Education/Training:
Greenville High School: ****-2010
Nuclear Field A School Machinist Mate: February 2012- May 2012
●Course coverage included basic machinery, mechanical systems, and technical mathematics
Nuclear Field Power School: July 2012- December 2012
●Course coverage included fluid dynamics, heat transfer principles, reactor physics, chemistry,
radiological controls, electrical theory, and advanced mechanical systems.
Nuclear Propulsion Plant Operator Mechanical: May 2013- October 2013
●Operations of a nuclear power plant and mechanical systems
EPA Refrigerant Technician: November 2014
Submarine Force Quality Assurance Inspector: March 2016
Core skills:
●Process improvement
●Planning and time management
●First time quality maintenance
●High attention to detail
●Analytical skills
●Dependability
●High initiative
Communication skills
Experience:
United States Navy: November 2011- May 2021
USS Henry M. Jackson SSBN-730: March 2014 - April 2018
●Operated and maintained all mechanical systems directly related to the reactor and all mechanical systems in the Engineroom; to include, pumps, valves, heat exchangers, steam turbines, refrigeration plants, reverse osmosis distilling units, high pressure air compressors, and other propulsion related equipment.
●Scheduled and assigned corrective and preventative maintenance items to 14 subordinates on over 800 pieces of machinery for three maintenance periods. As the work center supervisor, my workcenter received the highest possible rating from submarine squadron 17 during both inspections.
●Inspected and maintained quality assurance on over 75 non-nuclear repairs and 17 nuclear level repairs.
●Ordered and received over $100,000 annually of repair parts for two years, maintained the tracking of level parts, and coordinated on time delivery and execution of orders to support ships evolutions and operations.
Trident Refit Facility: May 2018- Present
●As the primary technician; maintained the status, repairs, and operations of over $1.2 million worth of equipment to include, test pumps, gauges, relief valve, test hoses, and special fittings.
●Developed a computer program to ensure all annual testing was completed on time for 115 test hoses and 42 test pumps. The new system allows for easier tracking of upcoming testing and for schedule changes of equipment as necessary.
●Modified 18 testing stands to allow a wider range of applications and usability. This in turn aided in reducing repair costs and frequency saving the Navy $10,800 annually.