Thursday, May 2, 2019

Santa Rosa Native serves with Navy Strike Fighter Squadron

By Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Tom Gagnier, Navy Office of Community Outreach
Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Tim Miller

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va.- A 2007 homeschool graduate and Santa Rosa, California, native is currently serving with a U.S. Navy strike fighter squadron which flies one of the world’s most advanced warplanes.

Petty Officer 2nd Class Raven Dubois is an aviation maintenance administrationman with the Gladiators of VFA 106, which operates out of Naval Air Station Oceana. A Navy aviation maintenance administrationman is responsible for maintaining logs and records that document aircraft maintenance.

Dubois credits success in the Navy to many of the lessons learned growing up in Santa Rosa.

“Let your work speak for itself," said Dubois. "You don’t have to say a lot, it’s what you do,”

Members of VFA 106 fly and maintain the F/A 18 Super Hornet, one of the most advanced aircraft in the world. The Super Hornet takes off from and lands on Navy aircraft carriers at sea and is capable of conducting air-to-air combat as well as striking targets on land. It is approximately 61 feet long, has a loaded weight of 51,000 pounds, and a max speed of 1,190 miles per hour.

Operating from sea aboard aircraft carriers, the Super Hornet gives the Navy the power to protect America’s interests anywhere, at any time. The versatile jet has the ability to destroy targets located hundreds of miles inland. Super Hornets are an all-weather aircraft used as an attack aircraft as well as a fighter. In its fighter mode, the F/A-18 is used primarily as a fighter escort and for fleet air defense; in its attack mode, it is used for interdiction and air support.

A key element of the Navy the nation needs is tied to the fact that America is a maritime nation, according to Navy officials, and that the nation’s prosperity is tied to the ability to operate freely on the world’s oceans. More than 70 percent of the Earth’s surface is covered by water; 80 percent of the world’s population lives close to a coast; and 90 percent of all global trade by volume travels by sea.

Dubois is playing an important part in America’s focus on rebuilding military readiness, strengthening alliances and reforming business practices in support of National Defense Strategy.

“Our priorities center on people, capabilities and processes, and will be achieved by our focus on speed, value, results and partnerships,” said Secretary of the Navy Richard V. Spencer. “Readiness, lethality and modernization are the requirements driving these priorities.”

Though there are many ways for sailors to earn distinction in their command, community and career, Dubois is most proud of earning a Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal.

“I got it at the end of my tour on the USS George H.W. Bush," said Dubois. "We were the first aircraft carrier to make a port visit to Israel in years.”

Serving in the Navy is a continuing tradition of military service for Dubois, who has military ties with family members who have previously served. Dubois is honored to carry on the family tradition.

“My grandpa was a Marine and I thought it was cool,” said Dubois. “My uncle, though, was in the Navy and had good things to say about his time.”

As a member of one of the U.S. Navy’s most relied-upon assets, Dubois and other sailors know they are part of a legacy that will last beyond their lifetimes providing the Navy the nation needs.

“Serving in the Navy gives you a sense of purpose and you feel like you’re doing your civic duty,” added Dubois.