Information Technology And Management Jobs in Colton, CA
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Officer None
What to Expect
Information Professional Officer
More Information
Responsibilities
Information Professional Officers (IPOs) oversee the seamless operation of the global Naval network environment. Their responsibilities include:
- Leading the Naval network warfare missions in developing tactics and procedures to realize tactical, strategic and business advantages afloat and ashore
- Driving interoperability with joint, allied and coalition partners
- Building professional excellence through education, training and certification and milestone qualifications
- Optimizing organizational effectiveness through cutting-edge technologies, knowledge management techniques and a culture of innovation
- Helping to develop and deploy information systems, command and control and space systems
- Serving as a key part of the Information Dominance Corps in its mission to gain a deep understanding of the inner workings of adversaries
- Overseeing the work of Information Systems Technicians - Enlisted Sailors (no degree required) who serve as specialists in information technology
Work Environment
Information Professionals serve in challenging roles of increasing scope and responsibility both afloat and ashore. This could include:
- Serving as part of Battle Group staffs on ships at sea
- Working in C4I/Space/Surveillance on shore tours
- Serving on major Navy and joint staffs
- Serving in command of key communication and surveillance facilities around the globe
Training & Advancement
Those pursuing an Information Professional Officer position are required to attend Officer Candidate School (OCS) in Newport, RI.
Upon completion, candidates typically attend a five-week IP Basic Course of instruction in Pensacola, FL, before or during their initial assignment. IPOs must complete specific qualifications as part of their training during Fleet tours and are expected to pursue advanced education opportunities.
Promotion opportunities are regularly available but competitive and based on performance.
Post-Service Opportunities
Specialized training received and work experience gained in the course of service can lead to valuable credentialing and occupational opportunities in related fields in the civilian sector.
Education Opportunities
Wherever you are in your professional career, the Navy can help ease your financial burdens and advance your career with generous financial assistance and continuing education programs. Beyond professional credentials and certifications, Information Professional Officers can advance their education by:
- Pursuing opportunities at institutions such as Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) or Navy War College (NWC)
- Completing Joint Professional Military Education (JPME) at one of the various service colleges
Postgraduate education is important to the success of the Information Professional. Most IPs will complete a master's degree in C4I, space, information systems, computer science or modeling and simulation.
There's also potential to pursue a graduate certificate, DoW certifications, federal executive fellowships and information assurance scholarships and internships.
Qualifications & Requirements
A degree from a four-year college or university is a minimum educational requirement to become a Commissioned Officer. Candidates seeking an Information Professional Officer position must have a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution in a technical field, preferably in one of following fields: Information Systems, Electrical Engineering, Computer Engineering, Information Operations, Computer Science, Systems Engineering, General Engineering.
All candidates must also be: U.S. citizens, willing to serve worldwide, eligible for a Top Secret/Sensitive Compartmented Information (SCI) security clearance and qualified for sea duty.
General qualifications may vary depending upon whether you're currently serving, whether you've served before or whether you've never served before.
Part-Time Opportunities
There are part-time opportunities available as an Information Professional Officer.
Serving part-time as a Navy Reserve Sailor, your duties will be carried out during your scheduled drilling and training periods. During monthly drilling, Information Professional Officers in the Navy Reserve typically work at a location close to their homes.
For annual training, Information Professional Officers may serve anywhere in the world, whether on a ship at sea or at bases and installations on shore.
Take a moment to learn more about the general roles and responsibilities of Navy Reserve Sailors.
Most of what you do in the Navy Reserve is considered training. The basic Navy Reserve commitment involves training a minimum of one weekend a month (referred to as drilling) and two weeks a year (referred to as Annual Training) - or the equivalent of that.
Information Professional Officers in the Navy Reserve serve in an Officer role. Before receiving the ongoing professional training that comes with this job, initial training requirements must first be met.
For current or former Navy Officers (NAVET): Prior experience satisfies the initial leadership training requirement - so you will not need to go through Officer Training again.
Officers who previously held a commission in another United States Military Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Public Health Service, or United States Coast Guard are exempt from attending ODS or LDO/CWO Academy.
Compare Navy Careers
See how a career as an Information Professional Officer compares to other Navy jobs.
- Both Overview Information Systems Technicians, Cryptologic Technician Networks, and Intelligence Specialists keep the Fleet connected, informed, and secure by operating and defending networks, conducting cyber operations, and producing intelligence for decision makers across the Navy.
Key Responsibilities As an Information Systems Technician, design, operate, secure, and restore networks, servers, and communication systems that support naval operations; as a Cryptologic Technician Networks specialist, conduct offensive and defensive cyber operations, investigate and track adversary activity, and help protect Navy networks and critical systems; as an Intelligence Specialist, collect and analyze information on adversaries, environments, and weather and create intelligence products and briefings for commanders.
What to Expect High tempo, mission critical work supporting around the clock operations and watch floors; mix of help desk and user support, network and systems administration, incident response, and planned maintenance; continuous learning in cyber tools, network defense, signals analysis, and intelligence production; strict requirements for handling classified information and complying with security and information assurance standards; shift work, duty rotations, and deployments afloat and ashore.
Work Environment Worldwide assignments ashore at information warfare and intelligence commands and afloat on ships, aircraft, or submarines; work in secure facilities, server rooms, operations centers, and shipboard communications spaces; close teamwork within information warfare and intelligence teams and with supported operational units.
Pathways, Training & Advancement Recruit Training followed by Class A School in an information warfare specialty, such as IT or CTN at information warfare training sites and IS at intelligence training commands; advanced C schools and follow on training in areas such as cyber operations, network defense, digital forensics, signals analysis, targeting, imagery, language, and mission systems; progressive advancement based on qualifications, performance, and warfare pins such as Information Warfare and platform specific warfare designations.
Direct enlistment into IT, CTN, or IS pipelines from civilian life based on aptitude, security clearance eligibility, and Navy needs; in service conversion opportunities for qualified Sailors who meet screening criteria and community requirements; Reserve accession pathways for prior service or qualified civilian professionals when manning needs allow.
Qualifications All Navy jobs require meeting general enlistment or commissioning standards, which typically include: Eligibility to serve in the United States Navy, which may involve United States citizenship or other legal residency and work status, depending on the program and current law and policy A high school diploma or equivalent for enlisted positions, and a bachelor's or qualifying professional degree for officer positions Meeting age limits that vary by program and are set in law and Navy policy.
Some communities have more restrictive age ranges Meeting medical, vision, and dental standards, including body composition and physical fitness requirements, with some jobs requiring more demanding standards Meeting character and conduct standards, including background screening Achieving required test scores for your program, such as the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery for enlisted roles or officer qualification tests for officer programs Eligibility for a security clearance when required for your rating or designator Additional qualifications can include specific skills, education, licensure, or experience that are unique to a job or community and will be reviewed with you by a recruiter.
Additional qualifications for this job may include: United States citizenship or equivalent status as allowed by law and policy, with most billets requiring citizenship; high school diploma or equivalent; at least 17 years of age; strong interest and aptitude in computers, networks, cyber operations, and analytical work; eligibility for a security clearance at the Secret or Top Secret level depending on the billet.
Education Education benefits are available through standard Navy programs such as Tuition Assistance, the Post-9/11 GI Bill, ACE-recommended college credit for Navy training, Navy COOL-funded certifications, USMAP apprenticeships, and other Navy College Program opportunities.
Specific options depend on the Sailor's status, training, and current Navy policy.
Pay, Benefits & Service Pay, benefits, and service commitments follow standard Navy Active and/or Reserve policies for this type of role, including basic pay, allowances when eligible, health coverage, and retirement options.
Exact entitlements, special pays, and service obligations depend on program, component, years of service, and current law and Navy guidance.
Incentives Incentives such as bonuses, special pays, and loan repayment may be available at times for specific ratings or communities, but they change frequently and cannot be guaranteed.
Applicants must confirm current incentives and eligibility with an official Navy recruiter or authoritative Navy source.
Notes and Disclaimers This description is a general overview of typical duties, training, and opportunities in this community.
It does not replace official Navy instructions, policies, or contracts and does not guarantee specific assignments, training, incentives, or outcomes.
Actual opportunities depend on Navy needs, individual performance, screening results, and current law and policy.5c143e31-5e48-4549-b638-05792d185386
Saving lives is the mission-but for Special Operations medics, it's a mission fought in the shadows. These elite medical specialists don't just treat injuries; they bring life-saving expertise into the fight.
From stabilizing wounded operators under enemy fire to leaping from helicopters and diving with Special Operations teams, Hospital Corpsmen in the Advanced Technical Field (HM-ATF), are trained to handle medical emergencies wherever the mission takes them. As part of an exclusive group supporting SEALs, Divers, SWCC, and EOD teams, they deliver critical care in the most extreme conditions. You might serve in one of three roles: a Search & Rescue Medical Technician, a Dive Medical Technician or as a Special Operations Independent Duty Corpsman.
It's not easy to earn the title "Doc." But when warfighters put their lives on the line, they need a medical warrior by their side.
Enlisted None
WATCH VIDEOS ABOUT SPECIAL OPERATIONS CORPSMEN
Special Operations Independent Duty Corpsman
Search and Rescue Medical Technician
Medical Deep Sea Diving Technician
SPECIAL OPERATIONS CORPSMAN: CAREER DETAILS & REQUIREMENTS
Responsibilities
Those in the Hospital Corpsman Advanced Technical Field go beyond the duties of basic Hospital Corpsman, working in austere and challenging environments while saving lives. Each of the three classifications has its own responsibilities:
Special Operations Independent Duty Corpsman (SOIDC)
- Provide advanced medical care and operational services for Marine Reconnaissance, USMC Special Operations Forces and Navy Special Operations Command personnel, like SWCC and SEALs
- Engage as a team member in direct action, special reconnaissance, foreign internal defense and unconventional warfare
Search and Rescue Medical Technician (SMT)
- Rescue patients and deliver emergency care from the back of a helicopter
- Perform aircrew duties and En Route Care (ERC) for routine illness and emergent patients
- Provide relief and assistance in areas ravaged by catastrophic natural disasters
- Support Search and Rescue (SAR), tactical evacuation (TECEVAC), Medical Evacuation (MEDEVAC), casualty evacuation (CASEVAC) and Combat Search & Rescue (CSAR) for Navy and Marine Corps Aviation
Deep Sea Diving Medical Technician (DMT)
- Provide basic medicine and assist medics in prevention and treatment of diving related illnesses, injuries associated with deep sea diving and hyperbaric conditions
- Operate, test and repair all Navy diving equipment
- Perform underwater inspections, harbor/port/ship security inspections, conduct ordnance searches, rescue personnel, engage in special warfare and small boat operations
- Operate Swimmer Delivery Vehicle Dry-Deck Shelter system and submarine Lock-in/Lock-out systems
Work Environment
As a Hospital Corpsman, you have the most diverse range of work environments in the Navy. Your job will likely take you all over the world-and far out of your comfort zone. If you choose to go the Hospital Corpsman Advanced Technical Field route, you will work in extreme and sometimes precarious conditions. From deep-sea diving to combat missions to flying in MH-60 Romeo helicopters, you will train outside the realm of conventional military forces to prepare for any mission. You may work independent of a physician or under supervision in this program.
Training & Advancement
Upon completion of initial training at Recruit Training Command Great Lakes (known as Boot Camp), you'll report for specialized training including:
Hospital Corps "A" School (19 weeks) in San Antonio, Texas for training on basic principles and techniques of patient care and first aid procedures.
After "A" School, HM-ATF candidates track to one of three advanced training paths:
- Special Operations Independent Duty Corpsman Pipeline (121 weeks)
Areas of training include but are not limited to basic reconnaissance, airborne operations, combatant diving, demolitions, clinical diagnostics, advanced trauma skills, Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS), basic surgical anesthesia, basic veterinary medicine and basic dental exams. - Search and Rescue Medical Tech Pipeline (27 weeks)
Areas of training include but are not limited to advanced fluid resuscitation, administration and management of Advanced Life Support medications, use of emergency medical equipment, rescue and recovery devices and patient handling. - Medical Deep Sea Diving Tech Pipeline (28 weeks)
Areas of training include but are not limited to diving physics, scuba and surface-supplied air diving, recognition and treatment of diving related illnesses.
After completing your pipeline, you'll receive your first assignment. You'll go wherever you're needed, which can be anywhere in the world. Automatic promotion opportunities are available but are competitive and based on completion of pipeline.
Post-Service Opportunities
There's no better way to begin a successful career in health care than by serving in the medical support division of America's Navy. Specialized training received and work experience gained in the course of service can lead to valuable credentialing and occupational opportunities in related fields in the civilian world, such as Emergency Medical Technician (EMT), Home Health Aide, Anesthesiologist Assistant and more.
Education Opportunities
Beyond offering access to professional credentials and certifications, Navy technical and operational training in the medical field can translate to credit hours toward a bachelor's or associate degree through the American Council on Education.
You may also continue your education through undergraduate degree opportunities like the Navy College Program and Tuition Assistance and the Post-9/11 GI Bill.
Qualifications & Requirements
A high-school diploma or equivalent is required to become an Enlisted Sailor. Those seeking a position as a Hospital Corpsman must be U.S. citizens.
While no college degree is required to apply for a position as a Hospital Corpsman Advanced Technical Field, a high degree of difficulty should be expected. Entry Requirements include:
- Vision correctable to 20/20
- Normal color perception
- Pass a physical examination
- 28 years of age or younger
- U.S. citizen eligible for security clearance
In addition to strong communication, writing and arithmetic skills, you should also have a genuine interest in providing health care, along with good use of your hands and strong physical stamina.
The Minimum and Elevated Navy Physical Screening Test (PST & EPST) requirements are:
For Special Operations Independent Duty Corpsman (SOIDC)
Exercise Time Min. Elevated Swim 500 yards (breast or sidestroke) Unlimited 12:30 9:30 Push-up 2:00 50 75 Curl-up 2:00 50 75 Pull-up 2:00 10 15 Run 1.5 miles Unlimited 10:30 9:30
For Search and Rescue Medical Technicians (SMT)
Exercise Time Min. Swim 500 yards (breast or sidestroke) Unlimited 12:00 Push-up 2:00 42 Pull-up 2:00 04 Run 1.5 miles Unlimited 12:00
For Deep Sea Diving Medical Technicians (DMT)
Exercise Time Min. Swim 500 yards (breast or sidestroke) Unlimited 12:00 Push-up 2:00 50 Pull-up 2:00 06 Run 1.5 miles Unlimited 11:30
Candidates who achieve the Elevated Physical Screening Test (EPST) scores shown above may qualify for the Enlisted Bonus for Shipping (EB-SHP) program. These elevated standards must be met during your 14-day shipping PST to be eligible for the bonus. Learn more about Navy enlistment bonuses.
Important personal traits for this role include maturity, resourcefulness, dependability and trustworthiness. Please note that any illegal involvement with drugs may be disqualifying.
General qualifications may vary depending upon whether you're currently serving, whether you've served before or whether you've never served before.
Part-Time Opportunities
There are no part-time jobs as a Navy Reserve Sailor in this role. Go back to Careers to find other jobs that have a Reserve component. You can also find out more about what life is like as a Reserve Sailor in the Navy.
Compare Navy Careers
See how a career as a Hospital Corpsman Advanced Technical Field compares to other Navy jobs.
Compare roles, pay and requirements for each job now.
Saving lives is the mission-but for Special Operations medics, it's a mission fought in the shadows. These elite medical specialists don't just treat injuries; they bring life-saving expertise into the fight.
From stabilizing wounded operators under enemy fire to leaping from helicopters and diving with Special Operations teams, Hospital Corpsmen in the Advanced Technical Field (HM-ATF), are trained to handle medical emergencies wherever the mission takes them. As part of an exclusive group supporting SEALs, Divers, SWCC, and EOD teams, they deliver critical care in the most extreme conditions. You might serve in one of three roles: a Search & Rescue Medical Technician, a Dive Medical Technician or as a Special Operations Independent Duty Corpsman.
It's not easy to earn the title Doc. But when warfighters put their lives on the line, they need a medical warrior by their side.
Enlisted None
WATCH VIDEOS ABOUT SPECIAL OPERATIONS CORPSMEN
Special Operations Independent Duty Corpsman
Search and Rescue Medical Technician
Medical Deep Sea Diving Technician
SPECIAL OPERATIONS CORPSMAN: CAREER DETAILS & REQUIREMENTS
Responsibilities
Those in the Hospital Corpsman Advanced Technical Field go beyond the duties of basic Hospital Corpsman, working in austere and challenging environments while saving lives. Each of the three classifications has its own responsibilities:
Special Operations Independent Duty Corpsman (SOIDC)
- Provide advanced medical care and operational services for Marine Reconnaissance, USMC Special Operations Forces and Navy Special Operations Command personnel, like SWCC and SEALs
- Engage as a team member in direct action, special reconnaissance, foreign internal defense and unconventional warfare
Search and Rescue Medical Technician (SMT)
- Rescue patients and deliver emergency care from the back of a helicopter
- Perform aircrew duties and En Route Care (ERC) for routine illness and emergent patients
- Provide relief and assistance in areas ravaged by catastrophic natural disasters
- Support Search and Rescue (SAR), tactical evacuation (TECEVAC), Medical Evacuation (MEDEVAC), casualty evacuation (CASEVAC) and Combat Search & Rescue (CSAR) for Navy and Marine Corps Aviation
Deep Sea Diving Medical Technician (DMT)
- Provide basic medicine and assist medics in prevention and treatment of diving related illnesses, injuries associated with deep sea diving and hyperbaric conditions
- Operate, test and repair all Navy diving equipment
- Perform underwater inspections, harbor/port/ship security inspections, conduct ordnance searches, rescue personnel, engage in special warfare and small boat operations
- Operate Swimmer Delivery Vehicle Dry-Deck Shelter system and submarine Lock-in/Lock-out systems
Work Environment
As a Hospital Corpsman, you have the most diverse range of work environments in the Navy. Your job will likely take you all over the world-and far out of your comfort zone. If you choose to go the Hospital Corpsman Advanced Technical Field route, you will work in extreme and sometimes precarious conditions. From deep-sea diving to combat missions to flying in MH-60 Romeo helicopters, you will train outside the realm of conventional military forces to prepare for any mission. You may work independent of a physician or under supervision in this program.
Training & Advancement
Upon completion of initial training at Recruit Training Command Great Lakes (known as Boot Camp), you'll report for specialized training including:
Hospital Corps A School (19 weeks) in San Antonio, Texas for training on basic principles and techniques of patient care and first aid procedures.
After A School, HM-ATF candidates track to one of three advanced training paths:
- Special Operations Independent Duty Corpsman Pipeline (121 weeks)
Areas of training include but are not limited to basic reconnaissance, airborne operations, combatant diving, demolitions, clinical diagnostics, advanced trauma skills, Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS), basic surgical anesthesia, basic veterinary medicine and basic dental exams. - Search and Rescue Medical Tech Pipeline (27 weeks)
Areas of training include but are not limited to advanced fluid resuscitation, administration and management of Advanced Life Support medications, use of emergency medical equipment, rescue and recovery devices and patient handling. - Medical Deep Sea Diving Tech Pipeline (28 weeks)
Areas of training include but are not limited to diving physics, scuba and surface-supplied air diving, recognition and treatment of diving related illnesses.
After completing your pipeline, you'll receive your first assignment. You'll go wherever you're needed, which can be anywhere in the world. Automatic promotion opportunities are available but are competitive and based on completion of pipeline.
Post-Service Opportunities
There's no better way to begin a successful career in health care than by serving in the medical support division of America's Navy. Specialized training received and work experience gained in the course of service can lead to valuable credentialing and occupational opportunities in related fields in the civilian world, such as Emergency Medical Technician (EMT), Home Health Aide, Anesthesiologist Assistant and more.
Education Opportunities
Beyond offering access to professional credentials and certifications, Navy technical and operational training in the medical field can translate to credit hours toward a bachelor's or associate degree through the American Council on Education.
You may also continue your education through undergraduate degree opportunities like the Navy College Program and Tuition Assistance and the Post-9/11 GI Bill.
Qualifications & Requirements
A high-school diploma or equivalent is required to become an Enlisted Sailor. Those seeking a position as a Hospital Corpsman must be U.S. citizens.
While no college degree is required to apply for a position as a Hospital Corpsman Advanced Technical Field, a high degree of difficulty should be expected. Entry Requirements include:
- Vision correctable to 20/20
- Normal color perception
- Pass a physical examination
- 28 years of age or younger
- U.S. citizen eligible for security clearance
In addition to strong communication, writing and arithmetic skills, you should also have a genuine interest in providing health care, along with good use of your hands and strong physical stamina.
The Minimum and Elevated Navy Physical Screening Test (PST & EPST) requirements are:
For Special Operations Independent Duty Corpsman (SOIDC)
Exercise Time Min. Elevated Swim 500 yards (breast or sidestroke) Unlimited 12:30 9:30 Push-up 2:00 50 75 Curl-up 2:00 50 75 Pull-up 2:00 10 15 Run 1.5 miles Unlimited 10:30 9:30
For Search and Rescue Medical Technicians (SMT)
Exercise Time Min. Swim 500 yards (breast or sidestroke) Unlimited 12:00 Push-up 2:00 42 Pull-up 2:00 04 Run 1.5 miles Unlimited 12:00
For Deep Sea Diving Medical Technicians (DMT)
Exercise Time Min. Swim 500 yards (breast or sidestroke) Unlimited 12:00 Push-up 2:00 50 Pull-up 2:00 06 Run 1.5 miles Unlimited 11:30
Candidates who achieve the Elevated Physical Screening Test (EPST) scores shown above may qualify for the Enlisted Bonus for Shipping (EB-SHP) program. These elevated standards must be met during your 14-day shipping PST to be eligible for the bonus. Learn more about Navy enlistment bonuses.
Important personal traits for this role include maturity, resourcefulness, dependability and trustworthiness. Please note that any illegal involvement with drugs may be disqualifying.
General qualifications may vary depending upon whether you're currently serving, whether you've served before or whether you've never served before.
Part-Time Opportunities
There are no part-time jobs as a Navy Reserve Sailor in this role. Go back to Careers to find other jobs that have a Reserve component. You can also find out more about what life is like as a Reserve Sailor in the Navy.
Compare Navy Careers
See how a career as a Hospital Corpsman Advanced Technical Field compares to other Navy jobs.
Compare roles, pay and requirements for each job now.
Saving lives is the mission-but for Special Operations medics, it's a mission fought in the shadows. These elite medical specialists don't just treat injuries; they bring life-saving expertise into the fight.
From stabilizing wounded operators under enemy fire to leaping from helicopters and diving with Special Operations teams, Hospital Corpsmen in the Advanced Technical Field (HM-ATF), are trained to handle medical emergencies wherever the mission takes them. As part of an exclusive group supporting SEALs, Divers, SWCC, and EOD teams, they deliver critical care in the most extreme conditions. You might serve in one of three roles: a Search & Rescue Medical Technician, a Dive Medical Technician or as a Special Operations Independent Duty Corpsman.
It's not easy to earn the title Doc. But when warfighters put their lives on the line, they need a medical warrior by their side.
Enlisted None
WATCH VIDEOS ABOUT SPECIAL OPERATIONS CORPSMEN
Special Operations Independent Duty Corpsman
Search and Rescue Medical Technician
Medical Deep Sea Diving Technician
SPECIAL OPERATIONS CORPSMAN: CAREER DETAILS & REQUIREMENTS
Responsibilities
Those in the Hospital Corpsman Advanced Technical Field go beyond the duties of basic Hospital Corpsman, working in austere and challenging environments while saving lives. Each of the three classifications has its own responsibilities:
Special Operations Independent Duty Corpsman (SOIDC)
- Provide advanced medical care and operational services for Marine Reconnaissance, USMC Special Operations Forces and Navy Special Operations Command personnel, like SWCC and SEALs
- Engage as a team member in direct action, special reconnaissance, foreign internal defense and unconventional warfare
Search and Rescue Medical Technician (SMT)
- Rescue patients and deliver emergency care from the back of a helicopter
- Perform aircrew duties and En Route Care (ERC) for routine illness and emergent patients
- Provide relief and assistance in areas ravaged by catastrophic natural disasters
- Support Search and Rescue (SAR), tactical evacuation (TECEVAC), Medical Evacuation (MEDEVAC), casualty evacuation (CASEVAC) and Combat Search & Rescue (CSAR) for Navy and Marine Corps Aviation
Deep Sea Diving Medical Technician (DMT)
- Provide basic medicine and assist medics in prevention and treatment of diving related illnesses, injuries associated with deep sea diving and hyperbaric conditions
- Operate, test and repair all Navy diving equipment
- Perform underwater inspections, harbor/port/ship security inspections, conduct ordnance searches, rescue personnel, engage in special warfare and small boat operations
- Operate Swimmer Delivery Vehicle Dry-Deck Shelter system and submarine Lock-in/Lock-out systems
Work Environment
As a Hospital Corpsman, you have the most diverse range of work environments in the Navy. Your job will likely take you all over the world-and far out of your comfort zone. If you choose to go the Hospital Corpsman Advanced Technical Field route, you will work in extreme and sometimes precarious conditions. From deep-sea diving to combat missions to flying in MH-60 Romeo helicopters, you will train outside the realm of conventional military forces to prepare for any mission. You may work independent of a physician or under supervision in this program.
Training & Advancement
Upon completion of initial training at Recruit Training Command Great Lakes (known as Boot Camp), you'll report for specialized training including:
Hospital Corps A School (19 weeks) in San Antonio, Texas for training on basic principles and techniques of patient care and first aid procedures.
After A School, HM-ATF candidates track to one of three advanced training paths:
- Special Operations Independent Duty Corpsman Pipeline (121 weeks)
Areas of training include but are not limited to basic reconnaissance, airborne operations, combatant diving, demolitions, clinical diagnostics, advanced trauma skills, Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS), basic surgical anesthesia, basic veterinary medicine and basic dental exams. - Search and Rescue Medical Tech Pipeline (27 weeks)
Areas of training include but are not limited to advanced fluid resuscitation, administration and management of Advanced Life Support medications, use of emergency medical equipment, rescue and recovery devices and patient handling. - Medical Deep Sea Diving Tech Pipeline (28 weeks)
Areas of training include but are not limited to diving physics, scuba and surface-supplied air diving, recognition and treatment of diving related illnesses.
After completing your pipeline, you'll receive your first assignment. You'll go wherever you're needed, which can be anywhere in the world. Automatic promotion opportunities are available but are competitive and based on completion of pipeline.
Post-Service Opportunities
There's no better way to begin a successful career in health care than by serving in the medical support division of America's Navy. Specialized training received and work experience gained in the course of service can lead to valuable credentialing and occupational opportunities in related fields in the civilian world, such as Emergency Medical Technician (EMT), Home Health Aide, Anesthesiologist Assistant and more.
Education Opportunities
Beyond offering access to professional credentials and certifications, Navy technical and operational training in the medical field can translate to credit hours toward a bachelor's or associate degree through the American Council on Education.
You may also continue your education through undergraduate degree opportunities like the Navy College Program and Tuition Assistance and the Post-9/11 GI Bill.
Qualifications & Requirements
A high-school diploma or equivalent is required to become an Enlisted Sailor. Those seeking a position as a Hospital Corpsman must be U.S. citizens.
While no college degree is required to apply for a position as a Hospital Corpsman Advanced Technical Field, a high degree of difficulty should be expected. Entry Requirements include:
- Vision correctable to 20/20
- Normal color perception
- Pass a physical examination
- 28 years of age or younger
- U.S. citizen eligible for security clearance
In addition to strong communication, writing and arithmetic skills, you should also have a genuine interest in providing health care, along with good use of your hands and strong physical stamina.
The Minimum and Elevated Navy Physical Screening Test (PST & EPST) requirements are:
For Special Operations Independent Duty Corpsman (SOIDC)
Exercise Time Min. Elevated Swim 500 yards (breast or sidestroke) Unlimited 12:30 9:30 Push-up 2:00 50 75 Curl-up 2:00 50 75 Pull-up 2:00 10 15 Run 1.5 miles Unlimited 10:30 9:30
For Search and Rescue Medical Technicians (SMT)
Exercise Time Min. Swim 500 yards (breast or sidestroke) Unlimited 12:00 Push-up 2:00 42 Pull-up 2:00 04 Run 1.5 miles Unlimited 12:00
For Deep Sea Diving Medical Technicians (DMT)
Exercise Time Min. Swim 500 yards (breast or sidestroke) Unlimited 12:00 Push-up 2:00 50 Pull-up 2:00 06 Run 1.5 miles Unlimited 11:30
Candidates who achieve the Elevated Physical Screening Test (EPST) scores shown above may qualify for the Enlisted Bonus for Shipping (EB-SHP) program. These elevated standards must be met during your 14-day shipping PST to be eligible for the bonus. Learn more about Navy enlistment bonuses.
Important personal traits for this role include maturity, resourcefulness, dependability and trustworthiness. Please note that any illegal involvement with drugs may be disqualifying.
General qualifications may vary depending upon whether you're currently serving, whether you've served before or whether you've never served before.
Part-Time Opportunities
There are no part-time jobs as a Navy Reserve Sailor in this role. Go back to Careers to find other jobs that have a Reserve component. You can also find out more about what life is like as a Reserve Sailor in the Navy.
Compare Navy Careers
See how a career as a Hospital Corpsman Advanced Technical Field compares to other Navy jobs.
Compare roles, pay and requirements for each job now.
- Both Overview Information Systems Technicians, Cryptologic Technician Networks, and Intelligence Specialists keep the Fleet connected, informed, and secure by operating and defending networks, conducting cyber operations, and producing intelligence for decision makers across the Navy.
Key Responsibilities As an Information Systems Technician, design, operate, secure, and restore networks, servers, and communication systems that support naval operations; as a Cryptologic Technician Networks specialist, conduct offensive and defensive cyber operations, investigate and track adversary activity, and help protect Navy networks and critical systems; as an Intelligence Specialist, collect and analyze information on adversaries, environments, and weather and create intelligence products and briefings for commanders.
What to Expect High tempo, mission critical work supporting around the clock operations and watch floors; mix of help desk and user support, network and systems administration, incident response, and planned maintenance; continuous learning in cyber tools, network defense, signals analysis, and intelligence production; strict requirements for handling classified information and complying with security and information assurance standards; shift work, duty rotations, and deployments afloat and ashore.
Work Environment Worldwide assignments ashore at information warfare and intelligence commands and afloat on ships, aircraft, or submarines; work in secure facilities, server rooms, operations centers, and shipboard communications spaces; close teamwork within information warfare and intelligence teams and with supported operational units.
Pathways, Training & Advancement Recruit Training followed by Class A School in an information warfare specialty, such as IT or CTN at information warfare training sites and IS at intelligence training commands; advanced C schools and follow on training in areas such as cyber operations, network defense, digital forensics, signals analysis, targeting, imagery, language, and mission systems; progressive advancement based on qualifications, performance, and warfare pins such as Information Warfare and platform specific warfare designations.
Direct enlistment into IT, CTN, or IS pipelines from civilian life based on aptitude, security clearance eligibility, and Navy needs; in service conversion opportunities for qualified Sailors who meet screening criteria and community requirements; Reserve accession pathways for prior service or qualified civilian professionals when manning needs allow.
Qualifications All Navy jobs require meeting general enlistment or commissioning standards, which typically include: Eligibility to serve in the United States Navy, which may involve United States citizenship or other legal residency and work status, depending on the program and current law and policy A high school diploma or equivalent for enlisted positions, and a bachelor's or qualifying professional degree for officer positions Meeting age limits that vary by program and are set in law and Navy policy.
Some communities have more restrictive age ranges Meeting medical, vision, and dental standards, including body composition and physical fitness requirements, with some jobs requiring more demanding standards Meeting character and conduct standards, including background screening Achieving required test scores for your program, such as the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery for enlisted roles or officer qualification tests for officer programs Eligibility for a security clearance when required for your rating or designator Additional qualifications can include specific skills, education, licensure, or experience that are unique to a job or community and will be reviewed with you by a recruiter.
Additional qualifications for this job may include: United States citizenship or equivalent status as allowed by law and policy, with most billets requiring citizenship; high school diploma or equivalent; at least 17 years of age; strong interest and aptitude in computers, networks, cyber operations, and analytical work; eligibility for a security clearance at the Secret or Top Secret level depending on the billet.
Education Education benefits are available through standard Navy programs such as Tuition Assistance, the Post-9/11 GI Bill, ACE-recommended college credit for Navy training, Navy COOL-funded certifications, USMAP apprenticeships, and other Navy College Program opportunities.
Specific options depend on the Sailor's status, training, and current Navy policy.
Pay, Benefits & Service Pay, benefits, and service commitments follow standard Navy Active and/or Reserve policies for this type of role, including basic pay, allowances when eligible, health coverage, and retirement options.
Exact entitlements, special pays, and service obligations depend on program, component, years of service, and current law and Navy guidance.
Incentives Incentives such as bonuses, special pays, and loan repayment may be available at times for specific ratings or communities, but they change frequently and cannot be guaranteed.
Applicants must confirm current incentives and eligibility with an official Navy recruiter or authoritative Navy source.
Notes and Disclaimers This description is a general overview of typical duties, training, and opportunities in this community.
It does not replace official Navy instructions, policies, or contracts and does not guarantee specific assignments, training, incentives, or outcomes.
Actual opportunities depend on Navy needs, individual performance, screening results, and current law and policy.5c143e31-5e48-4549-b638-05792d185386
Division Vice President – Landfill & Organics
Position Summary:
The Division Vice President works in all business aspects (revenue growth and managing cost) of landfill and organics operations. The Division Vice President will have full P&L responsibility and ensure the highest standards of environmental safety and operational excellence by effectively managing the day-to-day operation and continuous improvement of assigned Landfill locations and compost facility.
Essential Job Functions:
- Manage performance of general managers, operations and maintenance managers.
- Manage the day-to-day operations and maintenance, meeting performance standards and productivity
- metrics
- Full P&L responsibility of assigned operations, including all business aspects of operation (contract
- management, revenue growth, cost management, compliance, personnel development, capital projects,
- and budget development).
- Interact with various municipal leadership including but not limited to Public Works, City Managers, & City Council Members
- Complete involvement in sales and marketing aspects to continue overall location growth potential
- Manage all aspects of operating contract with Municipality and ensure full compliance. Assume role of contract manager.
- Manage implementation of maintenance program for full on and off-highway fleet, including program development and auditing processes.
- Develop and manage program to maximize landfill density and airspace savings.
- Manage technical consultants and operations teams to prepare and develop annual site operating plans, including but not limited to fill sequence plans, winterization plans, and drainage plans.
- Manage composting operation using KPIs to drive process improvement and production of high quality compost and mulch.
- Lead the sales effort of organic products to insure continuous movement of product at a profit.
- Responsible for interaction with all regulatory agencies, including Region Water Quality Control Board, Air Management District, CalRecycle, Local Enforcement Agency and Jurisdictional land use.
- Ensure the training and development of the skills of the workforce by providing proper guidance and coaching
- Provide exceptional customer service and customer retention
- Engaging in the interview process in order to hire the most talented and qualified personnel
- Conducting weekly staff meetings with management team
- Encourage internal growth by providing opportunity for personnel development
- Provide effective leadership by developing and implementing a team focused work environment
- Determines workflow, staffing levels, monitors equipment operations and maintenance, conducts safety training, all while fostering a work environment based on teamwork and cooperation
- Provide monthly projection data and analysis. Review year-to-date and prior year budget data
- comparisons
- Ensure facilities meet all Federal and State Regulations, OSHA and local requirements
- Establish the necessary procedures to ensure overall safety of employees, customers and visitors
- Engage employees to create a safe, energetic work environment through feedback and recognition
- Ensure the cleanliness and maintenance of facility, equipment, and property through inspections and preventive maintenance programs
Required Qualifications:
- Bachelor's Degree (Civil Engineering preferred)
- 10 - 15 year's management experience
- Registered Civil Engineer (preferably in CA)
- Experience managing a solid waste system including landfills, transfer stations and composting facility.
- Knowledge of DOT, OSHA, and other related state and federal regulations
- Must have demonstrated leadership, problem solving and organizational skills
- Good interpersonal skills and ability to coach and develop subordinates
- Excellent communication and customer service skills
- Ability to effectively interface with general public and regulatory agencies as well as political contacts
- Ability to perform physical requirements of the position with or without reasonable accommodations
Preferred Qualifications:
- Master's Degree (Business preferred)
- Previous experience in the solid waste and organics industry
- Manager of Landfill Operations certification (SWANA MOLO)
Director/Regional VP of Operations - General Contractor - Education Sector - DSA
Overview
Our client, a highly respected General Contractor, is seeking an accomplished Project Leader to take on a VP/Director of Operations role on their leadership team in Southern California. This firm is well known for delivering high-quality construction projects across multiple sectors — including DSA regulated K-14 education, OSHPD/NCAI regulated healthcare, and many other institutional & commercial facilities.
Must Haves
- Minimum of 15 years of experience managing large-scale construction projects with increasing responsibility.
- Bachelor's degree in Construction Management, Engineering, or a related field.
- Demonstrated success leading operations or large project portfolios exceeding $100M in total value.
- Strong background in general contracting with expertise in preconstruction, estimating, and project delivery.
- Exceptional leadership skills with a track record of mentoring and developing project management teams.
- Proven ability to manage client relationships, negotiate contracts, and maintain strong partnerships with owners, architects, engineers, and trade partners.
- Deep understanding of risk management, cost control, scheduling, and operational strategy.
- Proficiency with Microsoft Office Suite and industry-standard construction management software.
- Excellent communication, presentation, and decision-making skills.
- Unwavering commitment to safety, quality, and team success.
Nice to Haves
- Experience in K-14 education, civic, and healthcare construction environments.
- Prior experience in a regional or divisional operations leadership capacity.
- Advanced degree (MBA, MS in Construction Management, or similar).
- Familiarity with lean construction methodologies and continuous improvement frameworks.
- Proven success implementing operational efficiencies or standardization initiatives.
- Active involvement in professional associations or community organizations.
- Familiarity with California DSA (Division of the State Architect) processes and compliance.
Responsibilities
- Lead and oversee regional operations to ensure projects are executed safely, efficiently, and profitably.
- Provide strategic direction, leadership, and mentorship to project management and field operations teams.
- Collaborate with executive leadership to develop and implement company-wide initiatives, strategic plans, and growth objectives.
- Foster a culture of accountability, innovation, and continuous improvement.
- Partner with pre-construction, estimating, and business development teams to align project opportunities with company goals.
- Build and maintain long-term relationships with key clients, consultants, and trade partners.
- Drive operational consistency across teams and promote best practices in project delivery.
- Identify and mitigate risks while ensuring adherence to contractual, financial, and safety obligations.
- Represent the company in industry and community forums to strengthen its market presence.
- Champion the organization's core values.
The Director of Channel Marketing will lead the development and execution of channel-specific marketing strategies for Retail, Mexican Ethnic Retail, and National Accounts to accelerate demand for Del Real Foods’ branded and unbranded meal solutions across the U.S.
This role is accountable for driving “Sales Overnight” through conversion-focused activation and “Brand Overnight” through disruptive, shopper-relevant storytelling that builds awareness, trial, and loyalty. The Director will serve as the connective tissue between Brand Marketing and Sales, translating brand strategy into winning in-store, digital, and customer-specific execution.
General Overall Duties
Some of the duties of this position are those described below. This job description does not state or imply that the duties listed are the only duties and responsibilities assigned to this position. Employees holding this position will be required to perform any other job-related duties as requested by management.
𝗖𝗵𝗮𝗻𝗻𝗲𝗹 𝗦𝘁𝗿𝗮𝘁𝗲𝗴𝘆 & 𝗣𝗹𝗮𝗻𝗻𝗶𝗻𝗴
𝗗𝗲𝘃𝗲𝗹𝗼𝗽 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗼𝘄𝗻 𝗰𝗵𝗮𝗻𝗻𝗲𝗹 𝗺𝗮𝗿𝗸𝗲𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝘀𝘁𝗿𝗮𝘁𝗲𝗴𝗶𝗲𝘀 𝗳𝗼𝗿:
- Conventional Grocery
- Mexican Ethnic Retail
- Club, Mass, and other National Accounts
- Translate brand and portfolio strategies into channel-specific growth plans.
- Define priority occasions, categories, and platforms by channel.
- Demand Creation (Sales Overnight)
𝗗𝗲𝘀𝗶𝗴𝗻 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗲𝘅𝗲𝗰𝘂𝘁𝗲 𝘀𝗵𝗼𝗽𝗽𝗲𝗿 𝗺𝗮𝗿𝗸𝗲𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗽𝗿𝗼𝗴𝗿𝗮𝗺𝘀 𝘁𝗵𝗮𝘁 𝗱𝗿𝗶𝘃𝗲:
- Distribution gains
- Velocity growth
- Basket expansion
- Lead development of customer-specific selling stories, playbooks, and toolkits.
- Partner with Sales to support new item launches, line reviews, and expansions.
- Brand Building (Brand Overnight)
- Bring brand platforms to life in-store and across retailer digital ecosystems.
- Create disruptive activation that builds mental and physical availability.
- Ensure consistent but flexible brand expression across channels.
𝗥𝗲𝘁𝗮𝗶𝗹 𝗔𝗰𝘁𝗶𝘃𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 & 𝗘𝘅𝗲𝗰𝘂𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻
- Own in-store marketing strategy: displays, POS, secondary placements, demos, and sampling.
- Lead digital shelf and retailer media strategy in partnership with Brand and eCommerce.
- Drive excellence in execution and post-event analysis.
- National Accounts & Customer Co-Marketing
- Develop joint business planning marketing components with top customers.
- Identify and activate co-marketing and shopper insights opportunities.
- Customize programs by retailer while protecting brand integrity.
- Cross-Functional Leadership
- Serve as primary marketing partner to Sales, Category Management, and Revenue Growth Management.
- Align with Brand, Innovation, and Insights on priorities and timing.
- Manage external agencies and partners.
- Budget & Performance Management
- Own channel marketing budget and ROI tracking.
- Establish KPIs tied to distribution, velocity, trial, and repeat.
- Optimize spend toward highest-return activities.
- Success Metrics
- Incremental distribution and velocity gains by channel.
- Growth in branded and unbranded meal solutions sales.
- Launch success and speed to scale.
- Improved retailer media ROI.
- Stronger brand awareness and consideration in priority channels.
Specific Skills and Abilities Required
- Builder and operator mindset
- Commercially obsessed, shopper-first
- Influential leader and strong collaborator
- Comfortable in fast-growth, entrepreneurial
Additional Required Skills
- A passion for rich, vibrant and the insanely crave-able world of good REAL food.
- Has the ability to turn strangers into Familia
- Someone who would proudly and passionately celebrate the Hispanic culture through REAL food.
Education/Experience
- Bachelor’s degree in Marketing, Business, or related field; MBA a plus.
- 8–12+ years of CPG experience with deep shopper/channel marketing focus.
- Proven success driving growth in Retail and National Accounts.
- Experience with ethnic or multicultural brands strongly preferred.
- Strong analytical and commercial acumen.
Schedule: Full-time
Compensation: Starting compensation range of $140,000.00 - $150,000.00 annually. Exact compensation will be determined by experience, education, licensure/certifications, and location, in accordance with applicable laws.
Position Overview
The Director of Nursing (DON) or Director of Patient Care Services provides clinical leadership for Loma Linda University Hospice’s daily care delivery operations across a market census, supervising a multidisciplinary clinical team comprising of nurses, aides, therapists and interdisciplinary team members. This role balances operational excellence with empathetic leadership ensuring each patient receives compassionate, high-quality end-of-life care while maintaining performance metrics that meet the standards of Loma Linda University Hospice’s joint venture partnership. The DON is accountable for clinical outcomes, workforce utilization, and compliance, driving a metrics-based culture where decisions are informed by data, not intuition.
Key Responsibilities
Clinical Leadership & Team Oversight
- Lead and coach an interdisciplinary team (clinical managers, RNs, LVNs, aides, therapists)
- Ensure high-quality hospice care aligned with regulatory and organizational standards
- Establish and enforce clinical workflows, standards, and expectations
- Drive accountability through:
- Team huddles
- Case reviews
- Performance coaching
- Maintain field presence to support staff and patient experience
- Partner with Medical Director and IDT to ensure appropriate, compliant care plans
Workforce Management & Staff Utilization
- Oversee scheduling, territory coverage, and caseload distribution
- Ensure staffing ratios and productivity meet established benchmarks
- Monitor and optimize:
- Visit volumes
- Time utilization
- Workload balance
- Align staffing with census and admissions to prevent gaps
- Coordinate across admissions, nursing, and scheduling teams
- Ensure payroll accuracy through auditing of visits and documentation
- Manage triage and resource allocation efficiently
Ultimate Accountability & Hands-On Clinical Support
- Maintain full accountability for clinical operations and care continuity
- Step in or ensure coverage when needed, including:
- Admissions
- Urgent visits
- Care coordination and discharges
- Critical patient needs
- Provide direct support during staffing gaps or high-priority situations
- Serve as a hands-on leader with occasional frontline clinical involvement
- Retain responsibility for outcomes at all times
Metrics & Performance Management
- Lead operations using a data-driven approach
- Accountable for:
- Patient Satisfaction (5-Star target)
- Staff Retention (≥85%)
- Documentation completion (within 24 hours)
- Productivity benchmarks
- Monitor and analyze:
- Clinical outcomes
- Visit/utilization data
- Operational KPIs
- Conduct performance reviews and corrective actions
- Report performance metrics to executive and partner leadership
- Leverage EHR data to drive compliance, productivity, and quality outcomes
Clinical Systems & EHR Proficiency
- Achieve EHR proficiency within 60 days
- Utilize systems to:
- Review and audit documentation
- Monitor compliance
- Analyze performance data
- Coach and retrain staff on workflows and documentation standards
- Use EHR insights to identify gaps and drive improvements
Clinical Quality Governance & QAPI Leadership
- Lead QAPI initiatives in partnership with Compliance
- Oversee:
- Quality trends and adverse events
- Patient safety and infection control
- Documentation and regulatory readiness
- Drive improvements through:
- Staff education
- Workflow enhancements
- Lead quality reviews and implement corrective actions
- Ensure ongoing compliance with regulatory standards
- Report quality outcomes to leadership and partners
Joint Venture Partnership Obligations
- Serve as clinical lead for joint venture partnerships
- Collaborate with:
- Medical Director
- Health system leadership
- Case management teams
- Support care coordination, integration, and performance goals
- Ensure alignment with partner standards and reporting requirements
Required Qualifications
- Active Registered Nurse (RN) license in state(s) of operation; BSN required, MSN preferred.
- Minimum 5–7 years of hospice or home health leadership experience, with at least 3 years in a Director-level or senior management role overseeing a multidisciplinary team.
- Proven success managing teams of 20+ clinical staff and patient populations exceeding 100 active census.
- Demonstrated ability to use EMR systems and analytics tools to drive data-based performance improvement.
- Strong knowledge of hospice regulations, quality reporting, and compliance frameworks.
- Excellent communication, leadership, and conflict-resolution skills.
- Regular local travel
- Reliable transportation, valid license, active insurance
- Ability to lift 25–30 lbs and navigate patient environments
- Bilingual preferred
About Loma Linda University Hospice
Loma Linda University Hospice is dedicated to a patient-first mission, ensuring compassionate, high-quality care that supports patients and families through every stage of need. Loma Linda University Hospice’s culture is defined by data-driven excellence, operational transparency, and a steadfast commitment to its core values of Dignity, Integrity, Compassion, Excellence and Partnership. Loma Linda University Hospice was created in 2026 though a joint venture between Loma Linda University Health and Kara Health.
Loma Linda University Hospice is an equal opportunity employer and is committed to a policy of equal employment opportunity for all employees and applicants. We do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, age, disability, veteran status, or any other legally protected status in accordance with applicable federal, state, and local laws. All employment decisions are based on job requirements, individual merit, and business need.