

The equipment allows pilots to speak to anyone, anywhere, anytime. "Pretty much everyone has the attitude, 'send it our way, we'll get the job done.'"įrom every noncommissioned officer to every Airman, "they accomplish the mission and accomplish it well."Įven though he's only been in the Air Force for two years, Airman Houghton is responsible for maintaining all the radios and navigation equipment aboard the C-17s here. "The crew here is very capable," he said.

"It's been rewarding to get to work as a team and learn each other's jobs," said Senior Airman Jon Houghton, a communication and navigation journeyman deployed from Charleston AFB. The team of C-17 maintainers, aerial port Airmen, command and control specialists, communications and navigation and mission systems journeymen, and supply professionals work together as one squadron, to take on a work load comparable to that at Ramstein AB, Germany, but with one-third the number of Airmen Ramstein's squadron has. "We took 4,600 pallets of cargo into Iraq that month." "All of their normal sorties were flying out of here," Captain Corley said. Robert Corley, director of operations.Įarlier this year, the runway at Incirlik AB, Turkey, was shut down for repairs for 30 days, and the 8 EAMS team here readily stepped in to take on all of the Operation Iraqi Freedom workload Incirlik passed on. "Last year, we transported 270,000 passengers and 94,000 tons of cargo," said Capt. The 8th Expeditionary Air Mobility Squadron, a tenant unit of one of the largest, most diverse expeditionary wings in the Air Force, is composed of a group of Airmen from 13 career fields who do everything from tracking missions and communicating with aircrew to cleaning the bathrooms in the passenger terminal. Air Forces Central area of responsibility, proudly proclaiming, "You need it, we move it." The first two are electronic and are the fastest way to file in EAMS.A squadron of 255 Air Mobility Command Airmen in Southwest Asia works around the clock to ensure passengers and cargo move in and out of the U.S. External users also now have access to case information on line and DWC launched a new bulk electronic filing service, JET File, on June 27, 2011. More than 400 external user locations now file using e-forms.
EAMS SEARCHY FULL
The division is bringing external users-those who need to file forms and documents with the district offices and the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board Reconsideration Unit-into the full electronic system over time. EAMS reduces environmental and physical stress associated with maintaining paper files and helps guide policy decisions to better distribute resources.ĮAMS went live for internal users-DWC and Workers' Compensation Appeals Board employees at DWC administration and district offices-Aug. Electronic Adjudication Management System (EAMS)ĮAMS is a computer-based case management system that simplified and improved the Division of Workers' Compensation (DWC) case management process.ĮAMS better serves injured workers and employers by eliminating redundancy and creating efficiency in the workers' compensation court system.
