PDA

View Full Version : 12 things soldiers can expect in 2009



CommunityEditor
01-03-2009, 02:00 PM
From a new commander in chief to a revamped method of PT, soldiers will see a slew of changes in 2009. Some might make Army life tougher. Some might make it easier. But there’s no doubt it’s a packed agenda as the Army’s active and reserve forces shift gears in Iraq and face likely increased action in Afghanistan, along with keeping up with the day-to-day demands of running the service and meeting the needs of families on the home front. Here’s a look at some of the highlights:

1. NCO promotions
The new year kicks off this month with 4,400 soldiers expected to be promoted in the sergeant ranks, 800 more than January 2008, Army officials said. And the pace isn’t supposed to let up, with a total of 51,000 noncommissioned promotions forecast through the year.

In January, senior NCO sequence numbers and mid-ranks cutoff scores call for 11 advancements to sergeant major for the Regular Army, 78 to master sergeant, 690 to sergeant first class, 1,307 to staff sergeant and 2,275 to sergeant.

Promotions to sergeant will come from a pool of 16,466 eligible corporals and specialists, and advancements to staff sergeant from a group of 16,280 promotable sergeants.

2. Stop-loss and dwell time
The thorn of stop-loss and stop-move policies that has been sticking soldiers since the beginning of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq isn’t going away anytime soon, according to the Army’s senior personnel manager.

Maj. Gen. Sean Byrne, commander of the Human Resources Command, said in a Dec. 22 interview at HRC headquarters in Alexandria, Va., that senior leaders want to reduce, if not eliminate, the policies that keep soldiers beyond their voluntary separation and retirement dates.

“However, I think there will be a lot of pressure to keep stop-loss and stop-move in effect until the number of troops deployed overseas is reduced,” Byrne said. About 7,000 soldiers are serving on active duty beyond their scheduled separation dates.

Byrne said the success of recruiting and retention has provided some relief.

“When the war started we had 480,000 soldiers, and today we have 545,000 soldiers in the force,” he said.

That puts the Army within 2,000 soldiers of meeting its expansion goal of 547,400 one year ahead of schedule.

Byrne cautioned that there are a variety of issues that adversely affect the manpower equation.

In addition to the uncertain status of stop-loss soldiers, the Army has 6,000 to 7,000 wounded warriors in transition units who are not available for operational assignments, even though they are carried on the active-duty rolls.

Many of the soldiers being added to the force under the Grow the Army program are being assigned to brigade combat teams of 3,500 to 4,000 soldiers each.

Active component force structure currently has 43 BCTs that either are fully manned or in the process of being built.

Byrne, whose organization is responsible for manning these units, said three additional brigades will start building at about this time next year.

The goal is to have 48 fully manned BCTs by 2012.

Officials said that as these units are added to the force, the Army will be able to increase the time soldiers spend at home station between deployments. Called “dwell time,” soldiers currently average about 12 months at home for every 12 months deployed.

Officials expect that as more brigades become available for operational assignments, dwell time throughout the Army will increase to 24 months, and eventually 36 months.

Meanwhile, Congress and President Bush have signed off on payouts of up to $500 per month this year to soldiers extended under stop-loss. The actual cutting of checks awaits the Army setting a specific amount of the check and review by a congressional panel. As the plan stands now, the payouts won’t be retroactive. Also, the special pay plan is set to expire at the end of this fiscal year.

3. Officer incentives
Regarding officers, the Army may offer a new round of officer retention incentives in 2009, but likely without the huge cash bonuses of the past 18 months.

Results of the two-phase captain retention program that ended Nov. 30 are being evaluated to determine retention strategy for the new year, according to Paul Aswell, chief of the officer policy division in the Office of the G-1 at the Pentagon.

The target population for the bonus-laden retention campaign launched in September 2007 included 23,000 captains from the basic line branches, the Medical Service Corps and Nurse Corps.

Incentives included critical skill retention bonuses of $25,000, $30,000 and $30,000, respectively, along with graduate school attendance and certain assignment and training opportunities.

The program was started as a temporary measure to bolster retention among officers in year groups 1999-2005. Included in the ongoing force expansion are requirements for an additional 9,000 officers, most of them captains and majors.

Under a pre-commissioning program that began in 2006, more than 4,100 high-potential West Point and Reserve Officer Training Corps scholarship cadets have agreed to service extensions in return for branch of choice, assignment and advanced schooling guarantees.

Aswell said these additional service commitments will significantly increase the number of officers who will remain on active duty through at least their eighth year of service.

Officer Candidate School will remain a major source of new officers in 2009, with the 12-week OCS course at Fort Benning, Ga., projected to commission about 1,700 second lieutenants.

However, the Army will tighten educational requirements for in-service enlisted soldiers and warrant officers seeking commissions. Aswell said the Army will implement a policy in 2009 that will require in-service OCS applicants to have a baccalaureate degree.

Under current policy, applicants must have at least 90 semester hours of college credits that lead toward a degree.

“Soldiers who want to go to OCS but who don’t have a four-year degree should apply as soon as they can, because the policy will change,” Aswell said.

Also, the Army Competitive Category major board, previously scheduled for April, has been moved forward to January, which should make nearly 2,000 newly promoted majors available to fill O-4 positions in brigades and other units later in the year.

To support that change, the Army will accelerate the promotion “pin-on” point for major from 9½ years to about nine years, and for captain from 38 month to 37 months.

The later change will generate 400 to 500 additional captains for 2009.

4. Personnel system delays
If you were looking forward to the new joint service pay and personnel system for active and reserve soldiers, it won’t start March 1 as planned.

The Army said it doesn’t have a new date to start the Defense Integrated Military Human Resources System.

This is the fifth time since 2006 that the deployment of DIMHRS has been delayed, according to a report on system problems issued by the Government Accountability Office.

“DIMHRS is undergoing a systems acceptance test, and the program clearly is not where it should be for a March 1 fielding,” said Byrne of Human Resources Command.

“We want a fully functional pay and personnel system,” Byrne said of the system that is designed to replace 70 Army management and data systems.

DIMHRS uses a commercial software product, PeopleSoft, that was developed for civilian business applications, and has been slightly modified for military use.

“This is the largest automation project the Army, Defense Department and probably the United States, has ever undertaken,” Byrne said.

5. Full-spectrum ops training
Units coming back from deployments to Iraq or Afghanistan should be prepared for a return to training for major combat operations — at least on simulators.

The December release of FM 7-0, “Training for Full Spectrum Operations,” launched an overhaul in the Army’s approach to training by including stability operations on par with offensive and defensive operations.

Training for counterinsurgency conflicts, such as those in Afghanistan and Iraq, will continue as long as those wars do. But Army Chief of Staff Gen. George W. Casey has set a goal of getting soldiers back to training in major combat ops as soon as units have a minimum of 18 months’ dwell time.

The first exercise will involve at least one brigade that is between war-zone rotations and will take place this summer in a simulated environment, said Brig. Gen. Robert “Abe” Abrams, deputy commander of training at the Combined Arms Center.

The location hasn’t been determined.

He described the return of major combat operations training as a “re-kindling of skill sets that we have to perform differently in major combat operations versus an irregular war environment.”

Abrams projected that the earliest the Army expects a brigade to be able to conduct a full-scale major combat ops rotation at one of the combat training centers would be sometime in 2010.

6. New PT manual in the works
A new physical training manual that links soldier fitness and the demands of combat and long deployments is in the final review process and likely will be available toward the end of the year.

The new manual will contain dozens of fitness regimens for the garrison environment as well as regimens with mobile equipment, such as dumbbells, that a soldier could use during a deployment.

The workouts are aimed at conditioning soldiers for the missions and tasks they perform every day, rather than getting them in shape for the semiannual Army Physical Fitness Test.

The PT test — which has remained unchanged since it first appeared in 1980 — will stay the same for now.

Push-ups and sit-ups will continue to be part of PT, but sprinting and walking will be recommended over distance running.

Some sets require soldiers to exercise in their Army Combat Uniforms, wearing body armor and helmets with rifles slung across their backs. The exercises are designed to build the strength and flexibility soldiers need for the jobs they do; perhaps to dash 50 yards in full battle gear and jump a low wall, or to endure the twisting and balance of manning a gun turret.

7. Push for M4 replacement
The maker of the Army’s M4 carbine, Colt Defense LLC, will hand over the weapon’s technical data rights to the Army in June, a step that could lead to a new weapon for the service.

By late summer, the Army is scheduled to approve a revised carbine requirement document that was ordered by Army Secretary Pete Geren in November.

This represents a significant course reversal for the Army. Until recently, senior officials have maintained that the M4 is a “world-class weapon” and saw no reason to consider anything new.

But for more than a year, the M4 has been the subject of increased scrutiny from lawmakers on Capitol Hill concerned about whether soldiers have the best available weapon. The scrutiny intensified in late November of 2007 when the weapon finished last in an Army reliability test against other carbines. The M4 suffered more stoppages than the combined number of jams by the other three competitors: the Heckler & Koch XM8; FNH USA’s Special Operations Forces Combat Assault Rifle, or SCAR; and the H&K 416.

One year later, the Army held a small arms industry day in November that attracted 19 companies eager to compete for the chance to make the service’s next weapon. The event was the result of a “request for information” the service put out in August.

Provided that the new carbine requirement is approved, the Army could issue a formal request for proposals for a new carbine to gun makers in late 2009.

8. Language skills check
Soldiers have been ordered by the Army to divulge their foreign language skills after a voluntary survey designed to assess the number of soldiers who speak a foreign language failed to produce enough participants.

By March 15, all active, National Guard and Reserve soldiers, even those who only speak English, must complete an online foreign language self-assessment, according to a Dec. 19 All Army Activity message.

Describing foreign language skills as “critical war fighting enablers in the twenty-first century,” the message directs field commanders to ensure mandatory participation in the one-time assessment.

The language survey was posted on the front page of Army Knowledge Online earlier this year in response to a directive from the Office of the Secretary of Defense. With less than 10 percent participating, the ALARACT message says the voluntary survey has not been completed to the satisfaction of the Defense Department.

A November report by the House Armed Services’ subcommittee on oversight and investigations found that only a small portion of service members were proficient in the cultural and language skills critical to success in Iraq and Afghanistan. It also found that until recently, no comprehensive effort had been made to tackle the issue.

The mandatory survey is designed to identify those in the ranks who have existing foreign language skills.

Soldiers found to have a high proficiency in certain languages may be eligible for foreign language proficiency bonuses and will be recommended to take the defense language proficiency test to document that ability.

Soldiers who have already taken the survey do not need to take it again.

9. Overhaul GI Bill
One of the biggest advances in veterans’ benefits since World War II takes effect Aug. 1, when the flat-rate GI Bill transforms overnight into a plan that pays full tuition plus stipends for housing and books for most students.

Making the plan even more attractive is the possibility that career members with at least 10 years of service could be allowed to transfer their unused benefits to their immediate family. That makes the new benefit a big reward for active-duty and mobilized National Guard and reserve members and a big recruiting and retention incentive that could ease worries about future personnel shortages.

Many questions remain about how the new Post-9/11 GI Bill will work, but the most important is whether the Veterans Affairs Department will be ready by Aug. 1 to make payments in the face of what could be a landslide of claims.

The new GI Bill, for people who have served 30 days or longer on active duty since Sept. 11, 2001, will provide tuition payments directly to the school that are up to the cost of the most expensive four-year public college or university in the state where the veteran is matriculating.

When private-school tuition exceeds that of the costliest public school, students could get additional help if the school and VA agree to give grants under which the government will match whatever tuition discount a school is willing to make.

The housing stipend will be equal to the Basic Allowance for Housing rate for an E-5 living in the school’s ZIP code. The book allowance will be $1,000 a year.

While rates will vary from state to state for tuition and from school to school for the housing allowance, the average benefit will be worth about $80,000 for four years of college education.

10. More family leave

11. Moving household goods

12. War shift


To read the full article, please go here ---> http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/01/army_whatsahead_010509w/

nicklesd@bellsouth.net
01-21-2009, 10:26 PM
I would like to respond to the new GI bill. I think that the new GI bill is the most inovative thing the Army has done in years and I think it will be a boost to all the soldiers and there families. The only conplaint that I have is where does that leave the retired soldier? For example, my husband retired in 2004 after serving more then 23 years in the military. When he retired he still had portions of his GI bill that he never used. He would like to pass these benefits on to our college age daughter, or even to his spouse, but doesn't see how he can based on the information that was in the 19 Jan 09 Army Times. From what we could understand this new GI bill is only for the active duty, reserve or guard. Am I understanding this correctly?
If so, then the retirees are getting the shaft. I hope that someone can clarify this for me. Thank you.