Air Force Climate Survey gives insights Published April 21, 2011 Air Force News Service RANDOLPH AIR FORCE BASE, Texas -- More than 172,000 Airmen across the Air Force voiced their opinions in the online Air Force Climate Survey from Oct. 8 to Nov. 28. After experts performed a comprehensive analysis, officials have recently released the total force results on the Air Force Portal. The climate survey is designed to measure Airmen's attitudes toward their work environment and unit with results showing more than 80 percent of survey respondents are happy with their jobs and 95 percent agreeing their unit is successfully accomplishing its mission. Links to the final report are being e-mailed this week to all unit commanders and leaders who had 10 or more of their Airmen respond. The identity of those who participated will be protected. Those reports will contain breakouts of active duty, Guard and Reserve responses and an additional breakout of officer, enlisted and civilian responses only if there are seven or more responses in that category, officials said. No other demographic information is included in unit final reports, and individual responses are not revealed. The survey gives leaders an insight into the work environment of organizations within the total force, officials said. For instance, despite deployment demands, deployed and nondeployed Airmen have nearly equal levels of positive responses regarding recognition, trust in leadership and job satisfaction. Survey analysis showed that more than 90 percent of Airmen believe their immediate supervisor trusts them, has confidence in them and respects them. Airmen also indicated they generally have trust in their direct supervisor, with levels of agreement at 83 percent or more on all related questions. Additionally, 82 percent of all survey respondents are generally satisfied with the Air Force. The results of the survey also indicated that the strain on manpower and time continues to be a concern for the total force, with the majority of home-station Airmen reporting an increase in levels of stress, workload and work-hours due to personnel being deployed. The survey also showed that, despite these indicators of a more stressful environment, Airmen who intend to remain on active duty increased slightly. Not only does the survey measure the attitudes of Airmen currently, but it also compares those of Airmen who took the 2008 survey, the officials said.