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AETC Mission: Recruit, train, and educate exceptional ... Snaps… · Recruit, Train & Educate...
Transcript of AETC Mission: Recruit, train, and educate exceptional ... Snaps… · Recruit, Train & Educate...
AETC Basics (FY19)
AETC Mission: Recruit, train, and educate exceptional Airmen. AETC Vision: The First Command: Developing Airmen of character, the foundation of a lethal force. To download your copy of the 2018 AETC Strategic Plan, click here.
(2) Does not include students, (3) AETC Contracted Manpower Equivalents (does not include NAF employees), (4) Does not include NAF or Contractors, (5) Includes direct commissions for medical professionals, JAG, Chaplains and all interservice transfers
AETC Key Leaders
Assigned AD Race/Ethnic Group (%) Civilian Workforce (4) (%) Commission Source (%) Active Duty (2) 33,571 Caucasian 70.29 White Collar 77.71 AF Reserve Officer Training Corps 37.28
Officers African American 15.95 Blue Collar 23.29 Basic Officer Training 17.25 7,059
Enlisted Asian 3.41 Male 69.08 Air Force Academy 21.43 26,512 Guard 6,000 Hawaiian 1.14 Female 30.92 Commissioned Officer Training (5) 23.34
Reserve 1,800 American Indian 0.77 Bachelor’s or Higher 42.65
Civilians 14,536 Other 4.12 Master’s Degree 19.18
Contractors (3) 9,581 Declined to Respond 4.32 PhD 1.89 Total 65,488 (Hispanic designation) (15.53) Average Age 49.82
Avg. Years Service 14.04
AETC Demographics (FY19)
Active Duty (%) Enlisted Education (%) Officer Education (%) Avg. Years Total Service
Men 76.39 Associate’s or Equivalent 34.81 Bachelor’s 100 Officers 10.92 Women 23.61 Bachelor’s or Higher 13.66 Master’s or Higher 57.46 Enlisted 8.61
(1) Includes Active Duty, Reserve, Guard, Civilians and Contractors
Recruiting Basics
Mission
Trainer (6) 1,129
Fighter/Attack (F-16/F-35A) 232
Tanker (KC-135) 22
Strategic Airlift (C-17) 17
Combat Search and Rescue (HH-60/HC-130) 15
Theater Airlift (C-17) 14
Special Operations (MC-130/CV-22) 13
Support/Special Airlift (UH-1N) 10
Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance 16
Total 1,468
Airframes
T-6A 442 T-53A 24 UH-1N 10
T-38C 425 KC-46 4 CV-22B 8
T-1A 177 KC-135R 18 MC-130J 5
F-16C/D 134 C-17A 17 T-41D 4
F-35A 98 C-130J 14 T-51A 3
TH-1H 28 HH-60G 12 UV-18B 3
Gliders 23 MD-1A 16 HC-130J 3
Total 1,468
(6) Figures include the T-1, T-6, T-38, T-41, T-51. T-53,TH-1H, UV-18B and gliders
AETC Aircraft (FY19)
Established Jan. 23, 1942 (Re-designated July 1, 1993)
Annual Budget $9.4 Billion
Total Force Assigned (1) 64,778
Total Force Recruits (Enlisted) 31,269
Total Force Recruiting Goal FY19 32,421
Education Course Graduates 96,121
Training Course Graduates 215,643
Basic Military Training Graduates 37,449
Aircraft in Inventory 1,468
Career Specialties 260
Monthly Flying Hours 33,261
AETC Installations 11
AETC Wings 26
71% of all Americans (ages 17-24) are not qualified for military service
Average wait time to enter basic training (when qualified): 123 days
Top 3 reasons to join: opportunity to travel; continue college education; excellent pay 81.8% of Air Force enlistees score at or above the 50th percentile of the ASVAB test
Commander: Lt. Gen. Marshall B. “Brad” Webb
Deputy Commander: Maj. Gen. Mark E. Weatherington
Command Chief Master Sergeant: Chief Master Sgt. Juliet Gudgel
Air University: Lt. Gen. James B. Hecker
AF Mobilization Assistant to the AETC Commander: Maj. Gen. James P. Scanlan
ANG Assistant to the AETC Commander: Maj. Gen. Floyd W. Dunstan
2nd Air Force: Maj. Gen. Andrea D. Tullos
19th Air Force: Maj. Gen. Craig D. Wills
Air Force Recruiting Service: Maj. Gen. Jeannie M. Leavitt
AETC/PAO/DSN 487-4400/[email protected]/9 Jan 2020
AETC Recruiting, Education and Training Demographics (FY19)
FY19 Total Force Recruiting Basic Military Training Graduates 37,449 Education Course Graduates
Enlisted (Active) 32,421 Training Course Graduates (12) Professional Military Education 23,417
(Reserve) 7340 Aircrew 7,662 Residence 13,770
(ANG) 10481 Officers 5,904 Non-Residence 9,647
Line Officers (7)(Active) 1,453 Enlisted 1,758 Professional Continuing Education (8) 52,827
(Reserve) 1005 Survival Training 12,275 Residence 18,632
(ANG) 1663 Initial skills 72,414 Non-Residence 34,195
Health Professionals (Active) 744 Officers 3315 Academic Degrees Awarded(9) 21,399
(Reserve) 346 Enlisted 69,099 Total 97,643
Chaplains (Active) 34 Supplemental/Advanced 75,730
(Reserve) 50 Officers 13,812 Officer Accessions
Total 55,537 Enlisted 61,918 Officer Training School-Full Course(10) 2,285
FY19 Total Force Recruiting
Goals
Expeditionary Training (13) 10,124 Officer Training School-Abbrev Course (11) 1,007
Enlisted (Active) 32,300 Officers 1,721 Reserve Commissioned Officer Orient. 160
(ANG) 9,421 Enlisted 8,251 AF Reserve Officer Training Corps 1,979
AF Reserve (all programs) 8,650 Civilians 152 Total 5,431
Line Officers (7)(Active) 1,453 Total 215,654 (ANG) 958 Citizenship Development
Health Professionals (Active) 836 Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps(12) 104,022
Chaplains (Active) 33
Total 53,651
(7) Figures do not include the Air Force Academy or AFROTC (8) PME includes AWC, ACSC, SOS, eSchool, SNCOA, CLC, NCOA (CONUS and OCONUS) (9) Degrees include AU PhD; AFIT MS and PhD; AWC, ACSC, OLMP and SAASS
MS; Blue Horizons MS; Test Pilot School MS; and CCAF AS (10) Former Total Force Officer Training (TFOT) (11) Former Commissioned Officer Training (COT) (12) 1 Nov 2018 JROTC enrollments(13) One Airman may attend multiple
courses throughout the reporting period and some numbers include Civilians trained (14) (14) Includes training provided via Fieldcraft-Hostile (FC-H, formerly Combat Airman Skills Training [CAST]), Fieldcraft-
Uncertain (FC-U), Evasion and Conduct After Capture (ECAC), Air Advisor (AA) pipeline (academics and fieldcraft) and Joint Expeditionary Training (JET) Airmen courses providing Expeditionary Readiness
Training (ERT) for deploying Airmen (15) Includes military personnel (MILPERS) and civilian pay (operations and maintenance (O&M), medical
AETC/PAO/DSN 652-4400/[email protected]/5
Budget
Payroll (15) $5.462.2M
Medical Care $412.4M
Military Family Housing $1.3M
Procurement $17.5M
Overseas Contingency
Ops
$172.1M
Research, Development,
Testing & Evaluation
$23.6M
Recruit, Train & Educate
Flying Training $1.818.6M
Base Support $575.6M Education $516.8M
Technical Training $251.3M
Recruiting $152.8M
Force Development $37.9M
Total $9.442M
Technical Training Units 2nd Air Force, Keesler AFB, Miss. · 17th Training Wing, Goodfellow AFB, Texas - 517th Training Group, Presidio of Monterey, Calif. · 37th Training Wing, JBSA-Lackland, Texas · Special Warfare Training Wing, JBSA-Lackland, Texas · 81st Training Wing, Keesler AFB, Miss. · 82nd Training Wing, Sheppard AFB, Texas · 381st Training Group, Vandenberg AFB, Calif. · 602nd Training Group Provisional, Keesler AFB, Miss. · Technical Training Operations Center, Keesler AFB, Miss.
Air University, Maxwell AFB, Ala. · Air War College · Air Command and Staff College · Squadron Officer School · International Officer School · Jeanne M. Holm Center for Officer Accessions & Citizen Development · Curtis E. Lemay Center for Doctrine Development & Education · Ira C. Eaker Center for Professional Development · Thomas N. Barnes Center for Enlisted Education · School of Advanced Air & Space Studies · Air Force Institute of Technology, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio · National Security Space Institute, Peterson AFB, Colorado · 42nd Air Base Wing Air Force Recruiting Service, JBSA-Randolph, Texas · 360th Recruiting Group, New Cumberland, Pa. · 367th Recruiting Group, Warner-Robins AFB, Ga. · 369th Recruiting Group, JBSA-Lackland, Texas · 372nd Recruiting Group, Hill AFB
Flying Training Units 19th Air Force, JBSA-Randolph, Texas · 12th Flying Training Wing, JBSA-Randolph, Texas - 306th Flying Training Group, USAF Academy, Colo. - 479th Flying Training Group, Pensacola NAS, Fla. · 14th Flying Training Wing, Columbus AFB, Miss. · 33rd Fighter Wing, Eglin AFB, Fla. · 47th Flying Training Wing, Laughlin AFB, Texas · 49th Wing, Holloman AFB, N.M. - 49th Operations Group, Holloman AFB, N.M. - 54th Fighter Group, Holloman AFB, N.M. · 56th Fighter Wing, Luke AFB, Ariz. · 58th Special Operations Wing, Kirtland AFB, N.M. - 336th Training Group, Fairchild AFB, Wash. · 71st Flying Training Wing, Vance AFB, Okla. · 80th Flying Training Wing, Sheppard AFB, Texas · 97th Air Mobility Wing, Altus AFB, Okla.
AETC-associated Air National Guard Component Units · 149th Fighter Wing, JBSA-Kelly Field Annex, Texas · 150th Special Operations Wing, Kirtland AFB, N.M. · 162nd Fighter Wing, Tucson IAP, Ariz. · 189th Airlift Wing, Little Rock AFB, Ark. · 173rd Fighter Wing, Kingsley Field, Ore. · 174th Attack Wing (Det 28-372nd Training Squadron), Hancock Field, N.Y. AETC-associated Air Force Reserve Component Units · 340th Flying Training Group, JBSA-Randolph, Texas · 944th Fighter Wing, Luke AFB, Ariz. · 730th Air Mobility Training Squadron, Altus AFB, OK · 429th Attack Squadron, Holloman AFB, N.M. 502nd Air Base Wing, JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, Texas
59th Medical Wing, JBSA-Lackland, Texas
AETC Budget (FY19)