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Sgt. Jessica Reed
313th MEDICAL COMPANY, NATIONAL GUARD
Assignment:
Communications NCO,
313th Medical Company,
Nebraska National Guard,
Lincoln Neb.
Personal: Age 22. Competitive runner,
studying psychology at the
University of Nebraska at
Lincoln; serves as unit
morale, welfare and recreation NCO.
To read the citation click here!
The traditional mission of the 313th Medical
Company, a National Guard ambulance unit
from Lincoln, Neb., is to move patients inside
bases - from helipads to hospitals, from hospital to hospital.
But the unit's mission in Iraq is far more harrowing. Its 24 ambulances and 75 troops
are scattered over seven locations around the country, with a main task of accompanying convoys and providing medical care to
those wounded in all-too-frequent attacks.
The key to making the mission work is communicating with the far-flung fleet, a job that
falls to a 22-year-old college senior from tiny
Lawrence, Neb. - Sgt. Jessica Reed.
When Reed arrived, many, but not all, of the
ambulances were equipped with a computer
and satellite Movement Tracking System
(MTS) technology that allows a base station
to see, in near real time, the location of all the
ambulances. It allows the ambulance crews to
see their exact location on a video display
map. And everyone can communicate via text
message, an important consideration in an
environment when voice communications can
be shaky.
But no one in the 313th, Reed included, had
ever seen the system. As communications noncommissioned officer, Reed had to learn how to
install, operate and maintain it.
"It would be a lot more scary out there with
out it," Reed said.
And, because it's her job to keep the whole
thing running, her biggest nightmare, she said,
is that "at the most critical time, they will need
the communications and it won't be working."
During her Iraq tour, Reed
became such an expert on the system that
other medical companies now ask her to
train their troops,
which she does on a
regular basis - which
has helped make her
the Army Times
Soldier of the Year.
But that's not all Reed does.
Ignoring the tradition of never volunteering,
Reed's hand seems to shoot up constantly. She leads the Field Sanitation Team, is her unit's retention NCO and Equal Opportunity representative, and she chairs the enlisted advisory
council. She also trained to become an alternate noncommissioned officer in charge for the company's operations center.
And as morale, welfare and recreation NCO,
Reed organizes monthly entertainment - most
recently, a karaoke night. She also plays on the
unit softball team, though she admits her hit
ting is weak. She also trained to become a com bat lifesaver and, in that role, has traveled
on a half-dozen convoys.
"She was instrumental in maintaining
communications with a quick-reaction force and her higher headquarters when one of
the convoys she was on was attacked by an insurgent's improvised explosive device on
Jan. 16," said Reed's company commander, Capt. Craig Strong, 37, of Silver Creek,
Neb.
With all of that, Reed still finds time to
keep in top shape. A competitive runner in high school who traveled to Great Britain
and Australia for meets, she is the undefeated woman's champion in the monthly runs that draw about 90 men and 30 women.
In fact, only a handful of men finish ahead of the 5-foot-6, 126-pound Reed.
Reed joined the National Guard at 17. "I had to have my mom sign up on it," she
said. "I thought it would be a good challenge. I wanted to serve my country."
She began studying psychology at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln and was
15 credit hours away from a degree when her unit was activated last October.
She had planned to work with underprivileged kids when she finished school, but now
says, "I'm not sure what I want to do yet."
For now, she shares an 8-foot-by-20-foot air-conditioned trailer with another soldier.
"It would be a very small apartment back home," she said, surveying the cramped
room with its plywood bookshelves and homemade curtains.
While the base is considered a safe rear area, one recent Sunday morning, a 120mm
rocket landed less than 100 yards from her trailer. Nonetheless, Reed doesn't complain.
"I just go with the flow," she said.
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