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Photo Information

Lance Cpls. Lud G. Romain, (left), Lagrima C. Urista, (center), and Brian A. Yanez, supply warehouse clerks with Combat Logistics Battalion 4, 1st Marine Logistics Group (Forward), take a break from supply warehouse duties at Camp Leatherneck, Afghanistan. The three lance corporals manage day-to-day tasks around the warehouse, doing their part to keep CLB-4 in the fight.

Photo by Cpl. Mark W. Stroud

Warehouse clerks band together in Afghanistan

16 Apr 2012 | Cpl. Mark W. Stroud

“Pretty much everything anyone has out here came through supply at one point,” said Lance Cpl. Lud G. Romain, assistant warehouse chief, Combat Logistics Battalion 4, 1st Marine Logistics Group (Forward). “We have three lance corporals in the warehouse taking care of the entire battalion.”

Once the supply warehouse meets the battalion’s needs, CLB-4 in turn provides direct, combat logistics support to Regimental Combat Team 6.

The other supply warehouse clerks, Lance Cpl. Brian A. Yanez, and Romain, began their journey together at the birthplace of many Marine Corps friendships – military occupational school.

Lance Cpl. Lagrima C. Urista, another supply warehouse clerk, joined the duo shortly afterward at their first duty station, Camp Foster, Marine Corps Base Camp Butler.

“Romain and I had already been a good team on Okinawa when we first met Urista, but when we did, we knew we had found someone who was going to be a great addition,” said Yanez.

Their group bonded by day at work and explored Okinawa by night, taking advantage of the recreational and historical sites on the island, said Urista.

Less than two-years into their careers, their service has already taken them across thousands of miles, with stops in five countries on two continents.

“We first met in Japan, but since then we have been on training exercises or deployments in [the Republic of Korea], America, Kyrgyzstan and now Afghanistan,” said Yanez.

Helmand Province, Afghanistan, is the most recent stop in the road for the supply Marines.

“I think we will look back at this deployment in 20 years as an opportunity that was given to us to rise to the challenge of taking on [noncommissioned officer] responsibilities as lance corporals,” said Yanez. “[We] have always [had] responsibilities, but this is the first time we were given this level of responsibility. It is a good feeling knowing we are accomplishing the mission.”

The Marines have learned to trust and rely on one another over the course of their friendship.

“It is always noticeable whenever one of us is out of the warehouse for training or convoys,” said Yanez. “We have learned to rely on each other. When we are all here everything thing runs perfectly smooth, but it becomes apparent how important each Marine is whenever one of us is gone.”

The bonds formed during training have helped the Marines accomplish their mission as a part of CLB-4, both individually and as a team. These bonds have given them experience beyond their rank.

“Each of them are capable of making their own decisions; decisions that [noncommissioned officers] would normally make,” Staff Sgt. Drew McDonald, supply warehouse chief, CLB-4. “They make a good team, and it helps them every day.”

Romain, a Newark ,N.J., native, uses his natural tenacity to complete his duties as assistant warehouse chief, said Yanez.

Yanez, a Buena Park, Calif., native, is a fixture around the CLB-4 compound, spending time as the Defense Reutilization Management Office noncommissioned officer, assisting with base improvement projects and managing the DRMO pit, where excess or broken equipment is taken for disposal or reutilization.

The junior Marine in the warehouse, Urista, a Vernon, Texas, native, brings a positive attitude to the table, motivating her fellow Marines on even the longest days when filling her billet as roll-back clerk, said Yanez.

The trio intends to continue their friendship long after the deployment is over, carrying the bonds they forged with their fellow Marines with them for the rest of their lives, said Urista.

“We will probably try to stay in contact, but even if we don’t, we will take what we learned from each other and pass it on to the next group of Marines,” said Yanez.


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