Article View
News | May 19, 2021

Vermont ANG Airman honored during EMS week

By Tech. Sgt. Richard Mekkri 158th Fighter Wing Public Affairs

National Emergency Medical Services week kicked off on May 16, honoring EMS practitioners who are a vital component of emergency medicine.

Established in 1974, the theme for this year’s observance is "This is EMS: Caring for Our Communities.”

Staff Sgt. Nathan Bourn, a munitions specialist at the Vermont Air National Guard’s 158th Fighter Wing, is one first responder who has striven to live up to what this year’s theme is all about.

Bourn, an assistant fire chief with the Poultney, Vermont volunteer fire department, was the first to arrive on the scene of an active fire on April 3, 2021. Bourn discovered the garage quickly filling with smoke and found that the door to the main house was locked.

Knowing he had to find a way in before the fire spread from the garage, he took immediate action.

“I kicked the door in, shut it behind me to keep the smoke and heat away from the house,” said Bourn, who's been a firefighter for more than decade. “When I got into the house there was one dog that was roaming about and several others in kennels in the dining area.” Bourn assessed the scene, looking for the homeowners or anyone else who may have been inside the home. After he discovered that no individuals were present, Bourn took to the task of rescuing the dogs from the house.

“I went back downstairs and started to carry the kennels with the smaller dogs outside and put them on the front porch,” Bourn said. “There was a larger dog that I couldn't carry out so I pointed his kennel to the open front door and let him out.”

By the time the larger dog made it safely outside, the house began to fill with smoke. There were still more dogs in the house, however. At that point, Bourn said that the smoke was so thick he had to crawl on his stomach to find the last dog.

“We volunteer with a dog rescue, so the dogs are our lives,” said Keith Mahar, the owner of the home. “Nate got all the dogs out. He was our hero that day.”

To Bourn, though, it was nothing exceptional. He said it was something that anyone would have done. 

“I joined to help my local community,” said Bourn. “I don't feel like I did anything special to help them or anyone else. It is just the right thing to do, help when and how you can.”

Vermont National Guard News
Students at the U.S. Army Mountain Warfare School’s Basic Military Mountaineer Course practice traversing in crampons and learning to stop a fall with ice axes Jan. 21, 2022. The AMWS is a U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command school operated by the Vermont Army National Guard at Camp Ethan Allen Training Site, Vermont.
Making Mountaineers: U.S. Army Mountain Warfare School
By Sgt. 1st Class Whitney Hughes, | Feb. 17, 2022
CAMP ETHAN ALLEN TRAINING SITE, Vt. – Each service member who enters the U.S. Army Mountain Warfare School passes under a placard with an ominous warning from Ethan Allen himself: “The Gods of the valleys are not the Gods of...

Staff Sgt. John Hampson, an instructor at the U.S. Army Mountain Warfare School, demonstrates a casualty evacuation system to students at the school’s Basic Military Mountaineer Course at Camp Ethan Allen Training Site, Vermont, Jan. 22, 2022. U.S. and foreign service members learn basic, advanced and specialty mountain warfare skills at the school.
Legacies of Excellence: Mountain Warfare School instructors
By Sgt. 1st Class Whitney Hughes, | Feb. 17, 2022
Service members from French desert commandos to U.S. Special Forces operators have sung the praises of U.S. Army Mountain Warfare School instructors...

Pictured from left, the aid station that accompanied a mobile home (which no longer exists) where the first Army Mountain Warfare School courses were run when it was established in 1983; the current AMWS building, which was built in 1987, and the new $30 million facility scheduled to house students and instructors and support courses in April 2022.
Humble Beginnings: U.S. Army Mountain Warfare School
By Sgt. 1st Class Whitney Hughes, | Feb. 17, 2022
The U.S. Army Mountain Warfare School was established April 5, 1983, in a mobile home next to a tin shack on a small hill in Jericho, Vermont. The tin shack still exists, across from where a new $30 million facility is being...

Students at the U.S. Army Mountain Warfare School’s Advanced Military Mountaineer Course in Jericho, Vermont, drag mountaineering equipment on sleds as they leave the site where they camped in temperatures that plunged to -29 degrees with windchill Jan. 27, 2022.
Beyond the Basics: U.S. Army Mountain Warfare School
By Sgt. 1st Class Whitney Hughes, | Feb. 17, 2022
The education at the U.S. Army Mountain Warfare School doesn’t end at the Basic Military Mountaineer Course.From the four advanced and specialty courses taught in the hills and mountains of Vermont and New Hampshire to the...

U.S. Army Soldiers assigned to Task Force Avalanche of the 86th Infantry Brigade Combat Team (Mountain), Vermont National Guard, return home from deployment, in South Burlington, Vermont, Dec 9, 2021. Family, friends, and colleagues were present to greet the Soldiers as they arrived. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Sgt. Denis Nuñez)
Adjutant general issues biannual update: Feb. 2022
By | Feb. 16, 2022
Maj. Gen. Greg Knight, the state adjutant general, released the Vermont National Guard's legislative update on Feb. 14...