Posted on Dec 11, 2015
Did you know the Army is Making Rare Change to Its Iconic Dog Tags?
1.6K
7
6
Did you know the Army is Making Rare Change to Its Iconic Dog Tags?
Army announced Tuesday it's making changes to dog tags for the first time in four decades, the Army Times reports.
RP Members that still carry your Dog Tags - was this a needed change to avoid ID Theft?
http://www.newser.com/story/217353/army-making-rare-change-to-its-iconic-dog-tags.html
For soldiers, a dog tag "individualizes the human being who wears it, despite his or her role as a small part of a huge and faceless organization," CNN quotes the Library of Congress as saying.
Army announced Tuesday it's making changes to dog tags for the first time in four decades, the Army Times reports.
RP Members that still carry your Dog Tags - was this a needed change to avoid ID Theft?
http://www.newser.com/story/217353/army-making-rare-change-to-its-iconic-dog-tags.html
For soldiers, a dog tag "individualizes the human being who wears it, despite his or her role as a small part of a huge and faceless organization," CNN quotes the Library of Congress as saying.
Edited 9 y ago
Posted 9 y ago
This is a duplicate discussion. Click below to see more on this topic.
Well, DA PAM 600-8-14 was just updated last week and the SSN on our tags has been replaced with our DoD ID Number.
c. All ID tags will have the following information embossed on them:
(1) Line 1. Name of the wearer: Enter last name, first name, middle initial. (If the full name cannot be embossed on
the first line, put the last name on line 1, place the first name and middle initial on line 2. Subsequent entries shift
down one line each. If a U.S. National, the name will be the same as shown on passport or ID card.)
(2) Line 2. (Service Number) Department of Defense (DOD) ID number (10 digits, no hyphens) (The Social
Security number has been replaced by the DOD ID, in accordance with DODI 1000.30.)
(3) Line 3. Blood group and type. Record as "A", "B", "AB", or "O", followed by "POS" OR "NEG." Do not use
plus (+) or minus (-) signs to record the blood type. If the blood type is incorrect the Soldier must update the medical
system of record.
(4) Line 4. Religious preference. Spell this out when possible (the example shown in figures 2–1 and 2–2 is used to
set forth a pattern for guidance). If the religious preference is incorrect, the Soldier must update the personnel system
of record.
Do you think this is going to make any difference, beside the lines to get the new tags and the people you know add some crazy stuff on them, will there be any benefit from it?
AR 670-1 States: 3–11. Identification tags and security identification badges
a. Identification tags. Wearing identification tags is governed by AR 600–8–14.
(1) Soldiers will wear identification tags at all times while on duty in uniform unless otherwise directed by the
commander.
Do you use them every single day? To PT, while on training in Civilians? Will this make any change?
Soldiers' Social Security numbers will no longer be part of their dog tags, the Army announced Tuesday.
The change, which some have argued is long overdue, is the first update to the ubiquitous identification tags in more than 40 years.
A soldier's Social Security number will be replaced by a 10-digit, randomly-generated number. The change will be implemented on an as-needed basis, Michael Klemowski, Soldiers Programs branch chief at Army Human Resources Command, said in a statement released by the Army.
"This change is not something where soldiers need to run out and get new tags made," he said. "We are focusing first on the personnel who are going to deploy. If a soldier is going to deploy, they are the first ones that need to have the new ID tags."
The change is in accordance with new Defense Department guidelines calling for less use of Social Security numbers. It also comes on the heels of several data breaches that compromised the personal information of millions of service members, government employees and veterans.
Removing Social Security numbers from dog tags is one of the ways the Army is trying to safeguard personal information, Klemowski said.
"If you find a pair of lost ID tags, you can pretty much do anything with that person's identify because you now have their blood type, their religion, you have their Social, and you have their name," he said.
The Army has been working on making this change for years; it was first outlined in the DoD Social Security Number Reduction Plan and the President's Task Force on Identity Theft Strategic Plan in 2007, according to the Army.
It took time to figure out how to implement the change because several Army systems used a soldier's Social Security number, and all for different purposes, Klemowski said. Each system had to be reworked so they worked with one another and the DoD ID number, he said.
"More and more systems are going to go to the DoD ID number as technology catches up with us and we are able to phase out the Social Security number," he said.
http://www.armytimes.com/story/military/careers/army/2015/12/08/army-stop-putting-social-security-numbers-dog-tags/76984792/
c. All ID tags will have the following information embossed on them:
(1) Line 1. Name of the wearer: Enter last name, first name, middle initial. (If the full name cannot be embossed on
the first line, put the last name on line 1, place the first name and middle initial on line 2. Subsequent entries shift
down one line each. If a U.S. National, the name will be the same as shown on passport or ID card.)
(2) Line 2. (Service Number) Department of Defense (DOD) ID number (10 digits, no hyphens) (The Social
Security number has been replaced by the DOD ID, in accordance with DODI 1000.30.)
(3) Line 3. Blood group and type. Record as "A", "B", "AB", or "O", followed by "POS" OR "NEG." Do not use
plus (+) or minus (-) signs to record the blood type. If the blood type is incorrect the Soldier must update the medical
system of record.
(4) Line 4. Religious preference. Spell this out when possible (the example shown in figures 2–1 and 2–2 is used to
set forth a pattern for guidance). If the religious preference is incorrect, the Soldier must update the personnel system
of record.
Do you think this is going to make any difference, beside the lines to get the new tags and the people you know add some crazy stuff on them, will there be any benefit from it?
AR 670-1 States: 3–11. Identification tags and security identification badges
a. Identification tags. Wearing identification tags is governed by AR 600–8–14.
(1) Soldiers will wear identification tags at all times while on duty in uniform unless otherwise directed by the
commander.
Do you use them every single day? To PT, while on training in Civilians? Will this make any change?
Soldiers' Social Security numbers will no longer be part of their dog tags, the Army announced Tuesday.
The change, which some have argued is long overdue, is the first update to the ubiquitous identification tags in more than 40 years.
A soldier's Social Security number will be replaced by a 10-digit, randomly-generated number. The change will be implemented on an as-needed basis, Michael Klemowski, Soldiers Programs branch chief at Army Human Resources Command, said in a statement released by the Army.
"This change is not something where soldiers need to run out and get new tags made," he said. "We are focusing first on the personnel who are going to deploy. If a soldier is going to deploy, they are the first ones that need to have the new ID tags."
The change is in accordance with new Defense Department guidelines calling for less use of Social Security numbers. It also comes on the heels of several data breaches that compromised the personal information of millions of service members, government employees and veterans.
Removing Social Security numbers from dog tags is one of the ways the Army is trying to safeguard personal information, Klemowski said.
"If you find a pair of lost ID tags, you can pretty much do anything with that person's identify because you now have their blood type, their religion, you have their Social, and you have their name," he said.
The Army has been working on making this change for years; it was first outlined in the DoD Social Security Number Reduction Plan and the President's Task Force on Identity Theft Strategic Plan in 2007, according to the Army.
It took time to figure out how to implement the change because several Army systems used a soldier's Social Security number, and all for different purposes, Klemowski said. Each system had to be reworked so they worked with one another and the DoD ID number, he said.
"More and more systems are going to go to the DoD ID number as technology catches up with us and we are able to phase out the Social Security number," he said.
http://www.armytimes.com/story/military/careers/army/2015/12/08/army-stop-putting-social-security-numbers-dog-tags/76984792/
Responses: 5
About 20 years on the late side, but still any progress in identify theft is a good one.
They should have changed this long ago. The VA took off the SS #S on the VA Identification hospital cards years ago....I think Military ID cards should just show the last four of the SS# too.
The more things change the more they stay the same. In 1967 we were issued eight digit service numbers, and they switched to SSNs by the time my dog tags were issued in 1970 before I shipped out to Viet Nam.
Read This Next