Federal Executive Branch
Here's a look at documents from the U.S. Executive Branch
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USU's Dr. Regina Day Secures $340K NIH Grant to Stop "Brittle Blood" and Toxic Iron Following Radiation Exposure
BETHESDA, Maryland, March 11 -- The Uniformed Services University issued the following research news:
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USU's Dr. Regina Day Secures $340K NIH Grant to Stop "Brittle Blood" and Toxic Iron Following Radiation Exposure
Backed by a newly awarded NIH/NIEHS R21 grant, the Uniformed Services University's Dr. Regina Day explores the molecular mechanics of red blood cell lysis to prevent iron-associated systemic organ failure following radiation exposure.
By Hadiyah Brendel
When ionizing radiation strikes the body--whether from a misplaced industrial, medical, or military source--the immediate
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BETHESDA, Maryland, March 11 -- The Uniformed Services University issued the following research news:
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USU's Dr. Regina Day Secures $340K NIH Grant to Stop "Brittle Blood" and Toxic Iron Following Radiation Exposure
Backed by a newly awarded NIH/NIEHS R21 grant, the Uniformed Services University's Dr. Regina Day explores the molecular mechanics of red blood cell lysis to prevent iron-associated systemic organ failure following radiation exposure.
By Hadiyah Brendel
When ionizing radiation strikes the body--whether from a misplaced industrial, medical, or military source--the immediatedamage to internal organs is invisible. Yet, a deadly, secondary threat quietly unfolds in the bloodstream as red blood cells begin to shatter.
To combat this, Dr. Regina Day, a professor and vice chair of the Department of Pharmacology and Molecular Therapeutics at the Uniformed Services University's (USU) School of Medicine, has been awarded a $340,000 National Institutes of Health (NIH)/NIEHS R21 grant. Day will spearhead a two-year study titled "Mechanisms of Radiation-Induced Hemolysis" to find out why these cells break apart and how to stop them.
While current U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) radiation countermeasures focus on prompting the bone marrow to produce new blood cells, Day's research takes a different approach. She is investigating how to protect the cells already circulating in the body. This award builds on more than five years of her research into why a healthy cell suddenly begins spilling toxic debris after radiation exposure.
The Threat of "Brittle" Blood
Day's research investigates radiation-induced hemolysis, a process in which red blood cells (RBCs) physically break apart. While scientists have documented this reaction since the 1950s, the molecular "why" has remained a mystery.
Her team discovered that ionizing radiation acts as a potent stressor, oxidizing at least two critical proteins inside the RBCs: hemoglobin and carbonic anhydrase II.
"RBCs have some proteins in high concentration," Day explains. "If these proteins change in shape or rigidity, then that can cause the cell to be less flexible and more susceptible to fracturing."
This stiffness creates a lethal defect when the cells reach the spleen, the body's internal quality-control filter. To pass through the spleen's incredibly tiny blood vessels, healthy RBCs must effortlessly fold and flex.
Day's research shows that oxidized RBCs are simply too brittle to bend. Instead, they deform. The spleen's specialized cells recognize this damage and attempt to remove them, but the sheer volume of damaged cells overwhelms the system.
"Following total body irradiation, when there is a large population of defective RBCs, the spleen has difficulty performing the normal uptake and removal process," Day says. "Instead, the radiation-damaged RBCs break open, releasing their contents, including iron, into the blood."
The Iron "Second Wave"
The danger extends far beyond the loss of the blood cells themselves. When RBCs rupture, they release their internal contents directly into the bloodstream. This sudden flood of free iron acts as a secondary poison, shutting down the liver, bone marrow, and other vital tissues.
Worse, this iron toxicity suppresses the body's already-weakened ability to regenerate new, life-saving blood cells.
"A number of recent studies show that iron chelators--specialized drugs that act like 'chemical claws' to bind to iron and safely remove it from the body--increase survival from total body irradiation and decrease tissue damage when used alone as radiation countermeasures," Day notes. "These findings suggest that iron itself is a secondary toxicity following ionizing radiation."
A Two-Pronged Defense
Collaborating with Dr. Yuichiro Suzuki at Georgetown University and Dr. Nicholas Chartrain at USU's 4D Bio(3), Day is developing a "shield and clean-up" strategy to stabilize the blood before it releases its toxic contents:
* Antioxidant Shields: The team is testing agents like Vitamin E and N-acetylcysteine to reverse the radiation-induced protein oxidation before the cells break open. The goal is to keep the cells flexible enough to survive the spleen's microvascular squeeze test.
* Iron Chelators as Chemical Claws: If cells do shatter, iron chelators circulating in the blood can grab the free iron. This allows the body to safely flush the poison out before it damages surrounding organs.
Readiness for the Battlefield and Beyond
For military service members and first responders operating in radiation-contaminated environments, this research could offer a critical golden window for medical intervention.
"If you know that a radiation exposure has occurred, then you know that red blood cells are going to be damaged," says Day. "Then you could be prepared to treat it during the early period ... well before too many red blood cells lyse, and well before iron reaches a toxic level."
Beyond the battlefield, Day's findings could help cancer patients better tolerate radiation therapy or even address the root cause of "space anemia" in astronauts. By identifying these molecular shields, USU is paving the way for novel methods to protect the body's ultimate lifeline.
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Original text here: https://news.usuhs.edu/2026/03/usus-dr-regina-day-secures-340k-nih.html
Surface Transportation Board Issues Decision Involving Lake Providence Port Commission, Delta Southern Railroad
WASHINGTON, March 11 -- The U.S. Department of Transportation Surface Transportation Board issued the following decision (Docket No. FD 36447) entitled "Lake Providence Port Commission - Feeder Line Application - Line of Delta Southern Railroad Located in East Carroll and Madison Parishes, Louisiana":
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This proceeding involves efforts by the Lake Providence Port Commission (LPPC), a noncarrier political subdivision of the State of Louisiana, to acquire the portion of the McGeheeTallulah rail corridor owned by Delta Southern Railroad, Inc. (DSR), a Class III rail carrier, through a feeder
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WASHINGTON, March 11 -- The U.S. Department of Transportation Surface Transportation Board issued the following decision (Docket No. FD 36447) entitled "Lake Providence Port Commission - Feeder Line Application - Line of Delta Southern Railroad Located in East Carroll and Madison Parishes, Louisiana":
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This proceeding involves efforts by the Lake Providence Port Commission (LPPC), a noncarrier political subdivision of the State of Louisiana, to acquire the portion of the McGeheeTallulah rail corridor owned by Delta Southern Railroad, Inc. (DSR), a Class III rail carrier, through a feederline application under 49 U.S.C. Sec. 10907 and 49 C.F.R. part 1151.
On December 12, 2025, the Board issued a decision that, among other things, assigned and authorized Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Jenifer Soulikias to address discovery matters in this docket. Lake Providence Port Comm'n--Feeder Line Appl.--Line of Delta S. R.R. Located in E. Carroll & Madison Parishes, La., FD 36447, slip op. at 3 (STB served Dec. 12, 2025).
On February 27, 2026, ALJ Soulikias issued a decision granting a motion filed by DSR for issuance of a subpoena to Complex Chemical Company, Inc. (Complex Chemical), a nonparty witness, with certain limitations. On March 5, 2026, Complex Chemical and LPPC jointly appealed a portion of the ALJ's decision. On March 6, 2026, DSR filed a letter stating that it would respond to the appeal by March 15, 2026, "in compliance with the ten day period allotted for responses to appeals under 49 C.F.R. Sec. 1115.1(c)." (DSR Letter 1, Mar. 6, 2026.)
Counsel are reminded that appeals of discovery rulings of Board employees, including administrative law judges, are interlocutory appeals and that replies thereto must be filed with the Board within seven calendar days. See 49 C.F.R. Sec. 1115.9(b); Finch Paper--Pet. for Declaratory Ord., FD 35981, slip op. at 6 (STB served Jan. 11, 2017).
It is ordered:
1. This decision is effective on its service date.
By the Board, Anika S. Cooper, Chief Counsel, Office of Chief Counsel.
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Original text here: https://dcms-external.s3.amazonaws.com/DCMS_External_PROD/1773163634242/52948.pdf
Investing in Emerging Developers: How Kaba-Baal Is Expanding Pathways Into Affordable Housing Development
CHICAGO, Illinois, March 11 -- The Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago, a district bank in the Federal Home Loan Bank System, issued the following news:
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Investing in Emerging Developers: How Kaba-Baal LLC Is Expanding Pathways into Affordable Housing Development
In 2025, FHLBank Chicago awarded $241,000 through its Community First Developer Program to Kaba-Baal LLC, a Madison-based firm founded by developer Kaba Bah. The funding, delivered through Forward Community Investments, marked a significant milestone for Kaba-Baal LLC as it worked to create new pathways into affordable housing development
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CHICAGO, Illinois, March 11 -- The Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago, a district bank in the Federal Home Loan Bank System, issued the following news:
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Investing in Emerging Developers: How Kaba-Baal LLC Is Expanding Pathways into Affordable Housing Development
In 2025, FHLBank Chicago awarded $241,000 through its Community First Developer Program to Kaba-Baal LLC, a Madison-based firm founded by developer Kaba Bah. The funding, delivered through Forward Community Investments, marked a significant milestone for Kaba-Baal LLC as it worked to create new pathways into affordable housing developmentfor emerging professionals across Wisconsin.
Kaba built his firm on the belief that everyone deserves a safe and dignified place to call home. His work centers on creating homeownership opportunities that strengthen neighborhood stability and help families build long-term security. The Developer Program grant provided new capacity to advance this mission, supporting fellowships and internships that prepare emerging leaders for careers in affordable housing.
Future fellows and interns will gain hands-on experience through projects in development, including work in communities such as River Falls and Columbus. Their roles will introduce them to project management, planning and community engagement--while also teaching them the importance of thoughtful, purposedriven development. Kaba notes that the most meaningful outcome will be helping new professionals understand how intentional development can transform neighborhoods and expand opportunities for families.
Forward Community Investments has played a key role in this progress, helping Kaba-Baal LLC refine its vision, navigate early challenges, and position the firm for growth. With Developer Program funding secured, the organization is ready to take its next steps and create space for new developers who want to make an impact in their communities.
In 2025, the partnership between FHLBank Chicago, Forward Community Investments, and Kaba-Baal LLC demonstrated how targeted investment can open doors for emerging leaders. The work ahead will support new talent, new projects, and new opportunities for families across Wisconsin and Illinois.
Watch the video below to learn more.
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Original text here: https://www.fhlbc.com/news/news-detail/2026/03/10/investing-in-emerging-developers
HUD Appeals Judicial Decision to Shift Homelessness Paradigm
WASHINGTON, March 11 -- The Department of Housing and Urban Development issued the following news release:
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HUD Appeals Judicial Decision to Shift Homelessness Paradigm
Rejects Subsidized Drug Use, Half-Million Dollar Salaries, and Lifelong Handouts
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The Department of Justice (DOJ) on behalf of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is appealing the Federal District Court of Rhode Island's preliminary injunction. The injunction denies HUD the ability to award homelessness grants under its policies that protect homeless individuals from dangerous encampments, illicit drugs,
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WASHINGTON, March 11 -- The Department of Housing and Urban Development issued the following news release:
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HUD Appeals Judicial Decision to Shift Homelessness Paradigm
Rejects Subsidized Drug Use, Half-Million Dollar Salaries, and Lifelong Handouts
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The Department of Justice (DOJ) on behalf of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is appealing the Federal District Court of Rhode Island's preliminary injunction. The injunction denies HUD the ability to award homelessness grants under its policies that protect homeless individuals from dangerous encampments, illicit drugs,and sex offenders, and orders the Department to spend billions of dollars on simply warehousing people. This action underscores HUD's commitment to reform the misguided "Housing First" approach that funded the self-serving homeless industrial complex, rewarded activists, and ignored solutions. HUD is challenging the decision to support the status quo that now stands in the way of much needed reforms for homeless Americans.
"President Trump and Secretary Turner vowed a drastic paradigm shift in how America addresses homelessness. The homeless industrial complex promulgated Housing First, which has repeatedly failed vulnerable Americans. It has by every objective measure turned America's streets into a petri dish of disease, drugs, and despair. HUD is doubling down for real solutions to this catastrophe and will continue to pursue every legal avenue to reform the homelessness system within the bounds of the law," said Deputy Secretary Andrew Hughes.
In November 2025, HUD announced monumental reforms to the Continuum of Care (CoC) program, its key homelessness funding program intended to promote self-sufficiency, not government dependency. It is also intended to be a true competition designed to choose among the best available solutions and not an entitled slush fund. HUD's FY25 Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) invests $3.9 billion in housing with accompanying services, rather than rewarding grantees for simply warehousing able-bodied, non-elderly homeless individuals. This realignment effectuates President Donald J. Trump's Executive Order, Ending Crime And Disorder On America's Streets.
Through the use of weaponized litigation, twenty-one states, the District of Columbia, and a handful of activist groups and local municipalities sued HUD. This lawfare has blocked HUD's ability to revise the funding conditions and select the best and most effective projects, delaying important funding deadlines.
The appeal puts HUD one step closer to providing dignity to our most vulnerable Americans, protecting billions of taxpayer dollars, and overturning the Court's decision to perpetuate the failing status quo.
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Original text here: https://www.hud.gov/news/hud-no-26-020
EIA Releases Latest Short-Term Energy Outlook Amid Middle East Conflict
WASHINGTON, March 11 -- The U.S. Department of Energy's Energy Information Administration issued the following news release:
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EIA releases latest Short-Term Energy Outlook amid Middle East conflict
U.S. energy market indicators ... 2025 ... 2026 ... 2027
Brent crude oil spot price (dollars per barrel) ... $69 ... $79 ... $64
Retail gasoline price (dollars per gallon) ... $3.10 ... $3.34 ... $3.18
U.S. crude oil production (million barrels per day) ... 13.6 ... 13.6 ... 13.8
Natural gas price at Henry Hub (dollars per million British thermal units) ... $3.53 ... $3.76 ... $3.85
U.S.
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WASHINGTON, March 11 -- The U.S. Department of Energy's Energy Information Administration issued the following news release:
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EIA releases latest Short-Term Energy Outlook amid Middle East conflict
U.S. energy market indicators ... 2025 ... 2026 ... 2027
Brent crude oil spot price (dollars per barrel) ... $69 ... $79 ... $64
Retail gasoline price (dollars per gallon) ... $3.10 ... $3.34 ... $3.18
U.S. crude oil production (million barrels per day) ... 13.6 ... 13.6 ... 13.8
Natural gas price at Henry Hub (dollars per million British thermal units) ... $3.53 ... $3.76 ... $3.85
U.S.liquefied natural gas gross exports (billion cubic feet per day) ... 15 ... 17 ... 18
Shares of U.S. electricity generation
Natural gas ... 40% ... 40% ... 39%
Coal ... 17% ... 16% ... 15%
Nuclear ... 18% ... 19% ... 18%
Conventional hydropower ... 6% ... 6% ... 6%
Wind ... 11% ... 11% ... 12%
Solar ... 7% ... 8% ... 9%
Other energy sources ... 1% ... 1% ... 1%
U.S. GDP (percentage change) ... 2.2% ... 2.6% ... 2.1%
U.S. CO2 emissions (billion metric tons) ... 4.9 ... 4.8 ... 4.8
Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Short-Term Energy Outlook, March 2026
Note: Values in this table are rounded and may not match values in other tables in this report.
* Crude oil price movements. The Brent crude oil spot price has risen sharply following the onset of military action in the Middle East. Brent settled at $94 per barrel (b) on March 9, up about 50% from the beginning of the year and the highest since September 2023. Crude oil prices have risen as petroleum shipments through the Strait of Hormuz have fallen, and some Middle East oil production has been shut in.
* Middle East oil production. We make the assumption in our modeling that the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz will cause oil production in the Middle East to fall further in the coming weeks. We assume this shut-in production will gradually ease as transit through the Strait resumes.
* Crude oil price forecast. We forecast the Brent crude oil price will remain above $95/b over the next two months, before falling below $80/b in the third quarter of 2026 and around $70/b by the end of the year. We expect prices to average $64/b in 2027. This price forecast is highly dependent on our modeled assumptions of both the duration of conflict in the Middle East and resulting outages in oil production.
* U.S. crude oil production. Higher oil prices lead to more U.S. crude oil production in our forecast. We expect U.S. crude oil production will average 13.6 million barrels per day (b/d) in 2026 and rise to 13.8 million b/d in 2027. Our 2027 forecast is 0.5 million b/d higher than last month's forecast.
* Natural gas prices. Although reduced liquefied natural gas (LNG) flows through the Strait of Hormuz have caused the price of natural gas in Europe and Asia to increase, we expect U.S. natural gas prices to be relatively unaffected by this development. In our forecast, the Henry Hub spot price averages about $3.80 per million British thermal units (MMBtu) in 2026, or 13% less than our forecast last month. Prices in the early part of our forecast are lower because of milder-than-forecast temperatures in February that left more natural gas in storage than we expected. The Henry Hub spot price averages nearly $3.90/MMBtu in 2027, 12% lower than our forecast last month. Lower prices in 2027 mostly reflect more associated natural gas production as a result of the recent increase in oil prices and the related increase in production later in the forecast.
* Natural gas production and inventories. Higher crude oil production results in more associated natural gas production. We expect marketed natural gas production to average 121 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) this year, up 2% from 2025, and 124 Bcf/d in 2027, an additional 3% and almost 2 Bcf/d higher than last month's outlook. U.S. natural gas inventories are expected to end the withdrawal season in March around 1,840 billion cubic feet, which is near the five-year average (2021-2025). Withdrawals slowed in February, following historic withdrawals in January related to extreme cold weather around Winter Storm Fern.
* Electricity. U.S. electricity generation has been increasing by an average of 2% per year since 2021 to meet growing electricity demand following a period of flat demand growth between 2010 and 2019. We expect U.S. electricity generation will grow by 1.2% in 2026 and by 3.1% in 2027 led by demand growth in the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) region. In 2026, U.S. coal generation declines by 7% in our forecast as generation from renewable sources increases and the electric power sector retires about 4% of its coal-fired generating capacity.
This month's forecast also reflects the implementation of an updated U.S. crude oil and natural gas production modeling system that improves analytical capabilities and forecast accuracy.
The full March 2026 Short-Term Energy Outlook is available on the EIA website (https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/steo/).
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The product described in this press release was prepared by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), the statistical and analytical agency within the U.S. Department of Energy. By law, EIA's data, analysis, and forecasts are independent of approval by any other officer or employee of the U.S. government. The views in the product and this press release therefore should not be construed as representing those of the U.S. Department of Energy or other federal agencies.
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Original text here: https://www.eia.gov/pressroom/releases/press584.php
Department of Justice Releases First-Ever Corporate Enforcement Policy for All Criminal Cases
WASHINGTON, March 11 -- The U.S. Department of Justice issued the following news release on March 10, 2026:
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Department of Justice Releases First-Ever Corporate Enforcement Policy for All Criminal Cases
The Department of Justice released today the first-ever Department-wide corporate enforcement policy for criminal matters, promoting uniformity, predictability, and fairness in how it pursues white-collar cases to protect the American people.
"This Department of Justice is committed to transparency and fairness, and our first-ever Department-wide corporate enforcement policy is yet another
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WASHINGTON, March 11 -- The U.S. Department of Justice issued the following news release on March 10, 2026:
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Department of Justice Releases First-Ever Corporate Enforcement Policy for All Criminal Cases
The Department of Justice released today the first-ever Department-wide corporate enforcement policy for criminal matters, promoting uniformity, predictability, and fairness in how it pursues white-collar cases to protect the American people.
"This Department of Justice is committed to transparency and fairness, and our first-ever Department-wide corporate enforcement policy is yet anotherexample of that," said Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. "This policy draws on decades of experience across the Department and creates incentives for companies to come forward and do the right thing when misconduct occurs so that we may hold accountable the individual wrongdoers. Well-intentioned businesses know that, across the Department, they will be rewarded when they self-disclose wrongdoing, cooperate with our investigations, and remediate the misconduct. But for those that do not, make no mistake -- we will not hesitate to seek appropriate resolutions against companies and individuals alike that perpetrate white collar offenses that harm American interests."
"The Criminal Division has a long and storied history of corporate enforcement, and the corporate enforcement policy announced today takes the principles the Division has long promoted -- disclosure, cooperation, and remediation -- and applies them uniformly across the Department," said Assistant Attorney General A. Tysen Duva of the Justice Department's Criminal Division. "The Division's own corporate enforcement policy traces its roots to 2016. Since that time, based on our experience prosecuting the most sophisticated white-collar schemes, we refined our approach, culminating in the revisions announced in May 2025. Having helped craft the Department-wide policy, our prosecutors will continue to reward good corporate behavior, seek individual accountability, and root out criminal conduct in our mission to protect the American people."
The Department-wide Corporate Enforcement Policy (CEP) provides concrete benefits to incentivize companies to voluntarily disclose discovered misconduct, cooperate with our investigations, and timely and appropriately remediate the wrongdoing. For companies that do, absent certain limited aggravating circumstances, the Department will decline to prosecute the company. Incentivizing corporate self-disclosures -- while still permitting prosecutions in appropriate circumstances -- allows the Department to quickly pursue culpable individuals, secure justice for victims, and deter white-collar crime, all while not unduly burdening American businesses. The CEP also provides predictability for companies and their counsel that approach these issues as it applies to all corporate criminal cases across the Department (aside from those relating to antitrust), superseding all component-specific or U.S. Attorney's Office-specific corporate enforcement policies currently in effect.
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Original text here: https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/department-justice-releases-first-ever-corporate-enforcement-policy-all-criminal-cases
CMSAF Wolfe Visits Joint Base Andrews
JOINT BASE ANDREWS, Maryland, March 11 -- The U.S. Air Force Joint Base Andrews (316th Wing) issued the following news on March 10, 2026:
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CMSAF Wolfe visits Joint Base Andrews
By Senior Airman Alexis Redin 316th Wing Public Affairs
Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force David Wolfe, and his wife, Dr. Doniel Wolfe, visited Joint Base Andrews on March 3, 2026.
The CMSAF held an all-call to emphasize the Air Force's three priorities: readiness, modernization, and Airmen and their families.
"It's the job of every leader in this room, which means every person in this room, to convince
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JOINT BASE ANDREWS, Maryland, March 11 -- The U.S. Air Force Joint Base Andrews (316th Wing) issued the following news on March 10, 2026:
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CMSAF Wolfe visits Joint Base Andrews
By Senior Airman Alexis Redin 316th Wing Public Affairs
Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force David Wolfe, and his wife, Dr. Doniel Wolfe, visited Joint Base Andrews on March 3, 2026.
The CMSAF held an all-call to emphasize the Air Force's three priorities: readiness, modernization, and Airmen and their families.
"It's the job of every leader in this room, which means every person in this room, to convincethose around you that what we do is important," said Wolfe.
During his visit, the CMSAF also took time to recognize four Airmen from across the installation for outstanding work in their units, emphasizing that every career contributes to the work of the force. Master Sgt. Bria Wilkins, 459th Operations Group logistics officer; Staff Sgt. Ethan Fields, 316th Wing financial operations technician; Staff Sgt. Joi Laws, 89th Airlift Wing communication squadron journeyman; and Staff Sgt. Alberto Matos Fernandez, 113th Wing Command Post journeyman, were all recognized as Airmen who display excellence in all they do. Wolfe spoke with each individual and ensured them that the effects of their hard work can be tracked all the way to the front lines.
In his all-call, CMSAF addressed the new command's primary objectives, changes in standards, ongoing Air Force operations and the future use of artificial intelligence. The audience was given an opportunity to pose questions and concerns to the CMSAF, and many asked about the future of their respective career fields with the integration of artificial intelligence.
Beyond tactical details, Wolfe encouraged all service members to consider how they interact with teammates and make a concerted effort to take care of each other.
"What I'd like for you to do," said Wolfe, "is think about somebody you know that needs some help... and in the next couple of days, go help them."
Before departing, the CMSAF left Team Andrews with a final thought.
"I want you to come to work every day and really know that you're contributing to something bigger than yourself, and that you are entitled to outstanding leadership to get you there."
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Original text here: https://www.jba.af.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/4430027/cmsaf-wolfe-visits-joint-base-andrews/