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An Army Field Support Battalion-Charleston team member walks up the roll on/roll off ramp of the USNS Pomeroy (T-AKR 316) as the ship is docked and prepared to receive its load of military equipment and supplies as part of the Army Prepositioned Stocks, or APS, program. (Ellen Crown)
U.S. Army Medical Logistics Command Commander Col. Gary Cooper talks to team members from the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Agency’s APS-3 (medical) warehouse in Goose Creek, South Carolina, during an APS-3 site visit to the USNS Pomeroy (T-AKR 316) March 23, 2023. The engagement provided staff with insights into how and where medical materiel is stored on the roll on/roll off cargo ship as part of the Army Prepositioned Stocks, or APS, program. (Ellen Crown)
Maj. Janessa Moyer, director of the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Agency’s Force Projection Directorate, stands topside of the USNS Pomeroy (T-AKR 316) overlooking prepositioned stocks that are ready to load onto the ship at port in Charleston, South Carolina. The Pomeroy is a roll on/roll off cargo vessel – one of several in the Military Sealift Command inventory – that transports and stores military equipment and supplies as part of the Army Prepositioned Stocks, or APS, program. (Photo Credit: Ellen Crown)
APS-3 (medical) site manager James Gerrard stands in a medical warehouse bay in Goose Creek, South Carolina. (Photo Credit: Ellen Crown)
1st Lt. Andrew Whittenbarger, center left, passes the unit colors of the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Agency’s Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment to Sgt. 1st Class Tie Wu during a change of command ceremony March 17 at Fort Detrick, Maryland. Whittenbarger assumed command during the event, with Wu taking responsibility as detachment sergeant. Also pictured are USAMMA Commander Col. Gary Cooper, left, and outgoing detachment commander, Maj. Chris Wright.
Col. Tony Nesbitt, outgoing commander of U.S. Army Medical Logistics Command, embraces Col. Clayton Carr, AMLC’s assistant chief of staff for operations, following a relinquishment of command ceremony March 10 at Fort Detrick, Maryland. Nesbitt, who is retiring, passed the baton to Col. Gary Cooper, who assumed interim command for the organization.
Col. Tony Nesbitt, center left, outgoing commander of U.S. Army Medical Logistics Command, shakes hands with Brig. Gen. Anthony McQueen, commanding general of U.S. Army Medical Research and Development Command and Fort Detrick, Maryland, following a relinquishment of command ceremony March 10 at Fort Detrick. Also pictured at right is Nesbitt’s sister, Donna Benjamin.
Col. Tony Nesbitt, outgoing commander of U.S. Army Medical Logistics Command, speaks during his relinquishment of command ceremony March 10 at Fort Detrick, Maryland. Nesbitt, who is retiring, passed the baton to Col. Gary Cooper, who will serve as interim commander for the organization.
Maj. Gen. Robert Edmonson II, commanding general of U.S. Army Communications-Electronics Command, greets attendees during his remarks at U.S. Army Medical Logistics Command’s relinquishment of command ceremony March 10 at Fort Detrick, Maryland. The event served to recognize and sendoff outgoing commander Col. Tony Nesbitt, who will be retiring.
Col. Tony Nesbitt, right, outgoing commander of U.S. Army Medical Logistics Command, passes the unit colors to Maj. Gen. Robert Edmonson II, commanding general of U.S. Army Communications-Electronics Command, during a relinquishment of command ceremony March 10 at Fort Detrick, Maryland. Also pictured is AMLC Sgt. Maj. Akram Shaheed.
Spc. Joel Velasco, a biomedical equipment specialist from the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Center-Europe, is pictured performing maintenance on a medical device at an Army prepositioned stocks site in Dulmen, Germany, March 1.
Donald Shelton, a certified biomedical equipment technician from the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Center-Europe, completes maintenance on a medical device at an Army prepositioned stocks site in Dulmen, Germany, March 1.
A biomedical equipment technician works on a portable X-ray machine at U.S. Army Medical Materiel Agency’s Medical Maintenance Operations Division at Tracy, California. (U.S. Army photo by Katie Ellis-Warfield/Released)
Juan Flores, right, a general supply specialist with the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Agency’s Business Support Office, leads a discussion during online training on the Defense Medical Logistics Item Identification System, or DMLIIS. Also pictured is Matthew Diggs, a supply management specialist for the BSO. Flores and Diggs have been collaborating with Defense Health Agency’s Medical Logistics Directorate to provide DMLIIS training on an ongoing basis for supply specialists and clinical analysts.
John Jeske, interim production controller at the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Agency’s Medical Maintenance Operations Division at Hill Air Force Base in Utah, has been named USAMMA’s Civilian of the Year for 2022. Jeske also has worked as inventory manager and transportation coordinator over his five-plus years at MMOD-Hill.
John Jeske is pictured in the warehouse at the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Agency’s Medical Maintenance Operations Division at Hill Air Force Base, Utah. Jeske, interim production controller at MMOD-Hill, was recently named USAMMA’s Civilian of the Year award winner.
Maj. Chris Wright, left, commander of the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Agency's Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment, presents John Jeske with USAMMA’s Civilian of the Year award at Hill Air Force Base, Utah. Jeske is interim production controller at USAMMA’s Medical Maintenance Operations Division at Hill. (Courtesy photo)
Kenneth Daniels is pictured with his daughter, Makayla, a senior guard for the University of Arkansas women’s basketball team, and wife, Wynetta, following a tournament in 2022. Daniels, a seasoned human resources professional and 21-year Army veteran, serves as interim director of the G-1 at U.S. Army Medical Logistics Command, drawing on past coaching with kids in sports growing up as he supports strong and cohesive teams at AMLC.
Workers at the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Center-Korea conduct a routine air-quality inspection. USAMMC-K was recently recognized by Army Materiel Command with its Exceptional Organization Safety Award at the battalion level.
Choe, Chae-hun, right, safety and occupational health specialist for the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Center-Korea, conducts a site inspection. USAMMC-K was recently recognized by Army Materiel Command with its Exceptional Organization Safety Award at the battalion level.