Article View
News | July 7, 2021

New commander details 124th RTI's pandemic responses

By Joshua Cohen Vermont National Guard Public Affairs

Operations at the Vermont National Guard’s 124th Regional Training Institute are gradually returning to the pre-COVID normal according to the Institute’s newly appointed commander, Col. William Wagner.

"It’s more complex than simply not having to wear a mask anymore," he said, pointing out the post pandemic reopening will require continual adaptation.

Wagner explained that post-COVID resources now have to be planned out and allocated well in advance. Due in part to the global pandemic, food contracts and vendors have increased in cost, complicating the contracting process.

During the pandemic, staffing was adjusted to maintain student engagement. “As a result of COVID we had to instruct the Basic Leader Course virtually," he said. "This prompted 2nd Battalion, 124th Regiment Modular Training Battalion to add an additional instructor to monitor questions presented digitally. As a result student size increased from 72 to 80.”

Wagner explained that as an agile learning organization successes from lessons learned while teaching in COVID times will be utilized.

“For instance, it may make sense to continue a virtual Basic Leader’s Course, offering the ability for expanding student attendance, therefore increasing the Army's readiness by providing exceptionally qualified junior NCOs to the Army arsenal by ‘Training the Army one Soldier at a Time.’”

Wagner said due to physical proximity and inability to physically distance, the temporary postponement of the Mountain Rifleman course was necessary during the pandemic. The Basic Military Mountaineering Course was also impacted, with class size reduced from 64 to 16, to ensure the safety of all students and instructors during COVID.

"I'd like to see the entire RTI back to achieving our original Army Program of Individual Training mission," Wagner said, explaining the Army Mountain Warfare School conducted courses at limited capacity during the peak of COVID for several months.

As COVID cases gradually reduced and mitigations were established, AMWS gradually began to have limited numbers of Soldiers, starting at 16 then increasing to 32, eventually returning to the normal class size of 64. By the end of Training Year 2022, the RTI will exceed its ARPRINT mission, Wagner said, noting the pandemic had no adverse impact on 3rd Battalion, 124th Information Operations.

As part of a return to normal operations, Wagner said experience gained by deployed RTI staff will be exploited as they re-integrate, while new talent will be sought for the cadre. “It will require cadre flexibility and willingness to adapt, already demonstrated by the Regiment’s success during COVID.”

Wagner said he intends to build RTI 'brand recognition' back up after the long COVID interruption. "While we're still nationally known for Army Mountain Warfare School and Information Operations, we need to regain mind space across the reserve component. We need to be every Quota Source Manager's first thought for our course offerings."

He added that preparation and implementation has begun with building projects and installation of special turf that provides BLC the capability to conduct the Army Combat Fitness Test in Quarter 1 of Training Year 2022.

Wagner said he has a personal connection with the RTI’s mission, “because of the vast number of Soldiers we've trained, and the influence we have in shaping future leaders, not just students who've come through our courses, but also those serving as cadre, it can be tremendously motivating to see the positive influence we can have on our students, and that makes us want to be all the more successful."

Wagner assumed command of the 124th Regimental Training Institute in March of 2021 after serving 18 months in direct support to U.S. Cyber Command and prior to that within the communications directorate for the Vermont Army National Guard. He is a 2019 graduate of the Army War College, a 2011 graduate of the Army Command and General Staff College and graduate of the Military Police Officer Basic Course, the Infantry Officer Advanced Course, and the Signal Captain’s Career Course.

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...