Utah Air and Major General Jefferson S. Burton, The Adjutant General In Every War…

State units have served in every major war, from the Revolution through Iraq & Afghanistan ARNG Under Federal or State Authority

Federal Authority State Authority Primary Governing Law: Title 10 U.S. Code Primary governing Law: Title 32 U.S. Code and applicable state law President of the Governor

Secretary of Defense

Combatant Commanders Higher HQ Higher HQ Unit Commander Unit Commander

The ARNG is subject to either Federal or State authority, not both at the same time How the Guard and Reserve are Different

Status Leadership & Force History & command culture relationships structure

• Serves in either Federal • State-based; commanded by • Balanced with combat, • Dates to or State status Governors for emergency combat support, & combat organization of first response, or President for service support militia regiments in Army • No Posse Comitatus federal missions 1636 restrictions when in • Mobilizes as units National State status • • State affiliation provides policy and resources remains a strong part Guard • Most experienced DoD to the 54 States, Territories, & of Guard culture element at disaster D.C response • CNGB a member of JCS

• Serves only in a Federal • Army Reserve Chief also • Principally combat • Dates to first status serves as the Commanding support, combat service federal reserve of General of US Army Reserve support & echelons above Army established in • Posse Comitatus Command Division capabilities 1908 Army applies • Subordinate command of US • Mobilizes as units & Reserve • May provide support to Army Forces Command, individual Soldiers States if requested by providing unified command governors and approved over Army Reserve units and by SecDef Soldiers at all times Dual Mission

 FEDERAL:  Support the overseas warfight, provide homeland defense, and execute other missions as directed by the president.

 STATE:  Respond to ‘all-hazard’ emergencies or disaster events within or other states and territories, as directed by the governor. Fiscal Impact Utah National Guard Budget

Fiscal Year 2017: $378,609,369

Utah Army National Guard (Federal Fiscal 2% Year 2017) 20% $294,640,069 Utah Air Naional Guard (Federal Fiscal 78% Year 2017) $77,034,700 State General Fund (State Fiscal Year 2018) $6,934,600 Organization

 Governor – Commander in Chief  6,948 members  5,524 Army Guard  1,424 Air Guard  2,661 full-time employees Personnel and Logan Brigham City Facilities Ogden Wendover SLC Airbase West Jordan Tooele Draper (JFHQ) Vernal Traditional Camp Williams American Fork Lehi Orem Guardsmen 4918 Dugway Springville Spanish Fork AGRs 606 Price Mt Pleasant Total: 5524 Manti Fillmore 535 Facilities in 23 Richfield Communities Beaver • Armories • Maintenance Shops Blanding Cedar City • Logistics • Training and Support St .George Major Commands

 Major Commands  Air st  151 Air Refueling Wing  Army th  19 Special Forces Group th  65 Field Artillery Brigade th  97 Aviation Troop Command th  97 Troop Command th  204 Maneuver Enhancement Brigade th  300 Military Intelligence Brigade th  640 Regional Training Institute Capabilities

 Homeland Response Force  Site security, show of force, checkpoints, civil-disturbance response, force protection

 85th Weapons of Mass Destruction Civil Support Team  Chemical, hazmat incidents  Communications suites  Identify agents/substances, assess consequences, advise on response measures Capabilities

 Joint Forces Headquarters  Command and control of all National Guard forces statewide for the governor

 EOD Support  151st Explosives Ordnance Disposal Detachment

 Ground Transportation  Humanitarian relief, medicine, equipment, civil evacuation Capabilities

 Aviation/Airlift  Fixed / Rotary-wing aircraft  Move personnel/equipment  Air search and rescue  Wildland firefighting support

 Engineer  Debris removal  Restore utilities  Terrain engineering  Temporary structural and civil construction Capabilities

 Communication  Support UWIN and UCAN networks  Integrate radio frequencies for state, federal agencies  Restore communications in affected areas Capabilities

 Medical  Personnel trained as medics, combat lifesavers, first responders  Ambulance unit Capabilities

 Counterdrug  Support to domestic law enforcement agencies  Drug Demand Reduction program  Linguist support to local, state, and federal government Capabilities

 Installations  Temporary shelter/storage  24 armories/readiness centers  Draper Headquarters  Base  Camp Williams Utah Training Center at Camp Williams

 Camp Williams  Established in 1914  24,100 acres of training area  Billeting capacity of 2,800 troops  Small-arms, artillery, demolition, hand grenade, and crew-served weapons facilities Utah Air National Guard Base

 Utah Air National Guard Base  Established in 1946  Located on 135 acres  Facility supports Air and Army mobilizations  Refueling missions worldwide 151st Air Refueling Wing

 151st Air Refueling Wing  151st Operations Group  151st Maintenance Group  151st Mission Support Group  151st Medical Group  101st Information Operations Flight  109th Air Control Squadron  130th Engineering Installation Squadron  169th Intelligence Squadron

 Provide air refueling and airlift support 19th Special Forces Group

 19th Special Forces Group  1st Battalion, 19th Special Forces  Bravo Co, 1st BN, 19th SFG  Group Support Battalion  Group Special Troop Company

 Sustain a broad spectrum of military and paramilitary operations in enemy or politically sensitive territory 65th Field Artillery Brigade

 65th Field Artillery Brigade  1st Battalion, 145th Field Artillery  2nd Battalion, 222nd Field Artillery

 Provide and coordinate lethal and nonlethal fires in support of contingency operations 97th Aviation Troop Command

 97th Aviation Troop Command  1st Battalion, 211th Aviation (Apache)  2nd Battalion, 211th Aviation (Blackhawk) st  1-171 Aviation Detachment (MEDEVAC) th th  5 Detachment, 159 Aviation (MEDEVAC)  DET 50, Operational Support Airlift (C-12) th  DET 2, B Co, 1-112 Aviation (Lakota)

 Provide utility and tactical airlift support  Provide attack-helicopter support 97th Troop Command

 97th Troop Command  23rd Army Band  85th Civil Support Team  115th Maintenance Company  128th Public Affairs Detachment  144th Medical Company  653rd Trial Defense Team  1993rd Contingency Contracting Team 204th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade

 204th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade  1457th Engineer Battalion  489th Brigade Support Battalion

 Provide operational and tactical freedom of action for the supported force; control security and functional forces on the battlefield 300th Military Intelligence Brigade (Linguist)

 300th Military Intelligence Brigade  141st Military Intelligence Battalion  142nd Military Intelligence Battalion

 Provide linguist, signal, human, and counterintelligence support 640th Regional Training Institute

 A full-time, total Army schoolhouse, training National Guard, Reserve, and active-duty Soldiers from across the nation State Partnership Program Kingdom of Morocco

 Kingdom of Morocco  Cultural/Informational exchange  Disaster relief, preparedness  Project U.S. humanitarian values  Promote political stability  Youth exchange Questions?