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Storekeeper

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
United States Coast Guard enlisted rating
ForStore manager in the Business or Retail sense, seeBusiness manager.
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Storekeeper
Rating insignia
Issued byUnited States Coast Guard
TypeEnlisted rating
AbbreviationSK
SpecialtyAdministration

Storekeeper (SK) is anenlisted rating in theUnited States Coast Guard; until 2009 it was also aUnited States Navy rating, the most common supply rate in U.S. Navy vs. CS (culinary specialist) and SH (Ship's Serviceman) and very much equivalent to theMOS 92 of the U.S. Army. In the Navy this rating, together with PC (postal clerk), has been renamed or superseded by the ratinglogistics specialist (LS).

Function

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Substantiated in 1916,[1] Storekeepers are tasked with maintainingship orcompany military supply stores. Their responsibilities generally include purchasing andprocurement, shipping and receiving, and issuing ofequipment,tools, consumable items or anything else obtained through the Federal Stock System.

Chain of command

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Storekeepers that fall under the authority of a supply officer are attached permanently or temporarily to a supply department, either ashore or afloat. There are exceptions to this practice as was the case of the Independent Storekeeper NEC which trains E-5 and above to operate independent of a supply officer, such as, or while deployed with surface or aviation units that operate in remote areas where no supply officer is present. Additionally, in Aviation Squadrons, the storekeeper falls under the chain of command of the Aircraft Maintenance Officer and his designate; the Maintenance Material Control Officer. The best example of this is the Storekeeper(s) tasked with operating theNaval Air Station Sigonella Weapons Department inSicily,Italy.[citation needed] The department, a semi-autonomous entity withinNAS Sigonella, is headed by a weapons officer to whom the Storekeepers report. Since there is no supply officer within a weapons department either ashore, or afloat, the tasks of material control, inventory control, financial accounting, material custody, issuing, receiving and warehousing and disposition actions all fall within the storekeeper's scope of work, validating, initiating and signing requisitions falls upon the Independent Storekeeper.

Rank and recognition

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Storekeepers are referred to, as all other Coast Guard rates, by rate and rank combined. If a sailor is aPetty Officer Third Class holding the rate of Storekeeper, he or she would be referred to as Storekeeper Third Class or more commonly, SK3. With the recent merger of Storekeepers (SK) andAviation Storekeepers (AK), Storekeepers can be found serving any Naval platform. For this reason, Storekeepers can be found with virtually every warfare pin offered by the Navy with only a few exceptions. Of the warfare qualification held by storekeepers, included are Aviation Warfare (AW), Surface Warfare (SW), Seabee Combat Warfare (SCW), Submarine Warfare Specialist (SS). The SK rate is also a source rating for Explosive Ordnance Disposal, the Navy SEALS, Navy Divers and SWCC. Thus Storekeepers can be stationed virtually anywhere and take on diverse duties.

Training

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Storekeepers are trained at theNaval Technical Training Center inMeridian, Mississippi. Undesignated or non-rate sailors may also strike for SK without attending NTTC Meridian's Storekeeper "A" School. Coast Guard Storekeepers get training inPetaluma, California.

Rating merger

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Effective 1 October 2009, The Ratings of Storekeeper (SK) and Postal clerk (PC) in theNavy have merged to becomeLogistics Specialist (LS).[2]

References

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  1. ^"Compilation of Enlisted Ratings and Apprenticeships, U.S. Navy, 1775 to 1969".Naval History and Heritage Command. December 1969. p. -S-. RetrievedJuly 28, 2019.
  2. ^"Storekeeper, Postal Clerk Ratings to Merge into Logistic Specialist Rating",Navy.mil, November 19, 2008.
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