On Saturday there will be a changing of — and at — the Guard.
The Minnesota National Guard, that is, as Major Gen. Jon A. Jensen is sworn in as adjutant general, succeeding Major Gen. Richard C. Nash.
But as Jensen describes it, it's more of a transition than a change, since he intends to focus on "the same core things."
"We're a soldier-airman-family-centric organization," Jensen said. "Our people are our most important thing that we have, and they will be our priority because everything revolves around that."
People were a priority for Nash as well. In an interview in his nearly cleared-out office — only pictures of the grandkids remained — he indicated that inclusion of all sectors of an increasingly divided society is imperative, an approach recognized as recently as this week when the Minnesota National Guard won three of five awards for excellence in diversity from the National Guard Bureau.
That's the ethos Jensen will build upon.
"Diversity has always been important in the Minnesota National Guard," Jensen said. "Service needs to be available for everyone," even though "not everyone will select service."
This approach has been put to the test by President Donald Trump's transgender ban, a policy at least temporarily halted after a federal ruling on Monday. Respecting the chain of civilian command, both officers said they would follow official policy. But both Jensen and Nash were sympathetic to the uncertainty facing transgender troops.