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Air Force Public Affairs Agency


FieldValue
unit_nameAir Force Public Affairs Agency
imageAir Force Public Affairs Agency.jpg
image_size150
captionAir Force Public Affairs Agency Shield
dates1 June 1978 – present
countryUnited States
branchUnited States Air Force
garrisonJoint Base San Antonio-Randolph, Texas
nicknameAFPAA
decorations[[File:Organizational Excellence ribbon.svg75 px]] AFOEA
current_commanderColonel Tony M. Wickman

The Air Force Public Affairs Agency (AFPAA) is a United States Air Force field operating agency headquartered at Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph, Texas. Headquarters AFPAA consists of two directorates, the Directorates of Staff and Operations. Additionally, AFPAA is accountable for two Combat Camera Squadrons, two Audiovisual Squadrons, and two Operating Locations. The Directorate of Staff includes Financial Management, IT Support, Knowledge Operations, Logistics, and Personnel and Training. The Directorate of Operations includes Branding, Trademark and Licensing, Public Web, Plans and Programs, and career field development courses writers.

The agency oversees the 1st Combat Camera Squadron and 4th Combat Camera Squadron co-located at Joint Base Charleston, South Carolina; the 3rd Audiovisual Squadron located at JB San Antonio-Lackland, Texas; and the Air Force's tier 1 video production facility, the 2d Audiovisual Squadron, located at Hill AFB, Utah.

The agency provides administrative and logistical support to six field offices across the United States. These include a command information branch at the Pentagon; Public Affairs assignment managers at the Air Force Personnel Center, JB San Antonio-Randolph, Texas; the Air Force Media Engagement Office in New York City; the Air Force Entertainment Liaison Office in Los Angeles; and the Combat Camera Detachment at Hurlbert AFB, Florida.

Combined, these offices and units encompass representatives from all specialties within the Public Affairs career field, and are charged with a multitude of unique public affairs responsibilities including: providing imagery documentation of Air Force warfighter and humanitarian relief missions; audiovisual production support; the public affairs visual information equipment purchasing program, the public web program, the branding and trademark licensing program, and serving as the Air Force's primary liaison to the Defense Media Activity on Defense Video and Imagery Distribution System and the American Forces Public Information Management System. Additionally, AFPAA serves as the sole force provider for combat camera forces in the Air Force. AFPAA also provides career-field support through the development of career development courses for the Air Force's nearly 5,500 public affairs practitioners.

Mission

Provide Airmen with unique Public Affairs resources to document and convey the Air Force mission and legacy.

Vision

Be the primary innovators of Public Affairs capabilities supporting global operations.

History

AFPAA traces its roots to 1 June 1978, with the activation of the Air Force Service Information and News Center. AFSINC was redesignated as the Air Force News Center 1 April 1990, and became a field operating agency 5 Feb. 1991. It was redesignated to the Air Force News Agency 1 Aug. 1991, before its redesignation to AFPAA 1 Oct. 2008. AFPAA achieved full operational capability 3 June 2013.

SquadronShieldLocationStatus
1st Combat Camera Squadron[[File:1st Combat Camera Squadron.pngcenter75px]]Joint Base Charleston, South CarolinaActive
2d Audiovisual Squadron[[File:2d Combat Camera Squadron.PNGcenter75px]]Hill AFB, UtahActive
3rd Audiovisual Squadron[[File:3d Combat Camera Squadron.PNGcenter75px]]Joint Base San Antonio, TexasActive
4th Combat Camera Squadron[[File:4th Combat Camera Squadron.PNGcenter75px]]Joint Base Charleston, South CarolinaReserve

Notes

References

References

  1. "Tony M. Wickman".
  2. (March 2025). ["Air Force Public Affairs:Mission, Vision, Goals"](http://www.publicaffairs.af.mil/HowTo/ }}{{dead link).
  3. "Factsheet".
  4. Joseph, Mike. (8 October 2009). "Air Force activates 3rd Combat Camera Squadron". United States Air Force.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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