CW2 Private RallyPoint Member 4532845 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>So I&#39;ve dug in AR 600-8-10 and it doesn&#39;t have any answers as per approval reasons. Now we&#39;re looking for actual regulatory guidance on if it can or can&#39;t, regardless of &quot;it being a Soldier&#39;s responsibility to stay in the green&quot;. Can being red on a MEDPROS category officially be means to deny leave. <br /><br />The issue is not that a Soldier shouldn&#39;t have to stay green, it&#39;s more that sometimes our brilliant health system gets quite backed up. So this would mean denied leave because the Soldier is simply waiting for his appointment to come up and other issues. Can MEDPROS being all green be used as a metric for whether leave will be approved or not? 2019-04-10T18:26:15-04:00 CW2 Private RallyPoint Member 4532845 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>So I&#39;ve dug in AR 600-8-10 and it doesn&#39;t have any answers as per approval reasons. Now we&#39;re looking for actual regulatory guidance on if it can or can&#39;t, regardless of &quot;it being a Soldier&#39;s responsibility to stay in the green&quot;. Can being red on a MEDPROS category officially be means to deny leave. <br /><br />The issue is not that a Soldier shouldn&#39;t have to stay green, it&#39;s more that sometimes our brilliant health system gets quite backed up. So this would mean denied leave because the Soldier is simply waiting for his appointment to come up and other issues. Can MEDPROS being all green be used as a metric for whether leave will be approved or not? 2019-04-10T18:26:15-04:00 2019-04-10T18:26:15-04:00 MSG Private RallyPoint Member 4532872 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I can see two sides to this coin:<br /><br />Side 1) I can see the Commander with the mentality of them dictating that they will not sign Leave Forms until one is GREEN. As they are the signature authority, they can approve or deny Leave as they see fit.<br /><br />Side 2) I can see the Commander having common sense and not disapprove a Leave Request due to circumstances beyond the Soldier&#39;s control.<br /><br />Personally, I think it would be a bad move to deny leave for being RED when the reason for being RED is beyond the control of the SM. This will certainly be a Regulation fight to no end. Probably a bitter fight, too. Response by MSG Private RallyPoint Member made Apr 10 at 2019 6:40 PM 2019-04-10T18:40:16-04:00 2019-04-10T18:40:16-04:00 SGM Private RallyPoint Member 4537252 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Yes a commander can do that.<br />How he should do that? Let&#39;s just use dental to make it easy:<br />If a soldier has been red for dental for three months and has no appointment scheduled, leave should be denied, AND he should be on his third counseling about medical readiness.<br />If a soldier has been red for dental for three weeks, and has a dental appointment four weeks from now, leave should be approved. Response by SGM Private RallyPoint Member made Apr 12 at 2019 8:36 AM 2019-04-12T08:36:58-04:00 2019-04-12T08:36:58-04:00 2019-04-10T18:26:15-04:00