Category: Reserve Issues

  • Continuation Boards – Coming Again to a Navy Near You!

    It appears as if the US Navy – like the Army – is about to engage in some “force shaping” efforts.  The Navy has announced that almost 8000 Chiefs (E7/8/9) will have their records screened for continuation in service, starting on 27 October 2014.

    The board will consider both active duty and reserve personnel.  Acitve duty personnel who had 19 years of service as of 28 February 2014, and who had 3 years time in grade as of 30 June, will be considered.  On the reserve side, only those with 20 “good” (qualifying) years for reserve retirement will be considered.

    The Navy held similar boards in FY2010-FY2013.  There was no board this year (FY2014).  But unlike previous years, no career fields will be exempted from consideration.

    No quota for eliminations was set.  Rather, based on the recommendations of Navy senior enlisted advisers the board will operate on a “pure quality cut” basis instead – whatever that means.

    Hey, at least they’re not forcing folks to retire earlier than 20.  Still – for some, it looks like it will soon be, “Bless Our Home It’s Christmas Almost”.

     

  • Some People Got Some ‘Splainin’ To Do . . .

    . . . and, I’d guess, also need to start working on a new resume.

    From the Army Times:

    The National Guard says an artillery shell fired by a Missouri Army National Guard unit during training at Fort Chaffee landed near a home in Franklin County.

    The incident occurred on Thursday, 5 June 2014.

    Although there were no casualties, that’s due as much due to blind luck as anything else. The errant round was a live round, fired during a live fire exercise. The home was damaged by shrapnel.

    The unit involved was the 1st Battalion, 129th Field Artillery Regiment of Maryville, Missouri. It was ordered to cease training, and the incident is under investigation.

  • The Economics of Veteran Unemployment

    Veteran unemployment rates are 9.2% for those serving after 9/11. That statistic is from the Bureau of Labor Statistics as of February 2014. Last year at the same time it was 9.4%. Comparatively, the unemployment rate for non-veterans is 6.9%, and was 7.9% the previous year. For veterans of other eras, their unemployment rate is 6.3% and was 6.9%.
    It is a startling statistic–as well as deeply disturbing. Why do our veterans leave the military, only to find themselves less employable than their civilian counterparts, especially our newest generation?
    The problem was glaringly obvious to me when I returned home from my third tour to Afghanistan and I found myself working at a food court serving pizza. I was happy for the opportunity and glad that someone was willing to hire me. I worked hard and tried to reduce the impact of my National Guard obligations on them as best I could–even if it was just a cashier position. But it burned. Six months prior I was managing repair and installation projects for cellular and data networks. I was a Staff Sergeant during my drill weekends, managing a platoon of combat medics, who supported a cavalry squadron. And then I took off my uniform, grabbed my visor and apron and always made sure to ask if the customer wanted a caesar salad with their order.
    My situation wasn’t unique, and it wasn’t until I connected two very important lessons that either the veterans need to accept or civilian employers need to educate themselves about. (Sadly, my guess is that capitalism will win and Veterans will need to accept their fate.) First, was when a friend, who had never served and had worked in the civilian market in an executive position, made this casually ignorant comment about military leadership. “Your experience doesn’t translate. You just tell your guys what to do and they do it. Things don’t work like that in the civilian world.”
    I wish. I wish it were that easy, but he didn’t know any better.
    Second, was when I was studying my Labor Economics textbook. It discussed the amount of experience that a person gains while working in a position, and how that experience makes them more valuable. This experience is only applicable to that position, however.
    That is the problem. That is the barrier that we can’t overcome: the combination of the belief that our experience doesn’t translate, and the simple fact that we don’t have experience in the civilian market. Many of our skills can be translated, but a civilian employer doesn’t know which ones. In addition, we are simply entry level employees in the eyes of those organizations seeking qualified applicants. There is no doubt that we have gained skills and experience, but rarely in the fields of employment we are attempting to gain access to, which is why so many of us must behave like someone freshly entering the market, with no job skills, because that is what we are–at least in the eyes of the hiring managers.
    The hard part for us is that we know we do have skills, the kind of skills that civilian employers are demanding. I can see it, as I push through college. I’m forced to take classes dedicated to speaking in front of a group, writing professional correspondence, and simply working in a team. That was three separate courses–summarized, two 100 level courses, and a 400 level course. Taking these courses, is to simply prove to my future civilian employer that I am capable of functioning and communicating in a professional environment. All of these were things I learned in the military: teaching classes to my peers and subordinates, briefing my superiors, and working in a team.
    Many of the issues have to do with our pride. Every veteran I know complains about attending college with these “kids.” It is a perfectly understandable frustration. We now operate under completely different frames of reference than most of America. Why should we have to stand in line with all these kids, people who didn’t serve, and be treated as their equals? We shouldn’t, but then again, in the eyes of the greater capitalist machine–those firms that would hire us–we are viewed simply for what production value we can offer. The hiring manager as a human being appreciates and perhaps, even sympathizes with our plight, but they have a job to do, and that job is to hire as many qualified applicants as they can for the lowest cost.
    To do this, they have pre-established requirements that an applicant must meet, simple easy to assess criteria to determine what our production value is to the hiring firm. Veterans are not easily assessed. We don’t have the same certifications, and our experience doesn’t translate well onto paper to fill in their check boxes. As a result, we aren’t hired.
    Why doesn’t the military simply support us with these civilian certifications? We do the same jobs right? Two reasons: cost and retention. Many certifications require training that goes beyond the scope of the job that the military requires of the veterans. Why would they train us, so that we could leave? Training is expensive, and it would be a waste of taxpayer money to train us then let us go. It sucks, but it is reality.
    So there we are: the veterans of foreign wars, combat proven individuals capable of thinking critically and performing under the kind of stress that the civilian market can’t reproduce. This, my generation of veterans, is the same experience as those veterans who came before us. But none of that matters. What we need to do is gain the credentials which the civilian market has established to ease the burden on their hiring managers. Then, once we have entered those positions, we, as human beings, can be evaluated more closely. Our productivity can be measured and our experience can be really put to the test against our civilian counterparts. That is where we will show the value of our experience and our productive capabilities.

  • Regarding That Latest Postal Rate Increase . . . .

    . . . idiocy like this might have something to do with it.

    Seems that in 1988, a guy left active duty.  He went to work for the US Postal Service.

    In 1990, he rejoined the National Guard.  He was active in the Guard.

    So active, in fact, that in 2000 the USPS fired him for “job abandonment”.  They thought he’d neglected his job at USPS and had taken off too much time for Guard matters.

    During a 7-year period, the matter went to court multiple times.  Courts ruled repeatedly in the soldier’s favor.  But for some reason, the USPS apparently simply refused to reinstate the man in his former job.

    The matter finally went to the Merit Systems Protection Board – again – late last year.  And in it’s latest ruling, the board clearly was not amused with the USPS’s antics.

    The board ordered the man reinstated – and also ordered the USPS to pony up for 12 years back pay and other costs.  The total could come to roughly $2 million.

    The USPS is reportedly appealing the latest MSPB decision.  Hey, interest rates are low – what have they got to lose, right?

    Sheesh.  Talk about being too dumb to stop digging . . . .

    Details are found here, and here.  (The second link is from this guy’s union, so it’s hardly an unbiased source – IMO, lotsa spin there – but it does provide a few pertinent details not present in the first.) I’ve heard a couple of other stories of government agencies (both Federal and state) treating members of the Reserve Components quite shabbily, so I can believe this wasn’t just an accidental “Oops” on someone’s part.  And the fact that multiple Federal judges and boards have ruled in this guy’s favor leads me to believe the facts are overwhelmingly on his side.

    If that’s the case – and it appears indeed to be the case – this is long overdue.

    It’s also good to see the USPS get absolutely body-slammed here.  Government entities aren’t exempt from the Uniformed Services Employment/Reemployment Rights Act.

    Hopefully those individuals at the USPS who are responsible for this idiocy end up with the same problem they foisted on this guy – unemployment.  But in their case(s), it would IMO be fully deserved.

  • NJ cops suspended for military service?

    Several of you have sent us links to this Fox News article about two Iraq War veterans & cops who were suspended from their police jobs for allegedly misusing military leave time.

    They’re being suspended without pay and could lose their jobs for allegedly misusing military leave time. An attorney for both men says they’re upstanding cops and did everything by the book. The police union claims the cops are being targeted by their department to discourage other cops from joining the reserves.

    From North Jersey.com, they were both members of the Air Force Reserve;

    The days in question – 15 for McCracken and 29 for Cartagena – go back to 2007 and 2008. McCracken used the days for traveling to a military base, while Cartagena used his days for medical treatments of combat injuries, Elston said.

    Elston said the police department makes it sound like the two were lounging on the beach.

    “These men are highly decorated Iraq War veterans, who have served our country overseas, have been overseas at least twice each, and have served our country with honor and distinction, as well as the Bloomfield Township Police Department,” she said. “The township is saying that now, four or five years after these occurrences, that they should not have been paid for the traveling to comply for the military order or for being treated on base.”

    Their chief isn’t talking to the media at this point, so all we have is the officers’ side of the story. The Bloomfield Patch reports;

    The time period in question occurred in 2008 and 2009 and involves both their overseas deployment and weekend training, Elston said. She said at that time, Bloomfield did not have a policy concerning military absences. Elston said a policy was later put in place and is now being retroactively applied.

    During the press presentation, Elston said she had audio recordings of Bloomfield police investigators saying they didn’t have a set policy in place.

    McCracken said the Essex County Prosecutor’s office had investigated their military leave claims earlier this year and did not find credible evidence that they had falsified their claims of military time.

  • NG/AF Rivalry in Ohio

    Since we’re hating on Big Air Force this week for rationalizing dumping the A-10, let’s hate on them a little longer for more stupid shit from the Washington Post;

    After spending almost $600 million to buy a tiny fleet of the planes over the past six years, stationing them in Mansfield and at two other National Guard bases, the Air Force flew all of them to a junkyard earlier this year. Five more planes, which the Pentagon already has paid for, will be mothballed as soon as they are built.

    To Air Force leaders, it was all about economics. They deemed the small planes less efficient than larger, more commonly used transport aircraft.

    To National Guard leaders in Ohio, how­ever, it was all about politics. The decision to get rid of perfectly good planes, they argue, was driven by a desire among active-duty Air Force leaders to shift the burden of budget cuts onto the National Guard.

    With no planes at the Mansfield base, the Pentagon would no longer pay for it — or the jobs there. Local leaders howled, and the state’s congressional delegation confronted the Air Force. The ensuing battle, which escalated into an intense political dogfight in Washington, was an opening skirmish in what many federal and state officials predict will be the next big clash over defense spending.

    Haven’t we been hearing about how the National Guard and the Reserves are going to play a bigger role in the near future as the Pentagon draws down the active force? And, in the meantime, they’re spending money on aircraft that will be mothballed as it rolls off the assembly line. Yeah, I understand that contracts must be filled, but still, someone should have seen this coming six years ago and maybe not ordered the planes that they don’t really want.

    As shrinking budgets force the military to thin its ranks, many active-duty leaders, seeking to protect their ilk, want the pain to fall disproportionately on National Guard and reserve forces.

    I’m starting to get the feeling that someone in Washington doesn’t know what they’re doing. It looks like by the time the active force gets drawn down, there will be no National Guard or Reserve units left to fill their gaps.

  • #@&!! TDY Fraud

    I alluded earlier to a problem in the Arizona Air National Guard.  It looks like the subject of this article was the reason.

    It appears as if some of those assigned to the 214th Reconnaissance Squadron, Arizona Air National Guard and based in Tucson, were really enduring a hardship tour operating those remotely-piloted aircraft (RPAs).

    How bad, you ask?  As in drawing TDY allowances while living at home and flying RPA missions in support of deployed troops.

    One of the indicted was an O6 – Colonel Gregg Davies.  Ranks of the remaining personnel indicted were not immediately available.

    Davies reportedly used his positionto circumvent measures that were supposed to prevent unauthorized temporary duty entitlements when military members are neither deployed nor away for training from their home.”  The others apparently just raked in their unauthorized cash – to the tune of over $1 million total.  Many individuals involved are thought to have pocketed upwards of $100,000.

    I hope the justice system burns the hell out of these fools.

  • Uh Oh . . .

    Hope I’m wrong, but it looks like there might be something seriously bad going on regarding the Arizona Air National Guard:


    A formal announcement by the Arizona Attorney General is due at 10PM MST/PDT. I don’t know how long it will be afterwards before details might be available.

    I’ll try to post an update later today if/as more info is released.