After career in military, Jim Nudd of Medina finds new role to serve veterans

By Ginny Kropf, correspondent Posted 27 December 2025 at 9:15 pm

Photo by Ginny Kropf: Jim Nudd of Medina, a retired career military officer, sits at his desk at the Orleans County Veterans’ Services Agency in Albion, where he was hired as a Veterans’ Services Officer to assist director Nik Mroz.

ALBION – Soon after assuming duties as director of the Orleans County Veterans’ Service Agency in Albion, Nik Mroz realized it would be even more beneficial to local veterans to have a second person on staff to serve the veterans’ community.

“Not only is it an advantage to have a veterans’ services officer available to manage veterans’ affairs, but it is very helpful in implementing events sponsored by the Dwyer Peer-to-Peer program,” Mroz said. “And if I have to be absent, he’s a big asset to have in the office.”

And Mroz knew just who to ask to fill the position – his brother-in-law, Jim Nudd.

The office will continue to have Jackie Lonnen as a clerk, but there are certain duties pertaining to veterans’ affairs that can only be done by a person accredited by the Veterans’ Administration.

Nudd obtained that accreditation and was hired in November 2024.

A Medina native, Nudd is a son of Jan Nudd and the late Tom Nudd. He graduated from Medina High School in 1984 and immediately joined the Air Force. What followed was a 33-year career which saw him advance from airman to command chief of several bases.

“I had a lot of exposure to the military,” Nudd said. “My dad was in the Navy, my grandpa in the Army and my uncle Ralph Gottovi was in the Army Air Corps. I thought the Air Force sounded more exciting and I had signed up in December of 1983.”

His first assignment was to Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio for basic training, where he learned he would be a munitions systems technician.

Next came a transfer to Lowry Air Force Base in Denver, where he met his wife Kristina.  This was followed by orders for RAF Bentwaters in England, where he achieved the rank of senior airman. While on leave from Bentwaters, his mother bought Kristina a plane ticket to Medina and he proposed to her at Glenwood Lake. On his return to England, Kristina eventually followed him, and they were married there in 1985.

In the years which followed, Nudd continued to climb in rank, becoming sergeant while serving from 1988 to 1990 at Hill Air Force Base in Utah; deployment in Desert Shield/Storm from 1990 to 1991; obtaining rank of staff sergeant at Hill Air Force Base while serving from 1991 to 1994; becoming tech sergeant at RAF Lakenheath, UK. During that time he was also deployed several times, including Bosnia.

In 1997, Nudd was transferred to McConnell Air Force Base in Kansas until 1999, and then to the Kansas Air National Guard until 2004, during which time he obtained master sergeant, senior master sergeant and first sergeant.

Then came his first retirement, which he enjoyed from 2004 to 2006, when he returned to duty at March Air Force Base in California. In 2008 he was sent to Whiteman Air Force Base, Mo. For two years, followed by assignment to the Pentagon from 2010 to 2012, where he was promoted to chief master sergeant. His boss arranged for his promotion ceremony to be held at Niagara Falls Air Force Base, so his father, who was in failing health, and his mother could attend.

His next deployments were back to RAF Lakenheath and Whiteman Air Force Base in 2012 until 2016. His final duty was at Luke Air Force Base in Arizona from 2016 to 2017, where he became command chief, and then retired for the second time.

Jim and Kristina had two daughters during his military service – Kassidi, who was born during his second deployment to Hill Air Force Base from 1991-94; and Alison, who was born after he joined the Kansas Air National Guard in 1999.

As a civilian, he became an explosives safety officer for the U.S. Air Force, serving at McConnell, Scott Air Force Base in Illinois, Hill and Ramstein, Germany until 2023, when he retired for the third time and returned to Medina.

“Nik approached me and said with my experience in the military would I consider coming to work in the Veterans’ Service office part-time,” Nudd said. “I would help veterans with disability claims, burial arrangements and education questions, and I would manage the Dwyer Peer-to-Peer program and help with the van service. Nik took action to get me accredited, and I started in November 2024.”

Nudd is in the office from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays and from 1 to 5 p.m. Fridays.