Part of a series of articles titled A Cold War Cast Of Thousands.
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The facility manager was the top ranking non-commissioned officer at a Minuteman Missile launch control facility. Typically,in their twenties or thirties, they held the rank of Master Sergeant, Technical Sergeant or Staff Sergeant. One facility manager was on duty during each three-day alert tour. While the facility managers were accountable for managing the facility and supervising the topside crew, they were ultimately responsible to the crew commander on duty in the Launch Control Center. They had excellent technical and managerial skills. "Jack-of-All-Trades" – Job Duties of a Facility ManagerThe facility manager's primary job duties included supervising and managing topside personnel at the Launch Control Facility (LCF) for the combat crew commander, maintaining support equipment, and responding to emergencies under the direction of the missile crew on duty. There were also a host of additional duties, including everything from acting weatherman, mechanic, innkeeper, and groundskeeper, or essentially, anything needed to keep the LCF running smoothly. Many missileers called the "jack-of-all-trades" facility manager their "house mouse." The phrase derives from the concept that the LCF performed much like a small hotel serving as a location away from home where security personnel, cooks, and missile crews, and sometimes missile maintenance crew ate, slept, and relaxed, in addition to worked. A Day In The Life of a Facility ManagerAfter arrival at the LCF, the facility manager's first task would be to walk the facility and the grounds with the manager on-duty for a briefing, where the work performed by the previous alert tour, and the work required for the next, would each be detailed. After rising in the morning, the facility manager would phone in a weather report to the helicopter pilot on-duty at Ellsworth Air Force Base. Following breakfast, the facility manager took care of other daily responsibilities. Morning chores included inspection of the LCF grounds,including the water treatment tank, the power generators, and the sewage lagoon. After the daily inspections, the facility manager typically spent much of the day maintaining the facility and repairing support equipment, including replacing light bulbs and refueling vehicles. In the summer the facility manager was responsible for mowing the yard and in the winter he or she shoveled the drive. |
Part of a series of articles titled A Cold War Cast Of Thousands.
Previous: Missile Rations Cook
Last updated: October 20, 2020