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Military Team Helps Make Hospitality
Happen
By Linda D. Kozaryn
American Forces Press Service
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Pfc. Danny McMullen, right, and
Sgt. Marty McGraw of the 530th Supply and Services
Battalion at Fort Bragg, N.C., prepare to
distribute sandwiches to Kosovar refugees arriving
at the reception center at Fort Dix, N.J.
U.S. Air Force
photo
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ORT DIX, N.J. --
Most career military people don't even blink an eye when
they get orders to do the impossible at a moment's notice.
It's just part of the job.
That's how it was for Army Brig. Gen. Mitchell M. Zais,
Army Reserve Lt. Col. Ellsworth E. Mayfield Jr. and more
than about 230 other service members who suddenly found
themselves part of Joint Task Force Provide Refuge.
The soldiers got orders to join an interagency task force
headed by the Department of Health and Human Services. The
task force was to form here and prepare to receive, house
and process up to 20,000 ethnic Albanian refugees from
Kosovo.
The first flight with about 450 refugees would arrive in
three days. To further complicate the mission, first lady
Hillary Rodham Clinton and her welcoming party would arrive
at about the same time. The military responded with a hearty
'Sir, yes sir!' But some confessed to some incredulous head
shaking before charging ahead.
Zais assembled his staff, including logistics officer
Mayfield, from the U.S. Army Reserve Command at Fort
McPherson. At Fort Dix, installation transportation,
billeting and food service directors went to work preparing
for the influx of refugees and high-ranking visitors. Army
officials mobilized forces from the XVIII Airborne Corps'
530th Supply and Services Battalion and other Fort Bragg,
N.C., support units to care for the refugees.
Zais arrived at Fort Dix after midnight April 30. Early
the next morning, he was coordinating the military's efforts
with those of Health and Human Services. That morning the
interagency team learned they'd been granted a 24-hour
reprieve. The first flight, scheduled May 2, would now
arrive May 3. "We were pleased to learn it would be
Wednesday afternoon, not Wednesday morning, Zais recalled
with a slight smile.
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Army Capt. Ron Frame works on a
notebook at Joint Task Force Provide Refuge
headquarters at Fort Dix, N.J. Frame was among 80
soldiers sent by Army Reserve Command to help
Kosovar refugees at the Army Reserve post.
U.S. Army
Photo
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s the arrival date drew near, specialists from
the Immigration and Naturalization Service, U.S. Customs
Service, Public Health Service, Centers for Disease Control
and other government agencies began assembling at the Army
Reserve post south of Trenton. Officials and volunteers came
in from the International Organization on Migrations,
American Red Cross, nine refugee resettlement agencies
contracted by the State Department, and other nongovernment
agencies.
"We put this team together in such short notice with such
a visible suspense date that there was no time for bickering
or interagency rivalry to arise," Zais said. As the arrival
drew ever closer, the interagency team worked together very
effectively, he said.
The general's staff is Total Force. Some members, such as
Mayfield, are reservists serving on full-time active duty in
a special Active Guard and Reserve status.
Mayfield's nine-member logistics staff set up offices for
the military and the various agencies. "We had to stand up
the headquarters with furniture, office supplies, file
cabinets, phone lines, computers," he said. "We had to find
places to live, vehicles -- plus prepare for the refugees."
The task force logisticians worked with base officials to
provide food, housing, laundry and transportation for the
task force and the refugees. Mayfield noted that while
supporting Operation Provide Refuge, Fort Dix officials were
also providing transportation for Operation New Horizons and
hosting reserve training.
"Without the support of the installation staff, we
couldn't have made it happen," said Army Maj. Kent Jennings,
an AGR officer and head of transportation for the joint task
force. Fort Dix transportation chief Johnnie L. Jackson and
passenger movement chief Robert Z. Beavin, for example,
assembled a fleet of 95 leased and General Services
Administration vehicles to shuttle military, civilian staff
and refugees, Jennings said.
The post civilian food service officer, retired Army
Master Sgt. General Gregg, adjusted meal times and recipes
at two dining facilities to suit Muslim customs and European
eating habits. Budgetary constraints, however, prevented him
from adding goat cheese, rabbit and some other special menu
items the refugees requested, he said.
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Maj. Kent Jennings,
an Army Reserve officer from Fort McPherson, Ga.,
talks with Dan Sowinsky, a bus contractor at Fort
Dix, N.J. The Army leased civilian vehicles to help
transport Kosovar refugees housed at the base.
Capt. Ronald Kopp,
USAR
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he biggest thing we can't provide them is time,"
Gregg said. "They like to sit and eat and talk. We don't
have the time since we have to feed so many people."
Each day, Operation Provide Refuge brought new lessons,
Mayfield concluded. It proved to be "a fast-paced,
challenging experience for even the most experienced
logistician and Army planner," he said. "We are literally
developing the model for future refugee operations."
While the military worked its magic, the federal and
nongovernment agencies put procedures in place to move the
refugees through Immigration and Naturalization Service
processing, provide identification cards, set up medical
screening and provide emergency medical care. Red Cross
workers prepared to welcome the refugees with box lunches,
fruit and juice snacks, 'comfort kits' with toiletries, and
clothing vouchers.
There was also a major planning effort under way to
receive the Clinton party of high-ranking dignitaries, Zais
said. This required coordination with White House and Secret
Service officials.
Wednesday morning, May 5, everything was ready. The
refugees arrived and were processed. The first lady arrived,
welcomed the refugees and departed. The climactic day wasn't
over till 2 a.m. Thursday, Zais said. The next morning, he
said, the interagency task force "got together and said,
'OK, now we need to get organized.' By that time, we were
used to working with each other. We'd already built the
team."
Sgt. Maj. Steven Woods, an AGR soldier from Army Reserve
Command headquarters, said people from the civilian agencies
said they couldn't believe the military could get everything
done in so little time.
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Army Capt. Ron Frame, a
logistics specialist with Joint Task Force Provide
Refuge, meets with Olga Nelson, a project manager
at Fort Dix Laundry Facility. The task force
supports 4,000 Kosovar refugees who reached safe
haven at the Army Reserve post, south of
Trenton.
Capt. Ronald Kopp, USAR
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e told them, 'We're used to chaos,'" Woods said.
"You just sit down and talk about it, figure out the right
way to go and go with it. If it works, that's fine. If it
doesn't, then we back up, figure out what was wrong, fix it
and move on out." Hosting the refugees takes the same kind
of effort as processing soldiers for an overseas movement,
he added.
Lavinia Limon, Health and Human Services' director of the
Office of Refugee Resettlement, hailed the military support
as "incredible." On very short notice, she said, they
transformed a seldom-used facility -- one never used for
children and older folks -- "into an environment that's
safe, comfortable, inviting and quiet."
"I know the refugees have been just amazed," Limon
continued. "They were worried they were coming to tents or
some other kind of difficult environment. They found
themselves treated warmly, not only in terms of the actual
environment, but the interaction with the soldiers. It's
really been something to watch."
The mix of military and civilian, government and
nongovernment agency cultures presented a learning
experience for all task force members, according to Health
and Human Services' Ron Munia. "I think the general probably
would like things to snap sometimes," he said. "We can snap,
but it just doesn't work quite the way it does in the
military. It will work, it just takes a little longer."
The civilians, in particular, learned from the crisp
military meeting style, he said, and the remarkable way the
military gets things done. The Army, for example, turned a
long-mothballed dining facility into a clinic, he said.
"When I first saw it, ceiling tiles were falling down,"
Munia said. "When I came back, I was amazed. I didn't think
paint could dry that fast. It was just that kind of an
amazing effort that came through to put this all
together."
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