 So, my job is a gunner and no 306 gunner is an infantry weapons officer and our job is to provide information, advice, and the overall observance of quality, safe training with all weapons organic to the infantry. Here at this unit, I am the officer in charge of the range complex, so my role is to ensure that all weapons are being employed properly and all Marines are receiving the training they should when they come to the range. This is my first range complex, so generally speaking, when a warren officer graduates from the gunner school, we'll do one of two billets first, we'll either go to an infantry battalion as a battalion gunner or they will come to a range complex. They're both good positions, I enjoy being here at the range, but I did my time as a battalion gunner at Second Battalion, Second Marines, and then from there I came here so this is my first boasting as a range OIC. Here as a range OIC, one thing that I find myself doing a lot more that I never did as a battalion gunner was managing 45 Marines, ranging in rank from PFC to gunnery sergeant, so generally gunners will not be officer in charge of individuals. I am now and that is an aspect of this job that I'm greatly enjoying is being able to help junior Marines and senior Marines alike and learn as much from them as I hope they are from me. The biggest thing that I try to impart upon the Marines here is that annual rifle training and pistol training is not a check in the box for annual training. It is legitimately to make Marines better with their issued weapons. So what I try to impart on the Marines is that they are not just a coach or shooter here at Cherry Point, but that they're taking the knowledge and the skills they learned here and then distributing that within their units and then making the entire units and thus the entire Marine Corps more combat effective.