so encompassing, one might think the position would include a large support staff. However, her office consists of a laptop, a rucksack, body armor and a side arm.

Criswell is constantly on the move across Central Command's area of responsibility. A few times she has traveled with a seven-person safety-team, but she usually travels alone to meet with firefighters wherever they may be.

To get there, she catches rides on Air Force cargo planes, Army helicopters, coalition transports, or hitch-hikes on convoys that are headed where she needs to go.

"I throw my three-day pack on, and it's been known to last me 11 days," said Criswell.

As operations wind down in Iraq, Criswell has been busy shifting and redeploying assets to Afghanistan. She says her brief tour has already stretched her leadership abilities beyond what she ever expected.

Her list of accomplishments read like years of super-star work, but it's all been done in just four months. She has provided oversight for two firefighter training academies, supervised the transition of five bases and repositioned assets all over the Middle East.

Recently, she deployed 12 firefighters and their equipment to a remote Forward Operating Base, ensuring a C-17 capable runway in just 96 hours. She also made a realignment recommendation, which is estimated to save the government $9 million in contractor costs.

Criswell says the heat and operations tempo has been taxing. She looks forward to returning home and relaxing - but only for a while. She recently completed a half marathon and is training to run the Marine Corps Marathon in Washington, D.C. this October. She's run 14 miles in Kyrgyzstan, 10 miles at a small forward operating base in Afghanistan and a half marathon in Qatar, to name a few.

"She often times get up at 3 in the morning to run when it's coolest. She's crazy," said her husband, Chief Master Sgt. John Criswell, who currently serves as the command chief of the 140th Wing.

Criswell has been a Guardsman her entire 19-year career, and "I haven't regretted a minute of it," she said.