By Kayla Good, Navy Office of Community Outreach
SAN DIEGO – A 1999 Saint Mary's High School
graduate and Lee Summit, Missouri native is serving
in the U.S. Navy with Afloat Training Group San Diego.
Petty
Officer 1st Class Tamara Carter
is
an operations specialist
with the training group operating out of San Diego, California.
A Navy operations specialist is responsible for communications
between ships as well as radar operations and surveillance.
“I enjoy training other sailors and allowing them to
learn about their rate so they can take their knowledge on a deployment,” said
Carter. “It makes me feel that I am giving back to the fleet.”
The training
group provides dynamic training to Navy and Coast Guard sailors to ensure a
combat ready force capable of performing a broad spectrum of missions,
according to Navy officials. Special emphasis is placed on preparing ships'
training teams, special evolution teams and watch teams to institutionalize the
onboard capability to sustain and improve combat readiness throughout an
employment cycle.
“I really like the leadership here,” said Carter. “I
get to interact with higher leadership on a different kind of level than when
you are on a ship.”
Afloat Training
Group San Diego strives to keep sailors’ warfare expertise sharp by maintaining
professional knowledge and skills through a robust training program of
installations and factory training, technical symposiums, informal training and
self-study. By maintaining a group of subject matters experts in different
warfare areas, they prepare ships to be missions ready.
"It’s amazing to hear our sailors’ stories,” said Capt. James Storm, commander of Afloat Training Group San Diego.
“Some of them are working on their PhDs and others are working on their first
degree. I’ve met sailors who grew up in extreme poverty, and now they own their
own home here in Southern California. Serving here at Afloat Training Group is
considered a career enhancing tour because these sailors are recognized
experts. They lay the foundation for successful deployments.”
According to Navy officials, approximately 355 sailors
make up the training group making their jobs highly specialized in
order to
keep each part of the command running smoothly.
As a member of
the Afloat Training Group San Diego, sailors prepare ships to deploy. Carter explained
they are building a legacy that will last beyond their lifetimes. The trainers
know how important it is for the Navy to maintain and uphold war-fighting
capabilities to continue their success on the world’s oceans.
“For me, serving means
doing something better with my life,” added Carter. “It's different than going
to college and getting a job. I feel like I am protecting my family and others
in the country.”