News

Group Control Center gets new home with $400K in upgrades

  • Published
  • By Amanda Creel
  • 78th Air Base Wing Public Affairs
When it comes to preparing for the unexpected, members of the 402nd Electronic Maintenance Group's Group Control Center are ready and able to ensure their peers are safe and accounted for. And now they have a new, state-of-the-art facility to help make it happen.

Members of the group agree the GCC's new facility, which holds its ribbon cutting today at 9 a.m., will allow them to achieve all of their missions more effectively.

The 13-person team is responsible for many missions including emergency management, production analysis, command and control and long-range workload for the 402nd EMXG.

"They are the nerve center or hub of the whole organization," said Sandy Faircloth, director of the 402nd Electronic Maintenance Support Squadron.

The new GCC, which is at least five times larger than the old office, will be located in Bldg. 645 within the 402nd EMXG complex.

Some of the many features of the new center include satellite TV capabilities enabling them to watch national and local news and weather channels, six 40-inch plasma screens and one LCD projection screen.

The project cost more than $400,000 and includes the adjacent conference room, which provides the GCC with video-teleconference capability.

The facility is also outfitted with secure telephone equipment used for classified communications and a phone linked with the Base Emergency Telephone System.

One of the most important features of the control center is a 900-gallon diesel-powered backup generator. The generator allows the group to operate for 72 hours without power.

"It keeps us running in any circumstance," said Mike Poole, GCC flight chief.

As part of the emergency management mission, the GCC team handles any inspection, plus exercise or real-world situations that might occur.

"We are like 9-1-1 for the group," Mr. Poole said.

Ryan Prosperie, emergency management coordinator, said the center has a plan for every organization and every person during emergency situations such as tornadoes or bomb threats.

The office also facilitates any Force Protection Condition changes such as electronic locking of gates throughout the group's facility, Mr. Poole said. The team is responsible for posting guards and moving cars when security measures are in place.

The facility is also equipped with cameras that allow members of the team to see who's attempting to gain entry into the center.

Along with ensuring the safety of the group's personnel, the group also helps guarantee production levels throughout the group are optimal. The new facility allows the team to monitor production levels using the tenets of visual management.

Members of the team can immediately determine shops that are producing well and shops that aren't by looking at one of the plasma screens. Great producers are shown in blue, while those with production issues are highlighted in red.

"This way we know where to focus manpower and attention to get problems fixed," said Tammie Hanlin, lead production operation analyst.