DOVER
AIR FORCE BASE, Del.,
Jan. 2010 – Air
Force officials
dedicated the new
Center for Families of
the Fallen at the Air
Force Mortuary Affairs
Operations Center here
yesterday.
|

Air
Force
Chief
of
Staff
Gen.
Norton
A.
Schwartz
and
Air
Force
Col.
Robert
Edmondson,
commander
of the
Air
Force
Mortuary
Affairs
Operations
Center,
read
the
inscription
on the
plaque
they
unveiled
during
a
dedication
ceremony
for
the
Center
for
Families
of the
Fallen
at
Dover
Air
Force
Base,
Del.,
Jan.
6,
2010.
U.S.
Air
Force
photo
by
Master
Sgt.
Stan
Parker
(Click
photo
for
screen-resolution
image);high-resolution
image
available.
|
|
Since its activation
Jan. 6, 2009, the Air
Force Mortuary Affairs
Operations Center has
provided dignity,
honor and respect for
fallen warriors and
care, service and
support for their
families. And on the
center’s one-year
anniversary, officials
said the new facility
would carry that
family support even
further.
“For many of us,
this dedication is a
bittersweet event,”
said Gen. Norton A.
Schwartz, Air Force
chief of staff.
“This center is
emblematic of our
genuine gratitude to
the families of our
fallen servicemembers.
“In an ideal world
– one that is
universally committed
to resolving disputes
in a peaceful manner
– a Center for the
Families of the Fallen
perhaps would not be
necessary,” the
general added. “But
alas, it is, as all
here know very
well.”
Schwartz dedicated the
center alongside Air
Force Col. Bob
Edmondson, Air Force
Mortuary Affairs
Operations Center
commander. Dignitaries
on hand included Dr.
Jill Biden, wife of
Vice President Joe
Biden, and
Delaware’s
congressional
delegation of U.S.
Sens. Thomas R. Carper
and Edward E. Kaufman
and U.S. Rep. Mike
Castle, as well as
other state, local and
Air Force officials.
Schwartz said the new
center represents a
commitment by military
leaders to care for
fallen servicemembers
and their families.
“Our most serious
obligation is to lead
in a way that
minimizes the
likelihood of losing a
teammate,” he said.
“But, when we
properly honor our
fallen, we must also
properly care for the
families.
“This center is one
manifestation of our
fidelity to this
commitment,” the
general continued,
“so that when
families from all over
the country come to
receive their loved
ones for the last
time, they do so in a
place that befits
their grief, and can
begin to offer them
comfort, support, and
the sincere thanks of
a grateful nation.”
Biden said she and the
vice president are
proud to have such a
facility in their home
state of Delaware. She
praised the
initiative, saying the
center will be a place
of comfort for
families “as they
come to meet their
fallen angels.”
The number of families
coming to meet their
fallen warriors has
increased since an
April 2009 Defense
Department policy
change that provides
aid to families
attending dignified
transfers of remains
of their fallen
military members. As
participation grew,
Air Force senior
leadership and spouses
recognized that the
facilities here could
benefit from
additional resources.
Previously, chaplains
and support staff
shared a facility with
base chaplains serving
Dover's 436th Airlift
Wing and the reserve
512th Airlift Wing.
An idea to transform a
former base
convenience store was
conceived, and a
renovation contract
was awarded in the
fall. Construction on
the center began Nov.
9, and contractors
completed the job
within 60 days.
The result: a
6,000-square-foot
center that offers a
comfortable and quiet
environment with
dedicated sitting
areas for the
families, as well as
private rooms that can
be used for counseling
or meditation. The
center will allow
mortuary affairs
specialists, chaplains
and mental health
technicians to better
assist families of the
fallen, Edmondson
said.
Schwartz acknowledged
the vision and hard
work it took to open
the center so quickly,
noting the dedication
of everyone involved
was a true “labor of
love.”
The center will play a
part in helping the
nation fulfill “its
most sacred of
obligations,” he
said, and
servicemembers can
know “that their
families will be cared
for in the way that
they would hope in the
most difficult of
circumstances.”
The center’s staff
will oversee the
appointment of family
liaison officers –
members of fallen
servicemembers’
units who help the
family work through
the paperwork and
problems that come
with their loved
one’s death, said
Todd Rose, mortuary
affairs division
director. The staff
also will provide
“reach-back” help
for families,
especially those who
don’t live near a
military installation.
“The intent is for
the staff to be
proactive, to reach
out to families,”
Rose said. “The team
will develop a package
of information on
resources available
for the next of kin.
They can provide
support over the phone
or help them find that
support in their local
community.”
Rose said the center
supervisor will be a
certified counselor
who will be available
to help families work
through their grief.
Staff members will be
available to help a
family from the time
they arrive at the
airport until the
family decides help no
longer is needed.
(Edward Drohan of the
Air Force Mortuary
Affairs Operations
Center public affairs
office contributed to
this article. Air
Force Master Sgt.
Russell P. Petcoff
serves in the
secretary of the Air
Force public affairs
office.)