Posted on Jul 7, 2014
Army offering Prior Service enlisted officers 15 yr early retirement: What say you?
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In an expanded effort to slim down the force, the Army is offering more 15-year retirements to officers with prior-enlisted service.
Army Secretary John McHugh, in a June 17 directive, granted early retirements to prior-enlisted officers with eight years or more commissioned service. Previously this voluntary separation was only available to prior-enlisted officers with at least 10 years of commissioned service. Warrant officers are not eligible.
These officers are only retirement eligible if they have 15 years of active-duty service.
As of May 30, there were 256 active-duty officers with eight years of commissioned service who qualify for the early retirements, and 176 with nine years who are eligible.
The 15-year retirement option is officially called the Temporary Early Retirement Authority. Congress authorized its use in 2011 as a force management program to be used through Sept. 30, 2018.
McHugh OK’d it for the Army in 2012 as the service prepared to launch a series of retention screening boards for officers and senior noncommissioned officers of the Regular Army and Army Reserve.
Before now, the use of TERA had been restricted to people identified for separation by involuntary release boards and those who have been passed over for promotion.
The special program allows soldiers with at least 15 but fewer than 20 years of active service to receive the same benefits as those who retire with 20 or more years of service, except that their retirement pay is reduced accordingly.
Before McHugh’s June 17 directive, it was possible for prior-enlisted officers to retire with only eight years commissioned service, but it required a waiver. The new rules are effective through Congress’ 2018 deadline.
Soldiers who have 18 to 20 years of service, and who are in the retirement lock-in category of federal law, may not be discharged unless recommended by a court-martial convening authority, and approved by the assistant secretary of the Army for manpower and reserve affairs.
The Army has Congressional authority to ease the retirement lock-in rule — requiring colonels and lieutenant colonels to serve at least three years after promotion to retire in those ranks — but McHugh has not yet decided to use it.
The Army recently increased the retirement lock-in for promotion to the senior NCO ranks from two to three years.
Staff writer Jim Tice contributed to this report.
Army Secretary John McHugh, in a June 17 directive, granted early retirements to prior-enlisted officers with eight years or more commissioned service. Previously this voluntary separation was only available to prior-enlisted officers with at least 10 years of commissioned service. Warrant officers are not eligible.
These officers are only retirement eligible if they have 15 years of active-duty service.
As of May 30, there were 256 active-duty officers with eight years of commissioned service who qualify for the early retirements, and 176 with nine years who are eligible.
The 15-year retirement option is officially called the Temporary Early Retirement Authority. Congress authorized its use in 2011 as a force management program to be used through Sept. 30, 2018.
McHugh OK’d it for the Army in 2012 as the service prepared to launch a series of retention screening boards for officers and senior noncommissioned officers of the Regular Army and Army Reserve.
Before now, the use of TERA had been restricted to people identified for separation by involuntary release boards and those who have been passed over for promotion.
The special program allows soldiers with at least 15 but fewer than 20 years of active service to receive the same benefits as those who retire with 20 or more years of service, except that their retirement pay is reduced accordingly.
Before McHugh’s June 17 directive, it was possible for prior-enlisted officers to retire with only eight years commissioned service, but it required a waiver. The new rules are effective through Congress’ 2018 deadline.
Soldiers who have 18 to 20 years of service, and who are in the retirement lock-in category of federal law, may not be discharged unless recommended by a court-martial convening authority, and approved by the assistant secretary of the Army for manpower and reserve affairs.
The Army has Congressional authority to ease the retirement lock-in rule — requiring colonels and lieutenant colonels to serve at least three years after promotion to retire in those ranks — but McHugh has not yet decided to use it.
The Army recently increased the retirement lock-in for promotion to the senior NCO ranks from two to three years.
Staff writer Jim Tice contributed to this report.
Posted 10 y ago
Responses: 15
You always have a legal fight. This is still the USA.
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I imagine the big Army probably thinks, "You're lucky you get that... nothing but upjumped enlisted swine.." :)
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SFC A.M. Drake
Is that a question? Or just a statement posed as a question? By the way it was reduced to 8
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LTC (Join to see)
The Army lowered the number of years served Asian officer to retire as an officer to 8. So if you did 8 years enlisted, went to OCS as a SSG do another 7 years as a CPT and are downsized into early retirement with 15 years, you will retire as a SSG.
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SFC A.M. Drake
sir, can you not appeal that to the Army Review Agency to see if it can be upgraded to 0-3 rank?
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