[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"mos-directory-list-marines":3},[4,13,19,25,30,35,41,46,51,56,61,66,71,76,82,87,92,97,102,107,112,117,122,127,132,137,142,147,153,158,163,168,173,178,183,188,193,199,205,210,215,220,225,230,235,240,245,250,255,260,265,270,275,280,285,290,295,300,305,310,315,320,326,331,336,341,346,351,356,361,366,371,376,381,386,391,396,401,406,411,416,421,426,431,436,441,446,451,456,461,466,471,476,481,486,491,496,501,506,511,516,521,526,531,536,541,546,551,556,561,566,571,576,581,586,591,595,600,605,610,615,620,625,630,635,640,645,650,655,660,665,670,675,680,685,690,695,700,705,710,715,720,725,730,735,740,745,750,755,760,765,770,775,780,785,790,795,800,805,810,815,820,825,830,835,840,845,850,855,859,864,869,874,879,884,889,894,899,904,909,915,920,925,930,935,940,945,950,955,960,965,970,975,980,985,990,995,1000,1005,1010,1015,1020,1025,1030,1035,1040,1045,1050,1055,1060,1065,1070,1075,1080,1085,1090,1095,1100,1105,1110,1115,1120,1125,1130,1135,1140,1145,1150,1155,1160,1165,1170,1175,1180,1185,1190,1195,1200,1205,1210,1215,1220,1225,1230,1235,1240,1245,1250,1255,1260,1265,1270,1275,1280,1285,1290,1295,1300,1305,1310,1315,1320,1325,1330,1335,1340,1345,1350,1355,1360,1365,1370,1375,1380,1385,1390,1395,1400,1405,1410,1415,1420,1425,1430,1435,1440,1445,1449,1454,1459,1464,1468,1473,1477,1482,1486,1491,1496,1501,1506,1510,1515,1519,1523,1527,1532,1536,1541,1546,1551,1556,1561,1566,1571,1576,1581,1586,1591],{"id":5,"code":6,"title":7,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":10,"status":11,"rank":12},"883c4f30-85a5-4b71-8cc1-a993fa463caa","0102","Manpower Officer","Marine Corps","SUPPORT","Manpower Officers plan, coordinate, execute and/or supervise the functions of administration (general administration, operational administration, manpower administration, and personnel administration) in their respective commands and organizations. Manpower Officers coordinate with MOS 0170 Personnel Officers for matters of personnel administration, for which the installation personnel administration center (IPAC) has primary cognizance. Manpower Officers serve as advisors to commanders for administrative matters. Manpower Officers are MAGTF officers, who support operations with policies and programs affecting service members in areas other than training and logistics. Duties at the company grade level receiving and routing correspondence, maintaining command files and directives, overseeing forms management programs, personnel strength reporting, processing awards and decorations, providing expertise on performance evaluations, safeguarding classified material, overseeing unit-level legal matters, casualty reporting and supervising unit-level postal functions. Duties at the field grade level include overseeing the four functional areas of administration, S-1 section, personnel administration section, civilian manpower section, G1 operations section, manpower plans and policy development, and military and civilian manpower planning and staffing. Billets include Unit S-1 officer, manpower officer, G-1 operations officer, G-1 adjutant, deputy G-1, and the assistant chief of staff (AC/S G-1) in the operating forces, supporting establishment, and joint assignments.","ACTIVE","officer",{"id":14,"code":15,"title":16,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":17,"status":11,"rank":18},"9b4c2d30-a91d-4d30-9e97-deceec35eb70","0111","Administrative Specialist","Administrative Specialist responsibilities include the management of administrative and clerical functions in the areas of general administration, personnel administration, operational administration, and manpower administration.  The required qualifications include basic clerical and communication skills.  Administrative Specialists are required to learn administrative procedures and processes, pay and personnel information, preparation of orders and directives, correspondence, and the use and maintenance of filing systems.  There are a wide variety of billets available in this MOS ranging from duty at the staff level in the operational, garrison, joint duty assignments and the opportunity to serve on independent duty in support of the Selected Marine Corps Reserve (SMCR).","enlisted",{"id":20,"code":21,"title":22,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":23,"status":11,"rank":24},"88037acb-5424-4a2e-b757-71093534e4fe","0160","Postal Officer","Postal Officers function as special staff officers and advisors to commanders and staffs on all military postal services, support, operations, and functions. Postal Officers manage postal operations and postal retail services and advises regarding federal regulations governing mail and postal affairs laws at all command levels. Postal Officers serve as Region Postal Directors, Installation Postal Officers, Postal Quality Assurance/Quality Control Officers, Postal Finance Officers, And Postal Operations Officers and as members of general or executive staffs in the operating forces, supporting establishments, and joint staffs. They formulate plans, policies, and procedures pertaining to postal services at all levels of the operating forces and the supporting establishment. Postal Officers provide advice on issues related to postal affairs, coordinate with the department of defense (DoD) and the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) for unit addressing, mail operations, and mail transportation throughout theater of operations. They act as region and installation official mail managers, ensuring that the Official Mail Cost Control Program (OMCCP) operate within DoD and federal regulations. They represent the commanding officer to the other services, tenant activities, the DoD, and the USPS for all postal and official mail matters. Postal Officers will not be assigned to unit level to conduct unit postal officer functions.","warrant_officer",{"id":26,"code":27,"title":28,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":29,"status":11,"rank":18},"f2aa34db-1d17-4fb7-9cb2-1bb96ef687f0","0161","Postal Clerk","Postal Clerks perform all duties necessary to the efficient operation of the Department of Defenses (DoD) Military Postal Service for Marine Corps Military Post Office (MPO) operations aboard Marine Corps installations, activities, and to support contingencies. Mail handling duties can include, but are not limited to, accepting, sorting, manifesting, and dispatching all types of personal and official mail domestically and overseas. As an extension of the U.S. postal service (USPS), Postal Clerks perform postal retail services such as the issuing and cashing of USPS money orders, selling USPS stamps, apply postage to letters and parcels, and performing unit mail outs of parcels. They perform all and any other duties in connection with the proper management and operation of a MPO operation to include deployed address coordination, unit mail routing, and mail delivery to individual receptacles and individual units. Postal Clerks handle registered mail, the most secure mail service, that may contain secret, classified, or sensitive items. Postal Clerks participate in MAGTF and expeditionary operations to provide mail services and support to forward deployed forces. Postal Clerks are responsible to the acceptance, process and dispatch of official correspondence and applying appropriate command funds. Only Postal Marines receiving formal training as listed in the prerequisites, and assigned to a military postal facility, may be given this MOS. Postal Clerks will not be assigned to unit mailrooms or unit official mail programs to conduct unit level mail clerk/orderly functions.",{"id":31,"code":32,"title":33,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":34,"status":11,"rank":24},"c756ae51-9493-4448-8294-7973b9fdbf22","0170","Personnel Officer","Personnel Officers function as special staff advisors to commanders and staffs on all personnel administration functions and operations. They are subject matter experts on all personnel administration disciplines and their application across the spectrum of military operations. They formulate plans, policies, and procedures pertaining to personnel administration operations at all levels of the operating forces and the supporting establishment. As officers in charge (OIC), they are responsible for the discipline, welfare, and effective employment of their unit's Marines. To fulfill these obligations, Personnel Officers must understand the duties, tasks, and responsibilities required for MOSs 0111 and 0171. Personnel Officers function as a supervisor, coordinator, and administrator of the manpower, pay and personnel information reported in the Marine Corps Total Force System (MCTFS) via the Unit Diary/Manpower Integrated Personnel System (UD/MIPS). Personnel Officers must possess knowledge of the Marine Corps standard word processing and database software packages, and the MCTFS. Personnel Officers provide advice on issues related to personal affairs, benefits, privileges, and entitlements accrued to members of the Armed Forces. Due to the diversity of commands throughout the Marine Corps, the duties and tasks performed by the Personnel Officer may overlap those performed by the manpower officer.",{"id":36,"code":37,"title":38,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":40,"status":11,"rank":12},"57d45934-38bd-43a9-b8b4-4dc36d6977ae","0202","Intelligence Officer","INTELLIGENCE","Intelligence Officers function as advisors to commanders and staffs on all intelligence functions and operations. They are subject matter experts on all intelligence disciplines and their application across the spectrum of military operations. As commanders or officers in charge (OIC), they are responsible for the discipline, welfare, and effective employment of their unit's Marines. To fulfill these responsibilities they collect, analyze and evaluate information, estimate the operational situation, formulate, coordinate, execute approved intelligence actions, operations, and activities. Additionally, they are responsible for their unit's communications capabilities, logistics, and maintenance.",{"id":42,"code":43,"title":44,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":45,"status":11,"rank":24},"ad09196f-03cc-43f9-93bd-d803f9d3aec6","0205","Intelligence Operations and Fusion Warrant Officer","The Intelligence Operations and Fusion Warrant Officer (0205) is an intelligence operations subject matter expert (SME), specially trained and experienced to advise and assist the Marine Air Ground Task Force (MAGTF) Intelligence Officer (0202), commanders, and staff, when required, in the planning, collection, and implementation and integration of all intelligence disciplines across the spectrum. The Intelligence Operations and Fusion Warrant Officer’s role is to direct and execute intelligence processes to support the functions of intelligence responsible to the commander. To do this, the Intelligence Operations and Fusion Warrant Officer develops operational strategies by applying analytic methods, implementing intelligence doctrine, and leveraging intelligence capabilities to support planning at all levels of the MAGTF. The Intelligence Operations and Fusion Warrant Officer further assists the MAGTF intelligence officer in developing, supervising and overseeing multi-discipline intelligence training plans, which range from individual to collective training and readiness (T&R) tasks. Additional duties include involvement in intelligence systems acquisition, integration of emerging technologies and techniques into current and future operations. The Intelligence Operations and Fusion Warrant Officer’s strength is their ability to think critically and maintain physical, functional, and virtual linkages between various intelligence disciplines, units, and organizations to maximize organic intelligence assets and available resources across the range of military operations. Intelligence Operations and Fusion Warrant Officer billet assignments include Marine Corps intelligence battalions, marine expeditionary units, marine expeditionary forces, and various major subordinate commands, marine corps intelligence activity, marine corps intelligence schools, marine forces commands, and headquarters, United States Marine Corps. Additional assignments may be allocated based on needs of the Marine Corps.",{"id":47,"code":48,"title":49,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":50,"status":11,"rank":24},"c2a6bb53-fbd9-4c75-8f72-ed7ca8d61d01","0210","Counterintelligence/Human Source Intelligence (CI/HUMINT) Operations and Sensitive Activities Officer","CI/HUMINT Operations and Sensitive Activities Officers are the Marine Corps Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance Enterprise (MCISRE) technical experts on the planning, designing, coordinating, deconflicting, managing and execution of CI and HUMINT operations and other intelligence related sensitive activities to the interagency and across the full spectrum of military operations throughout the competition-conflict continuum. They function as principal advisors to commanders, their staff intelligence officers, and operational planners concerning the best practices and the technical, doctrinal, and legal application of CI, and HUMINT, and related sensitive activities capabilities. 0210s ensure these activities are in accordance with intelligence community policy, directives, and applicable COCOM or Service intelligence authorities. 0210s also inform Commanders on the application of counterintelligence support to force protection. Through the Intelligence Officer, 0210 CWOs support the overall intelligence effort of the command by focusing on the planning, and execution of CI/HUMINT collection efforts, assessing potential counterintelligence threats and recommending countermeasures, monitoring foreign organizations of interest in order to detect, identify, degrade, disrupt, deceive, neutralize, or exploit foreign intelligence entities targeting Marine Corps operations, activities, and investments. Principle assignments include billets in the FMF as Counterintelligence Human Intelligence Operational planners, CI/HUMINT Company Operations and Training Officers, Technical Surveillance Countermeasures (TSCM) OICs, Assistant Staff CI/HUMINT Officers (CIHO), Sensitive Activities Cell (SAC) Directors at MARSOC, and 2X CI/HUMINT Operations Officers and SMEs at MARFORs, MEFs, Divisions, MIGs, MEUs, MLGs, MAWs, and other MAGTF Commands as directed. Billets in the supporting establishment include J2X CI/HUMINT Operations Officers in the Joint Force, and as CI/HUMINT SMEs at Marine Corps Intelligence Schools (MCIS), and other sensitive assignments within the interagency with senior CWOs serving as CI/ HUMINT Special Staff Officers to Deputy Commandants Principal Staffs and the DC I Information -Intelligence Division, HQMC.",{"id":52,"code":53,"title":54,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":55,"status":11,"rank":18},"c05de1f6-3df5-4a93-ab5e-6ed51b543e1d","0211","Counterintelligence/Human Intelligence (CI/HUMINT) Specialist","CI/HUMINT Specialists are involved in all facets of planning and conducting HUMINT operations, CI activities, and sensitive activities (SA). CI/HUMINT Specialists require specialization in the development and coordination of multi-use networks. They are expected to possess a working knowledge of the organization, operations, and techniques employed by foreign intelligence services, international terrorist organizations, insider threats, and other CI threats. CI/HUMINT Specialists conduct sensitive and non-sensitive HUMINT operations in Joint Operations Area (JOA) and Non-JOA environments to support MEF priorities, MAGTF operations, and service requirements. They also conduct CI functional services, CI collection activities, CI incident assessments, and CI analysis in support of MEF equities, MAGTF operations, the MCISRE, CCMDs, & USMC/DoN critical infrastructure/critical programs and technology. CI/HUMINT Marines obtaining a qualifying DLAB score can receive language training.",{"id":57,"code":58,"title":59,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":60,"status":11,"rank":18},"d5adbc95-e8e8-4130-a409-072cb7c5f565","0231","Intelligence Specialist","MOS 0231, Intelligence Specialist is an entry level primary MOS. Intelligence Specialists are familiar with all phases and facets of intelligence operations. Typical duties of Intelligence Specialists include researching, filtering, recording, analyzing, producing, and disseminating information and intelligence. The Intelligence Specialist, may supervise intelligence sections up to and including infantry regiments, Marine Aircraft Group (MAG) and Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU). Additionally, depending on rank and billet assignment, Intelligence Specialists duties may include Collection Requirements Management (CRM), targeting, target production, Intelligence Analyst, Intelligence Operations Chief, Company Level Intelligence Cell (CLIC) Chief, Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) Analyst, MAGTF Information Group (MIG) Assistant Operations Chief, and Targeting Cell Analyst at various echelons of command within the Fleet Marine Force (FMF) and supporting establishment (SE). Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC (within their occupational field) that has been coded with one or more DoD cyber workforce framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":62,"code":63,"title":64,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":65,"status":11,"rank":18},"05a8f41e-da5a-4e35-b118-f7c514f86eb4","0241","Imagery Analysis Specialist","MOS 0241, Imagery Intelligence Specialist is an entry-level primary MOS. Imagery Intelligence Specialists exploit and analyze imagery gathered by various space-based or airborne platforms and sensors. Sensors may include infrared, lasers, electro-optics, and radar. Utilizing photogrammetric skills and a suite of software tools, analysts derive critical information and create a variety of imagery intelligence products. These products support the commanders decision-making process by reducing uncertainty about the, situation, environment, and enemy forces.",{"id":67,"code":68,"title":69,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":70,"status":11,"rank":18},"fa0ecf7e-c03f-4b08-b52d-58c48966dc48","0261","Geospatial Intelligence Specialist","MOS 0261, Geospatial Intelligence Specialist is an entry level primary MOS. Geospatial Intelligence Specialists are involved in all activities that are related to the planning, processing, analysis, exploitation, and dissemination of spatial information that is used to gain intelligence concerning the operational environment. These specialists are expected to provide timely, relevant, and accurate geospatial intelligence for planning, decision-making, and action in support of Marine Corps, Joint, and Combined Operations. Using data regarding, terrain, inland and coastal water, climatology, meteorology, and cultural intelligence, geospatial intelligence specialists are able to visually depict this information and fuse it with other information through analysis to display a single, comprehensive picture of the operational area for the commander.",{"id":72,"code":73,"title":74,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":75,"status":11,"rank":18},"8d3129ee-bac7-4006-94a4-7d702612738e","0291","Intelligence Chief","Intelligence Chiefs serve as the principal manager for all intelligence capabilities assigned to the command and as senior enlisted intelligence professionals in the Marine Corps Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance Enterprise. They oversee the Intelligence efforts by managing/ advising/advocating intelligence capabilities and capacity by assigning intelligence capacity and managing intelligence production in support of the commander and organizational operations. Intelligence Chiefs ensure seamless integration of national intelligence capabilities by coordinating for the national intelligence-mandated combat support agencies to achieve operational objectives. Intelligence Chiefs also advise senior intelligence officers, Commanders, and Staff on the proper utilization and employment of intelligence personnel and capabilities and guide the professional development of the enlisted intelligence workforce at all echelons of the fleet Marine force, supporting establishment and joint force. Intelligence Chiefs can serve in various roles including the Intelligence Chief of Marine Corps Intelligence Activity, Intelligence Chief at Marine Corps Intelligence Schools, or as the Intelligence Chief of a Marine Force level command, Marine Expeditionary Force or Major Subordinate Command, or as the Intelligence Chief of Marine Corps Tactics and Operations Group or in other roles as required by the Deputy Commandant, Manpower and Reserve Affairs. This MOS will be assigned and voided only by the authority of the CMC (MM).",{"id":77,"code":78,"title":79,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":81,"status":11,"rank":12},"beb9f6bd-058c-43ce-bcee-c3c64e0b24da","0302","Infantry Officer","COMBAT","Infantry Officers are the commanders or their assistants in infantry and reconnaissance units in Marine Air-Ground Task Forces (MAGTFs). They plan, direct, and assist in the deployment and tactical employment of MAGTFs and any subordinate infantry and reconnaissance units. Infantry Officers are responsible for the discipline, morale, and welfare of their unit's Marines. To fulfill these responsibilities, they evaluate intelligence, estimate the operational situation, and formulate, coordinate, and execute appropriate plans for offensive/defensive maneuver, reconnaissance, fire support, nuclear, biological and chemical defense, directed energy warfare, communications and operational logistics and maintenance.",{"id":83,"code":84,"title":85,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":86,"status":11,"rank":24},"77291026-e0c0-4858-a4b1-90c46c0738af","0306","Infantry Weapons Officer","The Marine gunner is a CWO specifically trained in the employment and training of infantry battalion organic weapons, gear and assigned personnel and in the basics of combat marksmanship as defined by the current version of reference (cg). Gunners are special staff officers employed as the principal advisor to commanders at all levels. They assist in the development of training and employment plans designed to ensure mission essential task (MET) compliance. They help design and vet the weaponeering and training policies of the commander and help to disseminate information to the units personnel regarding such policies. They generate and quantify reports on the units technical and tactical weaponeering proficiency and brief the unit commander as to where each subordinate unit sits in regard to his intent. They mentor the officers and Marines of the unit in all applicable mechanical, doctrinal and conceptual weaponeering and training matters, as required, to improve the general effectiveness and proficiency of the command. They have oversight of the unit's ammunition allocation and annual weapons requalification and certification programs. They accommodate all weapons organic to the MAGTF in accordance with the current version of reference (cf). Additional duties will include Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) gunner, battalion landing team (BLT) gunner in support of a MEU, team new equipment training (NET), new weapons systems and gear research and development, foreign weapons.",{"id":88,"code":89,"title":90,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":91,"status":11,"rank":18},"d2a9ae89-340a-4de2-ad65-5764c76ac57e","0311","Rifleman","The Rifleman employs the M4 Service Rifle, the M320 Grenade Launcher, the M3E1 multi-purpose anti-armor anti-personnel weapons system (MAAWS), and the M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle (IAR). Riflemen are the primary scouts, assault, and close combat forces available to the MAGTF. They are the foundation of the marine infantry organization, and as such are the nucleus of the fire team in the rifle squad, the scout team in the LAR squad, and scout platoons in the infantry battalion. Noncommissioned officers are assigned as fire team leaders, scout team leaders, and rifle squad leaders.",{"id":93,"code":94,"title":95,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":96,"status":11,"rank":18},"5778437c-5feb-4d41-af2f-d26014307f23","0313","Light Armored Reconnaissance Marine","The Light Armored Reconnaissance (LAR) Marine is an infantry Marine skilled in Armored Reconnaissance. In addition to basic infantry skills, they are knowledgeable in armored reconnaissance and surveillance, and armored security missions in support of the MAGTF to gain information on the enemy and terrain. LAR Marines provide gunnery and weapons skills for the employment of the 25mm Chain Gun, the Coaxial and Pintle-Mounted 7.62mm Machineguns and thermal optics on the LAV-25 variant. LAR Marines receive advanced training as vehicle operators, LAV-25 Gunners, LAR Vehicle Commanders and LAR Master Gunners. Non-Commissioned Officers are assigned as LAV-25 Gunners and Vehicle Commanders.",{"id":98,"code":99,"title":100,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":101,"status":11,"rank":18},"d047284f-9ecf-4cbb-b59d-e89389d06ab1","0321","Reconnaissance Marine","The Reconnaissance Marine is a Marine skilled in multi-domain reconnaissance & surveillance. In addition to basic rifleman skills, Reconnaissance Marines possess enhanced physical and psychological attributes required to gain access to the operational environment and are required to maintain advanced capabilities in combat swimming, small boat operations, highly-refined scouting and long range patrolling, close combat skills, demolitions, forward observer procedures for supporting arms, ITG operations for heliborne, airborne, and waterborne forces; long-range communications, multi-domain collections, threat weapons and equipment identification. All Reconnaissance Marines receive advanced training in survival escape resistance evasion (SERE), low level static line (LLSL) parachuting, military freefall parachuting, and combatant diving. They are also trained as a subject matter expert in advanced communications, special weapons, joint terminal attack control, helicopter rope insertion/extraction techniques, assault climbing, intelligence collection, mountain warfare, methods of entry, sniper operations, advanced combat life support, close quarter tactics, and may serve as jumpmasters and dive supervisors depending on their billet in the reconnaissance unit. Reconnaissance Marines contribute to the multi-domain collection of intelligence at the tactical, operational, and strategic echelons of command. They are highly capable of conducting low visibility missions in environments ranging from cooperation to conflict. Supporting the fleet Marine Force, fleet, or joint task force, Reconnaissance Marines provide timely intelligence to the supported commander to shape and influence the operational environment. The varying types of missions a Reconnaissance Marine conducts are multi-domain reconnaissance and surveillance, battle space shaping, and other special reconnaissance missions.",{"id":103,"code":104,"title":105,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":106,"status":11,"rank":18},"05773759-a6b6-472c-ba76-4830a5256f57","0331","Machine Gunner","The Machine Gunner is responsible for the tactical employment of the light, medium, and heavy Machine-Gun, and their support vehicle. Machine Gunners provide direct fire in support of the infantry rifle squads/platoons/companies. They are located in the weapons platoons of the rifle and weapons company in the infantry battalion. Noncommissioned officers are assigned as team leaders and squad leaders/section leaders.",{"id":108,"code":109,"title":110,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":111,"status":11,"rank":18},"a2832641-9961-4d0c-8f8d-42559704d1a9","0341","Mortarman","Mortarmen are responsible for the tactical employment of the Light and Medium Mortar systems. Mortarmen provide indirect fire in support to the rifle and LAR squads/platoons/companies and also the infantry and LAR battalions. They are located in the weapons platoon of the rifle companies, 81mm mortar platoons of the weapons companies, and LAR companies. Noncommissioned officers are assigned as mortar gunners, forward observers, fire direction plotters, and squad and section leaders.",{"id":113,"code":114,"title":115,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":116,"status":11,"rank":18},"5f7c283c-3e73-4465-a765-6fd15faff6cb","0352","Antitank Missile Gunner","The Antitank Missile Gunner is responsible for the tactical employment of the M41A7 Improved Target Acquisition System (ITAS) Saber and M98A1 Javelin Weapons System during anti-armor operations and tactical vehicle operations. They provide medium and heavy anti-armor fire in support of the infantry battalion, LAR battalion, and the MAGTF. They are located in the anti-armor platoon within the weapons company of the infantry battalions and LAR battalions. Noncommissioned officers are assigned as gunners and squad leaders.",{"id":118,"code":119,"title":120,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":121,"status":11,"rank":18},"66ac9022-4229-4f8e-85cd-afaa8a88fc83","0363","Light Armored Reconnaissance (LAR) Unit Leader","The Light Armored Reconnaissance (LAR) Unit Leader serves as the enlisted technical and tactical advisor to the LAR unit commander.  He/She assists the commander with all aspects of the planning, training, employment, logistical support, maintenance, accountability, welfare, and administrative functions in support of the LAR unit’s mission.  He/She controls the employment of his vehicle and section within the unit and assists with the coordination and implementation of supporting arms.  He/She supervises and coordinates the performance of maintenance, maintenance management, embarkation, and recovery operations.  Staff sergeants are employed as LAR platoon sergeants and gunnery sergeants are employed as LAR Company Operation Chiefs.",{"id":123,"code":124,"title":125,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":126,"status":11,"rank":18},"d0b795f1-068e-4bb2-a7e0-a646c28c7de0","0369","Infantry Unit Leader","The Infantry Unit Leader is responsible to the commander and assists in the planning, training, deployment and employment of all infantry organic weapons systems and the units combat power capabilities. They supervise and coordinate the preparation and assignment of personnel/ equipment in accordance with the Table of Organization/Table of Equipment of their unit. Supervises the establishment and operation of unit command and control to include the integration and synchronization of the warfighting functions.",{"id":128,"code":129,"title":130,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":131,"status":11,"rank":12},"b99ebfd4-bf56-40da-8e2b-e3245b6e35a6","0370","Marine Raider Officer","Marine Raider Officers are Marine Officers responsible for the organization, training, planning, employment and execution of Marine Special Operations Force (MARSOF) formations across the spectrum of the Special Operations Core Activities of Direct Action (DA), Special Reconnaissance (SR), Countering Weapons of Mass Destruction (CWMD), Counterterrorism (CT), Unconventional Warfare (UW), Foreign Internal Defense (FID), Security Force Assistance (SFA), and Counterinsurgency (COIN), in hostile, denied, and politically sensitive environments. The Marine Raider Officer possess a high level of maturity, experience, judgment, and the ability to rapidly apply critical thought to the operational environment. They are team oriented, but are trained and ready to function as individuals and as members of an element, team, company, battalion, or group. They are capable of operations across the entire spectrum of special operations; from employment in isolated and austere locales with little-to-no conventional support to operations as fully integrated units in a variety of joint task organized configurations. They possess advanced cultural skills and are adept at working by, with and through partner nation forces in pursuit of strategic goals and objectives.",{"id":133,"code":134,"title":135,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":136,"status":11,"rank":18},"b03a7132-2195-4d73-82d6-661affe64bba","0372","Marine Raider","The Marine Raider is a US Marine who is trained to execute missions within the following special operations core activities assigned by USSOCOM: direct action (DA), special reconnaissance (SR), countering weapons of mass destruction (CWMD), counterterrorism (CT), unconventional warfare (UW), foreign internal defense (FID), security force assistance (SFA), and counterinsurgency (COIN). The Marine Raider is capable of being independently employed or rapidly integrated within the joint force. As part of a command team within the O4 level and above, the MGySgt or MSgt Marine Raider is in designated billets as the Special Operations Forces Senior Enlisted Advisor (SOFSEA). The MGySgt Marine Raider can also serve as a Command Senior Enlisted Leader (CSEL) in designated combined, joint, and SOF billets (examples combined joint special operations task force (CJSOTF), special operations task force (SOTF), and theater special operations command (TSOC).",{"id":138,"code":139,"title":140,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":141,"status":11,"rank":18},"6589f7ed-0ce1-44c2-ae61-16754ffd3fd6","0393","Light Armored Reconnaissance (LAR) Operations Chief","The Light Armored Reconnaissance Operations Chief (LAR Ops chief) serves as the senior enlisted tactical advisor to the commander and staff of a light armored reconnaissance (LAR) company or battalion. They advise the commander in the tactical employment of the organic weapons systems of the unit, the condition, care, and economical use of unit resources and equipment. They coordinate and supervise all aspects of the company or battalion combat operations center (COC) or administrative logistics operations center (ALOC). They ensure that personnel are trained and proficient in the employment of C4I systems and manages the flow of information provided through them. They assist with the timely collection, review, and distribution of orders, messages, briefs, reports, training schedules and all tasks in support of the units core and assigned mission essential tasks. The LAR Operations Chief advises and makes recommendations for the planning, coordination, and execution of the units fire support plan. They manage the 03XX personnel within the unit, in order to minimize crew turbulence amongst formed and trained crews, assists with the development of the units training plan, and managing the unit readiness program. They coordinate and supervise the embarkation and debarkation of the unit. Master Sergeants are assigned as battalion logistics chiefs, assistant battalion operations chiefs, and headquarters & service company operations chiefs. Master Gunnery Sergeants are assigned as A/C and R/C battalion operations chiefs, Marine Corps warfighting lab (MCWL) operations chief, Marine air ground task force-training center (MAGTF-TC) operations chief, program manager-light armored vehicle (PM-LAV) operations advisor, and plans, policies, and operations (PP&O) LAR advocate/OccFld sponsor.",{"id":143,"code":144,"title":145,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":146,"status":11,"rank":18},"2384be0a-1d76-4793-a853-bbacbe3a26ad","0399","Operations Chief","The Operations Chief is responsible to the commander and assists in all levels of planning, training, deployment and employment of MAGTF capabilities to include the integration and synchronization of the warfighting functions. Supervises and coordinates the preparation and assignment of all personnel/equipment supporting each warfighting function in accordance with the Table of Organization/Table of Equipment of their unit. The Operations Chief assists unit readiness by recording evaluations and training readiness task completion within program of record systems. The Operations Chief is responsible to facilitate and develop concepts of employment for new and emerging technologies fielded to the Marine Corps. The Operations Chief establishes Operation Posts, supervises information management and assists in operation of unit command and control.",{"id":148,"code":149,"title":150,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":152,"status":11,"rank":12},"226be65a-ddb3-44ca-b357-dee1ea9f91e7","0402","Logistics Officer","LOGISTICS","Logistics Officers plan, coordinate, and execute and/or supervise the execution of all logistics functions to include functional areas of tactical logistics, supply, maintenance, transportation, general engineering, health services, and services. Logistics Officers serve as commanders or executive officers of tactical logistics units/elements and as members of general or executive staffs in the operating forces, supporting establishments, and joint staffs. Logistics Officers perform the duties of logistics officer, assistant logistics officer, operations officer, plans officer, maintenance management officer, arms, ammunition, and explosives officer (AA&E), armory officer, motor transport officer, maintenance management officer, landing support commanders, parachutist officer, aerial delivery officer, and combat logistics patrol (CLP) commanders. They will also perform various supervisory duties in support of airborne and aerial delivery missions to include, but to limited to, mission planner, jumpmaster (static line and military freefall), drop zone safety officer, parachute safety officer, malfunctions officer, and airdrop load inspector certifier also known as JAI.",{"id":154,"code":155,"title":156,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":157,"status":11,"rank":24},"9d74ec36-4cd9-45ae-9abf-cc892e73d0c3","0408","Fatality Management Officer","Fatality Management Officers/Planners serve as supervisors, coordinators, technical advisers, and special staff officers in determining requirements associated with the management of human remains in both combat and non-combat environments. Duties include the search and recovery, processing, tentative identification, storage, interment, disinterment, and transportation of human remains and personal effects. Perform various duties for the operational management of mortuary affairs collection points and interment sites within designated areas of responsibility. These duties are performed in both joint and single service theaters of operations and in CBRN environments.",{"id":159,"code":160,"title":161,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":162,"status":11,"rank":18},"c2f0f90d-01d3-432d-a3d2-f964b34ed458","0411","Maintenance Management Analyst","The Maintenance Management Analyst provides advice, guidance, and assistance to the unit's equipment commodity/section managers and maintenance personnel to ensure a systematic approach to maintenance operations of ground equipment. The Maintenance Management Analyst supervises and analyzes maintenance management and maintenance personnel in monitoring and reporting of maintenance management policies, programs, procedures, and maintenance automated information systems (MAIS) requirements, maintenance management functional elements/areas, maintenance production functions, and maintenance engineering actions in support of equipment total lifecycle systems management (TLCSM) efforts. At the SNCO level, Maintenance Management Analysts serve as subject matter experts in exploratory data analysis encompassing the functions of logistics, maintenance, and supply chain management data. The utilization of exploratory data analysis is to identify trends, patterns, and anomalies, enabling timely and cost-effective optimization of operations. Maintenance Management Analyst utilize data analysis tools to drive data-enabled decision making for their respective domain, to provide visual representations depicting equipment reliability, improvement of maintenance cycle times, facilitate early detection of equipment availability short falls to impact the kill chain web. When serving in the capacity of the Maintenance Management Officer, coordinates the commander's interest, resources, production, and information requirements in operational planning to ensure effective management of personnel, equipment, maintenance, and materiel to meet operational objectives.",{"id":164,"code":165,"title":166,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":167,"status":11,"rank":12},"824c2bb5-7d0b-4511-9331-00a40fcdf689","0430","Mobility Officer","Mobility Officers plan and execute unit movements of personnel, supplies, and equipment via all modes of transportation. They prepare and execute plans to deploy, sustain, and redeploy marine combat forces of a MAGTF or joint task force. They serve as Mobility Officers at the marine wing support squadron, combat logistics battalion, infantry regiment, marine aircraft group, marine expeditionary unit, marine division, marine aircraft wing, and the marine logistics group. They serve as Strategic Mobility Officers at the marine expeditionary force, marine corps component command, and headquarters, marine corps. they also serve as combat cargo officers (CCOs) on naval staffs and LFORM capable amphibious ships. Moreover, they coordinate and conduct unit-level embarkation and mobility training; and are assigned as embarkation and strategic mobility instructors at logistics operations school, marine corps combat service support schools and expeditionary warfare training group pacific. Mobility Officers analyze, translate, and execute the commander's operational requirements and intent to support mission requirements. As subject matter experts, they articulate current and future strategic mobility requirements to the appropriate agencies such as Headquarters Marine Corps and U.S. Transportation Command. This MOS is technical in nature and requires years of training, education, and experience to become proficient. Officers with a primary MOS of 0402 will not be assigned MOS 0430 as an additional MOS.",{"id":169,"code":170,"title":171,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":172,"status":11,"rank":18},"6038dca1-8f82-4738-8853-434cb892ca04","0441","Logistics Specialist","The Logistics Specialist oversees the preparation of supplies and equipment for embarkation and performs various force deployment planning and execution (FDP&E) functions that support the movement of personnel, supplies, and equipment via all modes of transportation. In the performance of their duties, they support the administrative requirements, applicable maintenance, command and control of transportation throughput via beaches, landing zones, ports, and terminals used in support of MAGTF operations and deployments. Additionally, they are trained to facilitate operations at naval ports, arrival/departure airfield, helicopter support, and rail head operations. At the SNCO level, Logistics Specialist serve within these functional areas at the J/G/S-4 as section level supervisors. Additional billets outside the Fleet Marine Force includes serving as combat cargo assistants (CCAs) onboard naval amphibious warfare ships.",{"id":174,"code":175,"title":176,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":177,"status":11,"rank":18},"aac7face-0bb0-41e6-983a-25c887361be1","0451","Airborne and Air Delivery Specialist","Airborne and Air Delivery Specialists are responsible for the maintenance of all life support equipment relating to Airborne/Airdrop Operations.  In addition, they will assist in preparing supplies and equipment necessary to deliver personnel and/or equipment via parachute, external sling load, and air mobility operations.  They are responsible for performing parachute repack as well as conducting preventive and corrective maintenance on all airdrop equipment, and will assist in evaluating proposed Landing Zone/Drop Zones in order to support the planning and execution of effective personnel, supplies, and equipment clearance during airborne, airdrop and equipment recovery operations.  They will also perform various supervisory duties in support of airborne and airdrop missions to include, but to limited to, mission planning, Jumpmaster (military freefall and static line), Drop Zone Safety Officer, Malfunctions Officer, Sling Load Inspector, and Airdrop Load Inspector Certification.",{"id":179,"code":180,"title":181,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":182,"status":11,"rank":18},"8cdd6fe5-46bc-44d4-aab2-cdd1eb15693f","0471","Personnel Retrieval and Processing Specialist","Personnel Retrieval and Processing Specialist perform duties in both combat and non-combat environments pertaining to the search and recovery, processing, tentative identification, interment, disinterment, and transportation of human remains and personal effects.  Furthermore, they perform the various duties pertaining to the establishment of collection points and interments sites.  These duties are performed in both joint and single service theaters of operations and in an NBCR environment.",{"id":184,"code":185,"title":186,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":187,"status":11,"rank":18},"f9384ebe-990f-49a2-b039-94a82b5ba5ff","0491","Logistics/ Mobility Chief","The Logistics/Mobility Chief coordinates, plans, conducts, and supervises logistics operations throughout various levels of the Marine Corps. They serve on general officer staffs at the MEF, MARFOR, and HQMC level where they conduct planning and execution of MAGTF deployments from the tactical to strategic level. Additionally, Logistics/Mobility Chiefs articulate logistical and strategic mobility requirements to appropriate agencies both inside and outside the Service. Furthermore, assignments to embed within the U.S. Navy as combat cargo assistants (CCAs) aboard naval amphibious warfare ships and within various commands of the Navy. Lastly, Logistics/Mobility Chiefs facilitate unit level logistics and embarkation training within their commands.",{"id":189,"code":190,"title":191,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":192,"status":11,"rank":18},"c16bac73-418f-4e02-a2ac-96ff75a0a93a","0511","Marine Air Ground Task Force (MAGTF) Planning Specialist","The Enlisted MAGTF Planning Specialist is responsible for functional support in the areas of Force Deployment Planning & Execution (FDP&E), Joint Combat Capability Assessment (JCCA), and Global Force Management (GFM).  Typical duties include updating plan via established GFM/ FDP&E automated data processing tools and coordinating execution of force deployment plans.",{"id":194,"code":195,"title":196,"branch":8,"category":197,"description":198,"status":11,"rank":12},"e39dda22-6421-4dd8-a9ae-f83e9031f69f","0602","Communications Officer","COMMUNICATIONS","Communications Officers command or assist in commanding a communication unit or element in the MAGTF.  They are responsible for all aspects of the planning, installation, operation, displacement and maintenance of network, transmission, and data systems to support the command and control of the MAGTF.  They are responsible for directing Department of Defense Information Operations planning and implementation in support of operations and exercises. Example billets of a Communications Officer are as follows:  infantry battalion S-6, marine wing communications squadron (platoon, commander), marine wing support squadron S-6, communications battalion (platoon, commander), marine air group S-6, combat logistics battalion S-6, and other cyberspace operations related billets.",{"id":200,"code":201,"title":202,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":204,"status":11,"rank":12},"f5666dba-49c5-411e-9361-87c2eace68f9","0605","Cyber Network Operations Officer","IT_CYBER","The Cyber Network Operations Officer plans, synchronizes, and integrates the overall operational and strategic goals of enterprise Marine Corps communications and Department of Defense Information Network Operations (DoDIN Ops). Evaluates and recommends changes to current and future cyberspace operations in support of warfighting functions and mission requirements. They are responsible for the operational integration of Marine Corps information systems including command and control (C2), intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR), and logistics with naval, joint and coalition networks. They are responsible for the secure implementation of DoDIN Ops and integration with defensive cyberspace operations (DCO) across the enterprise. They provide the commander with expert advice on cyber risks and mitigation actions in order to enable assured C2 and improve decision making ability. The duties include providing technical expertise to the commander; serving as a DODIN Ops SME to boards, bureaus, centers, cells, and working groups (B2C2WG); managing command cyber security programs; providing advanced technical support to the development and maintenance of related plans, policies, procurements, and procedures in support of DODIN Ops; coordinating with the (G/J/C)2/3/5 staffs within MAGTF, joint, and coalition environments to synchronize the DoDIN Ops with cyberspace operations.",{"id":206,"code":207,"title":208,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":209,"status":11,"rank":24},"402dcbd1-3830-43d8-bc01-2163e8c5ab20","0620","Space and Propagation Engineering Officer","Space and Propagation Engineering Officers (SPEOs) design and implement over-the-air (OTA) transport operations for Marine Air-Ground Task Force (MAGTF), combined/joint task force (C/JTF) and coalition communication networks. Their expertise enables essential warfighting functions including intelligence, fires, logistics, information, command and control (C2), force protection, and maneuver capabilities to support activities across DoD operational domains. SPEOs integrate diverse spectrum-dependent systems (SDS) to support Department of Defense Information Network (DoDIN) Operations. Their core competencies include advanced knowledge of propagation theories and joint electromagnetic spectrum operations (JEMSO), design of secure and resilient OTA transport architectures, expertise in both military and commercial space-based capabilities and systems, in-depth knowledge of space policy frameworks and theoretical foundations, combined with expertise in space capabilities functional areas, to enables effective utilization of space-based assets to deliver strategic, operational, and tactical communications across the full range of military operations (ROMO), waveform capabilities analysis, integration, and employment are key contributors to Marine Corps Electromagnetic Spectrum Operations (EMSO) and the Electronic Warfare Control Center (EWCC). They are responsible for developing and implementing electronic warfare (EW) concepts of operations, with emphasis on electronic protection (EP) and electronic support (ES), enabling and optimization of resilient communication in a denied-disconnected, intermittent, limited (DDIL) environments. SPEOs play a strategic role in integrating OTA transport systems within complex, bandwidth-constrained electromagnetic environments (EME) across the space domain. Their technical analysis contributes to shaping Marine Corps policies and operational plans. To maintain their expertise, SPEOs adhere to ongoing training and certification requirements as outlined in DoDI 8140.10 and DoDM 8140.10. This ensures they remain prepared to meet evolving mission requirements and technological advancements in space and EMSO. In Marine Corps and joint organizational structures, SPEOs may be assigned to specific billet identification codes (BIC) within their occupational field, aligning with various DoD cyber workforce framework (DCWF) work role codes.",{"id":211,"code":212,"title":213,"branch":8,"category":197,"description":214,"status":11,"rank":18},"2bae307c-2f32-469c-b669-d286daaed7da","0621","Transmissions System Operator","Transmissions System Operators employ transmissions systems to enable essential warfighting functions including Intelligence, Fires, Logistics, Information, Command and Control (C2), Force Protection, and Maneuver capabilities to support activities across Department of Defense (DoD) operational domains. Their responsibilities encompass installation, operation, and maintenance of single and dual channel radio including vehicular and man-pack systems, and Multi-Channel Line of Sight (LOS) systems operating in HF, VHF, UHF, and SHF bands, establishing over-the-air (OTA) transmission links between a multitude of distant stations, message traffic management, information flow, and dissemination and implementation of authorized changes to network parameters, encryption protocols, and transmissions security; planning, coordinating, and executing operations using program of record and commercial-of-the-shelf (COTS) equipment and field-expedient antennas for network integration, proficiency with specialized computer hardware/software planning tools, Transmission Security (TRANSEC), and Communications Security (COMSEC), and are familiar with spectrum analyzing tools and DoD approved Position Navigation and Timing (PNT) devices. Operators may be assigned to Billet Identification Codes (BIC) within their field, associated with DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes. Additional training and certification requirements related to these codes are outlined in DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap.",{"id":216,"code":217,"title":218,"branch":8,"category":197,"description":219,"status":11,"rank":18},"62469dbc-199d-4f24-a088-379aa9dd8536","0627","Satellite Transmissions System Operator","Satellite Transmissions System Operators employ Wideband Satellite Communications (SATCOM) and Troposcatter Transmissions Systems to enable essential warfighting functions including intelligence, fires, logistics, information, command and control (C2), force protection, and maneuver capabilities to support activities across Department of Defense (DoD) operational domains. Their responsibilities encompass installation, operation, and maintenance of Wideband SATCOM and Troposcatter Transmissions systems operating in the L, C, X, KU, KA, and EHF bands, proficiency with spectrum analyzing tools, specialized computer hardware/software planning tools, transmission security (TRANSEC), and communications security (COMSEC), familiar with DoD approved position navigation and timing (PNT) devices. Operators may be assigned to billet identification codes (BIC) within their field, associated with DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes. Additional training and certification requirements related to these codes are outlined in DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap.",{"id":221,"code":222,"title":223,"branch":8,"category":197,"description":224,"status":11,"rank":18},"d753b0ee-8e6f-4121-bc6d-1a102e64ba3c","0629","Transmissions Chief","Transmissions Chiefs oversee advanced transmissions operations, including planning, installation, operation, maintenance, and supervision to enable essential warfighting functions including intelligence, fires, logistics, information, command and control (C2), force protection, and maneuver capabilities to support activities across Department of Defense (DoD) operational domains. Their responsibilities encompass development of site plans for single and dual channel radio, terrestrial wideband transmission systems (TWTS), and wideband satellite communications (SATCOM) systems, maintenance of single and dual channel radio including vehicular and man-pack systems, TWTS, and wideband SATCOM systems operating in HF, VHF, UHF, SHF, and EHF bands, integrate critical transmission planning data into communications electronic operating instructions (CEOI), management of training, security measures, and equipment deployment, ensuring systems integration across transmissions elements, data communications, wireless architecture, and cybersecurity; utilizing programming and planning tools, implementing and overseeing proper execution of maintenance procedures, and handling budgeting and administrative processes. Marines may be assigned to billet identification codes (BIC) within their field, associated with DoD cyber workforce framework (DCWF) work role codes. Additional training and certification requirements related to these codes are outlined in DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap.",{"id":226,"code":227,"title":228,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":229,"status":11,"rank":24},"b69c3265-4202-4ea4-8336-eb04d65fda05","0630","Network Engineering Officer","Network Engineering Officers analyze, design, deploy, maintain and manage network infrastructure to enable command and control.  The position encompasses both the theoretical and engineering aspects of specifying, designing, implementing and managing enterprise level classified and unclassified networks.  Typical duties include mission planning, budgeting, quality control, advanced technical analysis during the planning, installation, operation, maintenance and secure integration of communication network architectures.  Critical to this ability is advanced knowledge of routing/switching, Quality of Service (QoS), implementation/management of the cable plan, circuit provisioning, transport, Internet Protocol (IP) management, encryption management, boundary cybersecurity, network monitoring and end to end support of deployed and garrison networks to include external connectivity to Joint, National, and Coalition systems.  They provide technical direction informing the overall communications control effort relating to the security, installation and performance of network infrastructure within the MAGTF, Joint, Coalition, garrison, and tactical network environments.  Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC [within their occupational field] that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes.  Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":231,"code":232,"title":233,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":234,"status":11,"rank":18},"d183cc62-8e5c-4ff4-8550-71f85e647463","0631","Network Administrator","Network Administrators install operate and maintain local area networks (LAN) and wide area networks (WAN) to enable command and control.  Typical duties include routing/switching configuration, cybersecurity, premise wiring, installation of network components.  They establish technical control sites, conduct fault analysis, circuit testing and end to end troubleshooting.  Additional responsibilities include, network monitoring and quality of service (QOS) to maintain adequate bandwidth utilization in of communication networks and data services.  Network Administrators will maintain records on activation/ deactivation of communications links and maintenance actions performed.  Marines will be familiar with routing protocols, virtual private networks (VPN), internet protocol security (IPSEC), subnetting, traffic monitoring and cybersecurity.  Skill progression training for Staff Sergeant through Corporal is the Network Supervisor Course located at Camp Pendleton (M10BNPB), Camp Lejeune (M03BNPG), and Okinawa (M22BNP4) at the Regional Communications Training Centers.  Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC within their occupational field that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes.  Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":236,"code":237,"title":238,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":239,"status":11,"rank":18},"7dd51e4b-ce5e-41bd-9cf0-c772c2a9939a","0639","Network Chief","Network Chiefs install, operate, maintain, and supervise local area networks (LAN) and wide area networks (WAN) to enable command and control. The Network Chief is responsible for training, advanced routing/switching, cybersecurity, locating and correcting faults, quality of service (QOS), implementation/management of the cable plan, long haul transport, internet (IP) management, encryption management, network monitoring, end to end systems integration and troubleshooting. Additionally, Network Chiefs must be thoroughly familiar with security, programming and planning tools, maintenance procedures, budgeting, and administration processes. Network Chiefs also supervise the establishment of the technical control sites. Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC within their occupational field that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":241,"code":242,"title":243,"branch":8,"category":197,"description":244,"status":11,"rank":24},"6eafa8ad-39f3-4ef7-8bac-be89a177c9ad","0640","Strategic Electromagnetic Spectrum Officer","Strategic Electromagnetic Spectrum Officers plan, supervise, manage, and de-conflict the use of the electromagnetic spectrum for all spectrum dependent systems (SDS) in support of the MAGTF, joint, and coalition forces through Electromagnetic spectrum management operations (EMSMO) interrelated functions of: frequency management, host nation coordination, and interference reporting. Through these functions Strategic Electromagnetic Spectrum Planners support Electromagnetic Spectrum Operations (EMSO) by planning and coordinating MAGTF EMS use and enabling all SDS and capabilities while ensuring compatibility and harmonization of EMSO activities throughout the electromagnetic environment (EME). Strategic Electromagnetic Spectrum Officers must be thoroughly familiar with and trained in national, international, DoD, Joint and Service level spectrum policy, allocations and frequency assignment procedures; spectrum supportability and certification procedures; spectrum analysis and engineering; effects of electromagnetic compatibility (EMC); various waveform employment; coordination of Host Nation Approval (HNA); transmission theory; and determination, mitigation and resolution of electromagnetic interference (EMI) in a denied, degraded, and disrupted EMS operating environment (D3EMSOE). Strategic Electromagnetic Spectrum Planners develop policy and guidance for effective and efficient spectrum use; provide oversight of Marine Corps use of national level and DoD associated spectrum databases; supervise and manage the coordination, de-confliction and integration of spectrum dependent equipment and systems into the electromagnetic operational environment. Strategic Electromagnetic Spectrum Officers must be knowledgeable of all DoD/Service and commercial spectrum dependent equipment and systems to include, but not limited to command and control, communications, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) assets, aviation platforms, radar and navigation, electronic warfare (EW), munitions and weapons systems, etc.",{"id":246,"code":247,"title":248,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":249,"status":11,"rank":24},"b785b76e-5030-4dc0-a964-bef72142a32d","0670","Data Systems Engineering Officer","Data Systems Engineer Officers act as the subject matter experts in the analysis, design, deployment, and management of services in support of command and control. The position encompasses both the theoretical and practical engineering aspects of specifying, designing, implementing, and managing enterprise-level classified and unclassified data systems and applications. Typical duties include mission planning, procurement, quality control, and advanced technical analysis during the planning, installation, operation, maintenance, and secure integration of data systems to include active directory management, cloud services, disaster recovery, cybersecurity, database management, scripting, hardware/software management, virtualization, and messaging in support of deployed and garrison systems and services. They provide technical direction to the subsets of system administration, application development, and unified communication administration in conjunction with the overall communications control effort relating to the security, installation and performance of services within MAGTF, joint, coalition, garrison, and tactical network environments. Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC (within their occupational field) that has been coded with one or more DoD cyber workforce framework work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role code.",{"id":251,"code":252,"title":253,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":254,"status":11,"rank":18},"2fe52025-8d67-4e0c-b7d5-def9055ca576","0671","Data Systems Administrator","Data Systems Administrators support a myriad of computer and Network Operating Systems (NOS) to include versions of Linux, Microsoft, and Unix, to enable command and control. Typical duties include active directory administration, Domain Name Service (DNS) Public Key Infrastructure (PKI), Warfighting Systems, cybersecurity, Database administration and Unified Communications. Marines will be familiar with command line interface and tools (CLI), performance monitoring, client/server configuration, voice and video services, storage administration, virtualization, collaborative tools, and troubleshooting of hardware/software. Skill progression training for Staff Sergeant through Corporal is the Data Systems Supervisor Course.  Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC [within their occupational field] that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes.  Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":256,"code":257,"title":258,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":259,"status":11,"rank":18},"9f1aff37-ef4c-42e3-a706-692e5d79d647","0679","Data Systems Chief","Data Systems Chiefs supports a myriad of technologies to include data systems, virtualization, unified communications, and application development to enable command and control. The Data Systems Chief is responsible for training, domain infrastructure, active directory management, cloud services, disaster recovery, cybersecurity, database management, scripting, hardware/software management, storage area network (SAN), network attached storage (NAS), virtualization and messaging. Additionally, Data Systems Chiefs must be thoroughly familiar with security, programming and planning tools, maintenance procedures, budgeting, and administration processes. Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC (within their occupational field) that has been coded with one or more DoD cyber workforce framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":261,"code":262,"title":263,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":264,"status":11,"rank":18},"694aa9b3-8d90-4243-bc27-bedb82210b88","0681","Information Security Technician","Information Security Technicians (IST) serves as the Marine Corps primary functional proponent for the Department of the Navy's (DoN) Communications Security (COMSEC) and cryptographic key management. These Marines provide day-to-day operation of the DoN's COMSEC material control system (CMCS). The duties include coordinate for the provisioning of symmetric and asymmetric key products to support C4 systems in collaboration with communications planners for the development of communications instructions and support for elements of the Marine Air Ground Task Force (MAGTF) or other authorized elements requiring authorized support, provide information regarding new or revised COMSEC policies and procedures and their impact on the command, train and inspect COMSEC users within the command, monitors and maintains the command COMSEC material allowances performs spot checks of users to assess adherence to prescribed instructions. Also, may serve as a Central Office of Record (COR) Auditor for COMSEC account inspections. Lateral move into this MOS may be from any MOS at the grade of staff sergeant. This MOS will be awarded to Marines approved for lateral move upon completion of one of the listed approved courses in subparagraph (c) below. Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC (within their occupational field) that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":266,"code":267,"title":268,"branch":8,"category":197,"description":269,"status":11,"rank":18},"4dd6de97-7197-48d6-8229-cdc248658e94","0699","Communications Chief","Communications Chief must possess thorough understanding of equipment capabilities and system integration for all elements of transmissions, networks, data systems, cybersecurity, information, and communications security management.  They are trained to evaluate technical supportability and limitations of communications equipment, draft systems architecture, communications plans, and coordinate technical interface and restoration issues with higher, adjacent, and subordinate commands.  Additionally, they are responsible for manpower management, training, equipment accountability, and operational readiness.  The Communications Chief can serve as the Senior Enlisted Advisor (SEA) to the Director of Command, Control, Communications and Computers (C4), Headquarters Marine Corps and at the Marine Corps Cyberspace Operations Group (MCCOG), occupational field specialist on the staff of HQMC C4, and as Communications Chiefs for communication training battalion, at the MARFOR level, and in all levels of the Marine Air-Ground Task Force (MAGTF).  The duties of the Communications Chief encompass providing assistance and advice to MAGTF Commanders AC/S G-6, Commanders of Communication Battalions, and other designated commands concerning plans, policies, procedures and emerging communications requirements and capabilities led by HQMC C4 and other proponents and advocates.  Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC [within their occupational field] that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":271,"code":272,"title":273,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":274,"status":11,"rank":12},"66f8b1d0-3462-4213-916b-cb14024a0ad4","0802","Field Artillery Officer","Field Artillery Officers command or assist commanders in directing field artillery units. They direct administration, communication, supply, maintenance, and security activities of artillery units. They direct tactical employment of the field artillery unit in combat, and coordinate fire support from artillery, mortar, air, and naval surface fires assets. They serve as subject matter experts on the employment of indirect fire support assets organic to the MAGTF and effects-producing systems in the physical, cyber, electronic, and information domain. They advise supported commanders about fire support unit employment considerations and use of supporting arms. They evaluate intelligence, and conduct targeting at all echelons.",{"id":276,"code":277,"title":278,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":279,"status":11,"rank":24},"294c74cc-e942-4fe3-9709-9b612b607a9d","0803","Targeting Acquisition Officer","Target Acquisition Officers are special staff officers responsible for advising artillery, maneuver, MAGTF, and joint commanders at the tactical and operational levels on all aspects of the targeting process, as well as the planning and integration of target acquisition assets and related fire support systems. They supervise, coordinate, and guide the execution of targeting in accordance with the commander's guidance. They also assist and facilitate commanders and their staffs with integrating capabilities and synchronizing the execution of appropriate fires and activities through the joint targeting cycle to create specific lethal and/or nonlethal effects. Additionally, they supervise the task organization and employment of the target acquisition assets, specifically survey, acoustic, meteorological, and counter battery radar systems. Target Acquisition Officers are directly responsible for the training and readiness of the targeting and target acquisition personnel and equipment.",{"id":281,"code":282,"title":283,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":284,"status":11,"rank":18},"2d604456-b380-4d7b-bff9-9f96e54a585b","0811","Field Artillery Cannoneer","As a member of a Field Artillery Howitzer Battery, Cannoneers prepare artillery pieces and equipment for movement, combat, and firing.  They inspect and prepare ammunition for firing, and perform the various jobs incident to firing such as, laying for elevation and deflection, loading the piece, and handling ammunition.  Field Artillery Cannoneers perform preventive maintenance and clean artillery pieces and equipment.  They make routine tests and authorize repairs to equipment.  Camouflage position, protect equipment from chemical warfare agents, and construct field fortifications.",{"id":286,"code":287,"title":288,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":289,"status":11,"rank":18},"e70f0f3f-9099-4d6b-abd9-b9ae15c1188e","0842","Field Artillery Radar Operator","Field Artillery Radar Operators perform the duties required to emplace, operate, and displace counterfire radar systems.  Other duties include operating military vehicles, generator assets, communications equipment, establishing radio networks for voice and digital communications, and performing hasty survey techniques.  Radar Operators also work in the artillery target processing centers.  These duties include operating fire support systems that process counterfire/artillery target intelligence and manage radar assets in the field.",{"id":291,"code":292,"title":293,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":294,"status":11,"rank":18},"8211d7e9-92bb-4151-b345-2c47c4f27318","0844","Field Artillery Fire Control Marine","Field Artillery Fire Control Marine perform duties essential to the delivery of accurate artillery fire.  Typical duties include preparation of fire control equipment for movement and operation, performance of preventive maintenance, routine testing, authorized minor repairs and fire control equipment, and operation of field communications equipment.  Fire control computation includes the use of computer equipment systems, plotting survey data on firing charts, determination of target coordinates, and the conversion to target coordinates and observer's reports into firing data and commands.  MOS 0844 is assigned upon completion of formal school.  Upon promotion to Staff Sergeant and the appropriate formal school, the 0844 will be designated MOS 0848.",{"id":296,"code":297,"title":298,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":299,"status":11,"rank":18},"00d2e54c-46f8-4191-b951-327f70a5418e","0847","Field Artillery Sensor Support Marine","Field Artillery Sensor Support Marines assist in the delivery of accurate artillery fires and prosecution of counter fire fight by developing weather data for artillery ballistic computations, performing survey operation.  Duties include preparing and operating weather observation equipment such as theodolites and surface sensors, measuring atmospheric readings; preparing and operating survey equipment such as inertial navigation systems, global positioning system receivers, theodolites and electronic distance measuring equipment.  Additionally, the 0847 will prepare and operate acoustic sensors for employment.  Other duties include operating computer systems for computations, digital communications, command and control, and imagery development.  MOS 0847 is assigned upon completion of formal school.  Upon promotion to Staff Sergeant and the appropriate formal school, the 0847 will be designated MOS 0848.",{"id":301,"code":302,"title":303,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":304,"status":11,"rank":18},"f1d8eaaf-af3b-4335-b2c4-94d58983b1bf","0848","Field Artillery Operations Chief","Field Artillery Operations Chief perform the various duties associated with the operation of a field artillery and mortar fire direction center; operations or training section; artillery sensor section; survey section.  Duties include preparing personnel and equipment for movement and operation; assisting in location of fire direction center in the field; maintaining a situation map, operations journal, and survey records; performing duties incident to the preparation, reproduction, and distribution of operations orders, training orders, memoranda, schedules, status reports, and S-3 periodic reports; preparing operations maps and overlays; assisting in the establishment and operation of artillery meteorological stations, direct atmospheric meteorological observation interpreting, evaluating and distributing atmospheric data; performing duties incident to execution of sensor plans essential to proper employment of field artillery; assisting in installation, orientation, operation, and maintaining target acquisition radar equipment; and training personnel in radar, meteorological, survey, acoustic, and fire direction procedures.",{"id":306,"code":307,"title":308,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":309,"status":11,"rank":18},"db721749-bea9-4864-88f5-f94b5da1c266","0861","Fire Support Marine","Fire Support Marines perform duties related to the planning, observation, conduct, and control of surface to surface and air to surface fires. These duties include planning, calling for, integrating, coordinating, observing and adjusting artillery (cannon, rocket, missile) and naval surface fire support (NSFS), employment of LASER designators, range finders, and LASER guided munitions and coordination of non-lethal fires. These duties also include operating communications equipment, establishing radio networks for voice and digital communications, as well as operating Marine Corps fire support systems. Upon promotion to staff sergeant and completion of the appropriate formal schools, the 0861 will be designated MOS 0871.",{"id":311,"code":312,"title":313,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":314,"status":11,"rank":18},"8dfc8a71-72ec-423f-9467-69c1628ff99b","0869","Artillery Unit Leader","The Artillery Senior Cannoneer is responsible to the commander and assists in the planning, training, deployment and employment of all organic weapons systems and the units combat power capabilities.  They supervise and coordinate the preparation and assignment of personnel/equipment in accordance with the table of organization/table of equipment. Gunnery sergeants serve as the battery gunnery sergeant/ammunition platoon sergeant (HIMARS). Master sergeants serve as battery (HIMARS) and battalion field artillery chiefs. Master gunnery sergeants serve as battalion (HIMARS) and regimental field artillery chiefs.",{"id":316,"code":317,"title":318,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":319,"status":11,"rank":18},"f4f88c34-a914-4c51-bad9-04b63f5a77ee","0871","Joint Fires and Effects Integrator","Fires and Effects Integrator serves as the senior enlisted tactical advisor to the commander and staff for all lethal and non-lethal fire support assets to include mortars, artillery (cannon, rocket, missile), NSFS, and provide terminal attack control of fixed and rotary wing aircraft in support of close air support (CAS).  These duties include planning, integrating, coordinating, observing Surface to surface fires, employment of LASER designators, range finders. These duties also include operating communications equipment, establishing radio networks for voice and digital communications, as well as operating Marine Corps fire support systems.",{"id":321,"code":322,"title":323,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":325,"status":11,"rank":24},"ed6f8e37-3968-49eb-adc7-a244bd08942d","1120","Utilities Officer","ENGINEERING","Utilities Officers serve as technical advisers to commanders at all levels within the MAGTF, as well as supporting organizations, on the appropriate employment of utilities personnel and equipment. These WOs analyze and translate commander's operational requirements into an executable utilities support package that enhances mission accomplishment. They plan and direct operations and maintenance of water purification, storage, distribution sites, hygiene and laundry services, tactical power generation, and electrical power distribution systems. They coordinate and manage the installation, maintenance, and repair of environmental control units, refrigeration equipment, as well as repair and perform quality control inspections of the electrical systems of engineer equipment. Additionally, Utilities Officers will plan, direct, and coordinate water quality assurance and water disposal systems. When deployed in support of Humanitarian Assistance/Disaster Relief and CMO, these officers’ additional duties may include planning, directing, and coordinating the installation and repair of permanent and semi-permanent plumbing and interior electrical systems as well as liaising with foreign military and government officials in utilities support concerns involving the local populace. When deployed during combat operations, Utilities Officers will plan, direct, and coordinate utilities operations and distribution of equipment and personnel through each phase of operations. As the utilities specialists for the Marine Corps, they continuously liaise with DoD Project Manager Expeditionary Energy & Sustainment Systems, the Marine Corps’ Expeditionary Energy Office, DoD services, government agencies, and non-governmental organizations to provide an effective and beneficial interface to address utilities requirements and to ensure the Marine Corps remains on the cutting edge of technology regarding expeditionary utilities support. This MOS is technical in nature and requires years of experience to become proficient. Due to the diversity of commands throughout the Marine Corps, some of the duties and tasks performed by the Utilities Officer may overlap with those of the Engineer Equipment Officer and Motor Transport Operations and Maintenance Officer. Additional duties may include Maintenance Management Officer, formal school faculty, new equipment/systems research and development, new systems acquisition, utilities advocacy at LPE, requirements development as the Utilities Capabilities Integration Officer at CD&I, MAGTF Standards Division at TECOM, and doctrine refinement to support utilities operations.",{"id":327,"code":328,"title":329,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":330,"status":11,"rank":18},"63c38c94-8847-43c8-9339-132cfb0dfdd3","1141","Electrician","Using knowledge of electrical theory and concepts, electricians install, operate, maintain, and repair underground, above ground, and tactical electrical power distribution systems. Additionally, electricians perform preventive maintenance checks and service and operate electrical power generation and power distribution equipment, load banks, and floodlight sets. Electricians also install and repair interior wiring. Corporals through staff sergeants are afforded the opportunity to attend a skill progression course. The Advanced Electrician Course (M0311K2) provides in-depth instruction on code requirements and planning electrical support to include determining demand, phase balancing, and voltage drops. An apprenticeship program, leading to U.S. Department of Labor certification as a Journeyman Electrician, is available to electricians under the United Services Military Apprenticeship Program (USMAP).",{"id":332,"code":333,"title":334,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":335,"status":11,"rank":18},"73b7103e-d624-429b-8c5d-a8f796b7dc31","1164","Utilities Systems Technician","By applying electrical theory, electronic fundamentals, and refrigeration concepts, Utilities Systems Technicians perform organizational and intermediate repairs on electric motors, electronic modules, motor control circuits, electric power generation equipment, field refrigeration equipment, environmental control units, and electrical systems repairs of engineer equipment (to include ground equipment). Additionally, they install and operate field refrigeration units and environmental control units and thus must be certified by the environmental protection agency (EPA) to handle and recover hydro chlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) and chlorofluorocarbons (CFC). Corporals through staff sergeants are afforded the opportunity to attend a skill progression course. The Advanced Utilities Systems Technician Course (M03A212) provides in-depth instruction in diagnostics and repair of complex electrical circuitry and integrated electronics, identification of personnel to support deployed equipment, infrastructure reconnaissance, and maintenance operations. An apprenticeship program, leading to U.S. Department of Labor certification as a journeyman worker, is available under the United Services Military Apprenticeship Program (USMAP).",{"id":337,"code":338,"title":339,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":340,"status":11,"rank":18},"d0b77061-8438-4625-81bb-8a4cd6c22a81","1169","Utilities Chief","The Utilities Chief is responsible to the commander and assists in the planning, training, deployment and employment of all utilities capabilities. They supervise and coordinate the assignment of personnel and equipment in accordance with the Table of Organization and Equipment. They plan, supervise, and coordinate the installation, operation, and maintenance of utilities assets. This MOS is technical in nature and requires years of experience to become proficient. Due to the diversity of commands throughout the Marine Corps, some of the duties and tasks performed by the Utilities Chief may overlap with those of the Engineer Equipment Chief, Motor Transport Maintenance Chief, and Motor Transport Operations Chief. They may also be assigned to the staff of a Marine Air-Ground Task Force command element, ground combat element, air combat element, and logistics combat element advising utilities support. Additional duties may include formal schools faculty, new equipment/systems research and development, and new systems acquisition. This MOS will only be assigned to graduates of the resident Utilities Chief Course.",{"id":342,"code":343,"title":344,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":345,"status":11,"rank":18},"b043e485-3950-4db6-8d1f-8742fba41739","1171","Water Support Technician","Water Support Technicians install, operate, inspect, and perform preventive and corrective maintenance on pumps, water purification equipment, water storage/distribution systems, and laundry and shower facilities.  They conduct and evaluate water surveys, water reconnaissance, and water quality analysis as well as establish and maintain water disposal systems.  These technicians also plan, install, and repair the plumbing systems of structures.  Corporals through Staff Sergeants are afforded the opportunity to attend a skill progression course.  The Advanced Water Support Technician course (M03UAC2) provides in-depth instruction on code requirements, water reconnaissance, planning water support, designing plumbing systems, and diagnosing electrical malfunctions on water support equipment.  An apprenticeship program, leading to U.S. Department of Labor certification as a Journeyman, is available to Water Support Technicians under the United Services Military Apprenticeship Program (USMAP).",{"id":347,"code":348,"title":349,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":350,"status":11,"rank":12},"0f724e8b-8f9c-4249-a7e9-20ea507ad7c0","1302","Combat Engineer Officer","Engineer Officers command or assist in commanding engineer units consisting of Marines in various MOSs whose duties include:  repair, maintenance and operation of heavy equipment; engineer reconnaissance; obstacle system emplacement; breaching operations, to include reducing explosive hazards; mine/countermine operations; employment of demolitions and explosives; urban breaching; route and area clearance operations; assault, tactical and non-standard bridging; design, construction and maintenance of combat roads and trails; design and construction of expedient roads, airfields and landing zones; design and construction of survivability positions; expedient horizontal and vertical construction; and design, construction and maintenance of base camps/ forward operating bases and combat outposts; storage and dispensing of bulk fuel products; and the installation, operation and maintenance of tactical utility systems.",{"id":352,"code":353,"title":354,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":355,"status":11,"rank":24},"d7681f60-2fbb-4ee6-b744-195a91ad4afc","1310","Engineer Equipment Officer","Engineer Equipment Officers are warrant officers who manage and coordinate engineer equipment employment, repair, and advanced manufacturing in support of all engineering and material handling tasks associated with mobility, counter-mobility, general engineering, and logistics operations. They supervise the eight functional areas of maintenance management, as well as oversee establishing field maintenance and equipment staging sites, and procedures for their defense. Engineer Equipment Officers may also perform duties of a special staff officer at the battalion or general staff level, providing advice in equipment employment, material readiness, and qualification/training.",{"id":357,"code":358,"title":359,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":360,"status":11,"rank":18},"4e607229-9f84-4873-8674-2ee0069f72c8","1316","Metal Worker","Metal Workers examine drawings and work orders; determine sequence of operations, materials, tools, equipment, time, and personnel required.  Duties include selection of proper stock, and set up of work on welding equipment to include the automated Water Jet cutting system.  The control of quality and accuracy is met by the welder's use of Non-destructive inspection techniques that include liquid penetrant testing and magnetic particle testing.  They also perform installation, operation, maintenance and repair of metalworking, and welding equipment and material.",{"id":362,"code":363,"title":364,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":365,"status":11,"rank":18},"5d9e07f6-5861-4327-9b61-123da99ac942","1341","Engineer Equipment Mechanic","Engineer Equipment Mechanics perform preventive maintenance and perform repairs to diesel engines and gasoline and diesel driven construction equipment such as material handling equipment, earth moving equipment, construction equipment and other engine driven or towed equipment.",{"id":367,"code":368,"title":369,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":370,"status":11,"rank":18},"dd9dbf35-080f-4975-857a-d5cae054342d","1345","Engineer Equipment Operator","Engineer Equipment Operators operate gasoline or diesel engine equipment used in material handling and earthmoving operations, to include all equipment accessories.",{"id":372,"code":373,"title":374,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":375,"status":11,"rank":18},"2afac8cf-f087-426e-ac6e-1b6e9cf4ce6b","1349","Engineer Equipment Chief","Engineer Equipment Chiefs coordinate and manage the maintenance and employment of engineer equipment in both horizontal construction and material handling operations. They manage equipment licensing, certification of tactical ground load lifting equipment, equipment repairs, and related metal working in support of mobility, counter-mobility, general, combat engineering, and logistics operations in any environment. Additionally, they manage and coordinate ground maintenance, maintenance management policy, programs, procedures, functions, maintenance automated information systems (MAIS) requirements, and the support of engineer equipment and watercraft.",{"id":377,"code":378,"title":379,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":380,"status":11,"rank":18},"3c709c62-7e53-495a-8ab8-02f687a4642f","1361","Engineer Assistant","Engineer Assistants perform various duties incidental to construction design, planning, estimating, and management.  Personnel assigned this MOS are trained to use optical reading/electronic total station survey instruments to establish the horizontal and vertical alignment/layout for construction projects.  In addition, they are trained to use manual/ Computer Aided Drafting (CAD) methods of preparing architectural/mechanical/ civil drawings, to include computations for bills of material/earthwork volumes.",{"id":382,"code":383,"title":384,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":385,"status":11,"rank":18},"aa90f074-0f66-475e-b7c1-89fc5d11ba65","1371","Combat Engineer","Combat Engineers conduct engineer reconnaissance; emplace obstacle systems; conduct breaching operations; reduce explosive obstacles/hazards conduct mine/countermine operations; employ demolitions and military explosives; conduct urban breaching; conduct route and area clearance; non-standard bridging/repair; construct and maintain combat roads and trails; construct expedient roads and airfield/landing zones; design and construct survivability positions; perform expedient vertical and horizontal construction; design, construct and maintain base camps/forward operating bases and combat outposts; and fight as provisional infantry.",{"id":387,"code":388,"title":389,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":390,"status":11,"rank":24},"20fb22de-3ed0-4690-b99a-ca9ad440a860","1390","Expeditionary Fuels Officer","The Expeditionary Fuels Officer MOS consists of technical warrant officers who plan, coordinate, and supervise the receipt, storage, transfer, and dispensing of bulk fuel. Frequent coordination with other agencies, both inter-service and internationally, are required to include direct interaction with joint petroleum offices (JPO) and the defense logistics agency energy (DLA-E). Duties range from developing bulk fuel sites, advising planners on fuel estimations and requirements, making recommendations on security plans for tactical fuel systems, to emplacement of a bulk fuel system, to writing the bulk fuel portion of operation orders. Environmental concerns are extremely crucial in any training and operational scenario; therefore, understanding of environmental requirements and limitations is a must. Challenging and interesting billets include battalions within the Marine logistics group and squadrons within the Marine air wing, as well as instructor duty with the Marine Corps Detachment, U.S. Army Quartermaster School, assignment as regional fuel officers, equipment acquisition at Marine Corps Systems Command and Fuels Capabilities Integration Officer at CD&I.",{"id":392,"code":393,"title":394,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":395,"status":11,"rank":18},"dc4d7f17-29bf-4554-86c7-468d48ec4f53","1391","Expeditionary Fuels Technician","Expeditionary Fuels Technicians install, operate and employ a family of tactical fuel systems (TFS) and accessory equipment, tailoring fuel equipment in modular sets to address mission needs in support of both ground and aviation operations. This includes the setup and operation of fuel systems in support to installations, forward operating bases (FOBs) a forward arming and refueling points (FARPS). While utilizing tactical fuel systems, expeditionary fuel technicians can receive, store and dispense various petroleum products in support of tactical operations. Additionally, expeditionary fuels technicians are responsible for overseeing the quality surveillance procedures of fuel dispensed from TFS, provide support for the calculation of fuel estimates in support of operations and assist in the coordination of sources of class III to support expeditionary operations.",{"id":397,"code":398,"title":399,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":400,"status":11,"rank":12},"559f6199-309a-4d69-878d-78e55b965df6","1702","Cyberspace Warfare Officer","Cyberspace Warfare Officers lead cyber forces. They plan and direct the employment of cyber forces in support of tactical, operational, and strategic objectives for supported commanders in the joint force and MAGTF. They are subject matter experts on all cyberspace operations and the integration of the cyberspace domain into all military operations. To fulfill these responsibilities they evaluate intelligence, develop an understanding of the information environment, plan for and integrate information forces, and advise supported commanders on cyberspace operations.",{"id":402,"code":403,"title":404,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":405,"status":11,"rank":12},"e76d220f-4908-4463-9f89-47fb76bdb1b1","1705","Cyberspace Warfare Development Officer","Cyberspace Warfare Development Officers provide cyber warfare and capabilities development leadership for the creation, integration, synchronization, and implementation of cyber warfare technologies, capabilities, weapon systems, and tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) to deliver effects. They are a senior SME that leverages their technical knowledge and operational experience to advise service and joint force commanders, analyze and endorse requirements, and facilitate the rapid acquisition of cyber capabilities. They analyze data, implement development, security, operations (DevSecOps) into the software development pipeline; and manage the development of artificial intelligence/ machine learning (AI/ML) solutions within the joint cyber warfighting architecture (JCWA). Cyberspace Warfare Development Officer establish enduring interagency and intelligence community (IC) partnerships that ensure capability interoperability and deconfliction of cyber effects.",{"id":407,"code":408,"title":409,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":410,"status":11,"rank":12},"c6d66935-c10a-46fd-bf2a-d71e5fa5ed09","1706","Maritime Space Officer","Maritime Space Officers (MSO) serve as the principal advisor for integration of space effects and capabilities into fleet marine force (FMF) operations. They serve as commanders and staff officers in the FMF, on joint assignments, and in key billets throughout the information community. MSOs are responsible for the deliberate, detailed planning and employment of space capabilities and effects, as well as the coordination and integration of space operations into a unit’s overall scheme of maneuver. They evaluate both friendly and adversary capabilities, and develop, coordinate, and execute approved space operations activities.",{"id":412,"code":413,"title":414,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":415,"status":11,"rank":12},"b850d68f-fc42-437c-abd9-fa8e34c90766","1707","Influence Officer","Influence Officers formulate plans and policies and coordinate and supervise activities pertaining to Influence Operations including military information support operations (MISO), civil affairs operations (CAO) and the integration of Civil Military Operations and provide the Commander a means to integrate operations in the operational and information environment to achieve desired outcomes. Influence Officers are trained personnel who can integrate operations in the information environment and primarily focus on the planning and execution of MISO, civil authorities’ information support (CAIS) and CAO. MISO are planned operations to convey selected information and indicators to foreign audiences to influence their emotions, motives, objective reasoning, and, ultimately, the behavior of foreign governments, organizations, groups, and individuals in a manner favorable to the originator’s objectives. CAO are defined as those military operations planned, supported, executed, or transitioned by CA forces through, with, or by the OGAs, IPI, IGOs, or NGOs to modify behaviors, to mitigate or defeat threats to civil society, and to assist in establishing the capacity for deterring or defeating future civil threats in support of CMO, facilitation of military operations, or otherwise achieve U.S. objectives. Influence Officers will serve on staffs at all levels and advise the commander and staff on the information warfighting function. Influence Officers integrate capabilities to support the Combatant Command’s Influence Campaign objectives by supporting the Fleet Marine Force (FMF) missions, as they enable commanders to shape the information and security environment in their areas of responsibility (AOR).",{"id":417,"code":418,"title":419,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":420,"status":11,"rank":24},"93839cfe-d0a3-4544-8e58-7b1635e10fce","1710","Offensive Cyberspace Warfare Officer","The Offensive Cyberspace Warfare Officer is a SME in offensive cyberspace operations (OCO). They are technical experts experienced in clandestine and overt offensive cyberspace warfare, weapons platform design, infrastructure utilization, and the use of intelligence products and data to support planning and execution of OCO. These Marines possess an advanced understanding of the doctrines, policies, and authorities that govern maneuver warfare, the application of force in and through cyberspace, and intelligence procedures. As principal technical advisors on all aspects of OCO, they leverage this knowledge to provide recommendations and advice to commanders to understand second and third-order effects in cyberspace, drive target pairing, conduct weaponeering, initiate cascading effects into the physical domains, and satisfy collection requirements in cyberspace. Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC (within their occupational field) that has been coded with one or more DoD cyber workforce framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":422,"code":423,"title":424,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":425,"status":11,"rank":24},"cd0055e5-841b-4360-9314-45d985058570","1720","Defensive Cyberspace Warfare Officer","The Defensive Cyberspace Weapons Officer is a subject matter expert (SME) in defensive cyberspace operations (DCO) with advanced and mastery knowledge of defensive cyber weapons systems and platforms and their employment. They serve as master defensive operators, technical directors, top-level representatives, special staff officers, and principal technical advisors to selected headquarters and staffs. 1720s coordinate and synchronize all defensive cyberspace missions and related activities with representatives of other information-related capabilities in peer, higher, and adjacent staff organizations and advise commands conducting, supporting, or assisting in providing critical input and analysis in the development, review, and update of OPLANS, CONPLANS, cyberspace operations annexes to operations, operational orders, training, exercises, and letters of instruction. In doing such, Defensive Cyberspace Weapons Officers improve the commanders decision-making during planning and execution by integrating DCO capabilities into the development of problem framing and desired end states by identifying friendly and enemy cyber vulnerabilities, challenging assumptions about cyberspace, offering alternative perspectives, and aiding in the development of best courses of action at the tactical and operational levels. Most notably, 1720s utilize knowledge and experience in order to outmaneuver adversaries in cyberspace, defend operational missions and associated key terrain in cyberspace, and employ effects to ensure friendly freedom of movement in and through cyberspace to leverage capabilities, maximize effects, and optimize combat effectiveness in operational domains and across warfighting functions.",{"id":427,"code":428,"title":429,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":430,"status":11,"rank":18},"58dd71fc-0a23-4200-8c28-a529b1fc2c5e","1721","Cyberspace Warfare Operator","The Cyberspace Warfare Operator is familiar with all aspects of cyberspace maneuver operations.  They employ offensive and defensive cyber tools, tactics, techniques, and procedures.  They integrate effects into warfighting functions in order to achieve tactical, operational, and strategic objectives.  The Cyber Warfare Operator further provides the means to emulate tactics, techniques, and procedures used by known adversaries to identify unmitigated vulnerabilities through simulated exploitation or attacks on Department of Defense information systems.  Familiar with digital network concepts and analytical techniques that support tactical cyber operations.  Utilizing these skills to enumerate friendly environments, these operators search for and respond to targeted adversary presence within friendly terrain. Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC within their occupational field that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":432,"code":433,"title":434,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":435,"status":11,"rank":18},"b16009ba-7f6e-4f38-8090-3d2a1c8445df","1732","Civil Affairs Specialist","Civil Affairs (CA) Specialists perform various duties in both combat and non-combat environments involving the integration, planning, and conduct of civil affairs operations (CAO) and civil-military operations (CMO) in support of marine air-ground task force (MAGTF) operations. CA Specialists inform, influence, shape and gain access to the cognitive civil environment through targeted and integrated civil reconnaissance and civil engagements. This PMOS is only applicable to the reserve component. The MOS was previously listed as 0532.",{"id":437,"code":438,"title":439,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":440,"status":11,"rank":18},"c2f91042-9a7f-4ac2-acd7-1e348eaa919f","1751","Influence Specialist","Influence Specialists are the Marines that make up the PSYOP and civil affairs forces in the active component. These are the forces which conduct military information support operations (MISO), civil affairs operations (CAO), or civil military operations (CMO). The Influence Specialistâ€™s billet will determine their support to plan and execute functions pertaining to military information support operations (MISO), civil authoritiesâ€™ information support (CAIS), and civil affairs operations (CAO). Influence Specialists deploy in small teams known as tactical PSYOP teams or CA teams, depending on the billet they are filling, to employ capabilities that operationalize the information warfighting function and harness the military applications of information in all military operations. Influence Specialists capabilities are critical to the success of the fleet marine force (FMF) mission, as they enable commanders to shape the information and security environment in their areas of responsibility (AOR).",{"id":442,"code":443,"title":444,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":445,"status":11,"rank":18},"b0071758-204d-4673-aaf3-49266349076b","1795","Influence Chief","The Influence Chief is the senior staff non-commissioned officer that directly assists Influence Officers, Civil-Military Operations Planners, and mentors and advises Influence Specialists. They manage the conduct of influence operations and can facilitate the integration of influences operations with other information activities and force maneuver in the information environment. The Influence Chief assists in the planning, training, deployment, and implementation of capabilities and resources required to conduct influence operations. Influence Chiefs possess knowledge on the joint operational and marine corps planning processes (JOPP/MCPP) in order to develop integrated influence plans and operations.",{"id":447,"code":448,"title":449,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":450,"status":11,"rank":18},"bc754b7b-a0b1-4945-8a8a-ad609c744bd1","1799","Cyberspace Warfare Chief","The Cyberspace Warfare Chief is the senior staff non-commissioned officer who directly assists Cyberspace Warfare Officers and Cyberspace Weapons Officers and supports all Cyber Warfare Operators.  They manage the conduct of cyber warfare and possess an understanding of cyberspace warfare operations. The Cyberspace Warfare Chief assists in the planning, training, deployment, and implementation of capabilities and resources required to conduct cyber operations. Cyberspace Warfare Chiefs possess in-depth knowledge of the Joint operational and Marine Corps planning processes (JOPP and MCPP) to develop integrated cyber warfare plans and operations. Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC within their occupational field that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":452,"code":453,"title":454,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":455,"status":11,"rank":12},"71499d89-7b53-46f1-93aa-ced3e4fb57af","1803","Assault Amphibian (AA) Officer","Assault Amphibian Officers command, or assist in commanding, assault amphibian (AA) units, provide recommendations to the supported unit commander for the tactical employment of AA units. They also direct AA units on maneuvers, tactical problems, and in combat. In conjunction with the U.S. Navy units, they control the ship to shore movement of AAVs. AAV Officers are responsible for the AA unit's personnel and equipment readiness, operational employment, and the identification and coordination of required logistics support.",{"id":457,"code":458,"title":459,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":460,"status":11,"rank":18},"37958213-3c5e-46fa-93ad-5776b0d9f8da","1833","Assault Amphibious Vehicle (AAV) Crewmember","An Assault Amphibian Crewmember performs various duties related to the operation and maintenance of Amphibious Vehicles (AV), to include tactical employment, gunnery using the onboard weapon systems, communications, and maneuver.  AA Crewmembers employ their vehicle in support of Infantry units during ship to objective maneuver and during subsequent operations ashore.  Typical duties may include preventive and corrective maintenance, and pre-combat checks and inspections on the AV and its associated equipment in order to support both amphibious and land operations.",{"id":462,"code":463,"title":464,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":465,"status":11,"rank":18},"f2640fe7-fbf0-4499-8885-ee65b78081da","1834","Amphibious Combat Vehicle (ACV) Crewmember","Amphibious Combat Vehicle Crewmember performs various duties incident to the operation and maintenance of the vehicle, to include tactical employment, precision gunnery using on board vehicle weapon systems, and maneuver.¿¿ACV Crewmembers employ their vehicle during shore to shore, ship to objective maneuver, and during subsequent operations ashore.¿¿Typical duties may include preparing the ACV and associated equipment for movement and combat, locating, and engaging targets, driving the ACV in the water and ashore, and performance of preventive and corrective maintenance.",{"id":467,"code":468,"title":469,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":470,"status":11,"rank":12},"9158d1ae-7e39-4cb7-b444-5628222c815b","2102","Ordnance Officer","Ordnance Officers manage ordnance operations in the Marine Forces, MEFs, bases, posts, and stations to include HQMC.  They serve as the Ground Ordnance Maintenance Technical Advisor in general staff.  They may command or assist in commanding a ground ordnance maintenance unit, or test, evaluate, and advise in a foreign or joint environment.",{"id":472,"code":473,"title":474,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":475,"status":11,"rank":24},"7c756e55-b784-47e0-816a-a432bbd44957","2110","Ordnance Vehicle Maintenance Officer","Ordnance Vehicle Maintenance Officers manage the equipment readiness, work progress, and maintenance personnel qualification/training.  They manage the activities of personnel engaged in the recovery, salvage, and maintenance of weapon systems (ordnance vehicles).  They supervise the functional areas of maintenance management, establish field maintenance sites, and procedures for the defense of those sites.  They manage command environmental hazardous waste programs, and supervise and provide oversight of disposal, storage, emergency planning for hazardous waste, and ozone depleting substances.",{"id":477,"code":478,"title":479,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":480,"status":11,"rank":18},"87448c97-7c3a-4375-8e43-e58f518ddbd8","2111","Small Arms Repairer/Technician","Small Arms Repairer/Technician in the grade of Private through Lance Corporal, under supervision, inspect, maintain, and repair small arm weapon systems, less permanently mounted vehicular weapons.  The Small Arms Repairer/Technician also completes basic shop administrative actions utilizing forms, records, technical manuals, directives, and automated information systems.  At the ranks of Corporal through Gunnery Sergeant, the Small Arms Repairer/Technician performs maintenance actions, trains subordinates, and supervises the inspection, maintenance, and repair of all small arms, less permanently mounted vehicular weapons.  The Small Arms Repairer/Technician also performs, maintains, and supervises shop maintenance management programs and coordinates the maintenance and repair of small arms according to grade.",{"id":482,"code":483,"title":484,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":485,"status":11,"rank":24},"263bfb49-c11e-455d-9fa0-94f908ca40b9","2120","Ground Ordnance Maintenance Officer","Ground Ordnance Maintenance Officers are special staff officers who manage ground ordnance equipment readiness, accountability and security. They serve as technical advisers on the appropriate employment of ground ordnance maintenance resources. They oversee the activities of personnel engaged in the recovery, salvage, and maintenance of weapons, fire control systems, artillery, fires platforms, optical and electro-optical/ laser devices, small missile and other manned, remote, or semi-autonomous ground ordnance systems. They nest maintenance support packages into their commander's mission requirements to enable mission accomplishment. They must possess skills in managing resources with an emphasis on efficient personnel employment, maintaining equipment readiness, and exercise/deployment planning. Ground Ordnance Maintenance Officers must possess a working knowledge of forecasting equipment readiness and availability, monitoring and managing maintenance requirements, and effectively advising commanders. They mentor the officers and Marines within their unit in all applicable physical, doctrinal, and conceptual maintenance operations to improve the effectiveness of the command. They also develop maintenance policy at various levels, and manage work progress and maintenance personnel qualification/training. They establish maintenance production lines, procedures for inspection, and quality assurance on repaired equipment. They supervise the functional areas of maintenance management and can supervise the storage, disposal, and emergency planning for hazardous waste and ozone depleting substances. They liaise with project managers and sustainment partners to address maintenance requirements and to advance enterprise ingenuity in expeditionary ground ordnance maintenance support and weapon system lethality. Additional duties will include participation in applicable course curriculum review boards (CCRB), curriculum development for new equipment, and review of draft ground ordnance maintenance training and readiness manuals. Warrant Officers and junior chief warrant officers generally serve in maintenance companies and battalion staffs. They progress to serve on regimental staffs within the ground combat element and within the command element and supporting establishment. At the most senior ranks, 2120s serve billets which provide the greatest breadth of influence and include Headquarters Marine Corps supporting activities that analyze, design, and develop standards-based training for individual and collective progression, as well as billets which support the requirements development and acquisition processes of ground ordnance systems and related maintenance support equipment. At this level, Ground Ordnance Maintenance Officers must also be able to supervise operational level maintenance, integrate maintenance support into major subordinate command, service, and joint operations, manage maintenance policy and doctrine, manage the training and education continuum for ground ordnance maintenance personnel and provide staff level planning and technical advice concerning maintenance capabilities and supportability for MAGTF commanders.",{"id":487,"code":488,"title":489,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":490,"status":11,"rank":18},"2e6bd18c-9ac3-4a30-bcdd-f61cb0d7a14c","2131","Artillery Systems Technician","The Artillery Systems Technician, under supervision, performs basic duties incident to inspection, maintenance, and repair of Towed Artillery Howitzers.  The Artillery Systems Technician also completes basic shop administrative forms and records utilizing technical manuals.  At the Gunnery Sergeant through Corporal level, the Artillery Systems Technician performs, trains, and supervises various duties incident to inspection, maintenance and repair of towed artillery howitzers.  The Artillery Systems Technician also prepares, maintains and supervises a shop maintenance and management program, and performs the maintenance and repair of Towed Artillery Howitzers according to grade.",{"id":492,"code":493,"title":494,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":495,"status":11,"rank":18},"640c26c3-e44b-49a2-84ab-33ef530b05e9","2141","Assault Amphibious Vehicle (AAV)/Assault Combat Vehicle (ACV) Repairer/Technician","The AAV/ACV Repairer/Technician performs basic automotive duties including the inspection, maintenance, and repair of the AAV/ACV family of vehicles.  The AAV/ACV Repairer/Technician performs basic shop administrative actions utilizing technical manuals and automated information systems.  The AAV/ACV Repairer/Technician also operates the AAV/ACV recovery vehicle in support of combat and/or garrison operations. As a member of the recovery crew, the AAV/ACV Repairer/Technician will perform operator and field-level maintenance and maintain/manage associated tools and equipment, of which licensed to operate. Accordingly, they will employ land navigation techniques and must be knowledgeable with the operation of radios and weapon systems when mounted on the vehicle during tactical operations. The Gunnery Sergeant to Corporal level supervises, and performs various duties incident to the inspection, maintenance, and repair of the automotive and turret systems of the AAV.  In addition, AAV Repairer/Technicians prepare, maintain and supervise shop maintenance and management programs, and coordinate maintenance and recovery operations according to grade and position.",{"id":497,"code":498,"title":499,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":500,"status":11,"rank":18},"50664b09-8eb6-48b1-a1d0-282ba9bf7c20","2143","Amphibious Combat Vehicle (ACV) Technician","The ACV Technician performs basic automotive duties including the inspection, maintenance, and repair of the ACV family of vehicles. The ACV Technician performs basic shop administrative actions utilizing technical manuals and automated information systems. The ACV Technician can also operate the ACV FOV in support of combat and/or garrison operations. The ACV Technician will perform operator and field-level maintenance and maintain/manage associated tools and equipment, of which licensed to operate. Accordingly, they will employ land navigation techniques and must be knowledgeable with the operation of radios and weapon systems when mounted on the vehicle during tactical operations. The Gunnery Sergeant to corporal level supervises, and performs various duties incident to the inspection, maintenance, and repair of the automotive and RWS/Turret systems of the ACV. In addition, ACV Technicians prepare, maintain, and supervise shop maintenance and management programs, and coordinate maintenance and recovery operations according to grade and position.",{"id":502,"code":503,"title":504,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":505,"status":11,"rank":18},"5b8c1025-a100-447a-8ba9-4823c2792abf","2147","Light Armored Vehicle (LAV) Repairer/Technician","The LAV Repairer/Technician performs basic automotive duties including the inspection, maintenance, and repair of the LAV family of vehicles.  The LAV Repairer/Technician performs basic shop administrative actions utilizing technical manuals and automated information systems.  The LAV Repairer/Technician also operates the LAV recovery vehicle in support of combat and/or garrison operations. As a member of the recovery crew, the LAV Repairer/Technician will perform operator and field-level maintenance and maintain/manage associated tools and equipment, of which licensed to operate. Accordingly, they will employ land navigation techniques and must be knowledgeable with the operation of radios and weapon systems when mounted on the vehicle during tactical operations. At the grade of Corporal and above, the LAV Technician trains, supervises, and performs various duties related to the inspection, maintenance, and repair of automotive and turret systems of the LAV family of vehicles.  In addition, LAV Technicians prepare, maintain, and supervise shop maintenance and management programs, and coordinate maintenance and recovery operations according to grade and position.",{"id":507,"code":508,"title":509,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":510,"status":11,"rank":18},"4332a5c3-fc91-4818-9907-178c89f44cd2","2149","Ordnance Vehicle Maintenance Chief","Ground Ordnance Vehicle Maintenance Chiefs supervise the maintenance, repair, and inspection of ground ordnance vehicles and support equipment.  Additionally, Ordnance Vehicle Maintenance Chiefs supervise and manage the administration of ordnance vehicle related maintenance programs and facilities. The Ordnance Vehicle Maintenance Chief is technically proficient in the following areas: organizational, maintenance, and resource management; specifically in the areas of: training, records and reporting via Major Automated Information Systems, preventive and corrective maintenance, equipment availability, publications control, supply support, and the oversight of command environmental and hazardous waste  programs. The Ground Ordnance Vehicle Maintenance Chief also serves as a Licensing Officer for Ground Ordnance Maintenance Vehicle Operators and supervises the recovery of ground ordnance vehicles. The Ground Ordnance Vehicle Maintenance Chief assists the Ground Ordnance Vehicle Maintenance Officer in execution of their duties.",{"id":512,"code":513,"title":514,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":515,"status":11,"rank":18},"cdd5da8d-919f-428a-b72d-2d1b008473fe","2161","Machinist","Machinists perform various duties incident to fabrication, repair or modification of engineer, motor transport, weapons, and accessories.  Duties include selection of proper stock and set up of work on lathes, shapes, milling machines, internal and external grinders, drill presses, saws and cylinder, or line-boring machines.  Machinists work from sketches, diagrams, blueprints, written specifications, or oral instructions.  The control of quality and accuracy is met by the machinists' use of precision measuring devices to include micrometers, vernier gauges, and various other gauges and the subsequent adjustment of machine tool controls.  Fabrication of metals is also followed by welding with all standard welding equipment.  Maintenance of all shop equipment is performed to ensure that serviceability is sustained.  Coordination with other repair shops, reporting of work completion, and the shop administrative functions are requirements to be effected by machinists.",{"id":517,"code":518,"title":519,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":520,"status":11,"rank":18},"9cd04e66-3774-4e63-9e96-9c32e3d652a1","2171","Electro-Optical Ordnance Repairer","The Electro-Optical Ordnance Repairer performs electro-optical maintenance and repair to ground ordnance laser and night vision devices, small missiles systems, and other fire control equipment.  Duties also include performing mechanical, mechanical-optical and electrical repairs to include inspecting, troubleshooting and adjusting fire control instruments and systems.  The Electro-Optical Ordnance Repairer, grades Private through Corporal, also completes basic shop administrative forms and records using technical publications.  At the grades of Sergeant and above, the Electro-Optical Ordnance Repairer trains, supervises, and performs various duties and tasks incident to the management of an Electro-Optical Ordnance Repair shop or facility.",{"id":522,"code":523,"title":524,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":525,"status":11,"rank":18},"84587d0a-ac30-4f29-a996-4d6b46ac2b8c","2181","Ground Ordnance Weapons Chief","Ground Ordnance Weapons Chief supervise the maintenance, repair, and inspection of all small arms weapons and towed artillery howitzers and direct the activities of assigned enlisted personnel in a small arms or towed artillery repair shop or facility.  They supervise and manage the administration of small arms or towed artillery maintenance facilities and offices.  The Ground Ordnance Weapons Chief is proficient in the organization, management, operation and conduct of technical inspections of small arms weapons, and towed artillery howitzers, all equipment, and maintenance shops or facilities for maintaining small arms or towed artillery howitzers.  The Ground Ordnance Weapons Chief assists the Weapons Repair Officer in all duties and tasks.  They manage command environmental and hazardous waste programs.  They supervise and provide oversight of disposal, storage, emergency planning for hazardous waste, and ozone depleting substances.  2181 Marines possess a comprehensive knowledge of environmental and hazardous waste programs, disposal, storage, emergency planning for hazardous waste, and ozone depleting substances. 2181 Marines possess a comprehensive understanding of maintenance procedures for small arms weapons, and towed artillery howitzers, repair shop management and operations, maintenance and supply procedures.",{"id":527,"code":528,"title":529,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":530,"status":11,"rank":24},"44f80f99-6aa1-4dbd-a1d7-1dfaa38fed8d","2305","Explosive Ordnance Disposal Officer","Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) Officers supervise command and control EOD operations and personnel.  Additionally, they also serve as special staff officers.  EOD Officers are responsible for the EOD function in support of the MAGTF, supporting establishments, homeland defense, and special operations forces by locating, accessing, identifying, rendering safe, neutralizing, and disposing of hazards, both foreign and domestic: chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear, and high-yield explosive (CBRNE), unexploded explosive ordnance (UXO), improvised explosive device (IED), and weapons of mass destruction (WMD) that present a threat to operations, installations, personnel, or materiel.",{"id":532,"code":533,"title":534,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":535,"status":11,"rank":18},"cdabfcc1-6179-4cff-acd1-93736b19ac70","2311","Ammunition Technician","Ammunition Technicians work in every facet of the ammunition field, including receipt, storage, issue, and handling of ammunition and toxic chemicals.",{"id":537,"code":538,"title":539,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":540,"status":11,"rank":18},"2d6d51bb-6788-483c-97e0-c93c9894c900","2336","Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) Technician","Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) Technicians perform various duties may include locating, accessing, identifying, rendering safe, neutralizing, and disposing of hazards from foreign and domestic, chemical biological radiological nuclear and high-yield explosive (CBRNE), unexploded explosive ordnance (UXO), improvised explosive device (IED), and weapons of mass destruction (WMD) that present a threat to operations, installations, personal, or material.",{"id":542,"code":543,"title":544,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":545,"status":11,"rank":12},"e6ab55e0-b635-433f-9ae6-b1f55e9c9d95","2340","Ammunition Officer","Ammunition Officers supervise and coordinate ammunition supply and renovation functions. These functions include, but are not limited to, procurement, receipt, storage, issue, handling, shipment, salvage, and renovation of ammunition. They also operate ammunition supply points and are responsible for the establishment of field ammunition supply points in forward areas. Ammunition Officers are assigned to billets on the general staff level and are responsible for advising those commanders on matters relating to the development of ammunition allowances for both training and combat operations. Assignments may also include commanding an ammunition company.",{"id":547,"code":548,"title":549,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":550,"status":11,"rank":24},"e3a2d747-bd78-4577-9607-5fc8e3d228a3","2602","Signals Intelligence/Electronic Warfare/Cyberspace Operations","Signals Intelligence (SIGINT), Electronic Warfare (EW), Cyberspace Operations (CO) Warrant Officers supervise, direct, and provide guidance and technical expertise on all aspects of the employment of SIGINT/EW/CO personnel, systems and facilities.  These operations are in support of tactical, strategic, and national level SIGINT/EW/CO missions and include the management, collection, processing, analysis, and reporting of SIGINT and Electronic Warfare Support (ES) derived intelligence and information; directing and supervising Offensive Cyberspace (OCO); planning and directing electronic attack (EA) and ES missions; and other tasks related to security and dissemination of SIGINT/EW/CO derived information.  Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC [within their occupational field] that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes.  Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":552,"code":553,"title":554,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":555,"status":11,"rank":18},"4d2d9813-3fc8-4ad6-80c7-83a78dbeb733","2621","Communications Intelligence/Electromagnetic Warfare Operator","Communications Intelligence (COMINT)/Electromagnetic Warfare (EW) Operators exploit every phase of communications signals and digital network systems by engaging in collection, processing, exploitation, dissemination, and analysis. Additional skills include planning, coordinating, and executing signals intelligence (SIGINT) and electromagnetic warfare (EW) operations from start to finish while utilizing both program of record equipment as well as commercially acquired equipment. Operators must perform communications electronic signals search missions, record intercepts of signals using electronic means, and measure, classify, and evaluate signals. Operators must be familiar with communications intercept receivers, specialized computer hardware and software programs, wideband converters used in the process of collecting, recording, analyzing, and reporting on a wide variety of intercepted communications signals. Operators will conduct and support full spectrum EW operations encompassing electromagnetic warfare support, electromagnetic attack, and the correct reporting thereof. Marines must be familiar with the conduct of SIGINT, EW, and cyber operations in support of the marine air ground task force (MAGTF) at both team and battalion levels and be prepared to contribute to each as deemed necessary by the unit commander.",{"id":557,"code":558,"title":559,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":560,"status":11,"rank":18},"d262fb03-6e71-4fee-98cc-accbf681918b","2629","Signals Intelligence/Electromagnetic Warfare Technician","This is a PMOS that requires signals intelligence (SIGINT), electromagnetic warfare (EW), and support to cyberspace operations (CO) training focused on collection management, operational planning and coordination, analysis, reporting, exploitation, and dissemination in support of the seven warfighting functions. Duties encompass the supervision of tasking, collection, processing, exploitation, and dissemination of products related to the three disciplines of SIGINT: communications intelligence (COMINT), electronic intelligence (ELINT), and foreign instrumentation signals intelligence (FISINT). EW duties encompass the planning, coordination, and execution of full spectrum MAGTF EW operations including electromagnetic warfare support (ES), electromagnetic protect (EP), and electromagnetic attack (EA). Provides intelligence support to full spectrum CO defined as offensive cyberspace operations (OCO), defensive cyberspace operations (DCO), and DOD information network operations (DODIN). Technicians develop and maintain records on technical aspects of target emitters, develop and maintain communications order of battle files, situation maps, and other related SIGINT/EW/CO files. Technicians prepare and issue reports to include intelligence reports, technical reports, and summaries. Technicians are required to perform SIGINT/EW/CO briefings. This MOS is career progression for MOSs 2621, 2631, and 2641. MOS 2629 is assigned upon promotion to SSgt. Marines who are assigned an EMOS of 2712 through 2796 shall take the Defense Language Proficiency Test (DLPT) annually and shall maintain a minimum proficiency of L2/R2 on the Defense Language Proficiency Test (DLPT) in their assigned 27XX language(s), in accordance with reference (bb). Preferred target for assignment to career progression training is at the 5-8 years’ time in service (TIS) mark.",{"id":562,"code":563,"title":564,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":565,"status":11,"rank":18},"14af04c7-0c41-4eba-aaca-e35952aa2a2c","2631","Electronic Intelligence/Electromagnetic Warfare Analyst","Analyst duties encompass all facets of Electronic Intelligence (ELINT); and electromagnetic warfare (EW) analysis including installation, operation, and preventive maintenance of associated equipment. Analysts perform signals analysis, prepare electronic order of battle appraisals, and map overlays. They operate signals intelligence (SIGINT) support equipment, to include systems setup, operations reporting, computer processing of tape recordings, issuing necessary EW reports, assisting in air crew training/ briefings, and performing routine preventive maintenance. Analysts are trained in the use of the integrated broadcast receiver/systems and analytic programs. Marines must be familiar with the conduct of SIGINT, EW, and cyber operations in support of the marine air ground task force (MAGTF) at both team and battalion levels and be prepared to contribute to each as deemed necessary by the unit commander.",{"id":567,"code":568,"title":569,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":570,"status":11,"rank":18},"e8e345e9-6548-4a22-9756-ad330e4c0d90","2641","Cryptologic Language Analyst","Cryptologic Language Analysts (CLA) monitor, transcribe, and translate intercepted target foreign communications; exploit every phase of designated foreign communications by engaging in collection, processing, exploitation, analysis, and reporting; and install, operate, and perform preventive maintenance of program of record as well as commercially acquired intercept equipment. Duties encompass all facets of signals intelligence (SIGNT), electronic warfare (EW) and cyber operations in support of the MAGTF at both team and battalion levels and must be prepared to contribute to each as deemed necessary by the unit commander. Marines shall periodically (annually or biennially, dependent on scores) retake the defense language proficiency test (DLPT) and shall maintain a minimum proficiency of listening 2/reading (L2/R2) DLPT in their assigned 27XX language(s), in accordance with reference (bb). Formal intermediate and advanced language training is available and will be afforded to CLAs no later than upon PCS from their first duty station. Per DoDI 3300.07, CLAs will engage, during normal duty hours, a minimum of 160 hours of formal language training every 24 months. MOS 2629, SIGINT/EW/CO Technician, is assigned upon promotion to staff sergeant. Marines shall maintain language proficiency in their assigned 27XX language(s) upon assignment of MOS 2629.",{"id":572,"code":573,"title":574,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":575,"status":11,"rank":18},"3eb8b4ed-216b-4327-8bef-dcc0314724c0","2651","Intelligence Surveillance Reconnaissance (ISR) Systems Engineer","ISR Systems Engineers design and implement the integration and management of ISR platforms, intelligence datasets, and intelligence networks as members of the signals intelligence and all-source intelligence production chains. These duties include but are not limited to sensor integration, ensuring dataflow between intelligence systems, Sensitive Compartmented Information communications, maintain data standardization, enterprise support and services, network and data redundancy, and disaster recovery. Marines assigned this MOS receive training in computer hardware fundamentals, operating systems, information assurance, database and data flow management, radio frequency theory, satellite communications, networking, system integration, network and data science philosophies. This MOS will be assigned and voided only by the authority of the CMC (MM). Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC [within their occupational field] that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":577,"code":578,"title":579,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":580,"status":11,"rank":18},"208268f6-fdd4-43bb-8347-309a3863c8fb","2659","Intelligence Data and Technology Chief","The Intelligence Data and Technology Chief is an intelligence systems technologist that is responsible for the design and implementation of their organization operational architecture to address intelligence requirements. They integrate data science techniques, emerging technologies, and National Intelligence Community capabilities into their architecture. Marines are employed in the planning process and responsible for the development of an intelligence communications plan that integrates systems, software, personnel, and data within their organization. Intelligence Data and Technology Chiefs implement data security, intelligence community policy and guidelines, currently fielded operational equipment, available alternate technology, and emerging technology to interact with intelligence and non-intelligence data sources. Additional responsibilities include planning and deploying machine learning tools, neural networks, and artificial intelligence capabilities within their organizations architecture. Marines are assigned as data architects and function as senior advisors to the Chief Technology Officer Headquarters Marine Corps, the staff at the MEF and COCOM level, and in all levels of the marine air-ground task force (MAGTF).",{"id":582,"code":583,"title":584,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":585,"status":11,"rank":18},"65f2444d-48eb-4bdd-9726-173f490ea979","2691","Signals Intelligence/Electromagnetic Warfare Chief","Duties encompass signals intelligence (SIGINT), electromagnetic warfare (EW), planning, personnel and asset management, collection management, analysis, dissemination efforts, and ensuring national-to-tactical SIGINT/EW integration. SIGINT/EW Chiefs also supervise the activities of personnel performing communications intercept, electronic reconnaissance, radio direction finding, analysis and reporting functions, intelligence support to CO, and EW operations. They may also be assigned to the intelligence staff marine corps forces special operations command (MARSOC), marine cryptologic support battalion (MCSB), radio battalions, marine littoral regiments (MLR), and the staff sections of the MEF information groups (MIG), marine divisions (MARDIV), marine corps forces commands, and marine aviation wings (MAW) supervising special security and special intelligence support functions. Additionally, they serve in staff billets as operational advisors designated by the commander or cognizant staff officer.",{"id":587,"code":588,"title":589,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":590,"status":11,"rank":12},"de1381d5-83c5-4754-9bbb-a0bb13a05912","2802","Electronics Maintenance Officer (Ground)","Ground Electronics Maintenance Officers (2802) manage maintenance operations in the Marine forces, Marine expeditionary forces, bases, posts, and stations to include headquarters Marine Corps. They serve as the Ground Electronics Maintenance Technical Advisor on general staffs.  They may command, or assist in commanding a ground maintenance unit or test, evaluate, and advise in a foreign or joint environment. They provide staff level planning and technical advice concerning maintenance capabilities and supportability for ground electronics equipment to the unit, MSC, MAGTF, and MARFOR commander as well as at the enterprise level. 2802’s additionally serve in a variety of billets (within their occupational field) that include the development and execution of formal training, integration of maintenance support into MAGTF operations, management of maintenance policy and doctrine, and support the requirements development and acquisition processes of ground-electronics systems and related maintenance support equipment. Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC (within their occupational field) that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes.  Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":592,"code":593,"title":589,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":594,"status":11,"rank":24},"a55f351f-2e12-46e3-8c8d-bf2fb11b8c58","2805","Ground Electronics Maintenance Officers (2805) plan, supervise, and execute the installation, operation, and sustainment of ground electronics maintenance activities.  They manage the equipment readiness, work progress, and maintenance personnel qualifications/training.  They supervise the activities of personnel engaged in the recovery, salvage, and maintenance of weapon systems to include: full frequency spectrum of radio systems/components; information technology:  networks and their subsystems, computers and handheld/mobile devices; satellite communication systems; telecommunications/video telecommunications systems; cryptographic devices; test, measurement, and diagnostic equipment; unmanned systems; artillery/fire control electronics; ground sensors; robotics; and general electronic systems/components.  They supervise the eight functional areas of maintenance management; establish field maintenance sites; and supervise the security of those sites.  At senior ranks, 2805’s additionally serve in a variety of billets that include the development and execution of formal training, support the requirements development and acquisition processes of ground-electronics systems and related maintenance support equipment, supervision of operational level maintenance support for ground-electronics equipment, integration of maintenance support into MAGTF operations, management of maintenance policy and doctrine, management of the training and education continuum for ground electronics maintenance personnel, and providing staff level planning and technical advice concerning maintenance capabilities and supportability for the MAGTF commander.  Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC (within their occupational field) that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes.  Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":596,"code":597,"title":598,"branch":8,"category":197,"description":599,"status":11,"rank":18},"04262016-81c5-4ed1-aa66-7f4d6879bb85","2831","Digital Wideband Systems Maintainer","Digital Wideband Systems Maintainers are trained to install, diagnose, modify, and perform field level maintenance on digital wideband communications equipment used for high capacity, troposcatter and satellite link communications. Typical duties include tuning and aligning systems, adjusting audio or data levels, using test equipment to make checks on circuit quality, diagnose equipment faults to the component level, and replace faulty parts or components at an organizational or intermediate maintenance activity. These Marines submit field service maintenance requests to conduct technical research, order parts, repair, restore and assist in the installation of Digital Wideband Systems. Journeyman level Maintainers, with a minimum of three years of experience, reconcile repair parts and records of systems within the active and maintenance closeout phases, make recommendations pertaining to maintenance resource allocations and guide in the installation of digital wideband systems. Additionally, these Marines provide quality control inspections of maintenance tasks. These Marines guide novice Marines through non-routine maintenance tasks and develop competencies of those Marines. Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC (within their occupational field) that has been coded with one or more DoD cyber workforce framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":601,"code":602,"title":603,"branch":8,"category":197,"description":604,"status":11,"rank":18},"21a5644f-e62c-4ce5-9f67-c623449e9968","2841","Ground Electronics Transmission Systems Maintainer","Ground Electronics Transmission Systems Maintainers are trained to install, diagnose, modify, perform field level maintenance on ground common transmission systems, digital fires situational awareness systems, vehicle intercommunications systems, vehicle electronics equipment, related electronic equipment, electronic jamming systems, and miscellaneous non-communication systems. Typical duties include the troubleshooting and repair of ground common radio systems, ground common tactical wideband transmission systems, intercommunication systems and related electronic equipment at an organizational or intermediate maintenance activities. These Marines, submit field service maintenance requests, conduct technical research and order repair parts to restore and assist in the installation of ground common radio, tactical wideband and intercommunication systems. Journeyman level maintainers, with a minimum of three years’ experience, reconcile repair parts and records of systems within the active and maintenance closeout phases, make recommendations pertaining to maintenance resource allocations and guide in the installation of digital wideband systems. Additionally, these Marines provide quality control inspections of maintenance tasks. These Marines guide novice Marines through non-routine maintenance tasks and develop competencies of those Marines. Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC (within their occupational field) that has been coded with one or more DoD cyber workforce framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":606,"code":607,"title":608,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":609,"status":11,"rank":18},"8f8c3d95-d87e-4d5a-97fe-d99531d28eaf","2847","Electro-Mechanical/Information and Communication Technology Maintainer","Electro-Mechanical/Information and Communication Technology Maintainers (EMICTM) are trained to install, diagnose, modify, and perform field level repairs on Marine Corps information and communication technology systems and transmissions mediums. This includes end user devices (EUD), live and recorded broadcasting technologies, telephony, wired and wireless network devices, optical transmissions systems and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) processing systems. Electro-Mechanical/Information and Communication Technology Maintainers are trained to diagnose, modify, and perform field level repairs on electro-mechanical devices to include, but not limited to unmanned, robotic, and multi -function systems involving motors, servos, actuators and like devices and their control systems. Typical duties include the repair and modification of ground common electro-mechanical systems and sub-systems as well as repair and modification of information and communication technology systems and associated peripheral and interconnection devices utilizing visible or infrared carriers. These Marines, submit field service requests, conduct technical research and order repair parts to restore electro-mechanical/ information and communication technology systems at an organizational or intermediate maintenance activity. Journeyman level Maintainers, with a minimum of three years’ experience, reconcile repair parts and records of systems within the active and maintenance closeout phases, make recommendations pertaining to maintenance resource allocations and guide in the installation of digital wideband systems. Additionally, these Marines provide quality control inspections of maintenance tasks. These Marines guide novice Marines through non-routine maintenance tasks and develop competencies of those Marines. Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC (within their occupational field) that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":611,"code":612,"title":613,"branch":8,"category":197,"description":614,"status":11,"rank":18},"d5f0af66-1274-4edf-9712-f1c598b17147","2862","Ground Electronics Systems Maintenance Technician","Ground Electronics Systems Maintenance Technicians are qualified to perform complex diagnosis, field level repairs, and modifications to ground electronics systems. These technicians supervise ground electronics systems maintenance activities and instruct in the use and maintenance of ground electronics communications systems. These technicians provide subject matter expertise in the diagnosis and repair of complex system and system of systems restoration across the spectrum of ground electronics to include but not limited to: Ground common transmission systems, troposcatter, digital fires situational awareness systems, vehicle intercommunications systems, vehicle electronics equipment, Position, Navigation, and Timing electronic systems, electronic jamming systems, Marine Corps Information and Communication Technology systems and transmissions mediums, End User Devices (EUD), live and recorded broadcasting technologies, telephony, wired and wireless network devices, optical transmissions systems, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) processing systems, digital wideband communications equipment used for high capacity, and satellite link communications, nonstandard equipment, and miscellaneous non-communication systems, electro-mechanical devices to include, but not limited to unmanned, robotic, and multi-function systems involving motors, servos, actuators and their control systems and components at organizational and intermediate maintenance activities. Typical duties include complex field level repairs and modifications to ground electronics systems, supervision of a maintenance section or shop, coordination of equipment evacuation for repair with other maintenance activities, enforcing quality control measures and effective management of the maintenance cycle to include requisitioning of parts, monitoring maintenance reports and the management of internal shop programs. These technicians also provide technical assistance during the employment and installation of data/radio/satellite communication systems. This MOS is career progression for MOSs 2831, 2841 and 2847. MOS 2862 is assigned upon completion of the Electronics Maintenance Technician Course (M09DSM1). Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC (within their occupational field) that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":616,"code":617,"title":618,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":619,"status":11,"rank":18},"cba0c4dc-2865-430e-8d4d-5ddf05b7305a","2871","Calibration Technician","Calibration Technicians are qualified to perform calibration of mechanical, length, mass, and low complexity electronic Test Measurement and Diagnostic Equipment (TMDE) utilized within the Marine Corps. Additionally, they are also trained to repair, modify, and make adjustments that are routine in nature to TMDE as needed or required while under direct supervision. Typical duties include the calibration and repair of mechanical, length, mass, and low complexity TMDE while adhering to the associated maintenance processes and metrology documentation established within the appropriate references. Journeyman Calibration Technicians are trained to perform the calibration of increasingly complex TMDE and maintenance support equipment. Typical duties include the calibration, troubleshooting, repair, modification, and adjustment of increasingly complex TMDE, advanced level troubleshooting, and repairs of enterprise support equipment. These technicians may also supervise ground maintenance activities which include the execution of maintenance, maintenance administration, MOS skill training, supporting quality control programs, processing shipments of delicate TMDE to/from depot support, and assisting with the deployment/employment of the calibration facility. These technicians assist with the associated maintenance management and metrology requirements outside of a routine nature. Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC (within their occupational field) that has been coded with one or more DoD cyber workforce framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":621,"code":622,"title":623,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":624,"status":11,"rank":18},"5b2ce14d-dd8a-4b88-aeaf-11021b49f664","2874","Metrology Technician","Metrology Technicians are qualified to calibrate the highest precision TMDE utilized within the Marine Corps. These assets may include precision electronic, mechanical, physical, optical, infrared, or laser TMDE, automated test sets, automotive test stands, and laboratory standards through use of higher order measurement standards required by ANSI/ NCSL Z-540-1 (1994). Tasks include providing training to 2871 Marines, safeguarding and reporting of calibration results, maintaining accurate traceability to a higher echelon laboratory, and ensuring compliance with the USMC metrology calibration quality assurance program, MCOs, and other associated DoD Directives. Duties may also include technical evaluation of calibration procedures, monitoring the capabilities of the calibration facility, submission of procedure change requests, and any requested user training in the proper care and operation of TMDE. Metrology Technicians execute and manage the quality assurance program at the laboratory level, communicating directly to the MARCORSYSCOM Quality Assurance Program Manager (QPM) and Laboratory Manager as applicable, implementing best practices that meet the requirements of the Marine Corps Metrology Quality Assurance Program, conducting testing and certification of completion for all MOS 2871s in the managed on the job training continuum, identify collateral duty inspectors, monitor the working environment and output of the laboratory, documenting the results of all quality activities, coordinating and/or conducting annual internal audits of the laboratory, and perform/review all Quality Verification Inspections. In addition, execute the responsibilities of the technical manager which include making technical decisions in the measurement areas based on a thorough understanding of measurement methodologies, validate all technical aspects of laboratory operations, reviewing all calibration problem reports (CPRs) for technical accuracy and completeness before submission, evaluating environmental conditions to determine if calibration results will be impacted, ensure that all equipment used in conjunction with calibrations meet the requirements of the references, evaluate the impact of defective calibration standards on previous calibration results, and make recommendations to the calibration chief and/or laboratory manager for all things related to technical aspects of laboratory operations. Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC (within their occupational field) that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":626,"code":627,"title":628,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":629,"status":11,"rank":18},"13bbbe8f-8db1-43ce-8ac7-4b15ee42629b","2887","Artillery Electronics Technician","Artillery Electronics Technicians are trained to diagnose, modify, align, and perform field level maintenance on Artillery Electronics systems which include target acquisition systems, ground radar systems, acoustic counter fire systems, mobile tactical shelters, artillery meteorological systems, artillery survey systems, digital fire control system, and artillery electronic systems within the fire support modification line. Typical duties include the troubleshooting, parts requisitioning, repair, modification installation, and documentation of work performed for the prementioned systems. Journeyman/Expert technicians supervise troubleshooting, parts requisitioning, repair, modification installation, and maintenance record documentation of work performed, training to PMOS 2887 Marines and quality control.",{"id":631,"code":632,"title":633,"branch":8,"category":197,"description":634,"status":11,"rank":18},"d4179a8b-772d-42e2-8b6e-e12a9d7a7640","2891","Ground Electronics Systems Maintenance Chief","Ground Electronics Systems Maintenance Chiefs perform staff duties in formulating and implementing maintenance plans to support tactical logistics in accordance with MCTP 3-40B. These maintenance chiefs will develop policies and procedures for ground electronics systems maintainers to perform inspection and classification; servicing, adjustment, and tuning; repair; modification; recovery and evacuation; overhauling and rebuilding; and testing and calibration of ground electronics systems equipment and miscellaneous electronics systems used by Marine Corps ground forces. As a senior staff noncommissioned officer in a highly technical field, the Electronics Maintenance Chief is qualified to manage the activities of ground electronics maintenance personnel from diverse maintenance specialties within the MAGTF. Duties may include teaching electronics theory and maintenance best practices, supervising a maintenance shop, writing evaluation test plans, and inspecting units performing electronics maintenance. This MOS is a career progression for Gunnery Sergeants with MOSs 2862 and 2887. Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC (within their occupational field) that has been coded with one or more DoD cyber workforce framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":636,"code":637,"title":638,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":639,"status":11,"rank":12},"0482d761-a9f5-4a3a-8363-654845904379","3002","Ground Supply Officer","Ground Supply Officers are a special staff officer that supervise the commanders' property, plant, & equipment (PP&E) and operating material & supplies (OM&S) to ensure data accuracy, existence, and completeness (equipment accountability, visibility, and auditability). They supervise and coordinate ground supply administration and operations for supply activities, units, bases, or stations, to include operating forces and shore station organizations. Ground Supply Officers may direct the activities of a maintenance distribution or industrial type organization. They command or serve in either an operating forces service unit or a non-operating forces activity. Ground Supply Officers supervise the execution of supply chain management policies and procedures pertaining to procurement; receipt; inventory control; repair; storage; distribution; issue; disposal; and computation and maintenance of stock positioning requirements. They provide supply support insight for operational planning requirements; supervise transportation of supplies and equipment; manage the transmittal of public funds; participate in the budget process, administer, and expend allotted funds; and make necessary recommendations to the commanding officer regarding supply support procedures.",{"id":641,"code":642,"title":643,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":644,"status":11,"rank":24},"dac18d30-320f-4b07-a45a-a6bab4809ec3","3010","Ground Supply Operations Officer","Ground Supply Operations Officers are technical experts who are trained and appointed in writing to supervise and coordinate the technical activities of a supply section of the operating forces or a shore station organization. They may command or serve as a special staff officer. They advise the commander on supply related matters and provide recommended courses of action. They supervise and coordinate the technical aspects of retail (using unit and intermediate) and wholesale-level supply activities in the operating forces, supporting establishments, and with other supporting agencies. They provide the technical knowledge of automated supply systems necessary to ensure timely and accurate processing of supply related ADP systems. They provide liaison between supply sections and supporting data processing activities. They supervise supply chain management to include procurement; receipt; inventory control (i.e. forecasting/ stock determination); storage; distribution; issue; disposal; and computation and maintenance of stock positioning requirements. They supervise the maintenance of subsistence, clothing, ammunition, and inventory control accounts. Ground Supply Operations Officers assist in the budget execution; fund justification; administration and expenditure of allotted funds; and make recommendations to the commanding officer regarding supply support issues. They provide supply support insight for operational planning requirements; supervise transportation of supplies and equipment; manage the transmittal of public funds; participate in the budget process, administer, and expend allotted funds; and make necessary recommendations to the commanding officer regarding supply support procedures.",{"id":646,"code":647,"title":648,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":649,"status":11,"rank":18},"50e14e7a-b180-4a49-ad7d-ece8786d78a9","3043","Supply Chain Specialist","Supply Chain and Materiel Management Specialists perform and monitor management and procedural application of manual or automated inventory control actions. These Marines must be able to design, plan, execute, control, and monitor supply chain activities with the objective of leveraging worldwide logistics, synchronizing supply with demand, measuring performance and facilitating accountability in retail and intermediate inventory activities and units. Additionally, these Marines prepare, maintain and control essential supporting documentation to document major events in capital asset’s lifecycle from acquisition, transference, sub-custody, and final disposition and/or disposal in support of existence and completeness. Advise and provide recommendations to the supply officer on all supply matters.",{"id":651,"code":652,"title":653,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":654,"status":11,"rank":18},"45c8bf90-ff4a-4672-b7ce-067e48e7f86c","3044","Operational Contract Support Specialist","PMOS 3044 is a lateral move into the OCS career field. The PMOS integrates highly qualified enlisted Marines into the acquisition field whose mission is to deploy in support of the full range of military operations, as directed under the department of defense (DoD). Marines serving in this PMOS will be designated members of the Defense Acquisition Workforce and Contingency Contracting Force (CCF), which is governed under references (co) and (cp). Marines in this PMOS are equipped with the contracting fundamentals required to procure supplies and services for operations, exercises, contingencies, natural disasters, foreign training events, garrison environments, and advise senior leaders in business solutions and concepts. Supplies and services will be procured in accordance with governing regulations. Marines in this PMOS must have the ability to communicate effectively in order to interact with other branches of the DoD, civilian and military workforce, the commercial sector, host nations and their workforce. Marines in this PMOS may participate in formal apprenticeship programs leading to a Department of Labor Certificate of Apprenticeship refer to reference (bs) for specific information concerning the united services military apprenticeship program. Overall, Marines are required to operate independently, self-manage workloads, apply sound business management principles, fulfill acquisition workforce continuous learning requirements, and pursue higher education. Marines desiring lateral move into the 3044 MOS must submit a lateral move request in accordance with MCO 4200.34.",{"id":656,"code":657,"title":658,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":659,"status":11,"rank":18},"4572df63-0e83-4176-9a68-5c8497e00ad2","3047","Supply Chain Manager","Supply Chain Managers are required to be proficient in the execution of tactical and non-tactical supply chain programs and operations, some which are unique to the Department of Defense and Service. Supply Chain Managers execute, track, and manage the end-to-end flow of goods and services from the requestor to the receiver. They are required to have a working knowledge of Department of Defense financial systems to budget, track the life cycle funds from obligation to liquidation, and effectively manage an end-to-end supply chain to support both tactical and strategic objectives. Supply Chain Managers perform all functions related to ground supply operations to include customer service support, life cycle management, warehousing, financial management, inventory management, property management, storage operations management and the secondary reparable management program. Additionally, these Marines will be familiar with the impacts of supply chain management to operational-level logistics required to support distributed and expeditionary operations. The Supply Chain Manager provides Commanders with maximum flexibility to tailor and surge supply personnel to priority efforts and high-density projects based on the assigned mission and operational requirements. Supply Chain Managers will advise and support the supply officer on all supply matters. This MOS is a career progression for corporals with MOSs 3043 and 3051.",{"id":661,"code":662,"title":663,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":664,"status":11,"rank":18},"61fe19f8-edf3-457d-8aea-2cf8fa820c99","3051","Inventory Management Specialist","Inventory Management Specialists perform various duties within logistics chain management to include receiving, inspecting, locating, storing, rotating (first in-first out), safekeeping, issuing, preparing, shipping, material return, and disposal of materiel and equipment. These clerks maintain automated or manual locator systems in order to conduct inventories, maintain records of issued durable goods, and monitor shelf-life items; separate and handle hazardous material according to its classification and as indicated by material safety data sheets; input data entry transactions, and retrieval of historical records. They utilize and maintain handheld optical character recognition scanners, devices, and multimedia retrieval systems. These Marines are licensed to operate material handling equipment (MHE) in both garrison and deployed environments as well as operate bulk and small parts conveyer systems used in automated warehousing operations. Marines assigned to this occupational field receive, sort, document, and store inventory as well as prepare, pack, and issue inventory in open, enclosed, and hazardous material storage areas. They will use detailed technical data for the development and execution of a care and storage requirements to include the development of storage space requirements, per weight, cube, and clearance factors by categories of supply.",{"id":666,"code":667,"title":668,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":669,"status":11,"rank":24},"7e19fd40-0488-4f4d-bcae-42d0816752b5","3102","Distribution Management Officer","Distribution Management Officers (DMOs) are technical experts who are trained, certified, and appointed in writing to provide efficient, responsive, and quality transportation services within the assigned area of responsibility and ensure compliance with governing laws, directives, systems or programs, and regulations for cargo, passenger, personal property, and unit moves . They provide technical direction, management, and evaluation of the traffic management and unit movement aspects of the Department of Defense (DoD) transportation movement program on a worldwide basis, subject to the overall guidance, policies, and programs established by United States Transportation Command (USTRANSCOM), the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), and DoD Components. DMOs serve throughout the MAGTF, Headquarters Marine Corps, joint organizations, COCOMs, and supporting establishments. They are responsible for multiple procurement actions, financial documentation, and payment processes for transportation services as governed within authorized policies and applicable U.S. government contracting laws. DMOs make management decisions facilitating the execution of transportation entitlements for military members, dependents, and civilian employees; and act as the contracting officer representative (COR) for various transportation service provider contracts. They provide the technical knowledge of automated information systems which deliver in-transit visibility of DoD unit and non-unit cargo, passengers, and personal property. As subject matter experts, they advise the commander on distribution and transportation related matters, provide recommended courses of action, and articulate current and future strategic distribution management requirements to the appropriate agencies. This MOS is technical in nature and requires years of training, education, and experience to become proficient.",{"id":671,"code":672,"title":673,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":674,"status":11,"rank":18},"82cba6f8-229d-434c-84b9-a07b1f0b5996","3152","Distribution Specialist","Distribution Specialists are educated, equipped, and trained to manage fleet marine force requirements at the tactical, operational, strategic, and enterprise level.  The specialists use Federal, DoD, and service regulations, the defense transportation system (DTS), commercial modes of transportation, and distribution logistic functions to enable optimal selection and procurement of commercial and government-operated land, air, and sea transportation services.  They use a variety of automated systems in the performance of their duties.  Warehousing, rail, motor and air terminal operations, materiel handling, packing, packaging, preservation, and marking are daily operations.  Distribution Specialists perform technical distribution management duties pertaining to movement of civilian and military personnel and their eligible family members both individually and in groups, using all modes of transportation.  This includes planning for troop movements via chartered air, train, or bus, as well as port calls for overseas permanent change of station.  The specialists perform personal property counseling interviews to advise members and eligible family members of their personal property shipping entitlements.  The specialists perform additional operational duties and tasks at military and commercial air terminals.  The specialists perform passport and visa services by counseling members and dependents on required documents, foreign clearance regulations, and by aiding in the preparation and submission of required correspondence to the Department of State and foreign embassies.  This includes preparing all freight shipment documents to manifest cargo and passengers aboard government or commercial chartered conveyances.  At the operational level, specialists perform in-theater sustainment receiving, shipping, in-transit visibility, and distribution functions.",{"id":676,"code":677,"title":678,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":679,"status":11,"rank":12},"42d94fff-815c-4a50-b12d-0519dd09c68d","3302","Food Service Officer","Food Service Officers are special staff officers that supervise and manage the commanders' food service and subsistence program. They act as an interface between the commander and a wide variety of logistics agencies and organizations, while working closely with finance and supply communities to ensure the proper execution and expenditure of MPMC 1105 appropriated funds. Food Service Officers serve as technical advisers to commanders at all levels within the MAGTF, as well as supporting organizations, on the appropriate employment of food service personnel and equipment capabilities. They lead, coordinate, and integrate tailoring actions in support of the Maritime Prepositioning Force (MPF) Program, as well as the Marine Corps Prepositioning Program-Norway (MCPP-N). Food Service Officers ensure that combat feeding platforms are tailored and aligned with maritime expeditionary warfare capabilities throughout the prepositioning network. Food Service Officers plan, direct, coordinate, integrate, execute and/or supervise the execution of operations, and sustain operational forces throughout the conflict continuum for all operations, humanitarian assistance, crisis response activities, contingencies, and exercises. Food Service Officers analyze, translate, and execute commanders’ intent and operational requirements to support mission requirements across the enterprise. When forward deployed and during combat operations, or in support of humanitarian assistance/disaster relief, civil-military operations, distributed maritime operations, or other remote environments where DoD approved food sources are not established, Food Service Officers plan, direct, and coordinate actions with DoD agencies and appropriate medical authorities to ensure safe and hazardous-free food sources are obtained. When assigned to an installation command, Food Service Officers coordinate and manage installation messing and food service support, as well as perform quality control inspections of mess hall operations. They coordinate food service and messing activities at installations, units, bases, and stations, to include operating forces and shore station organizations. They provide technical assistance with the planning, budgeting, procurement, and functional layout of mess hall equipment and furniture. They shape and influence the design of dining facility construction, and rehabilitation projects for food service facilities. They administer the menu development and nutrition awareness program. This MOS is technical in nature and requires years of experience to become proficient. Due to the diversity of commands throughout the Marine Corps, some of the duties and tasks performed by the Food Service Officer may overlap with those of the supply officer and/or logistics officer. Additional billet roles may include assignment as company commander, formal school faculty, acquisition and cross-servicing arrangements (ACSA) manager, requirements development technician in coordination with the Capabilities Integration Officer at CD&I, OccFld specialist, and operations officer.",{"id":681,"code":682,"title":683,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":684,"status":11,"rank":18},"1b103b93-b078-4962-a4bf-a931c0269a0a","3381","Food Service Specialist","Food Service Specialists function in the garrison and field environments in every aspect of food preparation and cooking, program management and administration, procurement, storage, and distribution of subsistence supplies; requisitioning, purchasing, receiving, accountability, rotating (first in-first out), and safekeeping of subsistence supplies, meal activity and consumption reporting. Additionally, they perform various duties within the Class I logistics chain management to include receiving, inspecting, locating, storing, issuing, preparing, shipping, material return, and disposal of materiel and equipment. Food Service Specialists maintain and operate automated information technology systems in order to maintain accountability of all subsistence inventories, input data entry transactions and retrieval of historical records; maintain records of perishable and non-perishable subsistence supplies, maintain record of Class I subsistence issued, and monitor shelf-life items. In support of the maritime prepositioning force (MPF) program and the marine corps prepositioning program-Norway (MCPP-N), they ensure that combat feeding platforms (e.g., combat rations and field feeding equipment) are tailored and aligned with maritime expeditionary warfare capabilities through the prepositioning network. When assigned to an installation food service program office, they perform quality assurance surveillance of food service contracts. The most senior grades act as senior enlisted advisors and administrative assistants to the food service officer/food service operations officer. These specially trained technicians are also responsible for the design and functional layout of expeditionary field feeding sites employed for military operations and humanitarian aid. Marines of the 3381 occupational specialties also provide expeditionary Class I feeding support for marine expeditionary units (MEUs) and airfields.",{"id":686,"code":687,"title":688,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":689,"status":11,"rank":24},"75a84f5e-802d-43b8-adea-fc83647110c3","3402","Finance Officer","Finance Officers serve as agents of the U.S. Treasury and are responsible and pecuniary liable for the disbursement, collection, accounting, and safeguarding of all public funds entrusted to them.  They are responsible for the proper execution and adherence to policies and procedures governing the valid and legal disbursement/collection of public funds.  They are responsible for the maintenance of the payments generated from the master military pay account (MMPA), the computation and payment of travel entitlements, as well as other miscellaneous payments paid to or on behalf of military personnel or the Marine Corps.  They are, as fiscal agents responsible for the timely and accurate reporting of all expenditures and collections into the accounting system.  They are advisors to the local commanders and staffs, in both a garrison and deployed environment, on all matters concerning the technical aspects of military pay and allowances, the disbursement/collection of official funds, and the laws, regulations, and directives governing their duties and other activities of the command.  In garrison, they supervise and direct the operation of the finance office and are responsible for its performance.  When deployed, Finance Officers supervise and direct disbursing detachments in support of the deployed commander and the Disbursing Officer.  They interpret regulations and directives formulating policies and procedures relative to military pay, travel, and fiscal matters within the office and for deployed detachments.  They are responsible for the formulation and adherence to adequate internal controls to govern the operations of finance offices and disbursing detachments.  The appropriate command shall initiate MOS reclassification for any Marine in this MOS who receives NJP or is convicted by court-martial or civilian court for any offense involving larceny; theft; fraud, falsifying financial records; misuse of the government travel charge card (GTCC); or misuse of public funds.  This MOS will be voided only by the authority of CMC.",{"id":691,"code":692,"title":693,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":694,"status":11,"rank":12},"fae8303c-a4b2-4754-a7b4-b67e49649428","3404","Financial Management Officer","Financial Management Officers formulate and supervise the execution of policies and procedures pertaining to the financial management of appropriated funds in the operating forces and supporting activities. The functional areas of assignment are budget formulation and execution, finance, and resource evaluation and analysis.  Budget formulation and execution duties include supervising the operations of a budget office or section, providing guidance for formulation of budgets, compiling budget estimates, and reviewing and monitoring budget performance and execution.  Finance duties include supervising the operations of a finance office or section within a finance office, providing guidance procedures, ascertaining the validity of disbursements and the collection of public funds, and supervising and directing the legal expenditure of public funds.  Resource evaluation and analysis functions may include the evaluation and analysis of resource management issues and problems, workstation inspections, and external audits liaison.",{"id":696,"code":697,"title":698,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":699,"status":11,"rank":24},"564197b7-d313-4710-8bcc-a9407d220760","3408","Financial Management Resource Officer","Financial Management Resource Officers formulate and supervise the execution of policies and procedures pertaining to the accounting for appropriated funds supporting the operating forces and supporting establishment. Specific duties and tasks may include but are not limited to supervision financial management resource offices; advising commanders and comptrollers on technical aspects of accounting policy, procedures and Governmental accounting; maintaining a working knowledge of the Accounting system; identifying and reporting financial systems problems; validating accounting records for accuracy, evaluating and analyzing financial information, performing trend analysis and business process reengineering for effective and efficient use of financial resources; providing financial training to the various stakeholders; tracking accounting system changes and interfaces; performing as liaison with Defense Finance and Accounting Service (DFAS); serving as the financial management system expert, business feeder systems to the accounting system; maintaining a working knowledge of the financial reporting tools.",{"id":701,"code":702,"title":703,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":704,"status":11,"rank":18},"c7eccf70-95e3-40cf-a56c-554f580da9c9","3432","Finance Technician","Finance Technicians perform the duties associated with the maintenance, review, payments processing of master pay accounts, and the fiscal accounting supporting the transactions.  Finance Technicians also perform duties incident to the adjudication, computation, review, and payment of vouchers of reimbursement for official travel.  Finance Technicians staff NCOs supervise subordinates working in master pay accounts and/or official travel payment functions.  Finance Technicians may be assigned to finance offices in either the operating forces or the shore establishment.  Marines serving as Finance Technicians must have a fundamental understanding of related computer system applications.",{"id":706,"code":707,"title":708,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":709,"status":11,"rank":18},"636ff2a9-18ef-4210-b8b5-a31845c2d1b7","3451","Financial Management Resource Analyst","Financial Management Resource Analysts perform accounting, budgeting and all other financial management relevant duties for appropriated funds supporting the operating forces and supporting establishments. Financial Management Resource Analysts duties include the maintenance, monitoring, reconciliation and preparation of official accounting records; general ledger control; related cost accounting; financial systems analysis and any oversight duties typically performed by related cost accounting organizations. Financial Management Resource Analysts enter cost accounting data in business process systems to establish financial data parameters for end users. Financial Management Resource Analysts gather and transform data into information by generating reports and building data models to analyze results and make forecasts. Financial Management Resource Analysts present information to support recommendations for business process improvement, internal controls, and informed decision-making related to financial management. The aforementioned duties require a proficient understanding of all financial management-related system interfaces and associated computer applications.",{"id":711,"code":712,"title":713,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":714,"status":11,"rank":24},"0ab05f7e-f874-4d66-b476-9a70d458ea33","3510","Motor Transport Officer","The Motor Transport Officer plans, coordinates, executes and supervises the execution of all functions of motor transport.  Motor Transport Officers analyze, translate, and execute commander’s operational requirements and intent to support mission requirements at the battalion, squadron, regiment, MSC, MEF and HQMC levels.  As a motor transport subject matter expert, Motor Transport Officers are responsible for:  planning, executing and monitoring tactical wheeled vehicle movements; planning and forecasting of equipment readiness and availability; monitoring and managing motor transport maintenance requirements; advising commanders on motor transport maintenance and operations requirements; management of individual and collective motor transport training; and management of motor transport licensing programs.  Due to the complex technical nature of motor transport, years of experience and training are required to become proficient.  Depending on the unit and grade, Motor Transport Officers can be assigned as a Special Staff Officer, a Motor Transport Platoon Commander, a Motor Transport Maintenance Officer or a combination of all three.",{"id":716,"code":717,"title":718,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":719,"status":11,"rank":18},"c173c853-1521-4c12-8928-8a75496828ac","3521","Automotive Maintenance Technician","The Automotive Maintenance Technician services, inspects, maintains, and repairs motor transport equipment at the field level.",{"id":721,"code":722,"title":723,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":724,"status":11,"rank":18},"f88a5ce4-8cd1-4042-97e3-67554aea8ad7","3529","Motor Transport Maintenance Chief","The Motor Transport Maintenance Chief (MTMC) supervises the maintenance, repair and inspection of motor transport equipment, directs the activities of assigned enlisted personnel in a motor transport maintenance repair shop or facility.  The MTMC assists with all duties and responsibilities under the cognizance of the Motor Transport Maintenance Officer.",{"id":726,"code":727,"title":728,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":729,"status":11,"rank":18},"d7e7e30d-2853-462e-a29d-c607cdd9f0b0","3531","Motor Vehicle Operator","Motor Vehicle Operators inspect, operate, and manage medium and heavy wheeled vehicles in a variety of terrain and weather conditions to transport troops, supplies, and equipment in support of combat and/or garrison operations. Motor Vehicle Operators perform operator/crew level maintenance, maintain required forms, and manage associated tools and equipment of the medium and heavy fleet. Motor Vehicle Operators are only responsible for the management and oversite the operations of light tactical vehicles. Employs land navigation techniques and must be knowledgeable with the operation of radios and weapons when they are mounted on the vehicle. Responsible for convoy security and the tactical employment of the 7.62mm medium machine-gun, the 50-cal machine-gun, and 40mm heavy machine-gun, and their support vehicle during convoy operations. Responsible for the organizations licensing requirements and program management.",{"id":731,"code":732,"title":733,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":734,"status":11,"rank":18},"fce17ff7-1574-432e-8d94-9181ed9531dc","3537","Motor Transport Operations Chief","A Motor Transport Operations Chief is responsible to the commander and assists in the planning, training, licensing, deployment and employment of all operator/crew level maintenance. Also responsible for the planning and execution of motor transport operations, directs the activities of all 353X enlisted personnel in a motor pool, conducts motor vehicles accident/mishap investigations and prepares accident/mishap reports.  The Motor Transport Operations Chief coordinates the preparation and assignment of motor transport personnel/equipment in accordance with the Table of Organization/Table of Equipment of their unit.  The Motor Transport Operation Chief acts as the Fleet Manager, Truck Transportation Coordinator,  and assists with all duties and responsibilities under the cognizance of the Motor Transport Officer.",{"id":736,"code":737,"title":738,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":739,"status":11,"rank":24},"2e0c4857-eeeb-4f15-a2e6-a18409cfc71f","4130","Marine Corps Community Services (MCCS) Officer","MCCS Officers are responsible for myriad of MCCS duties that include managerial staff functions and positions located above the direct program managerial and operational level of individual MCCS programs.  MCCS Officers support planning, organizing, directing, coordinating, and controlling the overall operations of MCCS.  Duties consist of program, fiscal, logistical, and other managerial functions that are required to ensure oversight.  Where authorized by policy, MCCS Officers also serve in direct MCCS program support billets, such as Marine Corps Exchange Supervisors and Managers.  Duties include overseeing and managing daily operations in both a deployed and a garrison environment.",{"id":741,"code":742,"title":743,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":744,"status":11,"rank":18},"df8f371a-e022-42d7-b331-2a8648c98a00","4133","Marine Corps Community Services Marine","Marine Corps Community Services Marines are responsible for myriad of MCCS duties as outlined in the Introduction section above.  They also provide direct customer service and support; perform daily administrative tasking; provide managerial and custodial supervision of personnel, funds, property and merchandise; conduct inventories, purchasing, receiving, storage and issuing inventory/merchandise; and setting up and managing tactical Field Exchanges and other MCCS support services in a deployed environment.",{"id":746,"code":747,"title":748,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":749,"status":11,"rank":12},"702f8b09-681c-4719-a16b-b21b4481b474","4402","Judge Advocate","Judge Advocates provide legal advice and support to commanders, Marines, Sailors, and their families to promote the readiness of the force and contribute to Marine Corps mission accomplishment. As company grade officers, Judge Advocates ordinarily serve as litigators, legal assistance attorneys, victims’ legal counsel, assistant review officers, or command legal advisors. Litigation opportunities exist as trial, defense, and victims’ legal counsel in courts-martial; as Special Assistant United States Attorneys in United States Federal Court; and as recorders, counsel for the respondent, or victims’ legal counsel in administrative discharge boards. Judge Advocates either conduct or supervise investigations into claims for and against the United States and other matters required by regulations. Judge Advocates provide command legal advice on matters including military justice, administrative law, civil law, standards of conduct, ethics, operational law, and international law. As majors, Judge Advocates may serve as staff judge advocates or deputy staff judge advocates and provide command legal advice. Judge Advocate majors may also serve as senior trial counsel, senior defense counsel, or regional victims’ legal counsel at either a legal services support section (LSSS) or a legal services support team (LSST). Lieutenant Colonels may also serve as staff judge advocates, deputy staff judge advocates, regional trial counsel, regional defense counsel, or officers-in-charge of an LSST. Colonels may serve as staff judge advocates or officers-in-charge of an LSSS. All field grade Judge Advocates may serve as military judges after being screened by a judicial screening board. Professional military education and continuing legal education opportunities exist for all Judge Advocates.",{"id":751,"code":752,"title":753,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":754,"status":11,"rank":18},"60fe0535-ef97-48f7-9f92-594c7f8e050f","4421","Legal Services Specialist","The Legal Services Specialist MOS encompasses every facet of legal administration. General duties involve the legal operational, managerial, clerical and administrative duties incident to an LSSS, LSST, or OSJA. Typical duties include research, preparation and typing of general correspondence, forms, reports, wills, powers of attorney, and other documents dealing with legal and quasi-legal matters; checking all completed work for typographic accuracy; maintaining office correspondence files, directives and publications; if senior in grade, will act as the legal services chief and senior enlisted advisor directly responsible to the OIC/SJA for the overall assignment, performance, training, counseling, morale, discipline and welfare of all enlisted personnel. The Legal Services Chief is the active liaison between the command dealing with enlisted policy and duty assignments and advisor to the judge advocates with regard to enlisted instruction and supervision. Selected Marines may attend follow-on training at the Legal Services Court Reporter Course.",{"id":756,"code":757,"title":758,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":759,"status":11,"rank":24},"6c10cef7-273f-4669-86ff-48ac6bf56b7b","4430","Legal Administrative Officer","Legal Administrative Officers are responsible for the administrative and functional management of the business aspects of the provision of legal services support provided by legal services support sections (LSSS) and their subordinate legal services support teams (LSST) to Commanders, Marines, Sailors, retirees, and their dependents.  Legal Administrative Officers function as the principal technical advisor to the Officer in Charge, LSSS on all administrative and financial matters.  Legal Administrative Officers also function in billets as Administrative Law Officers, Trial Administrative Officers, and Post-Trial Administrative Officers.  Administrative Law Officer billets at LSSTs not co-located with the corresponding regional LSSS also  supervise the court reporting function.  Legal Administrative Officers, functioning in their respective billet may monitor, execute, or supervise command inspection programs, administrative claims and investigations, involuntary administrative separation boards, the court-martial post-trial process, budget and fiscal matters, expert witness and court-martial witness production, as well as myriad other legal administrative functions associated with the provision of legal services support that do not require certification as a judge advocate by law or regulation.",{"id":761,"code":762,"title":763,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":764,"status":11,"rank":12},"c6a2c63f-f34a-49e1-9d35-29b785f780db","4502","Communication Strategy and Operations Officer","The Communication Strategy and Operations (COMMSTRAT) officer holds the primary responsibility for communication engagement with all internal and external publics and audiences on behalf of the commander and for the execution of all plans and activities within the functions of Combat Camera (COMCAM) and Public Affairs (PA). The COMMSTRAT officer is the principal advisor to commanders and staffs on communication and visual information matters at all levels and supports all operational planning.  Typical duties include, but are not limited to: developing and synchronizing communication plans; monitoring and assessing the communication aspects of the information environment, to include misinformation/disinformation; identifying audiences, publics and stakeholders; identifying communication issues, risks and opportunities that may affect operations or institutional/command reputation; conducting crisis communication; leading COMCAM and PA missions; developing annexes and appendices to operation plans; engaging with internal, domestic and international publics via traditional news media, social and/or emerging media, and face-to-face communication, to include community and key leader engagement; supervising review and release procedures; directing the development of written and visual information products; conducting communication training to assigned and supporting forces, to include media literacy and social media best practices; serving as the Command Printing Officer; and providing support to recruiting operations.",{"id":766,"code":767,"title":768,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":769,"status":11,"rank":24},"c522b61c-1030-4773-bbe0-8d864ee82646","4503","Visual Information Officer","The Visual Information Officer (VIO) is the 45XX occupational field technical subject matter expert, specifically trained and experienced in the employment of organic visual information systems and training of 45XX personnel in visual information related disciplines. Visual Information Officers are the principal advisor to commanders and Communication Strategy and Operations (COMMSTRAT) Officers on visual information matters at all levels. They mentor the officers and Marines of the unit in all applicable mechanical, doctrinal and conceptual visual information matters, as required, to improve the general effectiveness and proficiency of 45XX personnel. They assist in the development of training, exercises, and employment plans designed to accomplish mission essential tasks, achieve communication objectives and ensure individual and collective Training and Readiness task compliance. They help design and vet the visual information management and production policies and disseminate information to the unit’s personnel regarding such policies. They manage all visual information commodities organic to the unit in order to ensure equipment and unit readiness. They aggregate and quantify reports on the unit’s technical proficiency and readiness. They have oversight of the unit's indoctrination and certification programs.  Additional duties include:  developing annexes and appendices to operations orders; new equipment training; research and integration of emerging technologies and industry standards; vetting of draft training and readiness manuals; and participation in applicable operational advisory groups, course curriculum review boards, training task selections boards, and technology trade shows. This MOS is technical in nature and requires extensive training, education, and experience to become proficient.",{"id":771,"code":772,"title":773,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":774,"status":11,"rank":18},"676d9d57-e99f-455e-9e36-793bb4543297","4512","Combat Graphics Specialist","The Combat Graphics Specialist conceptualizes and creates graphics and layout and design products in both electronic and print formats. These products support communication to internal, domestic and international audiences, commander’s information requirements, and all other operations, garrison, training, and recruiting requirements. Typical duties include, but are not limited to planning and creating graphics and illustration products, conducting layout and design of digital products, writing; tailoring products for different audiences and mediums (print, broadcast, audio visual, web-based, social media, face-to-face, etc.), broadcasting; supporting news media queries and escorts, supporting community engagement programs, executing marketing programs for recruiting, supporting combat investigations and documentation, conducting high-volume printing and finishing in multiple formats and sizes, transmitting and archiving products; creating traditional/ hand-drawn art products, and performing equipment inspections and preventive maintenance.",{"id":776,"code":777,"title":778,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":779,"status":11,"rank":18},"190122ed-cda1-41a7-a07b-d0ff16d38001","4541","Combat Photographer","The Combat Photographer conceptualizes, acquires and produces still imagery products using digital cameras and accessories (e.g., lenses, flashes, night vision devices). These products support communication to internal, domestic and international audiences; commander’s information requirements; and all other operations, garrison, training, and recruiting requirements. Typical duties include, but are not limited to: planning in order to meet communication/operational end state; developing a shot list; acquiring images in studio, field, and combat environments using the principles of photographic composition; selecting and editing images for layout; writing; tailoring products for different audiences and mediums (print, broadcast, audio visual, web-based, social media, face-to-face, etc.); broadcasting; supporting news media queries and escorts; supporting community engagement programs; executing marketing programs for recruiting; supporting administrative, legal, investigation, and combat documentation; conducting photographic finishing, visual and electronic quality control; transmitting and archiving; performing equipment inspections and preventive maintenance.",{"id":781,"code":782,"title":783,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":784,"status":11,"rank":18},"593aea8e-965f-4912-8b12-c5241ecf107f","4571","Combat Videographer","The Combat Videographer conceptualizes, plans, acquires and produces motion imagery products using digital video cameras and editing equipment. These products support communication to internal, domestic and international audiences; commanders’ information requirements; and all other operations, garrison, training, and recruiting requirements. Typical duties include, but are not limited to: planning in order to meet communication/operational end state; developing a story board; acquiring video in studio, field, and combat environments using the principles of video composition; selecting and editing motion imagery; writing scripts; using closed captioning, audio, graphics, and special effects; tailoring products for different audiences and mediums (print, broadcast, audio visual, web-based, social media, face-to-face, etc.); broadcasting; supporting news media queries and escorts; supporting community engagement programs; executing marketing programs for recruiting; supporting administrative videography, legal, investigation, and combat documentation; digitizing and rendering video; conducting visual and electronic quality control; transmitting and archiving; performing equipment inspections and preventive maintenance.",{"id":786,"code":787,"title":788,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":789,"status":11,"rank":18},"a60021fb-c601-48f2-9942-84f3413d5fad","4591","Communication Strategy and Operations Chief","The Communication Strategy and Operations (COMMSTRAT) Chief assists the COMMSTRAT Officer, Visual Information Officer (VIO), and/or COMMSTRAT Planner in communication planning and execution and is proficient in the technical aspects of written and visual communication, to include product development, equipment and equipment management, and software. The COMMSTRAT Chief conducts these activities in support of operations, garrison, training, and recruiting requirements. Typical duties include, but are not limited to employing, training, and deploying 45XX OccFld personnel and equipment, overseeing and supervising daily operations, advising leadership on communication matters, participating in operational, service and communication planning, conducting communication integration and synchronization, engaging with internal, domestic and international audiences via traditional news media, social and emerging media, and face-to-face communication, and supervising the production of communication (written and visual information) products. COMMSTRAT Chiefs serve as enlisted technical advisors and may assume the duties as the COMMSTRAT Officer or VIO in their absence, to include performing the administrative duties normally assigned to those officers. Staff Sergeants will also execute select duties and responsibilities found within the 4512, 4541 and 4571 PMOSs. Marines with the 4511 AMOS earned upon successful completion of a tour as an RS MAC are eligible for future assignment as COMMSTRAT Chiefs at the district and national level within MCRC; a successful tour as an RS MAC is a requirement of those billets.",{"id":791,"code":792,"title":793,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":794,"status":11,"rank":24},"0672db05-1fb9-4a05-98d1-2d38f4937fee","4810","Career Recruiting Officer","A 4810 is a chief warrant officer specifically trained in the training and employment of recruiting personnel ISO the recruiting mission. They are special staff officers employed as a principal advisor to command groups at all levels. They assist in the development of training and employment plans designed to ensure mission attainment. They design and vet recruiting execution and training policies of the command group to help disseminate information to the unit’s personnel regarding such policies. They generate and quantify reports on the unit’s technical and tactical proficiency and brief the unit commander as to where each subordinate unit sits in regards to his/her intent. They mentor the officers and Marines of the unit in all matters as required to improve the general effectiveness and proficiency of the command and all subordinate units.",{"id":796,"code":797,"title":798,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":799,"status":11,"rank":18},"64a35efc-718b-45f2-a19c-b65c0b206b01","4821","Career Counselor","The Career Counselor serves as the commander's primary advisor for enlisted retention matters and is crucial in guiding and assisting enlisted personnel in their career development across Marine Corps enlisted components. The Career Counselor must be thoroughly knowledgeable of the reenlistment process, to include prospecting, reenlistment ceremonies, career information programs, and associated policies. They further provide valuable guidance and support to service members. This MOS will be assigned and voided only by the authority of the CMC (MM).",{"id":801,"code":802,"title":803,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":804,"status":11,"rank":24},"fd2e4105-c206-4de9-a3f3-5d4d83f6148c","5502","Band Officer","MOS 5502 is assigned to Band Officers serving as either the principal or assistant director of a Marine Corps Band. They may serve as the sole Band Officer at a location, dependent on assignment, or as part of a director/assistant director leadership team. Band Officers function as special staff officers of the commanding general by providing information and recommendations on the use, current capabilities, standing procedures, and policies governing the operation of a Marine Corps Band. Band Officers serve as the officer in charge of Marine Corps Bands where they manage, administer, and coordinate musical performances, develop budgets and annual operation plans, direct internal operations and training, and supervise the employment of a Marine Corps Band. Band Officers must also maintain a working knowledge of applicable copyright regulations and directives. Band Officers regularly coordinate and liaise with their local and adjacent commands, higher headquarters, HQMC Communication Directorate, Marine Corps Recruiting Command, and other applicable agencies to provide musical support for community relations and personnel procurement programs.",{"id":806,"code":807,"title":808,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":809,"status":11,"rank":12},"bc707481-d748-4a35-b13a-32eaf34103c6","5505","Director/Assistant Director, The President's Own, U.S. Marine Band","MOS 5505 is assigned to those officers designated by the Secretary of the Navy to command or assist in commanding \"The President's Own\" U.S. Marine Band in providing music and performing such other functions as are directed by the President of the United States and the Commandant of the Marine Corps.",{"id":811,"code":812,"title":813,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":814,"status":11,"rank":12},"b8fca17a-ec22-4fb8-9ea0-93701d447404","5506","Staff Officer, The President's Own, U.S. Marine Band","MOS 5506 is assigned to those officers appointed to serve as the Executive Assistant to the Director or Operations Officer of \"The President's Own\", United States Marine Band.  These officers are permanently assigned to the U.S. Marine Band to assist the Director in the performance of his nonmusical duties and responsibilities.",{"id":816,"code":817,"title":818,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":819,"status":11,"rank":24},"6dccef24-f390-45fc-8cd4-1e63a9d528ee","5507","U.S. Marine Drum and Bugle Corps Officer","A Drum and Bugle Corps Officer manages, administers, and coordinates the musical performance, internal operations, training, and employment of \"The Commandant's Own,\" The U.S. Marine Drum and Bugle Corps (D & B Corps).  As Commanding Officer, Executive Officer, or Operations Officer of the D & B Corps Company, , will discharge applicable company level duties and act as technical advisor to the Commanding Officer of Marine Barracks on all matters pertaining to the utilization of the Drum and Bugle Corps.",{"id":821,"code":822,"title":823,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":824,"status":11,"rank":18},"09b3d25b-30e6-448a-8ee6-31f246532d8c","5511","Member, The President's Own, United States Marine Band","MOS 5511 is assigned to musicians who are enlisted \"for duty with the United States Marine Band only.\" They are appointed to the grade of Staff Sergeant upon their initial 4-year enlistment. These enlistees report directly to the Marine Band, Marine Barracks, Washington, DC for duty. They are permanently assigned to the Band and perform musical duties as an instrumentalist or music related technical duties as a member of the support staff. The Director, U.S. Marine Band recommends MOS 5511 promotions to CMC (MM) to fill T/O vacancies.",{"id":826,"code":827,"title":828,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":829,"status":11,"rank":18},"f38f629b-e1fd-42a9-be84-ea9a8ef284c2","5512","Member, The Commandant's Own, U.S. Marine Drum and Bugle Corps","Drum and Bugle Corps (D&B) Members perform music or music-related duties in support of military ceremonies, official functions, community relations, Marine Corps recruiting, and Marine \"esprit de corps”. A secondary mission of the unit is to augment barracks security in contingency operations in the event of an emergency or combat environment. After completion of recruit training and marine combat training (MCT), Marines report directly to the Commanding Officer, Marine Barracks, Washington, DC for duty with \"The Commandant's Own”, U.S. Marine Drum and Bugle Corps.",{"id":831,"code":832,"title":833,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":834,"status":11,"rank":18},"8ec566a1-c2cb-4d8c-88c1-b538a7e2ce19","5519","Enlisted Bandleader","An Enlisted Bandleader serves as the staff noncommissioned officer in charge of a Marine Corps Band and must possess a thorough understanding of functions internal to the operations of a Marine Corps Band and the policies governing external operations. Enlisted Bandleaders assist and advise the band officer in developing the musical proficiency of the Band, planning and scheduling, and supervising the necessary administrative duties within the musical unit. They are responsible for the operations and training of the band in garrison and in the field and they evaluate the technical proficiency of musicians. They lead the Band in performance, as appropriate, or assist in preparing and leading ensembles at concerts, parades, and various other formations and ceremonies. As such, Enlisted Bandleaders may be assigned assistant director duties such as selecting and rehearsing appropriate music for performance. Enlisted Bandleaders must also maintain a working knowledge of applicable copyright regulations and directives.",{"id":836,"code":837,"title":838,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":839,"status":11,"rank":18},"803ae3c5-2002-426e-a938-c3fe81887d4b","5521","Ensemble Leader","Ensemble Leaders direct, train and manage the musical performances of the full band, both static and on the march, and small ensembles. An Ensemble Leader may be assigned the interchangeable roles as either a drum major or enlisted conductor for Marine Corps Band operations. Ensemble Leaders select and rehearse music for band performances and instruct band personnel in drills specific to bands. They assist and advise the band officer and enlisted bandleader on musical development of the Marines, the implementation of musical protocol in accordance with navy regulations and Marine Corps drill and ceremonies manual, and the coordination of all logistics functions such as messing, billeting, and transportation for band operations. Ensemble Leaders are responsible for additional duties in managing the units organizational and operational administrative functions, or in managing the procurement, inventory and issuing of music library materials, or maintaining historical records of the band. As such, they must possess an overall knowledge of personnel and operational administration procedures and those policies specific to the library functions of a musical unit. Ensemble Leaders must also maintain a working knowledge of applicable copyright regulations and directives.",{"id":841,"code":842,"title":843,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":844,"status":11,"rank":18},"59d9b5de-76d8-4c29-b7c6-e4c62a8cf932","5522","Production Manager","Production Managers lead, train, and manage audio/visual production support for band operations, including employing production equipment for rehearsals, live performances, and in the creation of audio/ visual products. They assist and advise the band leadership on procurement and audio/visual production planning. As such, Production Managers must have a thorough knowledge of production design and execution including the technical aspects of audio reinforcement and recording, stage and studio lighting, video and photo products, and media editing software. Production Managers are responsible for additional duties in the bands marketing and communication section to support directed community relations plans, increase public awareness of the Marine Corps and generate publicity for band performances. Additional internal duties include maintaining band press packages and managing the band's official digital media platforms. They coordinate with local communication strategy and operations office for messaging guidance, cross-training opportunities, and support for where larger production teams may be necessary. Production Managers must maintain a working knowledge of applicable copyright regulations, directives, and respective digital media user policies due to the distribution of finished audio/video products to various digital media outlets.",{"id":846,"code":847,"title":848,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":849,"status":11,"rank":18},"4d80308e-1891-4216-817d-186340920af8","5523","Instrument Repair Technician","Instrument Repair Technicians lead, train and manage equipment support for band operations, and are responsible for inspecting, maintaining, repairing and overhauling all musical equipment assigned to a band. Duties include organizing and maintaining the instrument repair shop according to current occupational safety and health standards; maintaining administrative records and repairs of work performed on musical instruments; and performing preventative maintenance on instrument repair tools and equipment. They perform various duties pertaining to the acquisition and inventory of band equipment and accessories and assist and advise the band officer on budgeting and purchase plans. As such, Instrument Repair Technicians must be knowledgeable and objective in applying purchasing and contracting laws and regulations. Marines in this MOS must have the ability to work independently.",{"id":851,"code":852,"title":853,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":854,"status":11,"rank":18},"dc76d4c2-20f2-4c95-8f9c-ca1e7e4e774f","5524","Musician","Musicians perform in a Marine Corps Band for concerts, parades, ceremonies, and various other official functions in support of the Marine Corps Bands’ mission. Musicians perform additional duties in support of band operations, such as unit supply, unit administrative assistant, and music librarian. Musicians are required to perform preventative maintenance on assigned musical equipment. Additional increased responsibilities relating to music performance are assigned based on grade/experience, such as instrument section leader or leader of a small ensemble. Musicians may be assigned to complete the Live Production Technician Course and be assigned additional duties of sound engineer.",{"id":856,"code":857,"title":853,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":858,"status":11,"rank":18},"5b399fca-7b97-43e8-9954-3fd57f05659d","55XX","Musicians perform on musical instruments in a Marine Corps band in concerts, parades, band drills, honor guards, guard mounts, and various other official functions and ceremonies. Musicians also train or assist in the training of musician personnel, perform other additional duties as required, such as section leader, supply NCO, music librarian, storeroom keeper, arranger, and conduct preventive maintenance for musical equipment.",{"id":860,"code":861,"title":862,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":863,"status":11,"rank":24},"624d18ef-5c2d-43ae-9271-ec5e68fe69d9","5702","Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) Defense Officer","Chemical, Biological, Radiological, And Nuclear Defense (CBRND) Officers are technical advisers for operational and tactical functions associated with CBRN protection, CBRN response, and CBRN support to countering weapons of mass destruction (CWMD). They support an organization’s planning process by providing CBRN subject matter expertise for plans, annexes, orders, and standard operating procedures. CBRND Officers serving in protection billets develop plans to support their commander’s schemes of maneuver under CBRN conditions. CBRND Officers serving in response billets plan and lead CBRND support to the MAGTF and joint forces. CBRND Officers serving in CBRN analysis billets apply subject matter expertise to information and intelligence to develop a threat picture to guide the commanders planning and decision-making cycles. CBRND Officers in senior-level management billets (MEU, MEF, MARFOR) develop plans and advise commanders and staffs on requirements related to activates and requirements to support combatant commander’s CWMD lines of effort and objectives within the supported area of operations. Marines entering this OccFld will initially receive a basic MOS 5701, Basic Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear Defense Officer. Depending on the level of command, CBRND Officers will fill billets as CBRND/CWMD Plans Officer, CBRND Officers, CBRN Protection Officers, or CBRN Response Officers.",{"id":865,"code":866,"title":867,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":868,"status":11,"rank":18},"9e445eb3-d461-4e82-a78e-c3ee5e4b5062","5711","Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear (CBRN) Defense Specialist","CBRN Defense Specialists operate within the unit combat operations center to assist the staff in monitoring unit operations, facilitating warning and reporting, and coordinating CBRN response activities.  CBRN Defense Specialists train personnel to employ individual and organizational CBRN equipment and execute individual survival measures to enable protective actions and sustain operations in a CBRN environment.  CBRN Defense Specialists collect, analyze and provide information relative to CBR exposure status, location of contaminated areas and CBRN defense. Additionally, CBRN Defense Specialists maintain and prepare CBRN defense equipment for embarkation, deployment, and employment.  This MOS is assigned and voided only by the authority of the CMC (MM).",{"id":870,"code":871,"title":872,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":873,"status":11,"rank":18},"8d067b6e-6564-4ee8-9c39-29b947d3db8d","5769","Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) Defense Chief","The CBRN Defense Chief serves as a CBRN defense SME to advise the staff and coordinate CBRN defense, reconnaissance, and decontamination operations. CBRN Defense Chiefs plan, coordinate and monitor the employment of unit CBRN defense, reconnaissance, and decontamination equipment, and attached capabilities, and serve in the unit combat operations center to perform CBRN warning and reporting, and coordinate CBRN response activities. In addition to advising the Commander on the operational and technical functions associated with CBRN defense, CBRN reconnaissance, CBRN response, and CBRN decontamination, senior-level management Marines (MGySgt to MSgt) also advise the commander and staff on events related to supporting countering weapons of mass destruction (CWMD) in support of combatant command lines of effort and objectives within the supported area of operations. CBRN Defense Chiefs at MSC and higher or joint commands are responsible to assist the CBRN Defense Officer with integrating the execution of CWMD in plans, exercises, and operations through organization, training, and planning. They support operations across the spectrum of special operations as fully integrated special staff members in a variety of special operations forces or joint task organized configurations.",{"id":875,"code":876,"title":877,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":878,"status":11,"rank":12},"beddfc13-f427-4db1-a3bd-e6694b27ab95","5803","Military Police Officer","Military Police Officers perform garrison law enforcement duties at supporting establishments (SE) and operating forces (OPFOR) law enforcement duties within Marine Forces Headquarters and within 4th Law Enforcement Battalion, Marine Forces Reserve. Typical duties and billets at the SE include watch commander, services officer, operations officer, deputy provost marshal, and provost marshal. Typical duties and billets at the OPFOR include platoon commander, company commander, operations officer, executive officer, and commanding officer, and law enforcement integrations officer.",{"id":880,"code":881,"title":882,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":883,"status":11,"rank":24},"cb3eb553-26f0-4b94-809d-c06fc8c9845e","5804","Corrections Officer","Corrections Officers interpret, apply and review policies, regulations and directives; oversee the humane care, custody, discipline, safety, welfare, and correctional treatment of personnel confined at military correctional facilities (MCFs); review and recommend treatment programs, custody classification and other security, control and disposition matters related to the confinement or restraint of personnel. They review and make recommendations on clemency, parole and/or restoration to duty requests and other day-to-day requests from confined and restrained personnel. They investigate disturbances and recommend actions regarding discipline and adjustment; research and prepare correspondence and reports. They direct the operational, administrative and logistical activities of a brig regarding personnel administration, supply, training activities, messing, pay and funds accounts, and discipline. Corrections Officers also direct counseling and rehabilitation programs. Corrections Officers also provide commanders with the mission and immediate oversight of regional detention facilities in theater with subject matter expertise on the safe, humane and efficient care of enemy detainees entrusted to their care. Duties and billets include Administration Officer, Programs Officer, Operations Officer, Marine Corps Absentee Collection Center OIC, Detachments OIC, Revocation Hearing Officer, Brig Officer, Executive Officer, and Commanding Officer.",{"id":885,"code":886,"title":887,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":888,"status":11,"rank":24},"b45032ae-74c3-408b-abaa-aff42ceb239e","5805","Criminal Investigation Officer","Criminal Investigation Officers function as the officer in charge of the Criminal Investigation Division (CID), operationally assigned to either a Provost Marshal’s Office (PMO)/Marine Corps Police Department or a deployed/combat unit. Criminal Investigation Officers manage and provide subject matter expertise on criminal investigative operations in both supporting establishment and deployed/ combat contingency environments. Criminal Investigation Officers also liaise and coordinate with local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies on behalf of the Provost Marshal.",{"id":890,"code":891,"title":892,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":893,"status":11,"rank":18},"224474b1-91fd-468b-b068-05b10d163891","5811","Military Police","Military Police perform assigned military law enforcement duties to uphold the criminal justice system, maintain good order and discipline, and support the installation commander's law enforcement and security requirements. Typical installation billets include foot and motorized patrol, traffic management and accident investigator, crime prevention/physical security specialist, patrolman, SRT member, patrol supervisor, watch commander, training chief, services chief, operations chief, and provost sergeant. Typical MARFORRES LE Battalion billets include fire team member/leader, squad leader, platoon sergeant, training chief, operations chief.",{"id":895,"code":896,"title":897,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":898,"status":11,"rank":18},"10210f57-85a3-41d6-a35f-e997f0ac5c03","5821","Criminal Investigator (CID) Agent","Criminal Investigation Division Agents perform criminal investigative duties while operationally assigned to the criminal investigation division (CID), regional trial counsel (RTC), and naval criminal investigative service (NCIS). CID Agents provide criminal investigative support to both supporting establishment law enforcement and deployed/combat contingency operations. CID Agents investigate misdemeanor and felony level crimes that fall within the jurisdictional purview of the DOD, provide technical guidance supervision to junior CID Agents and apprentice investigators, conducts covert operations, personal protective services, crisis negotiations, forensic examinations/exploitation, assists the complex trial teams with trial case preparation, provides subject matter expertise and training to host nations during contingency operations and liaise with other military, local, state and federal law enforcement agencies.",{"id":900,"code":901,"title":902,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":903,"status":11,"rank":18},"37654401-0ef5-441b-b06c-b66b37b4115b","5831","Correction and Detention Specialist","Correctional Specialists guard and provide 24-hour supervision of the daily activities of confined personnel at military correctional facilities (MCFs) to prevent disturbances and escapes. Correctional Specialists perform routine inspections, process personnel for confinement and release, transport prisoners, absentees and deserters; manage prisoner's funds and personal property, observe and report meaningful changes in prisoner behavior, report conduct investigations on infractions of the MCFs published regulations, investigate the whereabouts of military deserters to facilitate their swift return to military control. Corrections Specialist also provide commanders with the capability to execute regional detention facilities in theater with immediate oversight and subject matter expertise on the safe, humane and efficient care of enemy detainees entrusted to their care. Typical duties and billets include escort, dorm supervisor, master control supervisor, mess deck supervisor, duty driver, duty brig supervisor, command investigator, administration chief, programs chief, and operations chief billets.",{"id":905,"code":906,"title":907,"branch":8,"category":197,"description":908,"status":11,"rank":12},"018af051-da12-4470-99de-85f8f16d7874","5902","Electronics Maintenance Officer Aviation Command and Control (C2)","The Electronics Maintenance Aviation Command and Control (C2) Officers supervise and coordinate the installation, operation, and maintenance of all aviation command and control electronic systems and equipment used by the marine air command and control systems (MACCS) units, littoral anti-air battalion, and air traffic control systems at marine corps air stations. Lead communications planner for the MACCS in expeditionary amphibious base operations for ensured command and control during littoral operations in a contested environment. Fleet marine forces billet assignments for this officer will be in the S-6 at the squadron or group level within the marine air control group and the littoral anti-air battalion. Non-Fleet marine forces billet assignments for the Electronics Maintenance Aviation C2 Officers include billets at the Marine Corps Communication-Electronics School, Marine Aviation Training Support Group 23, Training and Education Command, Marine Corps Tactical Systems Support Activity, Acquisition Project Officer at Marine Corps Systems Command, Requirements Officer at Marine Corps Combat Development Command, and occupational manager at Headquarters Marine Corps.",{"id":910,"code":911,"title":912,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":914,"status":11,"rank":24},"2709dd7e-02b0-4e15-8513-821d250b0c28","5910","Aviation Radar Systems Officer","AVIATION","Aviation Radar Systems Officers are specifically trained in the site selection, installation, operation, maintenance, and repair of the surveillance and fire control radar systems within the marine air command and control system (MACCS). Aviation Radar Systems Officers supervise and coordinate all task and maintenance related actions completed by the aviation radar technicians in the radar maintenance section. They assist the commander in coordination and future planning in support of operations and exercises. The Aviation Radar Systems Officer coordinates the execution of current operations and provides garrison support to operations in support of resident and deployed detachments. Fleet marine forces billet assignments for this officer will be in the marine air control group and littoral anti-air battalion. Non-Fleet marine forces billet assignments for the Aviation Radar Systems Officer include training and maintenance officer at the Marine Corps Communication-Electronics School, Maintenance Officer at the Marine Corps Logistics Base, Maintenance Officer at the Marine Corps Tactical Systems Support Activity, Acquisition Project Officer at Marine Corps Systems Command, and Requirements Officer at Marine Corps Combat Development Command. The Aviation Radar Systems Officer should complete the MACCS Warrant Officer’s Course after selection to WO. PMOS is not dependent upon the completion of this course. Upon appointment to warrant officer, PMOS 5910 is assigned.",{"id":916,"code":917,"title":918,"branch":8,"category":197,"description":919,"status":11,"rank":18},"36dc4b1a-58e4-4ccd-9b9a-58ee56d02370","5939","Aviation Communication Systems Technician","Aviation Communication Systems Technicians are qualified to perform/supervise diagnosis, field level repairs, and modifications to communications systems found within selected units of the Marine Air Control Group. Typical duties include installation, operation, performance testing, troubleshooting and repair of voice communications equipment, fiber optic cables, switched local area networks and devices, end-user computers, and system software/firmware for voice communications equipment used within the Marine Air Command and Control Systems (MACCS). Additional duties include supervision of a maintenance section/shop, coordination of equipment evacuation for repair with other maintenance activities, requisitioning of parts, and monitoring maintenance reports. These technicians also provide technical expertise in the planning, employment, and installation of aviation communications systems.",{"id":921,"code":922,"title":923,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":924,"status":11,"rank":18},"6e6b3d30-0de6-4896-91af-dd94a0a4b366","5948","Aviation RADAR Technician","Aviation RADAR Technicians site, install, operate, test, adjust, align, and repair the Marine Air Command Control Systems (MACCS) Air Defense RADAR Systems, and associated Identification Friend or Foe (IFF) equipment. Typical duties include installation, operation, performance testing, and troubleshooting and repair of RADAR equipment, fiber optic cables, switched local area networks and devices, end-user computers, servers, and system software/firmware for RADAR equipment. Additional duties include supervision of a maintenance section/shop, coordination of equipment evacuation for repair with other maintenance activities, requisitioning of parts, and monitoring maintenance reports. These technicians also provide technical expertise in the planning, employment, and installation of Air Defense RADAR Systems.",{"id":926,"code":927,"title":928,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":929,"status":11,"rank":24},"ff86d172-dc63-4e46-a888-eed7a5f76406","5950","Air Traffic Control Systems Officer","Air Traffic Control (ATC) Systems Officers supervise and coordinate the installation, sighting, operation, training, maintenance, and repair of ATC and meteorology and oceanography (METOC) systems and equipment. Must possess a detailed, working knowledge of all Navy sponsored aviation maintenance programs and processes governed by the Naval Aviation Maintenance Program Manual and familiarization with the ground equipment maintenance program. Fleet marine forces billet assignments for this officer will be in the marine air control group. Non-Fleet Marine Forces billet assignments for this officer include maintenance billets at marine corps air stations, marine corps air facilities, and marine corps installation command. The ATC Systems Officer should complete the Marine Air Traffic Control Maintenance Management Course and Joint Aviation Supply and Maintenance Material Management Course after selection to warrant officer. PMOS is not dependent upon the completion of these courses. Upon appointment to warrant officer, PMOS 5950 is assigned.",{"id":931,"code":932,"title":933,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":934,"status":11,"rank":18},"92787552-434e-46c4-bdd5-c43341cf6d2b","5951","Aviation Meteorological Equipment Technician, OMA/IMA","Aviation Meteorological Equipment Maintenance Technicians survey, site, and install meteorological equipment. They process and pack system components for storage or shipment. Make periodic inspections and perform preventive maintenance. Tune, adjust, and align systems for proper operation. Use proper safety procedures in system maintenance and operation. Diagnose and isolate malfunction(s) to the fault, remove and replace the fault, and verify that the malfunction(s) has been corrected. Install, operate, configure, and troubleshoot switched local area networks, devices, end-user computers, and system software/firmware as it relates to meteorological equipment. Maintain tools, support, and test equipment. Assist in maintaining the technical library. Assist in maintaining accountability of all parts of the system, including spare parts, and in requisitioning supplies and spare parts. Maintain necessary records of maintenance and compile data for reports. Assist ATC Maintenance Personnel in MOS 5952, 5953, and 5954. Must possess a working knowledge of applicable Naval Aviation Maintenance Programs.",{"id":936,"code":937,"title":938,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":939,"status":11,"rank":18},"b6345083-b132-40a2-a9b0-8b7d7ef2ebbc","5952","Air Traffic Control Navigational Aids Technician","Air Traffic Control Navigational Aids Technicians survey, site, and install air traffic control navigational aids and instrument landing systems.  Make periodic inspections and perform preventive maintenance.  Tune, adjust, and align systems for proper operation.  Use proper safety procedures in system maintenance and operation.  Diagnose and isolate malfunction to the fault, remove and replace the fault, and verify that the malfunction has been corrected.  Participate in and provide technical assistance during system flight inspections.  Maintain tools, support, and test equipment.  Assist in maintaining the maintenance technical library.  Assist in maintaining accountability of all parts of the system, including spare parts, and in requisitioning supplies and spare parts.  They process and pack system components for storage or shipment.  Train subordinates or less qualified personnel.  Maintain necessary records of maintenance and compile data for reports.  Assist Air Traffic Control Maintenance Personnel in MOS 5951, 5953, and 5954.  Must possess a working knowledge of applicable Naval Aviation Maintenance Programs.",{"id":941,"code":942,"title":943,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":944,"status":11,"rank":18},"64cae131-69eb-4b11-a14f-2b38f0037abb","5953","Air Traffic Control RADAR Technician","Air Traffic Control RADAR Technicians survey, site, and install air traffic control precision approach and surveillance radar systems.  Make periodic inspections and perform preventive maintenance.  Load operational software, tune, adjust, and align systems for proper operation.  Use proper safety procedures in system maintenance and operation.  Diagnose and isolate malfunction to the fault, remove and replace the fault; and verify that the malfunction has been corrected.  Participate in and provide technical assistance during system flight inspections.  Maintain diagnostic and operational tapes, tools, support, and test equipment.  Assist in maintaining the maintenance technical library.  Assist in maintaining accountability of all parts of the system including software, spare parts, and in requisitioning supplies and spare parts.  Process and pack system components for storage or shipment.  Train subordinates or less qualified personnel.  Maintain necessary records of maintenance and compile data for reports.  Assist Air Traffic Control Maintenance Personnel in MOS 5951, 5952 and 5954.  Must possess a working knowledge of applicable Naval Aviation Maintenance Programs.",{"id":946,"code":947,"title":948,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":949,"status":11,"rank":18},"9e7187cb-4c97-4c59-a837-3c58c46028f9","5954","Air Traffic Control Communications Technician","Air Traffic Control Communications Technicians survey, site, and install air traffic control communications systems. Make periodic inspections and perform preventive maintenance. Tune, adjust, and align systems for proper operation. Use proper safety procedures in system maintenance and operation. Diagnose and isolate malfunction to the fault, remove and replace the fault, and verify that the malfunction has been corrected. Participate in and provide technical assistance during system flight inspections. Maintain tools, support, and test equipment. Assist in maintaining the maintenance technical library. Assist in maintaining accountability of all parts of the system, including spare parts, and in requisitioning supplies and spare parts. They process and pack system components for storage or shipment. Train subordinates or less qualified personnel. Maintain necessary records of maintenance and compile data for reports. Assist Air Traffic Control Maintenance Personnel in MOS 5951, 5952 and 5953. Must possess a working knowledge of applicable Naval Aviation Maintenance Programs.",{"id":951,"code":952,"title":953,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":954,"status":11,"rank":18},"603c85a1-5c3b-452f-bd29-bb76125ff468","5955","Ground Control Station Technician","Ground Control Station Technicians oversee daily maintenance production, equipment installation, programing, upgrading, and troubleshooting on Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) Ground Control Station (GCS) and peripheral Command and Control equipment for the MQ-9 aircraft. Technicians provide organizational level technical support to facilitate secure and unsecure, local, and remote flight operations as well as flight safety, and data collection and dissemination to higher headquarters and combatant commanders. Technicians are required to ensure all pertinent cyber security and information security measures are met in accordance with local and higher headquarters instructions. Technicians are also required to coordinate with commercial and military Satellite Communication (SATCOM) Providers to ensure a seamless, on time, secured data link between aircrew and aircraft. Additional duties include supervision of a maintenance section/shop, coordination of equipment evacuation for repair with other maintenance activities, requisitioning of parts, and monitoring maintenance reports. These technicians also provide technical expertise in the planning, employment, and installation of aviation communications systems.",{"id":956,"code":957,"title":958,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":959,"status":11,"rank":18},"a4fda913-e424-4805-af3e-213666112630","5959","Air Traffic Control Systems Maintenance Chief","Air Traffic Control Systems Maintenance Chiefs supervise, coordinate, and instruct enlisted personnel in the performance of air traffic control maintenance functions.  Provide information concerning the capabilities, limitations, and reliability of air traffic control systems and equipment.  Instruct operation and maintenance of air traffic control systems.  Perform staff support duties in formulating and implementing maintenance and supply plans, provisioning air traffic control systems, and preparing publications and training materials.  Supervises surveying, siting, installation, modification, and maintenance tasks.  Supervise Air Traffic Control Maintenance Personnel in MOSs 5951, 5952, 5953, and 5954.  Must possess a working knowledge of applicable Marine Corps Ground Equipment and Naval Aviation Maintenance Programs.",{"id":961,"code":962,"title":963,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":964,"status":11,"rank":24},"5e68cbb4-51c2-4e39-b473-33eb16e71725","5970","Tactical Data Systems Officer","Tactical Data Systems (TDS) Officers supervise and coordinate the siting, installation, operation, training, maintenance, and repair of Aviation Command and Control (AC2) Tactical Data Systems (TDS) within the Marine Air Command and Control System (MACCS).  The TDS Officer provides the commander with expert technical advice regarding the employment, security, installation, and performance of AC2 TDS infrastructure within service, joint, coalition, and garrison environments.  Must possess a detailed working knowledge of all voice and tactical data communications systems found within the Marine Air Control Group.  Fleet Marine Forces billet assignments for this officer will be in the Marine Air Control Group.  Non-Fleet Marine Forces billet assignments for the Tactical Data Systems Officer include Training and Maintenance Officer at the Marine Corps Communication-Electronics School, TDS Maintenance Officer at the Marine Corps Tactical Systems Support Activity, and Acquisition Project Officer at Marine Corps Systems Command.  The Tactical Data Systems Officer should complete the MACCS Warrant Officer course after selection to Warrant Officer.  PMOS is not dependent upon the completion of this course.  Upon appointment to Warrant Officer, PMOS 5970 is assigned.",{"id":966,"code":967,"title":968,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":969,"status":11,"rank":18},"2352fa94-440c-46cf-8899-2c48993a0fc0","5974","Tactical Data Systems Technician","Tactical Data Systems Technicians are qualified to perform/ supervise diagnosis, field level repairs, and modifications to communications data systems found within selected units of the Marine Air Control Group. Typical duties include installation, operation, configuration, troubleshooting, and repair of fiber optic cables, switched local area networks and devices, end-user computers, servers, virtual systems and servers, and system software/firmware for equipment used within the Marine Air Command and Control Systems (MACCS). Additional duties include supervision of a maintenance section/shop, coordination of equipment evacuation for repair with other maintenance activities, requisitioning of parts, and monitoring maintenance reports. These technicians also provide technical expertise in the planning, employment, and installation of aviation command and control systems. Marines in this MOS may be assigned to a BIC [within their occupational field] that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework (DCWF) work role codes. Please reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with these work role codes.",{"id":971,"code":972,"title":973,"branch":8,"category":197,"description":974,"status":11,"rank":18},"68691310-1af6-4187-bbdc-a6117aeae755","5979","Tactical Air Operations/Air Defense Systems Technician","Air Defense Systems Technicians are qualified to perform and/or supervise the diagnosis, field-level repair, and modifications to electronic systems and sub-systems found within selected units within the Marine Air Control Group and the Marine Littoral Regiment. Typical duties include the installation, operation, troubleshooting, and maintenance of the MADIS air defense RADAR systems (active and passive), radio communications equipment, Tactical Data Link (TDL) equipment, networking and data storage devices, and software/firmware configuration for Ground Based Air Defense (GBAD) equipment. These duties can be executed as part of a crew construct as the System Configuration Manager or as part of a maintenance platoon. Additional duties include the operation of TDLs, supervision of a maintenance platoon, coordination of equipment evacuation for repair with other maintenance activities, requisitioning of parts, and monitoring maintenance reports. These technicians also provide technical expertise in planning, employing, installing, and integrating aviation command and control systems.",{"id":976,"code":977,"title":978,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":979,"status":11,"rank":18},"d7f09df3-5d4d-4eb9-9520-50dec69d49d6","5993","Electronics Maintenance Chief (Aviation (C2))","Electronics Maintenance Chiefs (Aviation (C2)) supervise, coordinate, and instruct enlisted personnel in the operation and maintenance of Marine Air Command and Control Systems (MACCS). Provide information concerning the employment, capabilities, limitations, and reliability of the MACCS and other equipment. Perform staff support duties in formulating and implementing maintenance and supply plans, provisioning the MACCS, and preparing publications and training materials. Supervises surveying, siting, installation, modification, and maintenance tasks. Supervise Maintenance Personnel in MOSs 5939, 5948, 5974, and 5979. Must possess a detailed, working knowledge of all applicable Marine Corps and Navy maintenance programs.",{"id":981,"code":982,"title":983,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":984,"status":11,"rank":12},"b40d4eff-9047-4deb-a7f4-aae23a1d4388","6002","Aircraft Maintenance Officer","Aircraft Maintenance Officers (AMOs) supervise and coordinate aircraft maintenance and repair activities. To be effective, 6002 AMOs must possess a detailed, working knowledge of all Navy-sponsored aviation maintenance programs and processes governed by CNAFINST 4790.2 series. MOS 6002 AMOs are different from MOS 6004, Aircraft Maintenance Engineer Officers in that they are unrestricted officers whose career paths can lead to the command of a Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron (MALS) or to designation as an Acquisition Professional.",{"id":986,"code":987,"title":988,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":989,"status":11,"rank":12},"b5b39e01-d6ed-45fa-a1c4-68849e4ad683","6004","Aircraft Maintenance Engineer Officer","Aircraft Maintenance Engineer Officers (AMEOs) are responsible for management of aircraft maintenance and aeronautical repair matters.  To be effective, AMEOs must possess a detailed, working knowledge of all Navy sponsored aviation maintenance programs and processes governed by reference (af).  AMEOs must possess skills in managing resources with emphasis on efficient personnel employment, maintaining equipment readiness, and exercise/deployment planning.  A high level of technical expertise is required to manage the execution of tasks within aviation maintenance. A small population of AMEO's are placed throughout Marine Corps aviation, complementing the talents of the MOS 6002 population.  Unlike the 6002, whose career path and school may lead to command, the 6004 will remain focused on the technical, procedural, planning and managerial details associated with organizational and intermediate level maintenance in support of shore based, sea based, and  expeditionary operations.  Warrant Officers and Junior Chief Warrant Officers generally serve in flying squadrons while more Senior Chief Warrant Officers generally serve as Division Officers within the Marine Aviation Logistic Squadron (MALS). While the minimum requirements in paragraph b. serve as a threshold, a range of characteristics indicating management knowledge exist including: training and documented management knowledge/skill. Management experience in organizational and intermediate levels both provide solid backgrounds for this restricted officer MOS as the task of an AMEO is to plan and solve complex management problems and not to have specific knowledge of repairing any one equipment or aircraft type.  Applicants with both organizational and intermediate level maintenance experience are considered ideal candidates for appointment to MOS 6004 Limited Duty Officer (LDO).  MOS 6004 shall not be assigned as a secondary MOS.",{"id":991,"code":992,"title":993,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":994,"status":11,"rank":18},"4db193f4-1b54-48de-a4eb-23a227be04e6","6019","Aircraft Maintenance Chief","Aircraft Maintenance Chiefs are directly responsible to the Commanding Officer for the establishment and sustainment of all maintenance areas and functions within a fixed-wing, rotary-wing, tilt-rotor, and aviation logistics squadron or repair facility.  Their leadership and expertise are essential to the success of the unit.  They are the Senior Enlisted Maintenance Advisors to the Commanding Officer (CO) for all maintenance Marines’ qualifications and professional development.  They report to the Aircraft Maintenance Officer (AMO) on all matters affecting aircraft maintenance and maintenance personnel.  They assist in the planning, management, supervision, and execution of all scheduled and unscheduled maintenance and flight operations.",{"id":996,"code":997,"title":998,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":999,"status":11,"rank":18},"9fa0409b-2068-4f09-8b64-64f6cf1d55cc","6042","Aviation Support Equipment Asset Manager","Aviation Support Equipment (SE) Asset Managers manage assets under the cognizance of the aircraft maintenance material readiness list (AMMRL) program, the F-35 lightning II program joint fleet management plan, and the United States marine corps F-35 integrated sustainment plan. They are responsible for SE physical and administrative inventory accountability, fleet management, and requirements validation utilizing the Department of Navy’s Support Equipment Management System (SEMS), and the F-35 lightning II joint program office’s lighting II support equipment management system (LSEMS). They manage SE assets at the organizational and intermediate levels of maintenance via the O-level squadrons, marine aviation logistics squadrons (MALS), marine aircraft wings (MAW), type commander (TYCOM) and naval air systems command support equipment controlling authorities (SECA), marine forces commands (MARFORs), and Headquarters Marine Corps (HQMC). They use logistical management techniques, supply chain procedures, technical publications, automated data processing equipment to conduct, reconcile, and report SE asset inventories; acquire and dispose of SE assets; train subordinate SE asset managers, validate requirements, conduct liaison with the SECA, and inform higher headquarters or adjacent commands on applicable SE management policies or aviation logistics strategy and plans.",{"id":1001,"code":1002,"title":1003,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1004,"status":11,"rank":18},"6eedc536-b595-408a-ad45-233a7fc469f9","6046","Aviation Maintenance Data Specialist","Aviation Maintenance Data Specialists maintain electronic aeronautical records within a computerized maintenance management system. They receive, compile, and record aeronautical component information from maintenance work orders and aircraft diagnostic systems to provide up to date information for maintenance scheduling. This includes the receipt and/or transfer of aircraft, engines, and tracked repairable components. Screening includes updating change management, engineering change proposals, and modifications for applicability to assigned aeronautical equipment. Responsibilities include tracking of naval aircraft flight record flight information and smart aircraft portable memory devices to maintain up to date usage for applicable equipment. In addition, Aviation Maintenance Data Specialist will initiate, maintain, close out, and reinitiate aeronautical component records. They maintain records on components that have service life limits and will monitor accumulations of forced removal items per engineering usage standards. Aviation Maintenance Data Specialist are required to prepare maintenance data reports and correspondence within aircraft maintenance and repair activities. They are also responsible for trend interpretation/analysis in support of aviation readiness reporting requirements to aid maintenance leadership and logisticians in the performance of aviation maintenance related tasks.",{"id":1006,"code":1007,"title":1008,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1009,"status":11,"rank":18},"bddef231-a5ae-4de9-8899-f294ce3f8979","6048","Flight Equipment Technician","Flight Equipment Technicians inspect, maintain, and repair parachutes; flight survival equipment; flight equipment; carbon dioxide, and gaseous and liquid oxygen equipment.",{"id":1011,"code":1012,"title":1013,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1014,"status":11,"rank":18},"e3bebef1-dc5e-48a0-bae1-2a093c8e0c62","6062","Aircraft Intermediate Level Hydraulic/Pneumatic Mechanic","Aircraft Intermediate Level Hydraulic/Pneumatic Mechanics inspect, maintain, and repair aircraft intermediate level hydraulic/pneumatic system components.",{"id":1016,"code":1017,"title":1018,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1019,"status":11,"rank":18},"9fb7d893-09db-4360-a547-ece7299d50f1","6073","Support Equipment Electrician/Refrigeration and Engine/Gas Turbine Technician","Support Equipment Electrician/Refrigeration and Engine/Gas Turbine Technicians inspect, test, maintain, and repair aircraft support equipment (SE), electricial/refrigeration and engine/gas turbine systems and systems components.  Perform duties related to the operation of support equipment.  Perform duties related to the licensing of aircraft maintenance personnel in the operation of support/special support equipment.",{"id":1021,"code":1022,"title":1023,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1024,"status":11,"rank":18},"6362e773-af00-4a87-a476-642b6e26d63f","6074","Cryogenics Equipment Operator","Cryogenics Equipment Operators assemble, operate, and maintain liquid oxygen/nitrogen generating plants, storage and aircraft servicing equipment, vaporizing equipment, vacuum pumps, and LOX tank purging units.  They operate and maintain purity analysis test equipment to ensure product acceptability.",{"id":1026,"code":1027,"title":1028,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1029,"status":11,"rank":18},"c3dcfd8d-3ccb-4754-a9f3-72dd3438d02f","6092","Aircraft Intermediate Level Structures Mechanic","Aircraft Intermediate Level Structures Mechanics inspect, maintain, and repair aircraft intermediate level structural components.",{"id":1031,"code":1032,"title":1033,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1034,"status":11,"rank":18},"ed32d4c5-56ae-4b60-9cec-5cd803333e24","6113","Helicopter Mechanic, CH-53","Helicopter Mechanic, CH-53; inspect, service, maintain, and repair power plants, transmissions, drivetrains, fuel systems, flight control systems, and rotor systems.",{"id":1036,"code":1037,"title":1038,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1039,"status":11,"rank":18},"b85e78b9-dece-48e1-b737-a1509f5a9977","6114","Helicopter Mechanic, UH/AH-1","Helicopter Mechanics, UH/AH-1; inspect, service, maintain, and repair power plants, transmissions, drivetrains, fuel systems, flight control systems, and rotor systems.",{"id":1041,"code":1042,"title":1043,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1044,"status":11,"rank":18},"0adc9599-57e7-4342-ae0d-247f0556e43a","6116","Tiltrotor Mechanic, MV-22","Tiltrotor Mechanics, MV-22; inspect, service, maintain, and repair power plants, transmissions, drivetrains, fuel systems, flight control systems, and rotor systems.",{"id":1046,"code":1047,"title":1048,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1049,"status":11,"rank":18},"e137531c-15df-4180-abd3-78933300c672","6123","Helicopter Power Plants Mechanic, T-64","Helicopter Power Plants Mechanics, T-64; inspect, maintain, test, repair, and perform complete repair of helicopter power plants and power plants systems.",{"id":1051,"code":1052,"title":1053,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1054,"status":11,"rank":18},"6f627d3c-221d-48d6-bbc5-c40abba2b279","6124","Helicopter Power Plants Mechanic, T-400/T-700","Helicopter Power Plants Mechanics, T-400/T-700; inspect, maintain, test, repair, and perform complete repair of helicopter power plants and power plants systems.",{"id":1056,"code":1057,"title":1058,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1059,"status":11,"rank":18},"b46984ed-0075-46cb-a063-c20cf7f579aa","6132","Helicopter/Tiltrotor Dynamic Components Mechanic","Helicopter/Tiltrotor Dynamic Components Mechanics inspect, maintain, test and repair helicopter/tiltrotor dynamic components.",{"id":1061,"code":1062,"title":1063,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1064,"status":11,"rank":18},"b1c1765d-db06-4b2c-bdd2-a49630705066","6153","Helicopter Airframe Mechanic, CH-53","Helicopter Airframe Mechanics, CH-53; inspect, service, maintain, and repair aircraft airframe structures, composite material, hydraulic systems, and landing gear systems.",{"id":1066,"code":1067,"title":1068,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1069,"status":11,"rank":18},"fe05ac59-0c37-4e80-a4e3-c60aa5813924","6154","Helicopter Airframe Mechanic, UH/AH-1","Helicopter Airframe Mechanics, UH/AH-1; inspect, service, maintain, and repair aircraft airframe structures, composite material, and hydraulic systems.",{"id":1071,"code":1072,"title":1073,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1074,"status":11,"rank":18},"054e4306-63f8-4641-9229-dbc5ead4ae3d","6156","Tiltrotor Airframe Mechanic, MV-22","Tiltrotor Airframe Mechanics, MV-22; inspect, service, maintain, and repair aircraft airframe structures, composite material, landing gears, and hydraulic systems.",{"id":1076,"code":1077,"title":1078,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1079,"status":11,"rank":18},"64a3cd7f-beb0-48ea-8946-5df5701d9ae3","6173","Helicopter Crew Chief, CH-53","Helicopter Crew Chiefs, CH-53; are flight crew members who, when assigned to the flight schedule, are responsible to the pilot in command while in operation of the aircraft and associated mission/weapons systems.  When not assigned to the flight schedule they report to their respective work center within the maintenance department where they inspect, service, maintain, and repair power plants, transmissions, drivetrains, fuel systems, flight control systems, and rotor systems.",{"id":1081,"code":1082,"title":1083,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1084,"status":11,"rank":18},"63791e1c-800c-4fb9-b361-9a302b595f7d","6174","Helicopter Crew Chief, UH-1","Helicopter Crew Chiefs, UH-1; are flight crew members who, when assigned to the flight schedule, are responsible to the pilot in command while in operation of the aircraft and associated mission/weapons systems.  When not assigned to the flight schedule they report to their respective work center within the maintenance department where they inspect, service, maintain, and repair power plants, transmissions, drivetrains, fuel systems, flight control systems, and rotor systems.",{"id":1086,"code":1087,"title":1088,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1089,"status":11,"rank":18},"07cb8d69-6551-4896-b37e-09f71f7a9f88","6176","Tiltrotor Crew Chief, MV-22","Tiltrotor Crew Chiefs, MV-22 are flight crew members who, when assigned to the flight schedule, are responsible to the pilot in command while in operation of the aircraft and associated mission/weapons systems. When not assigned to the flight schedule they report to their respective work center within the maintenance department where they inspect, service, maintain, and repair power plants, transmissions, drivetrains, fuel systems, and rotor systems.",{"id":1091,"code":1092,"title":1093,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1094,"status":11,"rank":18},"e23dbfc0-274a-41a3-a1ea-3538f7ec31ac","61XX","Aircraft Maintenance (Rotary-Wing)","The aircraft maintenance (rotary wing) mechanics provide direct and indirect support to inspect, maintain, test and repair helicopter/tiltrotor airframes and airframe components, dynamic components, power plants and power plant systems and to perform duties relating to flight line operation.",{"id":1096,"code":1097,"title":1098,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1099,"status":11,"rank":18},"4a06c705-eaf8-4884-b7a4-b0df0be14fed","6212","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Mechanic, AV-8/TAV-8","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Mechanics, AV-8/TAV-8 inspect, service, maintain, and repair aircraft airframes, airframe components, power plants, transmissions, fuel systems, and perform duties relating to flight line operations.",{"id":1101,"code":1102,"title":1103,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1104,"status":11,"rank":18},"0198f89b-ca5e-422e-83ca-5604e4e1f6ad","6214","Unmanned Aircraft Mechanic, MQ-9","Unmanned Aircraft Mechanic, inspect, service, maintain, and repair aircraft airframes, airframes components, airframe structures, composite material, power plants, transmissions, fuel systems, pneumatic systems, hydraulic systems, landing gear systems, and perform duties relating to flight line operations.",{"id":1106,"code":1107,"title":1108,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1109,"status":11,"rank":18},"9678495e-5688-45b6-9625-38f8788e6b2d","6216","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Mechanic, KC-130","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Mechanics, KC-130; inspect, service, maintain, and repair aircraft airframes, airframe components, power plants, transmissions, fuel systems, and perform duties relating to flight line operations.",{"id":1111,"code":1112,"title":1113,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1114,"status":11,"rank":18},"a0f9b75c-7575-44f1-83c7-befe945325a0","6217","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Mechanic, F/A-18","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Mechanics, F/A-18; inspect, service, maintain, and repair aircraft airframes, airframe components, power plants, transmissions, fuel systems, and perform duties relating to flight line operations.",{"id":1116,"code":1117,"title":1118,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1119,"status":11,"rank":18},"8d1112c3-6abb-4fa3-80d1-320cb5d8e09c","6218","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Mechanic, F-35","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Mechanics, F-35 inspect, service, maintain, and repair aircraft airframes, airframe components, power plants, transmissions, fuel systems, and perform duties relating to flight line operations.",{"id":1121,"code":1122,"title":1123,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1124,"status":11,"rank":18},"a53155fc-7ebb-47cc-bad6-e17701e2da73","6222","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Power Plants Mechanic, F-402","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Power Plants Mechanics, F-402, inspect, maintain, test, repair, and perform complete repair of aircraft power plants and power plant systems.",{"id":1126,"code":1127,"title":1128,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1129,"status":11,"rank":18},"5cfcd6de-3533-4eb7-85dd-7fa07519fbae","6223","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Power Plants Mechanic, J-52","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Power Plants Mechanics, J-52; inspect, maintain, test, repair, and perform complete repair of aircraft power plants and power plant systems.",{"id":1131,"code":1132,"title":1133,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1134,"status":11,"rank":18},"1e19f1b5-3479-42b9-896e-44201e8283b1","6227","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Power Plants Mechanic, F-404","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Power Plants Mechanics, F-404 inspect, maintain, test, repair, and perform complete repair of aircraft power plants and power plant systems.",{"id":1136,"code":1137,"title":1138,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1139,"status":11,"rank":18},"a5d9149b-853c-4f00-95a0-b811414cb569","6252","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Airframe Mechanic, AV-8/TAV-8","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Airframe Mechanics, AV-8/TAV-8 inspect, service, maintain, and repair aircraft airframe structures, composite material, hydraulic systems, pneumatic systems, and landing gear systems.",{"id":1141,"code":1142,"title":1143,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1144,"status":11,"rank":18},"98cf5f52-24a3-455c-9bb7-71b789da865e","6256","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Airframe Mechanic, KC-130","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Airframe Mechanics, KC-130, inspect, service, maintain, and repair aircraft airframe structures, composite material, hydraulic systems, pneumatic systems, and landing gear systems.",{"id":1146,"code":1147,"title":1148,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1149,"status":11,"rank":18},"c264df01-458b-485b-8adb-439d5cfc8ffa","6257","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Airframe Mechanic, F/A-18","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Airframe Mechanics, F/A-18; inspect, service, maintain, and repair aircraft airframe structures, composite material, hydraulic systems, pneumatic systems, and landing gear systems.",{"id":1151,"code":1152,"title":1153,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1154,"status":11,"rank":18},"c64a383d-b2aa-4baf-b322-8b749e27cb56","6258","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Airframe Mechanic, F-35","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Airframe Mechanics, F35 inspect, service, maintain, and repair aircraft airframe structures, composite material, hydraulic systems, pneumatic systems, and landing gear systems.",{"id":1156,"code":1157,"title":1158,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1159,"status":11,"rank":18},"f13ab1dc-564d-429f-b101-509e30064e47","6276","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Loadmaster, KC-130","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Loadmaster, KC-130; are mission essential flight crew members who are responsible for aircraft preparation and configuration prior to, during, after and between missions.",{"id":1161,"code":1162,"title":1163,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1164,"status":11,"rank":18},"65a56b72-1b68-4ec1-b20c-300b1dc7fa81","6282","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Safety Equipment Mechanic, AV-8/TAV-8","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Safety Equipment Mechanics, AV-8/TAV-8; inspect, maintain, and repair aircraft centered safety equipment and systems.",{"id":1166,"code":1167,"title":1168,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1169,"status":11,"rank":18},"668182a5-128b-4141-b518-9517c4fdbc40","6286","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Safety Equipment Mechanic, KC-130/V-22","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Safety Equipment Mechanics, KC-130/V-22; inspect, maintain, and repair aircraft centered safety equipment and systems.",{"id":1171,"code":1172,"title":1173,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1174,"status":11,"rank":18},"d44429e9-ddae-4276-913a-00f7843b6b5b","6287","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Safety Equipment Mechanic, F/A-18","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Safety Equipment Mechanics, F/A-18; inspect, maintain, and repair aircraft centered safety equipment and systems.",{"id":1176,"code":1177,"title":1178,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1179,"status":11,"rank":18},"508783bf-6bc4-4b95-ab9a-fec993534920","6288","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Safety Equipment Mechanic, F-35","Fixed-Wing Aircraft Safety Equipment Mechanic, F-35 inspect, maintain, and repair aircraft centered safety equipment and systems.",{"id":1181,"code":1182,"title":1183,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1184,"status":11,"rank":18},"4c88fc90-2f42-4907-b3c5-73daf79cd1ae","62XX","Aircraft Maintenance (Fixed-Wing)","The aircraft maintenance (fixed wing) mechanics inspect, maintain, test and repair aircraft airframes and airframe components, hydraulic/pneumatic and structure systems, safety equipment and systems power plants and power plant systems and perform duties relating to flight line operations.",{"id":1186,"code":1187,"title":1188,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1189,"status":11,"rank":24},"0e0037c3-afa2-4995-b753-65cf39e41e2a","6302","Avionics Officer","Avionics Officers (AVOs) direct the avionics department’s effort at the organizational and intermediate maintenance levels to provide the maximum support, coordination, and leadership in support of the organizational/intermediate level mission in the respective areas of aircraft maintenance, avionics equipment maintenance, integrated logistics resource management, and professional personnel development. AVOs are the subject matter experts on all avionics related matters and serve as the staff adviser to the commanding officer and other staff officers throughout the organization. The AVO is directly responsible to the commanding officer for the management, administration and control of the electronic countermeasures, aircraft survivability equipment and electronic key management system programs.",{"id":1191,"code":1192,"title":1193,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1194,"status":11,"rank":18},"55b93446-3041-4c04-9107-4c63213e78dc","6314","Avionics/Maintenance Technician, Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS)","Avionics/Maintenance Technician, Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) install, remove, inspect, test, maintain and repair systems components, and ancillary equipment.  These Marines also perform launch recovery and other flight line operations at the organizational maintenance level.",{"id":1196,"code":1197,"title":1198,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1199,"status":11,"rank":18},"b74f8f9c-8458-4c6b-a6c0-7354fd6aacaa","6316","Aircraft Communications/Navigation Systems Technician, KC-130","Aircraft Communications/Navigation Systems Technicians, KC-130 install, remove, inspect, test, maintain and repair systems components, and ancillary equipment of installed aircraft communications/navigation systems to include deceptive electronic countermeasures (DECM) systems at the OMA level.",{"id":1201,"code":1202,"title":1203,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1204,"status":11,"rank":18},"a4a9cbb3-834d-43ba-a802-e83ce5d4773f","6317","Aircraft Communications/Navigation/Radar Systems Technician, F/A-18","Aircraft Communications/Navigation/Radar Systems Technicians, F/A-18 install, remove, inspect, test, maintain and repair systems components, and ancillary equipment of installed aircraft communications/ navigation/radar systems to include deceptive electronic countermeasures (DECM) systems at the OMA level.",{"id":1206,"code":1207,"title":1208,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1209,"status":11,"rank":18},"bd4d4eab-c30a-4245-9d05-259e5c2827f7","6323","Aircraft Avionics Technician, CH-53","Aircraft Avionics Technicians, CH-53 install, remove, inspect, test, maintain and repair systems components, and ancillary equipment of installed aircraft communications/navigation/electrical systems to include deceptive electronic countermeasures (DECM) systems at the OMA level.",{"id":1211,"code":1212,"title":1213,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1214,"status":11,"rank":18},"5a248663-35bd-4481-8967-030878a79a82","6324","Aircraft Avionics Technician, U/AH-1","Aircraft Avionics Technicians, U/AH-1 install, remove, inspect, test, maintain and repair systems components, and ancillary equipment of installed aircraft communications/navigation/electrical systems to include deceptive electronic countermeasures (DECM) systems at the OMA level.",{"id":1216,"code":1217,"title":1218,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1219,"status":11,"rank":18},"79ae894a-b2fe-4698-8d49-3c25569ac9b4","6326","Aircraft Avionics Technician, V-22","Aircraft Avionics Technicians, V-22 install, remove, inspect, test, maintain and repair systems components, and ancillary equipment of installed aircraft communications/navigation/electrical systems to include deceptive electronic countermeasures (DECM) systems at the OMA level.",{"id":1221,"code":1222,"title":1223,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1224,"status":11,"rank":18},"16f37967-7462-4e22-822c-380b5af573e6","6332","Aircraft Avionics Technician, AV-8B","Aircraft Avionics Technicians, AV-8B, install, remove, inspect, test, maintain, and repair systems, components, and ancillary equipment of installed Aircraft Communications/Navigation/Radar/Electrical Systems to include Deceptive Electronic Countermeasures (DECM) Systems at the OMA level.",{"id":1226,"code":1227,"title":1228,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1229,"status":11,"rank":18},"1aaee99f-b24d-4c58-903c-5e3780c97597","6336","Aircraft Electrical Systems Technician, KC-130","Aircraft Electrical Systems Technicians, KC-130, install, remove, inspect, test, maintain, and repair system, component, and ancillary equipment of installed aircraft electrical systems at the OMA level.",{"id":1231,"code":1232,"title":1233,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1234,"status":11,"rank":18},"900c746a-05ff-40b7-818f-fe6350465f7c","6337","Aircraft Electrical Systems Technician, F/A-18","Aircraft Electrical Systems Technicians, F/A-18, install, remove, inspect, test, maintain, and repair system, component, and ancillary equipment of installed aircraft electrical systems at the OMA level.",{"id":1236,"code":1237,"title":1238,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1239,"status":11,"rank":18},"f820af9a-1644-45aa-b51e-75f628560dd1","6338","Aircraft Avionics Technician, F-35","Aircraft Avionics Technicians, F-35, install, remove, inspect, test, maintain, and repair systems, components, and ancillary equipment of installed aircraft communications/navigation/radar/electrical systems to include deceptive electronic countermeasures (DECM) systems at the OMA level.",{"id":1241,"code":1242,"title":1243,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1244,"status":11,"rank":18},"bd849b79-0aaa-49e1-8e84-14941fece89a","6391","Avionics Chief","Avionics Chiefs, as staff noncommissioned officers in charge of the avionics department supervise the maintenance and repair of aircraft avionics systems, equipment and components at the IMA/OMA levels. At the intermediate maintenance activity (MALS), the Avionics Chief (MGySgt) serves as the OccFld sponsor for all 63/6400 MOS within the MAG. At the organizational maintenance activity, the Avionics Chief holds the responsibility of managing the tier III EKMS account/assets as well as manages avionics manpower within the unit.",{"id":1246,"code":1247,"title":1248,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1249,"status":11,"rank":18},"ae6b3f56-1afb-40bd-95f4-c16ee776c65e","6423","Aviation Electronic Micro/miniature Component and Cable Repair Technician, IMA","Aviation Electronic Micro/Miniature Component and Cable Repair Technicians, at the IMA level, inspect, test, maintain, and repair modules, cards, printed-circuit boards, cables, and miniature and micro-miniature components. They also perform appropriate level of corrosion control.",{"id":1251,"code":1252,"title":1253,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1254,"status":11,"rank":18},"63b27981-435b-42a9-b261-4db9c906c129","6432","Aircraft Electrical/Instrument/Flight Control Systems Technician, IMA","Aircraft Electrical/Instrument/Flight Control Systems Technicians, at the IMA level, inspect, test, maintain, and repair components, assemblies, subassemblies, modules, cards, printed circuit boards, and ancillary equipment whose aggregate constitutes a complete aircraft electrical/ flight control system or subsystem.",{"id":1256,"code":1257,"title":1258,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1259,"status":11,"rank":18},"9290f386-6117-43e2-8045-97f1a6672396","6469","Reconfigurable Transportable Consolidated Automated Support System (RTCASS) Technician, IMA","Reconfigurable Transportable Consolidated Automated Support System (RTCASS) Technicians, at the IMA, inspect, test, maintain, repair, and analyze airborne weapon replaceable assemblies, shop replaceable assemblies, automatic test equipment, and ancillary equipment failures, beyond normal fault isolation procedures.",{"id":1261,"code":1262,"title":1263,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1264,"status":11,"rank":18},"16afc876-c35c-45b3-8042-703c9552cfbc","6483","Communication/Navigation/Cryptographic/Countermeasures Systems Technician, IMA","Aircraft Electronic Communication/Navigation/ Cryptographic/Countermeasures System Technicians, at the IMA inspect, test, maintain, and repair airborne weapon replaceable assemblies, shop replaceable assemblies and ancillary equipment whose aggregate constitutes a complete Aircraft Communications, Navigation, Cryptographic, Countermeasures System or subsystem beyond normal fault isolation procedures.",{"id":1266,"code":1267,"title":1268,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1269,"status":11,"rank":18},"e7414094-77e5-4a38-bb13-824e92069db0","6492","Aviation Precision Measurement Equipment (PME) Calibration/Repair Technician, IMA","Aviation Precision Measurement Equipment (PME) Calibration/Repair Technicians test, maintain, calibrate and repair aviation precision measurement and automatic test equipment.",{"id":1271,"code":1272,"title":1273,"branch":8,"category":324,"description":1274,"status":11,"rank":18},"33a21319-c1f2-4360-a391-98a1b361615f","6499","Mobile Facility Technician","Mobile Facility Technicians inspect, service, maintain and repair mobile facilities and associated environmental control units, generators, and all other electrical and ancillary equipment.",{"id":1276,"code":1277,"title":1278,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1279,"status":11,"rank":24},"ce567d6b-c356-456c-9fec-a61bf96e35dd","6502","Aviation Ordnance Officer","The Aviation Ordnance Officer manages all aviation ordnance logistics, maintenance, and operations functions, as well as all aircraft weapon systems and Aircraft Armament Systems (AAS).",{"id":1281,"code":1282,"title":1283,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1284,"status":11,"rank":18},"1af8b654-d0d2-4dbd-bc96-5adbaeb24096","6531","Aircraft Ordnance Technician","This MOS encompasses duties incident to the inspection, maintenance and repair of armament equipment and loading of aviation ordnance on Marine Corps aircraft.  The Aircraft Ordnance Technician performs a variety of duties and tasks such as inspecting ammunition, testing aircraft systems, performing preventive maintenance and effecting repairs, loading and fusing ammunition and arming/de-arming aircraft.",{"id":1286,"code":1287,"title":1288,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1289,"status":11,"rank":18},"14cdbca2-989c-4e23-a398-836bd122c5f0","6541","Aviation Ordnance Systems Technician","Aviation Ordnance Systems Technicians perform duties incident to the accounting, stowage, breakout, testing, maintenance, assembly, and transportation of aircraft armament systems, munitions handling equipment, air launched missiles, and conventional munitions. At the IMA level, Aviation Ordnance System Technicians perform required inspections, tests, checks, adjustments, preventive maintenance, and repair on armament weapons support equipment (AWSE), missile launching equipment, multiple ejection/triple ejection bomb racks, aircraft guns, turrets, aircraft crew-served weapons, aerial targets, and a wide variety of highly technical aircraft armament weapon systems in addition to performing quality assurance, safety, and maintenance management duties.",{"id":1291,"code":1292,"title":1293,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1294,"status":11,"rank":18},"c6864fde-a51c-4c33-be4b-be4478bc718a","6591","Aviation Ordnance Chief","The Aviation Ordnance Chief supervises the establishment and functions of aviation ordnance activities.  The Aviation Ordnance Chief assists the Aviation Ordnance Officer with the daily planning, conduct, and execution of the ordnance section, division, or department.  They also serve as Staff Action Officers at the MARFOR, MEF, Wing, and HQMC levels, as well as select Naval and Joint Aviation Logistics/Acquisition Billets.",{"id":1296,"code":1297,"title":1298,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":1299,"status":11,"rank":12},"dbbef825-491c-4b73-98a2-1e406207d523","6602","Aviation Supply Officer","Aviation Supply Officers are unrestricted officers who may command, or assist in commanding a Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron.  Aviation Supply Officers may also achieve designation as an Acquisition Professional.  Aviation Supply Officers are responsible for planning, directing, and controlling the performance and execution of aviation supply functions within Marine Aircraft Wings, Marine Aviation Logistics Squadrons, Marine Corps Air Stations, Naval Expeditionary Vessels, and various TYCOM and SYSCOM staffs.  This requires in-depth familiarity and working knowledge sufficient to supervise and control Navy-developed and sponsored aviation logistics information management systems; repairable material management programs; financial management programs; budgeting and accounting functions; aviation inventory management functions; and warehousing operations.  Aviation Supply Officers must ensure that aviation supply operations sustain the unit's combat readiness and enhance its ability to perform its mission.  They must be able to establish division and department goals and to develop and execute plans to achieve those goals.  They must monitor supply management indicators to assist in tracking performance over time and ensure progress towards accomplishment of established goals.  Aviation Supply Officers must initiate and maintain liaison with external agencies to provide or obtain support and to report supply management indicators.  They must also initiate and maintain liaison with maintenance personnel in the operational squadrons and the Intermediate Maintenance Department so that they have a clear appreciation of the needs of their customers.",{"id":1301,"code":1302,"title":1303,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":1304,"status":11,"rank":24},"9b7985c0-bd27-45f2-b7f1-eb6a934cb56b","6604","Aviation Supply Operations Officer","Aviation Supply Operations Officers are responsible for the performance of aviation supply activities within Marine Aviation Logistics Squadrons, Marine Aircraft Wings, Marine Corps Air Stations, and naval expeditionary vessels. A high level of expertise is required to supervise the execution of the various tasks encompassed within the wide spectrum of aviation supply support. To be effective, Aviation Supply Operations Officers must possess detailed and working knowledge of all Navy-developed and sponsored aviation logistics information management systems; repairable management programs; financial  management programs; budgeting and accounting functions; aviation inventory management systems and functions; and warehousing operations. They must be skilled in working with a variety of ashore and afloat automated systems such as Relational Supply (R-Supply), the Naval Aviation Logistics Command Management Information Systems (NALCOMIS), F-35 Autonomic Logistics Information System (ALIS), Supply Chain Management (SCM), and other. They must be able to effectively use information extracted from these systems to aid in supervision and control. In addition, Aviation Supply Operations Officers must have detailed knowledge of all applicable Navy Supply documents, forms, and publications; and must be proficient in working with Navy Supply afloat procedures, to include the support of deployed aviation operations. Aviation Supply Operations Officers must ensure that aviation supply operations support and sustain the unit's combat readiness and enhance the unit's ability to perform its mission. They must establish and maintain liaison with external agencies while providing or obtaining support and reporting supply management indicators. A working knowledge in acquisitions, life cycle logistics, and program management is highly desirable for senior 6604 billets.",{"id":1306,"code":1307,"title":1308,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":1309,"status":11,"rank":18},"65ae4c83-5b95-43b7-b321-e20d973ac1a8","6672","Aviation Supply Specialist","Aviation Supply Specialists are required to perform those functions unique to aviation necessary to provide logistical support to naval aviation activities. Aviation Supply Specialist prime objective is to satisfy customer requirements. They perform all functions related to aviation logistics, to include customer service support, requisitioning procedures, financial management, inventory management, materiel management, facilities and storage management, and personnel staffing. In addition, Aviation Supply Specialists must have thorough knowledge of all applicable naval supply documents, forms, and publications applicable to billet assignment; and must be able to gain proficiency working with navy supply afloat procedures, to include the support of deployed aviation operations in a disaggregated operations environment. Duties include validation of customer requirements, processing requisitions, submitting requisitions, initiating appropriate follow-up actions, and processing and delivering material in accordance with all governing policies, regulations and procedures. In addition, Aviation Supply Specialists have an understanding of acquisition procedures, provisioning and requirements determination, material handling procedures, and fiscal accounting and purchasing procedures in accordance with federal acquisition regulations.",{"id":1311,"code":1312,"title":1313,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":1314,"status":11,"rank":18},"01b8530b-47b6-412f-88c1-0590f96d6405","6694","Aviation Logistics Information Management System (ALIMS) Specialist","The responsibilities of an ALIMS Specialist encompass a broad spectrum of network infrastructure and information systems installation, operation, administration, maintenance, and security in support of Marine Corps and Naval Aviation. ALIMS Specialists are directly responsible for the deployment of tactical local area networks (LANs) to any theater of operation, whether in garrison, shipboard, or in forward-deployed joint-service environments. Tactical LANs include hardware, software, and organic system administration resources that enable network connectivity, communication, operation, and management of Aviation Information Systems (AIS). In support of a diverse portfolio of program of record AIS, ALIMS Specialists manage an array of computer and network operating systems (OS) including VMW are ESXi, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Microsoft Windows Server, Docker, Cisco IOS, and Alcatel AOS. ALIMS Specialists are responsible for the maintenance, repair, and secure operation of all AIS organic to the Marine Aircraft Group. These AIS include but are not limited to (ALIS) autonomic logistics information system, (CAMEO) collaborative automated maintenance environment optimized, (DTADS) data transfer and diagnostics system, (EPUK) expeditionary pack-up kit, (FAME) F/A-18 automated maintenance environment, (IBSONE) integrated barcode system, (IMDS) integrated mechanical diagnostics system, (MPE) mission planning environment systems, (NFSA) NAVAIR fleet system array, (NTCSS) naval tactical command support system, (ODIN) operational data integrated network, (OOMA) optimized organizational maintenance activity, and (PEMA) portable electronic maintenance aids. Administrative tasks for the ALIMS Specialist include but are not restricted to acting as the primary point of contact for all Aviation Logistics IT-related issues, ensuring AIS confidentiality, integrity, and availability, as well as providing continuity of operations through high-availability and disaster recovery procedures. Marines in the MOS may be assigned to a BIC within their occupational field that has been coded with one or more DoD Cyber Workforce Framework work role codes. Reference DoDI 8140.10, DoDM 8140.10, and the MOS roadmap for additional training and certification requirements associated with work role codes.",{"id":1316,"code":1317,"title":1318,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":1319,"status":11,"rank":24},"7d39b5e6-7def-4bcb-9c58-57b6a22d93f4","6802","Meteorological and Oceanographic (METOC) Services Officer","Meteorological and Oceanographic (METOC) Service Officers plan, direct, and lead METOC operations at all levels of the operating forces and the supporting establishment. They are subject matter experts on all aspects of the METOC discipline and the application of it within the decision-making process. Operating force billet assignments: operating force billet assignments for this officer include marine expeditionary forces, marine air wings, intelligence battalions; littoral anti-air battalions, marine littoral regiment, and marine air traffic control companies within the marine air control squadrons. Non-operating forces billet assignments for this officer include deputy commandant for information, HQMC, director of intelligence; deputy commandant for aviation, aviation enablers; chief of naval operations, N2N6E; naval information warfare center pacific; marine corps air stations; marine corps detachment Keesler AFB; marine aviation weapons & tactics squadron one; and marine corps intelligence schools. METOC Officers require excellent verbal and written communication skills, advanced competency in meteorology and littoral oceanography, and comprehension of geospatial intelligence (GEOINT) concepts.",{"id":1321,"code":1322,"title":1323,"branch":8,"category":39,"description":1324,"status":11,"rank":18},"bfff8077-13b4-4364-8adc-9efedfbdfbf5","6842","METOC Analyst Forecaster","Typical duties of the METOC Analyst Forecaster include observing, collecting, recording, validating, processing, disseminating, and assimilation of METOC data and information to formulate forecasts and environmental assessments.  METOC Analyst Forecasters use and perform preventive maintenance on METOC sensors, information technology systems, and equipment.",{"id":1326,"code":1327,"title":1328,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1329,"status":11,"rank":24},"cdafa5cf-4a0f-4142-b5a7-19e293e994a7","7002","Expeditionary Airfield and Emergency Services Officer","The Expeditionary Airfield and Emergency Services Officer conducts planning for and oversees the installation, operation, and maintenance of airfield surfacing materials, expeditionary visual landing aids, and aircraft recovery equipment. In addition these officers conduct the planning for and direct structural and aircraft firefighting, rescue, and salvage and recovery operations.",{"id":1331,"code":1332,"title":1333,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1334,"status":11,"rank":18},"6f00f592-59b3-4f8c-83ff-c4efed09f827","7011","Expeditionary Airfield Systems Technician","An EAF Systems Technician provides the Marine Air Ground task force (MAGTF) the capability to rapidly deploy and establish survivable, self-sustaining airfields in support of a wide range of military and humanitarian operations. Marines in this occupational field operate, inspect, and maintain emergency arresting gear systems for high performance Marine Corps, Navy, Air Force, And North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)tail hook aircraft. These specially trained technicians are responsible for the design of expeditionary AM-2 airfields employed for military operations and humanitarian aid. Marines of the 7011 occupational specialties, also provide expeditionary lighting systems for Marine Expeditionary Units (MEUs) and conduct tactical/assault landing zone surveys for Naval and Marine Corps tactical aircraft.",{"id":1336,"code":1337,"title":1338,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1339,"status":11,"rank":18},"8daead72-d169-4609-b009-5156cdc25565","7041","Aviation Operations Specialist","To provide the Marine Corps with trained personnel in MOS 7041, Aviation Operations Specialist (AOS). Selected marine corps personnel, male and female are provided with the basic duties of an Aviation Operations Specialist. This includes drafting correspondence; assisting in the preparation of orders, maintaining orders of flight time in both master and individual flight files in accordance with current marine corps standard systems and software applications; maintaining files of extended flight; storage and dissemination of flight information publications (FLIP); posting radio and landing facility charts, flight information manuals, maps, and preparing aviation operations safety reports. Additional duties include supporting air tasking order (ATO) production within a tactical air command (TACC), coordinating airfield services to include air traffic control (ATC), meteorological and oceanographic (METOC) services, aircraft rescue and firefighting (ARFF) transient aircraft, flight planning, fuel services, airfield maintenance in accordance with federal aviation administration (FAA) guidelines and restricted airspace management for tenant and non-tenant activities. Although this training is not all inclusive, graduates will be able to function at all levels of command. MOS 7041 is assigned upon completion of the Marine Aviation Operations Specialist Course (MARAOS) and meeting all required prerequisites.",{"id":1341,"code":1342,"title":1343,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1344,"status":11,"rank":18},"d2458b96-c5a8-4fa9-8c2f-29eac6b98552","7051","Aircraft Rescue and Fire Fighting (ARFF) Specialist","Aircraft Rescue and Fire Fighting (ARFF) is highly specialized. It demands familiarity with aircrew extrication and aircraft firefighting procedures and techniques for any potential aircraft mishap. Actions taken by rescuers must be precise and timely. Individuals seeking assignment to these duties should possess personal qualities that include alertness, courage, dedication, agility, physical strength, and the ability to be an exacting team worker. ARFF is a unique capability within the ACE. ARFF provides aircraft rescue and firefighting services in support of airfield operations (AirOps) at forward locations and support installations. The primary and secondary mission of ARFF is to save lives and protect property. ARFF services include; extrication and/or rescue, fire suppression and extinguishment, basic emergency medical services, salvage and overhaul operations, incident command, and immediate hazardous material operations level response. While supporting Advanced Naval Base and Distributed Aviation Operation locations, the ARFF platoon is also responsible for the effective implementation and management of fire protection and prevention programs, aircraft salvage and recovery operations, Base Recovery After Attack (BRAAT), and Forward Arming and Refueling Point (FARP).",{"id":1346,"code":1347,"title":1348,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1349,"status":11,"rank":12},"36558466-aa98-47f1-8401-71afbf1b5f02","7202","Command and Control Officer","Air Command and Control Officers plan and coordinate the activities of Marine Air Command and Control Systems (MACCS) agencies. They advise commanders on matters pertaining to integration and joint employment of the MACCS. Air Command and Control Officers are relied upon to execute the decentralized control of assigned aircraft and missiles in the MAGTF Area of Operations (AO). Air Command and Control Officers plan, organize, direct, and manage tactical operations. These include tactical control of aircraft and air traffic control, surface and airborne fires integration, Unmanned Aircraft Integration, Radar Network Management, Tactical Data Link Operations, airspace planning and the employment of Ground Based Air Defense (GBAD). They command or assist in commanding such units. The Joint Air Operations Center Air Command and Control Course (JAOC2C) (F19L2W2); JT-101 Introduction to Multi-Tactical Data Link Network Operations Course (JT-101Intro to MTN OPS); JT-102 Multi-TDL Advanced Joint Interoperability Course (JT-102 MAJIC) (A05L6Z1); JT-201 Multi-TDL Network Planners Course (A05KHY1);JT-301 Joint Interface Control Officers Course (JT-301 JICO) (A05FH21); Military Airspace Management Course (F0273D1); MAWTS-1 Air Command and Control Officers Course (ACCOC) (M1467Q1); MAWTS-1 ACE Battle-Staff Officer Course (ABOC); MAWTS-1 TACC University Course; MAWTS-1 Senior Watch Officer (SWO) Course; and the MAWTS-1 Weapons and Tactics Instructor (WTI) Course (M149731) are available as skills enhancement training for the Air Command and Control Officer.",{"id":1351,"code":1352,"title":1353,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":1354,"status":11,"rank":12},"b4e82a29-6e2d-4422-84a9-de0851e8ca98","7204","Low Altitude Air Defense Officer","Low Altitude Air Defense (LAAD) Officers serve as commanders or staff officers within ground based air defense (GBAD) units, with the mission of providing  surface to air fires in defense of Marine air ground task force critical assets  from threat unmanned aerial systems, missiles, and fixed and rotary wing  aircraft. They coordinate tactical employment of LAAD units through air command and control agencies, sensors, and other air defense weapons.  They evaluate intelligence, plan surface to air fires at all echelons, and direct administration, communication, supply, maintenance, and security activities of LAAD units.  LAAD Officers also plan tactical employment and command LAAD units conducting airbase ground security operations.  The Joint Air Operations Center Air Command and Control Course (JAOC2C) (F19L2W2); JT-101 Introduction to Multi-Tactical Data Link Network Operations Course (JT-101 Intro to MTN OPS) (JKO); JT-102 Multi-TDL Advanced Joint Interoperability Course (JT-102 MAJIC) (A05L6Z1); JT-201 Multi-TDL Network Planners Course (A05KHY1); Antiterrorism Officer Level II Course; MAWTS-1 LAAD  Enhancement Training Instructor (LETI) Course; and the MAWTS-1 Weapons  and Tactics Instructor (WTI) Course (M149731) are available as skills enhancement training for the Low Altitude Air Defense Officer.",{"id":1356,"code":1357,"title":1358,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1359,"status":11,"rank":12},"fd98f4cc-7fd4-4138-95e6-358d85722ca5","7208","Air Support Control Officer","Air Support Officers plan, direct, and coordinate air support missions in support of MAGTF operations. Their efforts support the management of combat airspace and the delivery of kinetic and non-kinetic aviation fires in support of ground forces. They also coordinate air missions that require deep air support (DAS), electronic warfare (EW), aerial refueling and designated air reconnaissance (AR). They are also responsible for the planning, preparation, movement, emplacement and operation of air support equipment and tactical data systems. They are responsible for processing immediate requests for close air support, casualty evacuations and medical evacuations, integrating aviation with other supporting arms, and procedurally controlling aircraft throughout the MAGTF area of operations. Their efforts support the management of combat airspace and the delivery of kinetic and non-kinetic aviation fires in support of ground forces. They also coordinate air missions that require deep air support (DAS), electronic warfare (EW), aerial refueling and designated aerial reconnaissance (AR). They are also responsible for the planning, preparation, movement, emplacement and operation of air support equipment and tactical data systems. Air Support Officers normally work in the Direct Air Support Center or one of its subordinate elements which are co-located with the GCE when deployed. The Joint Air Operations Center Air Command and Control Course (JAOC2C) (F19L2W2); JT-101 Introduction to Multi Tactical Data Link Network Operations Course (JT-101 Intro to MTN OPS) (JKO); JT-102 Multi-TDL Advanced Joint Interoperability Course (JT-102 MAJIC) (A05L6Z1); JT-201 Multi-TDL Network Planners Course (A05KHY1); JT-220 Link-16 Unit Managers Course (JT-220 LUM) (A05A111); JT-301 Joint Interface Control Officers Course (JT-301 JICO)(A05FH21); Military Airspace Management Course (F0273D1); MAWTS-1 Air Command and Control Officers Course (ACCOC) (M1467Q1); MAWTS-1 ACE Battle-staff Officer Course (ABOC) (MTT); MAWTS-1 TACC University Course (MTT); MAWTS-1 Senior Watch Officer (SWO) Course (MTT); and the MAWTS-1 Weapons and Tactics Instructor (WTI) Course (M149731) are available as skills enhancement training for the Air Support Officer.",{"id":1361,"code":1362,"title":1363,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1364,"status":11,"rank":12},"2088c657-0b1b-4f00-bb13-4016999406d0","7209","Air Command and Control Officer","\u003Cp>Air Support Officers plan, direct, and coordinate air support missions in support of MAGTF operations. Their efforts support the management of combat airspace and the delivery of kinetic and non-kinetic aviation fires in support of ground forces. They also coordinate air missions that require deep air support (DAS), electronic warfare (EW), aerial refueling and designated air reconnaissance (AR). They are also responsible for the planning, preparation, movement, emplacement and operation of air support equipment and tactical data systems. They are responsible for processing immediate requests for close air support, casualty evacuations and medical evacuations, integrating aviation with other supporting arms, and procedurally controlling aircraft throughout the MAGTF area of operations. Their efforts support the management of combat airspace and the delivery of kinetic and non-kinetic aviation fires in support of ground forces. Air Support Officers normally work in the Direct Air Support Center or one of its subordinate elements which are co-located with the GCE when deployed. The Joint Air Operations Center Air Command and Control Course (JAOC2C) (F19L2W2), JT-101 Introduction to Multi Tactical Data Link Network Operations Course (JT-101 Intro to MTN OPS) (JKO), JT-102 Multi-TDL Advanced Joint Interoperability Course (JT-102 MAJIC) (A05L6Z1), JT-201 Multi-TDL Network Planners Course (A05KHY1), JT-220 Link-16 Unit Managers Course (JT-220 LUM) (A05A111), JT-301 Joint Interface Control Officers Course (JT-301 JICO) (A05FH21), Military Airspace Management Course (F0273D1), MAWTS-1 Air Command and Control Officers Course (ACCOC) (M1467Q1), MAWTS-1 ACE Battle-staff Officer Course (ABOC) (MTT), MAWTS-1 TACC University Course (MTT), MAWTS-1 Senior Watch Officer (SWO) Course (MTT), and the MAWTS-1 Weapons and Tactics Instructor (WTI) Course (M149731) are available as skills enhancement training for the Air Support Officer.\u003C/p>",{"id":1366,"code":1367,"title":1368,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1369,"status":11,"rank":12},"c441bdb1-88df-4675-a935-aea4196fe8dc","7210","Air Defense Control Officer","Air Defense Control Officers work in the tactical air operations center where they direct aircraft and surface to air missile assets for the interception of hostile aircraft and missiles.  Air Defense Control Officers coordinate with intelligence resources to gather and share enemy targeting information to prosecute and direct deep air support missions.  They are responsible for the identification and classification of aircraft.  They are also responsible for providing navigational assistance of friendly aircraft and the dissemination of radar resources throughout the MAGTF and joint services.  Once complete with entry level training, the Joint Air Operations Center Air Command and Control Course (JAOC2C) (F19L2W2); JT-101 Introduction to Multi-Tactical Data Link Network Operations Course (JT-101 Intro to MTN OPS) (JKO); JT-102 Multi-TDL Advanced Joint Interoperability Course (JT-102 MAJIC) (A05L6Z1); JT-201 Multi-TDL Network Planners Course (A05KHY1); JT-220 Link-16 Unit Managers Course (JT-220 LUM) (A05A111); JT-301 Joint Interface Control Officers Course (JT-301 JICO) (A05FH21); Military Airspace Management Course (F0273D1); TOPGUN Air Intercept Controller Ground School (N39KYA1); MAWTS-1 Marine Division Tactics Course (MDTC) Academic Phase (MTT), MAWTS-1 Air Command and Control Officers Course (ACCOC) (M1467Q1); MAWTS-1 ACE Battle-Staff Officer Course (ABOC) (MTT); MAWTS-1 TACC University Course (MTT); MAWTS-1 Senior Watch Officer (SWO) Course (MTT); and the MAWTS-1 Weapons and Tactics Instructor (WTI) Course (M149731) are available as skills enhancement training for the Air Defense Control Officer.",{"id":1371,"code":1372,"title":1373,"branch":8,"category":80,"description":1374,"status":11,"rank":18},"e7ed72ed-3000-4d3e-a7cc-c0fc18f9b4e1","7212","Low Altitude Air Defense (LAAD) Gunner","LAAD Gunners serve in ground-based air defense (GBAD) units with the mission to provide surface-to-air fires in support of MAGTF critical assets from threat unmanned aerial systems, missiles, and fixed and rotary wing aircraft. Gunners are responsible for employment and maintenance of all equipment and weapon systems inherent to a LAAD Battalion. Gunners will provide air base ground security when not engaged in air defense operations.",{"id":1376,"code":1377,"title":1378,"branch":8,"category":203,"description":1379,"status":11,"rank":24},"43bf19fa-f62e-4762-8e2f-aa7f4f33c82d","7216","Command and Control Interface Control Officer","Command and Control Interface Control Officers (C2ICO) analyze, plan, design, execute, and manage the marine corps functional component’s common tactical pictures (CTP) and integrate the service’s CTP with the joint task force (JTF) commander’s common operational picture (COP). As a member of the operations section (S-3, G-3), the C2ICO is the senior ICO in support of USMC multi-tactical data link network (MTN) operations and is the USMC MTN coordinator for the joint data network within a theater/joint operations area. The C2ICO ensures available interfaces are optimized to achieve the end-to-end information exchange requirements and flow required to execute advanced digital mission threads and kill chains in a naval and joint force environment. This is a highly technical MOS and requires that the C2ICO be educated and thoroughly knowledgeable in tactical data link (TDL) theory, multi-TDL architecture planning and design, link 16 network design, COP/TDL systems and capabilities, advanced TDL techniques, differing TDL systems and applications, and air defense, air surveillance, and TDL capabilities of US, coalition, and allied partners. Operating forces billet assignments for this officer includes marine forces command, marine forces pacific, marine forces Europe/Africa, marine expeditionary force, marine division, marine air wing, marine air control group, and marine littoral regiment. Non-operating forces billet assignments for the C2ICO includes instructor billet at the Joint Interoperability and Data Link Training Center (JID-TC), Requirements Officer at Marine Corps Combat Development Command, TDL Acquisition Project Officer at Marine Corps Systems Command, Integration Officer under Deputy Commandant for Aviation, TDL Instructor at Marine Aviation Weapons and Tactics Squadron, and Project Officer at Marine Corps Tactical Systems Support Activity. C2ICOs will often work with joint, coalition, and other allied TDL partners to provide marine corps TDL expertise.",{"id":1381,"code":1382,"title":1383,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1384,"status":11,"rank":12},"daeff92c-257e-423d-859e-431f7c558838","7220","Air Traffic Control Officer","Air Traffic Control (ATC) Officers serve as watch commanders or company commanders in an expeditionary ATC company. They act as facility watch officers or officers-in-charge at garrison ATC facilities. They may serve as command airspace liaison officers. They coordinate and direct activities related to ATC and airspace management as staff officers at squadrons, marine air control groups (MACG), marine aircraft wings (MAW), and other senior marine, joint, or coalition units. The Military Airspace Management Course (F0273D1), MAJIC (A05L6Z1), Introduction to US Air Force Flight Procedures Course (F35YLH1), JAOC2C (F19L2W2), and other courses listed in the ATC training and readiness manual are available to ATC Officers for skill enhancement training.",{"id":1386,"code":1387,"title":1388,"branch":8,"category":197,"description":1389,"status":11,"rank":18},"0ebe08da-f8cb-42df-bf59-fccfd0d912aa","7236","Tactical Air Defense Controller","Tactical Air Defense Controllers advise on effective use of battle management assets. They provide functional expertise and input for activating, employing, deploying, or deactivating battle management systems. ACO manage assigned forces and air operations using voice and data communications and radar systems. Tactical Air Defense Controllers advise on weapons control capabilities. To facilitate MAGTF operations, Tactical Air Defense Controllers conduct analysis to determine optimum emplacement of AC2 ground units, surface-to-air platforms, and positioning of airborne assets. ACO’s provide appropriate types of positive and procedural control or direction of friendly aircraft in combat airspace. Tactical Air Defense Controllers direct aircraft in the execution of the six functions of marine aviation. Tactical Air Defense Controllers coordinate and integrate kinetic and non-kinetic aviation fires into combat airspace. This includes control of defensive counter air (DCA), offensive counter Air (OCA), and armed interdiction (AI) flights. They also coordinate and direct close air support (CAS), deep air support (DAS), assault support (AS), medical evacuation (MEDEVAC), casualty evacuation (CASEVAC), electronic warfare (EW), aerial reconnaissance (AR), and aerial refueling missions. During amphibious operations, air control operators can also be selectively employed in the navy tactical air control center (TACC Afloat), supporting arms coordination center (SACC), and landing force operations center (LFOC).",{"id":1391,"code":1392,"title":1393,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1394,"status":11,"rank":18},"a8580cf4-c5a9-406f-9c5f-010daf92b131","7240","Tactical Air Control Operator","Tactical Air Control Operators perform duties that provide air command and control in support of the Marine Air Ground Task Force (MAGTF), naval, and joint force operations. They advise on effective use of battle management assets and provide functional expertise and input for activating, employing, deploying, or deactivating battle management systems. Tactical Air Control Operators manage assigned forces and air operations using voice and data communications, tactical data links, and radar systems. Tactical Air Control Operators direct aircraft in the execution of the six functions of Marine aviation. They conduct airspace surveillance and provide appropriate types of positive and procedural control or direction of friendly aircraft in combat airspace. Tactical Air Defense Controllers coordinate and integrate kinetic and non-kinetic aviation fires into combat airspace. This includes control of defensive counter air (DCA), offensive counter Air (OCA), and armed interdiction (AI) flights. Tactical Air Control Operators coordinate and direct electronic warfare (EW), aerial reconnaissance (AR), and aerial refueling missions. They are also responsible for processing immediate requests for close air support (CAS), casualty evacuation (CASEVAC), medical evacuation (MEDEVAC), assault support (AS) and integrating aviation with other supporting arms and ensuring safety of flight for aircraft throughout the assigned airspace. During operations, they typically employed the Multifunction Air Operations Center (MAOC), air control elements within the Littoral Anti-Air Battalion (LAAB), and the Tactical Air Command Center (TACC). During amphibious operations Tactical Air Control Operators can also be employed in the Navy Tactical Air Control Center (TACC Afloat), Supporting Arms Coordination Center (SACC), and Landing Force Operations Center (LFOC), as required.",{"id":1396,"code":1397,"title":1398,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1399,"status":11,"rank":18},"dcfa97bc-f9db-4b74-bf30-0ec484e1741a","7242","Air Support Operations Operator","Air Support Operations Operators perform duties that support the integration of aviation with the ground combat element (GCE). They are responsible for processing immediate requests for close air support, casualty evacuation (CASEVAC) and medical evacuation (MEDEVAC), and assault support, integrating aviation with other supporting arms and ensuring safety of flight for aircraft throughout the MAGTF area of operations. Their efforts support the management of combat airspace and the delivery of kinetic and non-kinetic aviation fires in support of ground forces. They also coordinate air missions that require deep air support (DAS), electronic warfare (EW), aerial refueling and designated air reconnaissance (AR). They are also responsible for the preparation, movement, emplacement and operation of air support equipment and tactical data systems. During operations they normally work in the direct air support center (DASC) which is co-located with the GCE or the tactical air command center (TACC) which is the operational command post for the ACE. During amphibious operations Air support operations operators can also be employed in the navy tactical air control center (TACC Afloat), supporting arms coordination center (SACC), and landing force operations center (LFOC) as required.",{"id":1401,"code":1402,"title":1403,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1404,"status":11,"rank":18},"cd96b79a-3236-493b-975c-0075007ced6d","7257","Air Traffic Controller","Air Traffic Controllers routinely perform various duties and tasks related to the control of air traffic and vehicles within the designated areas aboard an established airport control zone, expeditionary airfield, or remote area landing site. These duties are performed within control towers, radar facilities, and expeditionary air traffic control equipment. The Military Airspace Management Course (F0273D1); MAJIC Course (A05L6Z1); Introduction to US Air Force Flight Procedures (F35YLH1); JAOC2C Course (F19L2W2); and other courses listed in the ATC Training and Readiness Manual, are available to 7257’s for skill enhancement training.",{"id":1406,"code":1407,"title":1408,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1409,"status":11,"rank":18},"d7aa4df5-99bf-407e-938f-1b792d74ef54","7291","Senior Air Traffic Controller","As a GySgt, the Senior Air Traffic Controller performs Air Traffic Control Branch Chief duties, including Tower Chief, Radar Chief, or Training Chief.  They are responsible to the Air Traffic Control Officer-in-charge for the management of air traffic control functions in their branch, credentialing of Air Traffic Controllers, and application of Federal Aviation Administration Regulations, NATOPS, and standard operating procedures to deployed air traffic control detachments and Marine Corps air stations.  As a MSgt-MGySgt, the Senior Air Traffic Controller additionally assists and advises the Air Traffic Control Detachment Commander, Marine Air Control Squadron (MACS) Operations Officer, or the Air Traffic Control Facility Officer for operational planning and personnel management.  They advise and make recommendations for the planning, coordination, and execution of the unit’s TEEP. They assist with the timely collection, review, and distribution of messages, briefs, reports, training schedules and all tasks in support of the unit’s core and assigned Mission Essential Tasks.",{"id":1411,"code":1412,"title":1413,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1414,"status":11,"rank":18},"9ee6514e-5894-48dc-9dd0-b89da77e6dfd","7314","Sensor Operator (SO), MQ-9","MQ-9 Reaper Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) Sensor Operators (SO) conduct multi-imagery sensor reconnaissance (MIR) and surveillance of potential targets and areas of interest. The Sensor Operator detects, analyzes and discriminates between valid and invalid targets using synthetic aperture radar (SAR), electro-optical, low-light, and infrared full-motion video imagery, and other active or passive acquisition and tracking systems. Sensor Operators assist the pilot in air navigation, flight planning, and other crew coordination tasks to achieve overall mission objectives. The Sensor Operator utilizes laser target marking systems to provide target identification and illumination, in support of other combat assets.",{"id":1416,"code":1417,"title":1418,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1419,"status":11,"rank":12},"fb1e5c5c-bdc1-4d8a-a085-ffeae2cdecf8","7315","Group 3 UAS MAGTF Officer","UAS Officers employ a network enabled and digitally interoperable UAS, from a Ground Control Station, to provide reconnaissance, surveillance, targeting and acquisition (RSTA), aviation fires, and electro-magnetic support across the full spectrum of combat operations. UAS Officers will advise supported commanders on matters pertaining to UAS integration; and provide information of intelligence value not readily available from normal sources.  UAS Officers are the supported commander’s subject matter expert on UAS tactics, techniques, and procedures.",{"id":1421,"code":1422,"title":1423,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1424,"status":11,"rank":18},"c1adf4a8-74a2-4121-b2b0-d223e108817a","7316","Small Unmanned Aircraft System (SUAS) Specialist","The PMOS 7316 SUAS Specialist is responsible for planning, integrating, and executing SUAS operations in support of the Marine Air Ground Task Force (MAGTF). 7316s integrate SUAS capabilities with unit operations in accordance with (IAW) mission orders, scheme of maneuver, fire support coordination measures, airspace control measures, frequency assignments, airspace, and range regulations. 7316s serve as the subject matter expert (SME) in SUAS operations for their assigned unit.",{"id":1426,"code":1427,"title":1428,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1429,"status":11,"rank":12},"f7364196-0f68-4b0d-bcf7-4c99d8582b21","7318","VMU MQ-9 Officer","MQ-9 Officers employ a network enabled and digitally interoperable UAS, from a  Ground Control Station, to provide RSTA, aviation fires, and electromagnetic  support across the full spectrum of combat operations. MQ-9 Officers will advise supported commanders on matters regarding UAS integration and provide  information of intelligence value not readily available from normal sources.",{"id":1431,"code":1432,"title":1433,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1434,"status":11,"rank":24},"cd5dfcff-41ed-4c71-a94c-3380ed958ced","7380","Tactical Systems Officer/Mission Specialist","Tactical Systems Officers/Mission Specialists plan and conduct tactical in-flight refueling and assault support missions, assist in the development of aviation weapons and tactics for the KC-130 Aircraft, assist in the development and evaluation of KC-130 Tactical Systems, assist and/or serve as Strategic Movement Control Officer, and supervise and instruct the training of Tactical Systems Operators.",{"id":1436,"code":1437,"title":1438,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1439,"status":11,"rank":12},"a8a0e91b-9b3d-4c3e-a696-012a5ac1f0e9","7502","Forward Air Controller/Air Officer","A Naval Aviator, Naval Flight Officer, or Unmanned Aircraft Systems Officer serving as a JTAC assigned to a non-aviation unit. The FAC is prepared to integrate all functions of aviation during the planning and execution of ground operations, and is prepared to conduct required liaison.",{"id":1441,"code":1442,"title":1443,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1444,"status":11,"rank":12},"7dcaee86-60dc-4f77-a060-45e57933c5f3","7507","Pilot VMA FRS Basic AV-8B","VMA Pilots operate attack aircraft to provide air support.",{"id":1446,"code":1447,"title":1448,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1444,"status":11,"rank":12},"af4e95bb-0e2e-4280-8fcf-878442ddf7d1","7509","Pilot VMA AV-8B Qualified",{"id":1450,"code":1451,"title":1452,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1453,"status":11,"rank":12},"253d8ac2-bc85-4cd2-92c3-4bcb58cf6cd6","7516","Pilot VMFA FRS Basic F-35B Pilot","VMFA Pilots operate network enabled and digitally interoperable fighter-attach aircraft to provide aviation support across the full spectrum of combat operations.",{"id":1455,"code":1456,"title":1457,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1458,"status":11,"rank":12},"a4b9bcbc-7b12-4819-a2f9-c02073e75814","7518","Pilot VMFA FRS F-35B Qualified","VMFA Pilots operate network enabled and digitally interoperable fighter-attack aircraft to provide aviation support across the full spectrum of combat operations.",{"id":1460,"code":1461,"title":1462,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1463,"status":11,"rank":12},"4707dc5d-c0a3-4cbf-b2ce-133c3896f66b","7521","Pilot VMFA FRS Basic F/A-18 Pilot","VMFA Pilots operate an electronics equipped fighter-attack aircraft to provide air defense and air support in all weather conditions, day and night.",{"id":1465,"code":1466,"title":1467,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1463,"status":11,"rank":12},"29ebc76d-6615-4f7e-bf08-c4547e271b25","7523","Pilot VMFA F/A-18 Qualified",{"id":1469,"code":1470,"title":1471,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1472,"status":11,"rank":12},"e11ce6fe-8fe6-4273-a52c-be3eb5b6b73e","7524","Naval Flight Officer (NFO), FRS Basic F/A-18D Weapons Systems Officer (WSO)","NFOs as members of aircraft crews assist in the employment of the aircraft offensive and defensive weapons. NFOs assigned as Supporting Arms Coordinator's (SAC(A)) will also direct supporting fires for ground forces to include artillery, naval gunfire and close air support. Advise commanders of ground units on matters pertaining to aerial observation and provide information of intelligence value not readily available from normal sources.",{"id":1474,"code":1475,"title":1476,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1472,"status":11,"rank":12},"3c637ee2-9c7b-47ef-a7a3-2ad5131654aa","7525","Naval Flight Officer (NFO), Qualified F/A-18D Weapons Systems Officer (WSO)",{"id":1478,"code":1479,"title":1480,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1481,"status":11,"rank":12},"161721f3-2a8b-4b0e-9335-64e737223d9f","7531","Pilot VMM, FRS Basic V-22 Pilot","VMM Pilots operate tiltrotor aircraft on observation, transport, rescue, and utility missions.",{"id":1483,"code":1484,"title":1485,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1481,"status":11,"rank":12},"b87ecff6-f6bd-4fc3-bf2e-ce084889f15e","7532","Pilot VMM, V-22 Qualified",{"id":1487,"code":1488,"title":1489,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1490,"status":11,"rank":12},"30134517-aa36-4b0e-b869-8d746d5c9fd4","7556","Pilot VMGR, KC-130 Co-Pilot (T2P/T3P)","VMGR Pilots operate transport aircraft or turboprop jet-powered aerial refueler/transport aircraft, air supply, and aerial refueling operations, as appropriate.",{"id":1492,"code":1493,"title":1494,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1495,"status":11,"rank":12},"fe8591db-7ccb-4765-87ce-e1d9f5d13084","7557","Pilot VMGR, KC-130 Aircraft Commander","VMGR Pilots operate Transport Aircraft or Turboprop Jet-Powered Aerial Refueler/Transport Aircraft, air supply, and aerial refueling operations, as appropriate",{"id":1497,"code":1498,"title":1499,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1500,"status":11,"rank":12},"eed5d821-ab8f-4447-a2bc-410ba117a1e8","7560","Pilot HMH FRS Basic/CH-53E Pilot","HMH Pilots operate Rotary Wing Aircraft providing assault support transport of heavy equipment, combat troops, and supplies.",{"id":1502,"code":1503,"title":1504,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1505,"status":11,"rank":12},"cd8b7dd6-4077-4bfc-b3eb-5d1898574e1e","7563","Pilot HMLA UH-1Y Qualified","HMLA Pilots operate Rotary Wing Aircraft on offensive air support, utility support, armed escort and airborne supporting arms coordination missions.",{"id":1507,"code":1508,"title":1509,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1500,"status":11,"rank":12},"a7c36fc5-0bd2-4e59-97f4-d79afd8a2260","7564","Pilot HMH CH-53D Qualified",{"id":1511,"code":1512,"title":1513,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1514,"status":11,"rank":12},"16bf144b-b1b0-436b-a41b-15680d538fbc","7565","Pilot HMLA AH-1 Qualified","HMLA Pilots operate Rotary Wing Aircraft on offensive air support, armed escort and airborne supporting arms coordination missions.",{"id":1516,"code":1517,"title":1518,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1500,"status":11,"rank":12},"bcf4b54f-3f6c-4876-98c6-b67a14f5cff8","7566","Pilot HMH CH-53E Qualified",{"id":1520,"code":1521,"title":1522,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1505,"status":11,"rank":12},"ad1104f9-d6f1-47fd-89ae-fa75fb40e228","7567","Pilot HMLA FRS Basic UH-1Y",{"id":1524,"code":1525,"title":1526,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1514,"status":11,"rank":12},"2a2ee0b8-7a3e-4fba-b2a7-c4d7450cdb25","7568","Pilot HMLA FRS Basic AH-1",{"id":1528,"code":1529,"title":1530,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1531,"status":11,"rank":12},"b5417192-f561-4276-9ba5-0d40b0055bc0","7578","Naval Flight Officer (NFO), Student (TBS)","NFOs as members of aircraft crews assist in the employment of the aircraft offensive and defensive weapons.",{"id":1533,"code":1534,"title":1535,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1472,"status":11,"rank":12},"6954b4e0-b816-4013-927b-6f1127f1a354","7580","Naval Flight Officer (NFO), Tactical Navigator Flight Student (NATC)",{"id":1537,"code":1538,"title":1539,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1540,"status":11,"rank":12},"856740b7-d214-43e9-9ef1-bf8db8b1c85c","7597","Basic Pilot, Basic Rotary Wing","Basic Pilots are newly designated NAs that have not yet become combat capable in a specific model of aircraft in the FMF inventory (e.g., MOS 7560:  CH-53E; MOS 7531:  V-22; MOS 7568:  AH-1; etc.).",{"id":1542,"code":1543,"title":1544,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1545,"status":11,"rank":12},"6fa7494f-b2af-46d6-9ebd-7fe60535ff3d","7598","Basic Fixed Wing Pilot","Basic Pilots are newly designated NAs that have not yet become combat capable in a specific model of aircraft in the FMF inventory (e.g., MOS 7507:  AV-8B; MOS 7556:  KC-130; MOS 7521:  F/A-18; MOS 7516:  F-35, etc.).",{"id":1547,"code":1548,"title":1549,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":1550,"status":11,"rank":12},"45a0fbcd-8451-4e04-b22c-c215ec2dc0cc","8003","General Officer","General Officers are officers in the grade of Brigadier General and above.  This title and MOS will also be used to identify General Officer billets in T/Os and individuals irrespective of prior PMOS.",{"id":1552,"code":1553,"title":1554,"branch":8,"category":151,"description":1555,"status":11,"rank":12},"2c8d49c3-d961-48d6-b317-1f175e8b8477","8040","Colonel, Logistician","Colonel, Logisticians are Logistics Officers in the grade of Colonel.  This title and MOS will be used to identify Colonel Logistics Billets in T/Os.",{"id":1557,"code":1558,"title":1559,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":1560,"status":11,"rank":12},"454939d5-892b-4d00-bcbd-ae433cd494c3","8041","Colonel, Ground","Colonel, Ground are officers in the grade of Colonel.  This title and MOS will also be used to identify Colonel Ground Billets in T/Os.",{"id":1562,"code":1563,"title":1564,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1565,"status":11,"rank":12},"5657246c-3b67-433a-b698-e9c3aa28ebe0","8042","Colonel, Naval Aviator/Naval Flight Officer/Unmanned Aircraft System Officer","Colonel, Naval Aviator/Naval Flight Officer/Unmanned Aircraft Systems Officer are officers in the grade of Colonel designated as NA/NFO/UAS Officers. This title and MOS will also be used to identify Colonel, NA/NFO/UAS Officers Billets in T/Os.",{"id":1567,"code":1568,"title":1569,"branch":8,"category":913,"description":1570,"status":11,"rank":12},"7774a3b9-1e5e-44bd-a32d-d1b6f7d2e7cd","8059","Marine Acquisition Officer - Aviation","A Marine Acquisition Officer-Aviation is selected from a panel of eligible candidates for lateral transition into the occupation field. This officer is normally assigned to critical acquisition positions (CAP) or key leadership positions (KLP), per guidance found in the DoDI 5000 series. They provide senior level leadership over aviation equities throughout the entire acquisition lifecycle. The MOS ensures a sufficient pool of senior acquisition leaders exist to assume the role of Acquisition Category I-IV (ACAT I-IV) Program Manager, Fleet Repair Center (FRC) Commanding Officer, or Defense Contract Management Agency (DCMA) Commanding Officer for Marine Corps equities.",{"id":1572,"code":1573,"title":1574,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":1575,"status":11,"rank":12},"8bb6667e-66f9-4134-87b3-1df488d770e7","8061","Marine Acquisition Officer - Ground","Marine Acquisition Officers-Ground are selected from aboard of eligible candidates.  A Marine Acquisition Officer-Ground is normally assigned to critical acquisition positions to provide senior level leadership over equipment/weapon systems acquisition programs.  Officers who meet the prerequisites outlined below are eligible to apply for designation as a Marine Acquisition Officer-Ground.",{"id":1577,"code":1578,"title":1579,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":1580,"status":11,"rank":18},"6e8d868b-d9b8-42ed-8e88-c1cfd332c737","8412","Career Recruiter","Career Recruiters are superior recruiters who will serve to establish a cadre of professional recruiters with long-term assignments in key managerial billets to improve the management and effectiveness of the recruiting effort. These billets include Staff Noncommissioned Officer in charge, instructor, Operations Chief, training team member, and liaison billets. Gunnery Sergeants serving as Career Recruiters may be considered for promotion to Master Sergeant and First Sergeant. Career Recruiters can anticipate a minimum 3-year tour in assigned key recruiting billets and should anticipate transfer to another key billet upon the completion of a 3-year tour. Assignment of Career Recruiters is determined by the needs of Marine Corps Recruiting Command and the personal desires of the individual concerned.",{"id":1582,"code":1583,"title":1584,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":1585,"status":11,"rank":18},"15b120e5-70f4-44d0-8642-d595bc933d74","8422","Career Prior Service Recruiter","Career Prior Service Recruiters are superior production recruiters and serve to establish a cadre of professional prior service recruiters with long-term assignments in key managerial billets to improve the management and effectiveness of the recruiting effort. These billets include staff noncommissioned officer-in-charge, operations chief, recruiter instructor, recruiter school instructor, and assistant recruiter instructor. Assignment of Career Prior Service Recruiters is determined by the needs of the recruiting service and the personal desires of the individual concerned.",{"id":1587,"code":1588,"title":1589,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":1590,"status":11,"rank":18},"c86ce6ef-7c93-4bc9-b164-d004e2918db3","8991","Sergeant Major of The Marine Corps","Assists the CMC as Senior Enlisted Marine in the Marine Corps.  Advises the CMC in matters pertaining to enlisted personnel and assists the CMC in the performance of his duties.  Performs such specific duties as member of the CMC's enlisted performance board, member of the permanent Marine Corps uniform board, and member of the CMC's party on all visits and inspection trips to Marine Corps installations when enlisted personnel are involved.  When directed by the CMC, assists staff agencies in matters pertaining to enlisted Marines.  Represents the CMC at the Staff Noncommissioned Officers symposium.",{"id":1592,"code":1593,"title":1594,"branch":8,"category":9,"description":1595,"status":11,"rank":18},"a88ea55a-b73b-4ad0-8399-90ea801ad8ec","8999","Sergeant Major-First Sergeant","The Command Senior Enlisted Leader is responsible to the commander for all matters which effect the morale, welfare, discipline, mission success, and overall readiness of the unit.  They disseminate and enforce Marine Corps and local policies, orders, and directives.  They possess comprehensive knowledge of Marine Corps organization, history, traditions, customs and courtesies. They are directly responsible for all enlisted career human resource matters within the unit and have a mandate to maintain and develop the total force."]