OS vs AET
Operations Specialist (USCG) vs Avionics Electrical Technician (USCG)
Same Semper Paratus, same "no really, we ARE military" conversation at parties. Two very different versions of what "always ready" means.
The official OS brochure says you'll when someone calls mayday on channel 16, you're the first voice they hear and the person who coordinates everything that happens next. The unofficial one says: the operational tempo never stops — the ocean doesn't have business hours. The official AET brochure says you'll keep Coast Guard aircraft mission-ready by maintaining the avionics and electrical systems that make search and rescue possible. The unofficial one says: coast Guard aircraft fly when everyone else is grounded — and they need to work perfectly every time. We didn't print the unofficial versions. We just typed them onto the internet. Same oath of enlistment, very different Google search histories about career changes.
After the Uniform
The part the recruiter skips: what each job actually translates to once you're a civilian — and what it pays.
Salary data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program. A guide, not a guarantee.
Recruiter vs. Reality
The pitch versus what people who actually did the job report back.
“When someone calls Mayday on Channel 16, you're the first voice they hear and the person who coordinates everything that happens next. Coast Guard Operations Specialists run sector watchfloors that manage search and rescue cases, vessel traffic, law enforcement coordination, and maritime domain awareness simultaneously. The emergency coordination and communications skills transfer to civilian maritime operations, emergency dispatch, and federal maritime security careers — roles that need people who can manage multiple crises in real time.”
You sit in front of radar screens and coordinate everything happening in your area of responsibility, which might be a search and rescue case, a law enforcement interdiction, a pollution response, and commercial vessel traffic management — simultaneously. Operations Specialists are the Coast Guard's battle managers, the people who synthesize information from every source and turn it into situational awareness that commanders use to make decisions. Your watch station is the nerve center: radios crackling with distress calls, radar tracks of every vessel in your sector, and the phone ringing because someone at Group wants an update on the SAR case you started tracking 30 seconds ago. When someone calls Mayday, you're the first Coast Guard person they talk to, and your voice needs to sound calm while you're simultaneously launching assets, coordinating with other agencies, and plotting the search pattern. The multitasking required would give an air traffic controller a panic attack. You manage vessel traffic in ports so congested that a wrong call creates a collision, and your communication log becomes evidence if something goes wrong. The operational tempo never stops — the ocean doesn't have business hours. Civilian transition hits port authorities, vessel traffic services, maritime operations centers, and logistics coordination roles at $60-90K. Your crisis management and multi-domain coordination skills are rare and highly valued.
“You'll keep Coast Guard aircraft mission-ready by maintaining the avionics and electrical systems that make search and rescue possible. AETs work on some of the most capable search and rescue aircraft in the world, and the avionics skills transfer directly to civilian aviation.”
You maintain the wiring, instruments, navigation systems, and communication equipment that pilots depend on to fly missions in the worst weather conditions imaginable. Coast Guard aircraft fly when everyone else is grounded — and they need to work perfectly every time. The A-school is at Elizabeth City, NC and the technical training is rigorous. The civilian avionics job market pays well, especially with an A&P license and CG operational experience.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. OS on the left, AET on the right.
Standing bridge watch, managing communications, plotting navigation, coordinating search and rescue, and maintaining the operational picture. On a cutter, you are the watchstander who tracks contacts, manages radios, and coordinates operations. In a command center, you coordinate SAR and law enforcement operations.
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A-school at Training Center Petaluma (CA) is about 14 weeks covering navigation, communications, SAR coordination, and watchstanding procedures.
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Low. Operations center and bridge watch standing. Standard Coast Guard PT requirements.
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Operations Specialist is the Coast Guard's operations and communications rate. The honest truth: it is shift work in command centers or bridge watchstanding on cutters. Much of it is routine monitoring and communications management. But when a search and rescue case launches, you are the person who coordinates the response — vectoring aircraft, directing boats, and managing the operation that saves lives. The civilian translation to maritime operations, port authority, and vessel traffic services is moderate but niche. The SAR coordination experience is genuinely unique and respected.
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