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PETTY OFFICER 3 & 2 Chapters 5-8

PETTY OFFICER 3 & 2 Chapters 5-8. NAVEDTRA-14504 ET1 CHARLIE BURNS. Topics. Chapter 5 – United States Military Organization Chapter 6 – Safety and Hazardous Materials Information for the Petty Officer Chapter 7 – Supply Procedures Chapter 8 – Military Responsibilities and Duties.

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PETTY OFFICER 3 & 2 Chapters 5-8

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  1. PETTY OFFICER 3 & 2Chapters 5-8 NAVEDTRA-14504 ET1 CHARLIE BURNS

  2. Topics • Chapter 5 – United States Military Organization • Chapter 6 – Safety and Hazardous Materials Information for the Petty Officer • Chapter 7 – Supply Procedures • Chapter 8 – Military Responsibilities and Duties

  3. Chapter 5United States Military Organization • I can imagine no more rewarding career. And any man who may be asked in this century what he did to make his life worthwhile, I can respond with a good deal of pride and satisfaction: “I served in the United States Navy.” - President John F. Kennedy

  4. Department of Defense

  5. Commander in Chief • The President, as the Commander in Chief, heads the military chain of command within the Department of Defense (DoD). • The Commander in Chief is kept abreast of all matters affecting the ability of the DoD to defend the United States and its allies.

  6. What article of the Constitution provides that the executive power shall be vested in a President of the United States? 1) V 2) II 3) III 4) IV 2) II

  7. Secretary of Defense • Under the President, the SECDEF, by virtue of an executive order, has responsibility for all the President’s functions involving the DoD. Those functions include the President‘s powers, duties and authorities.

  8. Joint Chiefs of Staff • Consists of the Chairman, the Vice Chairman the Chief of Staff US Army, the Chief of Naval Operations, the Chief of Staff US Air force, and the Commandant of the Marine Corps. The Chairman is the principal military advisor to the President. The Chairman holds the rank of general or admiral and outranks all other officers of the armed forces.

  9. Department of the Air Force • Established on Sept 18, 1947. They are responsible for defending the United States through control and exploitation of air and space.

  10. Department of the Army • Established by the Continental Congress on June 14, 1775. The Army focuses on land operations.

  11. United States Marine Corps • Established on Nov 10, 1775. The Marines are able to fight on land, air or sea.

  12. Which of the following is the most senior officer in the armed forces? 1) Commandant of the Marine Corps 2) Chief of Naval Operations 3) Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff 4) Secretary of Defense 3) Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  13. Other Department of Defense Agencies • Ballistic Missile Defense Organization • Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency • Defense Commissary Agency • Defense Contract Audit Agency • Defense Finance and Accounting Service • Defense Information Systems Agency • Defense Intelligence Agency • Defense Legal Service Agency • Defense Logistics Agency • Defense Security Service • Defense Threat Reduction Agency • National Imagery and Mapping Agency

  14. Who serves as the spokesman for the commanders of the unified combatant command? 1) Commander of the U.S. Joint Forces Command 2) Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff 3) Secretary of the Army 4) Secretary of the Air Force 2) Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  15. Department of the Navy • Primary mission is to protect the United States, as directed by the President or the SECDEF, by the effective prosecution of war at sea including, with its Marine Corps component, the seizure or defense of advanced naval bases; to support, as required, the forces of all military departments of the United States; and to maintain freedom of the seas.

  16. Department of the Navy • Office of Legislative Affairs • Office of Information • Office of the Judge Advocate General • Office of the Auditor General • Office of Program Appraisal • Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Manpower and Reserve Affairs) • Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Research, Engineering, and Systems) • Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Financial Management) • Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Shipbuilding and Logistics) • Office of the General Counsel of the Navy

  17. Chief of Naval Operations • The Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), under the direction of SECNAV, takes precedence above all other officers of the naval service. • The CNO is the Navy member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. • The CNO, under the Secretary of the Navy, exercises command over certain central executive organizations, assigned shore activities, and the Operating Forces of Navy.

  18. Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy (MCPON) • Serves as the senior enlisted representative of the Navy. Started in 1966 by the CNO to help with retention. The office was formally set up on 1 March 1967 with a tour length of four years. The MCPON reports directly to the CNO regarding matters on active duty and retired enlisted members and their dependants.

  19. The Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy is assigned to what immediate office? 1) Chief of Naval Personnel 2) Chief of Naval Operations 3) Secretary of the Navy 4) Assistant Secretary of the Navy 2) Chief of Naval Operations

  20. The Operating Forces • Naval Reserve Force • Operation Test and Evaluation Force • Naval Special Warfare Command • Military Sealift Command • U.S. Naval Forces Europe • U.S. Naval Forces Central Command • Atlantic Fleet • Pacific Fleet

  21. The U.S. Naval Forces Central Command’s area of responsibility includes which of the following areas? 1) Mediterranean 2) Middle East 3) Continental United States 4) South America 2) Middle East

  22. The Pacific Fleet’s area of responsibility includes which of the following area? 1) Southeast Asia 2) Arctic Ocean 3) U.S. west coast 4) Both 2 and 3 4) Both 2 and 3

  23. The Shore Establishment • Chief of Naval Personnel • Bureau of Medicine and Surgery • Naval Sea Systems Command • Naval Air Systems Command • Naval Supply Systems Command • Naval Facilities Engineering Command • Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command • Strategic Systems Programs • Naval Computer and Telecommunications Command • Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command • Office of Naval Intelligence • Chief of Naval Education and Training Command • Naval Doctrine Command • Naval Security Group Command • Naval Legal Service Command • Naval Space Command • Naval Safety Center

  24. Commandant of the Marine Corps • The Commandant of the Marine Corps (CMC) commands the Marine Corps. The commandant is directly responsible to SECNAV for the administration, discipline, internal organization, training requirements, efficiency, readiness, and total performance of the Marine Corps.

  25. What command plans the amount of education and training needed by the Navy personnel to meet manpower requirements. 1) CHNAVPERS 2) CNET 3) DIRSSP 4) COMNAVDOCCOM 1) CHNAVPERS

  26. What command enhances the war-fighting capability of the Navy and Marines by arming our Sailors, Marines, and civilians with the knowledge they need to save lives and preserve resources? 1) COMNAVSAFECEN 2) COMNAVSECGRUCOM 3) COMNAVSPACECOM 4) ONI 1) COMNAVSAFECEN

  27. Chapter 6Safety and Hazardous Materials Information for the Petty Officer • …out of this nettle, danger, we pluck this flower, safety. - William Shakespeare Henry IV, I.3

  28. Safety • Safety rules and regulations concern all of us, regardless of the job to which we are assigned. All types of tasks, from the simplest to the most hazardous, have safety regulations. We often will not observe safety precautions unless we are fully aware of the dangers involved.

  29. The objective of any safety program is to improve operational readiness. 1) True 2) False 1) True

  30. Organizational Safety Responsibilities • Ultimate responsibility for the safety of the unit lies with the Commanding Officer. • Each individual plays a part in that safety. • The Division Safety Petty Officer reports directly to the division safety officer in all matters concerning division safety.

  31. Who is responsible for mishap prevention training and maintaining appropriate records? 1) Executive Officer 2) Command master chief 3) Division Safety Petty Officer 4) All hands 3) Division Safety Petty Officer

  32. Safety Council • Large commands may have a safety organization. • As the Division Safety Petty Officer, you may serve as the representative of your division. • Meets monthly.

  33. What is the purpose of the command safety council? 1) Mandate safety policy 2) Enforce safety policy 3) Develop recommendations on safety policy 4) Conduct safety training 3) Develop recommendations on safety policy

  34. Individual Responsibilities SAFETY IS AN ALL-HANDS RESPONSIBILITY Observe all precautions. Report unsafe conditions or equipment. Warn others of hazards. Report any injury or ill health to your supervisor. Wear or use protective clothing or equipment. Be safety conscious. Always inspect equipment and attachments.

  35. Equipment Tag-out Procedures • Post DANGER, CAUTION, OUT-OF-COMMISSION tags or OUT-OF-CALIBRATION labels following authorized procedures. • Do not remove or break posted safety tags without proper authorization.

  36. Tag-out Logs • Used to control the entire tag-out procedure. • It is a record of authorization of each effective tag out action. • Contains a copy of the main tag-out instruction, a DANGER/CAUTION tag-out index and a cleared DANGER/CAUTION tag-out record.

  37. After the tags are cleared and the record sheet is filled out, where would you place the sheet? 1) At the front of the tag-out log 2) At the back of the tag-out log in the cleared section 3) In the index/audit record 4) In the documentation file 2) At the back of the tag-out log in the cleared section

  38. Hazardous Materials(HAZMATS) • Any material that, because of its quality, concentration, or physical or chemical characteristics, may pose a real hazard to human health to the environment. • Includes: Flammable and Combustible Materials, Toxic Materials, Corrosive Materials, Oxidizers, Aerosols, Compressed Gases • Hazardous Materials Information System(HMIS) is a computerized database of material safety data sheets (MSDSs).

  39. Occupational Safety and Health Administration passed a regulation that requires all civilian and military employees of the federal government to comply with what regulation? 1) Hazardous Material Control and Management 2) Hazard Material and Refuse Management 3) Hazard Communication Standard 4) Hazardous and Toxic Material Disposal 3) Hazard Communication Standard

  40. HAZMAT Precautions • MAKE sure the space in which you are working has adequate ventilation. • WEAR protective clothing, goggles, respirators, gloves and other equipment. • MAKE sure accessible fire-fighting equipment is nearby. • TAKE every precaution to prevent excessive vapors from contaminating the air. • CHECK the labels on all containers of liquid. • WIPE up spilled solvents immediately. • AVOID contact with your eyes, skin, or clothing. NEVER swallow solvents. • KEEP solvent containers tightly closed when you are not using them. • CHECK containers for leakage. • MAKE sure containers are empty before you discard them. • LABEL all containers used to store solvents. • READ and comply with all instructions and precautions on the label.

  41. Most cleaning compounds do NOT contain toxic substances. 1) True 2) False 2) False

  42. Chemical, Biological, and Radiological (CBR) Defense • Mission Oriented Protective Posture (MOPP) • 4 levels • Flexible to allow the CO to adapt the requirements for protective clothing and equipment to the degree of the threat and working conditions at any given time.

  43. MOPP • Level 1 - Suspected (Issued) • Level 2 - Possible (Mask in carrier on person) • Level 3 - Probable (Don gear) • Level 4 - Imminent (Don masks)

  44. Readiness condition III (wartime steaming) is set during what MOPP level? 1) 1 2) 2 3) 3 4) 4 1) 1

  45. Damage Control Petty Officer • Making damage control closure log entries. • Maintaining damage control fittings and equipment.

  46. Damage Control Closure Log • The closure log is maintained at all times, whether the ship is in port or underway. • Shows the location where the existing material condition has been modified. The type of fitting; the name of who requested permission to open or close the fitting, the date and time the fitting was opened or closed and the name and rate/rank of the person granting the permission. • The damage control closure log is normally kept on the quarterdeck in port, on the bridge at sea, and in damage control central (DCC) during general quarters.

  47. Maintaining Damage Control Fittings and Equipment • Conduct daily inspections of all spaces for the elimination of fire hazards. • Assist officers in charge in the inspection of spaces for cleanliness and preservation and assist in the preparation of required reports. • Ensure the preparation and maintenance of damage control check-off lists for all spaces under their cognizance. • Weigh portable CO2 bottles and inspect and test all fire fighting equipment and any PMS requirements. • Ensure all other damage control equipment is in place and in usable condition; dogging wrenches, battle lanterns. • Ensure all compartments are properly stenciled or identified by color codes. • Ensure posting in required spaces of safety precautions and operating instructions.

  48. Chapter 7 Supply Procedures • Help you become familiar with the workings of the supply department so you can use the Navy supply system to help you carry out your duties more effectively. • Identify material identification (national stock number format, etc.), requisition documents, and material expenditures

  49. Basic Supply Terms • Controlled Equipage - Items requiring special management control because the material is essential to protection of life or is relatively valuable and can be converted easily for personal use. • Logistics - The science of planning and carrying out the movement and maintenance of military forces. Logistics involve military operations that deal with the following: -Design, development, acquisition, storage, movement, distribution, maintenance, evacuation, and disposition of material -Acquisition, construction, maintenance, operation, and disposition of facilities -Acquisition and furnishing of services -Movement, evacuation, and hospitalization of personnel • Material - All items necessary to equip, operate, maintain, and support an activity. • Supplies - All items necessary to equip, maintain, and operate a military command, including food, clothing, equipment, arms, ammunition, fuel, materials, and machinery of all types. • Supply - The procurement, distribution, maintenance (while in storage), and salvage of supplies, including the determination of the type and quality of supplies. • Supply Control - The process by which an item of supply is controlled within the supply system, including requisitioning, receipt, storage, stock control, shipment, disposition, identification, and accounting.

  50. Stock and Control Numbers • Stock and control numbers are used to identify and order material in the supply system. • The identification numbers are known as: -national stock numbers (NSNs), -NATO stock numbers (a variation of the NSN) -Navy item control numbers, and -local item control numbers.

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