106th Rescue Wing Base Honor Guard sets high standards for performance

  • Published
  • By Tech Sgt. Monica Dalberg
  • 106RQW
The Base Honor Guard of the New York Air National
Guard's 106th Rescue Wing performed 619 military funerals in 2013; more than
any other Air National Guard Base Honor Guard. The high-performing Honor
Guard is also the eighth busiest in the Air Force overall.

With 619 funerals conducted in the 2013-14 fiscal year, the 106th Rescue
Wing's Base Honor Guard is the busiest Honor Guard Team in the Air National
Guard.

The team is also the eighth busiest Honor Guard in the total Air Force and
the only Base Honor Guard recognized by the Air Combat Command Inspector
General for their dedication to duty, training plan, and administrative
procedures.

The five-member team is on-call 365 days a year ensuring that Air Force
veterans get the military honors Congress says they are entitled to during a
funeral, said Chief Master Sergeant Dustin Lance, 106th Force Force Support
Squadron Superintendent.

Three team members have received the Air Force Achievement Medal for
outstanding achievement or meritorious service rendered specifically on
behalf of the Air Force.

On a recent Monday, for example, the honor guard conducted six funerals,
Lance said.

By law anybody who served in the United States military is entitled to
funeral honors, specified as the playing of Taps and the presentation of an
American flag to the veteran's family by a minimum of two service members.

The honor guard funeral detail members perform Military Funeral Honors for
Air Force active duty, retired personnel and veterans.

Detail assignments for the 106th Honor Guard come from Joint Base
McGuire-Dix- Lakehurst Air Force Honor Guard. That honor guard's area of
responsibility covers five states: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
Connecticut, and Massachusetts.

Being able to call on an Air National Guard honor guard helps get the
mission done, said Master Sgt. Roman Kernitski, the assistant
noncommissioned officer in charge of the Honor Guard at the joint base.

"Our area of responsibility is 68,000 square miles. The 106th helps us
manage the area and helps us allocate resources throughout," Kernitski said.
"They always answer our call and are eager to assist."

"They've helped us tremendously with the amount of details we can do," said
Tech. Sgt Nicholas Bryon, the noncommissioned officer in charge of the honor
guard a Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst.

"We've increased their manning from two slots to five slots in the last
three years," he added. "The funerals we've been able to do on Long Island
have increased, but our own manning here is the same. We used to have to
drive to Long Island all the time, but the 106th has made our jobs easier."

Staff Sgt Gregory Funaro, noncommissioned officer in charge of the 106th
honor guard said he is happy about how many details his team can provide.

"We're not straining ourselves and it shows the program is growing a lot
from where it used to be," he said, referring to the increase in slots. The
106th honor guard has paid final tribute at funeral ceremonies for Tuskegee
Airmen, the first African-American aviators of the United States armed
forces.

The detail also took part in ceremonies for William Lynch, an Air Force
Veteran and New York and national political leader whose funeral was
attended by New York power elite, civil rights activist Reverend Al
Sharpton, and ex-President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton.

As members of the Base Honor Guard, Airmen are expected to uphold the
standards of all in the Air Force and must epitomize perfection in dress and
appearance, customs and courtesies and drill and ceremonies, Funaro said.

To ensure members are physically and mentally prepared to flawlessly execute
the mission, Lance said he requires members to exercise a minimum of one
hour each day.

Ceremonial guardsmen are required to be of good reputation, having
integrity, ethical conduct and exhibiting standards which merit respect,
according to the United States Air Force Base Honor Guard website. But
members admit maintaining military bearing can be a challenge.

"What I tell them when they join the team is you never know what is going to
affect you or what is going to touch you," Lance said. "It may be that
someone in your family is sick and the person that has died reminds you of
them. It may be that the person who died is your age, or there is something
in their life you can identify with. Regardless, you always have to keep
your military bearing. It can be the hardest job in the military," he
explained.

The 106th Honor Guard members said they are honored to have the privilege
and responsibility of rendering military funeral honors at interments, and
showing the nation's deep gratitude to those who, in times of war and peace,
have faithfully defended our country.

Despite the grief family and friends endure at the loss of a loved one, a
show of gratitude is often returned to honor guard members, detail members
said.

"Many times when I'm presenting the flag, they thank us for our service,"
said Senior Airman Larissa Morales.

"They show their love toward the military...and affection to us sometimes.
There have been times when they hold our hand when we're presenting the
flag. You can sense just from the hand gesture they really appreciate it,"
she said

Funerals typically bring together families and friends to honor and say
goodbye to the deceased. Occasionally the BHG performs at funerals with no
attendees, and such funerals stand out most to Senior Airman Michael
Dancona.

"The funerals that don't have anybody are probably the most rewarding ones
for me," Dancona said. "I don't know what the situations are for some of
them, but we are there and it's proof the military doesn't forget about
them. That makes me feel good."

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