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Sunday, October 6, 2024

A New Day for CPOA: BMCS Jon Ostrowski Sworn as President of Chief Petty Officers Association

The Chief Petty Officers Association (CPOA) of the U.S. Coast Guard installed new leadership at this week’s 50th convention in St. Petersburg, Fla.  Sworn as president was BMCS Jon Ostrowski (ret), a 30 year Coast Guard boatswain who will lead the organization during its landmark 50th anniversary of serving the Chiefs of the U.S. Coast Guard.

Campaigning on a platform of modernization, partnership, and communication, Ostrowski said in an interview with HSToday that “I’m not planning to change the course of the CPOA; I am looking to increase our ’payload’ – our reach, membership, and speed – to bring our association into an era where things move at the speed of light.”

“We must be agile and meet the needs of our current and future members,” he said.

Ostrowski, a member of the CPOA since 2006, served as treasurer of the LA/LB Chapter, president and vice president of the Washington, D.C., Chapter, and co-chairman of the National Membership Committee; he is a Silver Lifetime Member of the association. During his service as a chapter president, his chapter was twice awarded the CPOA President’s Outstanding Chapter Award, and led the charge to raise over $120,000 to restore the Coast Guard WWI memorial at Arlington National Cemetery. During his tenure they doubled sponsorships and increased their membership by 10 percent. He has also worked diligently to mentor junior enlisted, culminating in the creation of a CGEA branch in Washington, D.C.

“I believe in developing cooperative, collaborative relationships and partnerships with other organizations to enhance the CPOA’s reputation and engagement in the broader community in addition to adding more value to our members,” Ostrowski continued.

Ostrowski will serve a three-year term as president and is eligible for one more term if re-elected.

Charlie Womack Courtesy photoChief Petty Officers Association

Also elected to the CPOA board was Charlie Womack, a CPOA member since 1985 and a Silver Lifetime member since 1997. Womack held chapter presidencies in Honolulu, New Orleans, and Mobile and served as vice president and secretary for those chapters as well. Nationally, he has served one term as vice president.

Established in 1969, the Coast Guard CPOA was formed to advance the interests of the United States Coast Guard Chief Petty Officer Corps, encouraging integrity and fidelity to the Service and fellowship within the ranks. In 1991, the Coast Guard Enlisted Association was chartered by and for junior enlisted personnel, under the auspices of the CPOA, reinforcing the association’s motto: “In respect for those who have gone before us, and as a guide for those who follow.”

The CPOA and the CGEA proudly serve Coast Guard and other military active duty and reserve members, veterans, their families and their communities. Through a strong and united network of over 10,000 members, the organizations work to advance the interests of membership through community service, scholarships and fundraising, and by partnering with military and veterans organizations both locally and nationally.

CPOA members re-elected to the CPOA Board include: Secretary YNCS Bruce Garrison, Treasurer CW02 Mark Tahtinen, Region 1 Advisor MKCM Dave Isherwood, Region 2 HSCM Tyrone Anderson, and Region 3 Advisor CWO Amy Ponce.

For more information on the CPOA or to join, click here.

Kristina Tanasichuk
Kristina Tanasichuk
From terrorism to the homeland security business enterprise, for over 20 years Kristina Tanasichuk has devoted her career to educating and informing the homeland community to build avenues for collaboration, information sharing, and resilience. She has worked in homeland security since 2002 and has founded and grown some of the most renowned organizations in the field. Prior to homeland she worked on critical infrastructure for Congress and for municipal governments in the energy sector and public works. She has 25 years of lobbying and advocacy experience on Capitol Hill on behalf of non- profit associations, government clients, and coalitions. In 2011, she founded the Government & Services Technology Coalition, a non-profit member organization devoted to the missions of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and all the homeland disciplines. GTSC focuses on developing and nurturing innovative small and mid-sized companies (up to $1 billion) working with the Federal government. GTSC’s mission is to increase collaboration, information exchange, and constructive problem solving around the most challenging homeland security issues facing the nation. She acquired Homeland Security Today (www.HSToday.us) in 2017 and has since grown readership to over one million hits per month and launched and expanded a webinar program to law enforcement across the US, Canada, and international partners. Tanasichuk is also the president and founder of Women in Homeland Security, a professional development organization for women in the field of homeland security. As a first generation Ukrainian, she was thrilled to join the Advisory Board of LABUkraine in 2017. The non-profit initiative builds computer labs for orphanages in Ukraine and in 2018 built the first computer lab near Lviv, Ukraine. At the start of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, she worked with the organization to pivot and raise money for Ukrainian troop and civilian needs. She made several trips to Krakow, Poland to bring vital supplies like tourniquets and water filters to the front lines, and has since continued fundraising and purchasing drones, communications equipment, and vehicles for the war effort. Most recently she was named as the Lead Advisor to the First US-Ukraine Freedom Summit, a three-day conference and fundraiser to support the rehabilitation and reintegration of Ukrainian war veterans through sports and connection with U.S. veterans. She served as President and Executive Vice President on the Board of Directors for the InfraGard Nations Capital chapter, a public private partnership with the FBI to protect America’s critical infrastructure for over 8 years. Additionally, she served on the U.S. Coast Guard Board of Mutual Assistance and as a trustee for the U.S. Coast Guard Enlisted Memorial Foundation. She graduated from the Drug Enforcement Agency’s and the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Citizens’ Academies, in addition to the Marine Corps Executive Forum. Prior to founding the Government Technology & Services Coalition she was Vice President of the Homeland Security & Defense Business Council (HSDBC), an organization for the largest corporations in the Federal homeland security market. She was responsible for thought leadership and programs, strategic partnerships, internal and external communications, marketing and public affairs. She managed the Council’s Executive Brief Series and strategic alliances, as well as the organization’s Thought Leadership Committee and Board of Advisors. Prior to this, she also founded and served for two years as executive director of the American Security Challenge, an event that awarded monetary and contractual awards in excess of $3.5 million to emerging security technology firms. She was also the event director for the largest homeland security conference and exposition in the country where she created and managed three Boards of Advisors representing physical and IT security, first responders, Federal, State and local law enforcement, and public health. She crafted the conference curriculum, evolved their government relations strategy, established all of the strategic partnerships, and managed communications and media relations. Tanasichuk began her career in homeland security shortly after September 11, 2001 while at the American Public Works Association. Her responsibilities built on her deep understanding of critical infrastructure issues and included homeland security and emergency management issues before Congress and the Administration on first responder issues, water, transportation, utility and public building security. Prior to that she worked on electric utility deregulation and domestic energy issues representing municipal governments and as professional staff for the Chairman of the U.S. House Committee on Energy & Commerce. Tanasichuk has also worked at the American Enterprise Institute, several Washington, D.C. associations representing both the public and private sectors, and the White House under President George H.W. Bush. Tanasichuk also speaks extensively representing small and mid-sized companies and discussing innovation and work in the Federal market at the IEEE Homeland Security Conference, AFCEA’s Homeland Security Conference and Homeland Security Course, ProCM.org, and the Security Industry Association’s ISC East and ACT-IAC small business committee. She has also been featured in CEO Magazine and in MorganFranklin’s www.VoicesonValue.com campaign. She is a graduate of St. Olaf College and earned her Master’s in Public Administration from George Mason University. She was honored by the mid-Atlantic INLETS Law Enforcement Training Board with the “Above and Beyond” award in both 2019 – for her support to the homeland security and first responder community for furthering public private partnerships, creating information sharing outlets, and facilitating platforms for strengthening communities – and 2024 – for her work supporting Ukraine in their defense against the Russian invasion. In 2016 she was selected as AFCEA International’s Industry Small Business Person of the Year, in 2015 received the U.S. Treasury, Office of Small Disadvantaged Business Utilization Excellence in Partnership award for “Moving Treasury’s Small Business Program Forward,” as a National Association of Woman Owned Businesses Distinguished Woman of the Year Finalist, nominated for “Friend of the Entrepreneur” by the Northern Virginia Technology Council, Military Spouse of the Year by the U.S. Coast Guard in 2011, and for a Heroines of Washington DC award in 2014. She is fluent in Ukrainian.

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