US Army: CA ARNG Welder Sews Face Masks to Combat COVID-19

May 18, 2020

CA ARNG Technician and LIUNA Local 1776 Member Edwin Rodriguez
Is on the Front-Lines of the COVID-19 Fight 

By Staff Sgt. Kimberly Hill - California National Guard - May 14, 2020

LONG BEACH, Calif. – It’s not the usual scene one expects in a U.S. Army maintenance shop.

While the air is filled with the scent of diesel and most Soldiers are busy turning wrenches underneath military vehicles, operating forklifts, or repairing generators, one lone service member is hard at task operating a seemingly out of place piece of equipment – a sewing machine, tucked away in the back of the shop.

Scraps of fabric and thread litter the green table, and beneath the clatter of wrenches and heavy machinery, you can hear the faint thrum of the sewing machine.

Sgt. Edwin Rodriguez is a full-time welder for the California Army National Guard’s combined support maintenance shop (CSMS) in Long Beach. But today, his attention is focused on nimbly working a piece of black cloth through the needle of the sewing machine.

The entire process takes less than 3 minutes, as he gestures to the newly created cloth mask that will help protect his fellow service members from COVID-19.

“Sewing is the easy part,” he says. “I’d say cutting and cleaning takes the most time.”

Rodriguez, who also serves as a wheeled-vehicle mechanic with 1st Battalion, 140th Aviation Regiment, 40th Combat Aviation Brigade, at nearby Joint Forces Training Base, Los Alamitos, has sewn over 90 masks for fellow Soldiers since COVID-19 began to influence uniform standards. The Department of Defense and the California National Guard require service members to include face coverings as part of their personal protective equipment (PPE) when physical distancing cannot be achieved.

Chief Warrant Officer 2 Ben Johnson and Chief Warrant Officer 2 Mark T. Bun, both California National Guard technicians who work with Rodriguez, approached the Compton native with the idea of making masks for their fellow Soldiers.

“Sgt. Rodriguez has always been outgoing and willing to support anybody who needs help, whether it be at drill or here at the shop,” said Johnson, an allied trade supervisor with the CSMS.

After guidelines required the use of face masks to help slow the spread of the virus, Bun, the CSMS foreman, began thinking of ways he and his Soldiers could help those without access to PPE.

Bun consulted with his mother, an avid sewer, to create a prototype based on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention specifications. He showed the design to Rodriguez and they began crafting a plan to create the masks for troops in need.

“I asked him if he could start sewing some stuff for us to protect the Soldiers. That’s the least we could do, make them feel safer here and give them peace of mind,” Bun said.

Sewing machines aren’t commonly thought of as maintenance shop equipment, but they are occasionally used to repair Humvee doors, said Rodriguez.

While Rodriguez knew the CSMS had three 40-year-old sewing machines, he also knew some hadn’t been used in years. After bringing them down from storage, he discovered only one of the machines was in working order.

After repairing two of the three sewing machines, Rodriguez began sewing, using his civilian skills as a former upholstery technician. Johnson and Bun went to work gathering fabric donations of T-shirts and trousers from the maneuver area training equipment shop (MATES) at Fort Irwin, as well as the 118th Maintenance Company in Stockton.

While making the masks, Rodriguez noticed an issue when sewing the fabric together. He solved the dilemma by adding a layer of gauze within the fabric, he said.

“He’s extremely creative; he’s able to think on a different level on how to make something and repair something,” said Johnson, a Palmdale native.

The masks created by Rodriguez were distributed to California Guard Soldiers working at the CSMS, MATES and the 118th Maintenance Company facility.

While sewing fabric may not be his usual duty at the maintenance shop, Rodriguez is happy to use his skills to help his fellow service members.

“It makes me feel good,” he said. “If I can help them then why not?”

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