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    When Cutting Corners Becomes the Norm 0 Workplace
    USACRC Editor

    When Cutting Corners Becomes the Norm

    The true danger of normalizing deviance lies in its subtlety. Initially, deviations might seem minor and inconsequential. Examples include skipping a procedural step due to a time crunch, deferring a minor maintenance procedure because...
    Staying in the Fight 0 Military Ops & Training
    USACRC Editor

    Staying in the Fight

    Combatives training is an important part of being a prepared Soldier. It provides the skills to help you protect yourself, as well as your battle buddies, in combat. Unfortunately, this training can sometimes take Soldiers out of the fight if...
    DITY Dumb or DITY Do? 0 Automobiles
    USACRC Editor

    DITY Dumb or DITY Do?

    Just like long checkout lines at the commissary on payday, the permanent change of station (PCS) move is a certainty for service members and their families. While many would prefer to let professionals handle the heavy lifting on Uncle...
    Light Up the Night Safely 0 Home & Family
    USACRC Editor

    Light Up the Night Safely

    Unfortunately, a lot of folks don’t take the major hazards related to fireworks seriously. Some people enjoy igniting firecrackers or cherry bombs and holding them in their hand as long as possible before throwing them — sometimes at...

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    A Lack of Intervention

    A Lack of Intervention

    MASTER SGT. CHAD ROSS
    Detachment 1, B Company,
    3-238th General Support Aviation Battalion
    Michigan Army National Guard
    Selfridge Air National Guard Base, Michigan

    I knew the kid. Most of the Soldiers in the battalion did. He was the son of one of the senior NCOs and very popular within the units. He was outgoing, energetic and, at 24 years old, had the whole world in front of him. A recent graduate of the 68W Combat Medic Course, he’d already deployed once with the battalion’s MEDEVAC Company. From what I knew of him, he seemed like he had a level head on his shoulders. He’d even volunteered for a deployment to Afghanistan as a door gunner with my company and was at the top of the list of those we planned on taking.

    I wasn’t there the night the accident happened. I wish I had been. I might have been able to talk some sense into him. However, a chain of bad decisions and lack of intervention would take him from his parents and sibling, his friends, the Army and this world forever.

    During a night of hanging out after drill with buddies from his unit, he decided it would be a good idea to hop on his Honda CBR 750, along with a young woman he was smitten with, and go for a quick ride. He had not been drinking, but he left his helmet with a friend. His companion didn’t have a helmet either — or any other personal protective equipment (PPE).

    As the Soldier left that night, everything seemed fine. He turned left out of the parking lot and disappeared into light traffic. A few miles down the road, the Soldier turned onto a smaller street that coiled through a group of subdivisions. At some point, he accelerated down a straightaway. It was late, no one seemed to be around and maybe the stop sign became an option instead of a rule. He never saw the van approaching from the right. If he did, it was too late or beyond his skill to avoid it.

    The impact was brutal. The Soldier and his passenger were violently launched from the motorcycle and into the side of the van. The injuries they suffered were extensive and grave. Paramedics pronounced them both dead at the scene.

    Four days later on a rainy afternoon in northern Michigan, more than 100 people paid their respects to the Soldier. Even though I didn’t know him very well, tears welled up in my eyes as “Taps” played, a 21-gun salute sounded and his coffin was lowered to his final resting place.

    When I reflect on this tragedy, my thoughts linger on what a waste of life it was. A young man and woman, in the primes of their lives, gone forever. Then I wonder, “Why in the hell didn’t someone stop him that night?” I puzzle over where the failure occurred. Everyone in the crowd he was hanging out with that night was in the military — enlisted, NCOs and officers. They should have known the risks, right?

    We will never know the reasons for the decisions made that night. We only know that the outcome was irreversible. A father and mother lost a son, a sister lost a brother, we all lost a comrade, the Army lost a Soldier, and the world lost two young people with untapped potential. What we can do, however, is learn from this tragic event. Leaders are obligated to educate Soldiers, especially young and inexperienced riders, on safe riding habits, the use of proper PPE and prudent decision-making processes on and off duty.

     

    • 9 June 2024
    • Author: USACRC Editor
    • Number of views: 302
    • Comments: 0
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