Thursday, June 2, 2022

Danville native serves at Naval Aviation Schools Command

By Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Bryan Niegel, Navy Office of Community Outreach

PENSACOLA, Fla. - Airman Apprentice Anthony Carbone, a native of Danville, California, is serving the U.S. Navy at Naval Aviation Schools Command (NASC).
Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class
Anna-Liesa Hussey

As a student at NASC, Carbone is serving among sailors, Marines and guardsmen developing the skills needed to be combat-ready aviation professionals. NASC is located at Naval Air Station Pensacola, Florida, provides an educational foundation in technical training, character development, and professional leadership.

Students at NASC are taught the requirements and skills needed to be successful in their new careers.

Carbone joined the Navy eight months ago.

“I was inspired to join the Navy because I wanted to live a life filled with adventure,” said Carbone.

According to Carbone, the values required to succeed in the Navy are similar to those found in Danville.

“Growing up, I was taught to always show respect and kindness to others,” said Carbone. “That has helped me grow in the Navy so far.”

NASC provides educational foundation in technical training, character development and professional leadership to prepare Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard and partner nations Officer and Enlisted to be the combat quality aviation professionals their nation needs.

NASC is comprised of four schoolhouses: Aviation Training School (ATS), Aviation Enlisted Aircrew Training (AEATS), Aviation Rescue Swimmer School (ARSS) and Aviation Water Survival School (AWS), which provide instruction in 14 different curricula. In fiscal year 2021, ATS staff conducted 2,250 hours of classroom instruction and 17,095 hours of flight instruction; graduated 1,140 pilots and 217 Naval Flight Officers. AEATS graduated 1,237 students, ARSS graduated 245 students and AWS, including Detachment Swim Sites Norfolk and Pearl Harbor provided training for 6,479 students.

Serving in the Navy means Carbone is part of a team that is taking on new importance in America’s focus on rebuilding military readiness, strengthening alliances and reforming business practices in support of the National Defense Strategy.

“The Navy is important to national defense because we provide protection to this country and its allies through the air, land and sea,” said Carbone.

Carbone and the sailors they serve with have many opportunities to achieve accomplishments during their military service.

“So far my proudest moment in the Navy has been completing Rescue Swimmer School,” said Carbone. “I worked a long time to be able to achieve my goals there.”

As Carbone and other sailors continue to train and perform the mission they are tasked with, they take pride in serving their country in the United States Navy.

“Serving in the Navy to me means being a part of something bigger than myself,” added Carbone.

The Naval Education and Training Command is the U.S. Navy’s Force Development pillar and largest shore command. Through its “Street to Fleet” focus, Naval Education and Training Command recruits civilians and transforms them into skilled warfighters ready to meet the current and future needs of the U.S. Navy.