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Top medical commander fired at Joint Base Langley-Eustis

Col. Tracy Allen was relieved of command on June 30 of Langley's 633rd Medical Group for a "loss of confidence" in her leadership.
Col. Tracy Allen was relieved of command on June 30 of the 633rd Medical Group at Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Virginia.
Col. Tracy Allen was relieved of command on June 30 of the 633rd Medical Group at Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Virginia. Air Force photo.

The senior commander who oversees healthcare services at one of the Air Force’s largest bases was relieved of command Tuesday, according to Air Force officials. Col. Tracy Allen was fired as the commander of the 633rd Medical Group at Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Virginia, by Col. Stephen Anderson, the 633rd Air Base Wing Commander, “due to loss of confidence in her ability to lead.”

Base officials said Col. Michael Blowers, deputy command surgeon at Air Combat Command, has assumed responsibility of the unit until a new commander is selected.

Langley officials did not provide any reason for Allen’s relief beyond the wing commander’s “loss of confidence,” a boilerplate expression cited almost universally across the military as the motive when senior officers are fired. The term by itself is not an indication of official misconduct by senior commanders, who can be and often are relieved of command in all military branches for a wide range of reasons, including poor on-duty performance or significant mistakes, events in their personal lives, or misbehavior by subordinates.

In rare cases of major misconduct by a commander, firing announcements sometimes note that a formal investigation preceded the firing. The announcement of Allen’s relief did not note any investigation.

Top medical commander at major base

Langley is one of the Air Force’s most significant bases and home to the headquarters of Air Combat Command, or ACC, the service’s largest major command. ACC oversees over 1,000 aircraft in 27 wings across more than two dozen bases. Roughly one of every four airmen in the Air Force is assigned to an ACC unit.

The 633rd Medical Group is the primary healthcare organization at Langley, according to a 2022 fact sheet, with 1,400 personnel across five squadrons. The group runs the base’s hospital, an ambulatory surgical center, and provides laboratory, radiology and pharmacy services. It also owns two 25-bed expeditionary medical support packages and operates a blood transshipment center.

The group supports 29,000 active duty members and their families associated with Langley, as well as up to 426,000 retirees and other civilians in the Hampton Roads region.

Allen previously served as the 436th Medical Group commander at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware.

 

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Matt White

Senior Editor

Matt White is a senior editor at Task & Purpose. He was a pararescueman in the Air Force and the Alaska Air National Guard for eight years and has more than a decade of experience in daily and magazine journalism.