IDT "Inactive" duty Training INACTIVE?! is it a inapropriate misleading term used to describe what is really going on? https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/idt-inactive-duty-training-inactive-is-it-a-inapropriate-misleading-term-used-to-describe-what-is-really-going-on <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Basically the discussion is in the end to help the United States through Congress and USCode and DOD and Department Branches change for the better.<br /><br />I specifically did research on INACTIVE and how it is being used inappropriately to describe ACTIVE MANDATORY STATUS on ORDERS RESERVISTs doing hazardous duties alongside Full Time Service Members, and the innuendos that INACTIVE carries and the Disparaging and sometimes second class lower tier lower appreciation or simply dogged Reservist may take grief for simply showing up to train and drill on ORDERS that are out of his control, and lastly as my research has shown, and as my research will give proof below in a CONGRESSIONAL COMMITEE task group 1997, INACTIVE innacurately describes current reservist training hazardous optemp stressor training and lack of health care and actual laws in USCODE that limit heath care based on ORDERS less then 30 days, as reported by the SEC of RSRVS and SEC of MANPWR and HEALTH <br /><br />This may not happen to a majority of RESERVIST. When a majority of RESERVIST are at RESERVE centers and not attached to COMPOSITE ACTIVE and RESERVE units in an AUGMENT unit in the HIGHEST-STATE of READINESS for QUICK RECALL and DEPLOYMENT.<br /><br />But for the few that did or do serve there INACTIVE duty TRAINING LIKE THIS, I believe there should be more protection and more appreciation especially in the terminology used to describe it.<br /><br />Lastly since WW 2 all conflicts used RESERVES to succeed and pull anything off. Simply, the AD manpower, is not enough, and to costly to maintain, between conflicts. And the RESERVES are kept in a high state of readiness. I lived it. I know. And I know it needs to improve. Sadly only because it can destroy the young man or woman in ways that few understand, mainly by putting young inexperierienced, men and women in HI-OPTEMP combat ACTIVE FUll TIME UNITS, in an AUGMEnT ROLE, forced to figure out how to take 2 days, 48 hours and learn and maintain hi level combat skills that the AD FULL TIME counterpart is living day in day out.<br /><br />At the very least the young inexperienced Soldier or Sailor will feel out of place and will be overwhelmed by the supreme pressure it is to try to learn and soak in full time active duty skill sets on just 2 days a month. It is impossible to have success a majority of times. I lived it. I know. I tried. And in the end I write this report, and ask what others think of INACTIVE to describe such situations.<br /><br /><br /><br /> <br /><br /><br />BELOW YOU WILL FIND snippets of a REPORT TO CONGRESS FROM SEC OF DEF RES AFFRS AND HEALTH AFFRS concerning RESERVIST like no time previous doing HAZARDOUS duties along side ACTIVE DUTY on IDT inactive duty training orders less then 30 days, a legal conundrum that lacks proper full ranging full spectrum health care from the wealthiest nations with the most advanced military and most well financed militaries, which puts a service member who is otherwise willing to risk his/her life even in training to defend his/her the UNITED STATES, puts a service member and dependents in a world of hurt when a reservist drilling incurs injury - becomes takes a boat load of stress on mental physical during training and becomes a major casualty or otherwise becomes incapacitated or sent back home with a possible multitude of symptoms of illness or injuries undealt with untreated uncared for etc etc..and it was all CALLED "INACTIVE" duty training And it was all captured in a REPORT to CONGRESS, I found that you can download yourself.<br /><br />--Report to Congress 1997-------<br />Prepared by: Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense For Reserve Affairs<br />Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense For Health Affairs<br />Section 746 of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 1997 directed the Department of Defense (DoD), in consultation with the Secretary of Transportation, to conduct a study and report to Congress on the means of improving the provision of uniform and consistent medical and dental care to members of the Reserve components (RCs)<br /><br />Since the end of the Cold War, and with the drawdown of the force, the role of the Reserve components has changed, and the use of the RCs in the performance of operational missions has increased dramatically. Reservists are now providing daily support to military operations around the world. This increased use results in a significant increase in exposure to injury, illness, disease, and death in the line of duty. As shown in Exhibit 1, Reserve component man-day contributions to Total Force missions have increased ten-fold from a 1989 benchmark. At the same time, the overall strength of the Reserve forces has decreased by nearly one quarter. As a result, the average Reservist’s exposure to injury and illness has increased significantly<br /><br />For example, on April 1, 1997, an Air Force Reserve C-130 aircraft crashed at Tegucigalpa, Honduras. Seven RC crew members survived this crash with incapacitating injuries. Although the survivors were entitled to incapacitation pay and medical treatment, prevailing restrictions precluded them from being retained on active duty for treatment of their injuries past the period of duty prescribed in their orders. Because length of duty status determines entitlements, their family members were not eligible for health care through the military’s TRICARE system. An Active or Reserve service member on orders for more than 30 days would have received retirement credit, pay and allowances, medical treatment for line of duty (LOD) injuries, comprehensive medical care for non-LOD conditions, and comprehensive medical care for family members. One survivor, who is married with three children under age five, noted, "I never thought in a million years that my family and I would not be covered if an accident occurred while serving my country." He also stated that, "If the Reservist/Guardsman knows that in a time of need, neither he nor his family will be protected, retention will be a serious problem…how can I continue to put my family in this predicament?" This example illustrates both the anachronistic scheme for the provision of health care and related benefits to Reserve component service members and the importance of modernizing the benefit scheme as a quality of life, force protection and recruiting and retention tool.<br /><br /> <br /><br /><br /><br /><br />BELOW DOD JOINT PUB Joint Publication 1<br />Doctrine for the Armed Forces<br />of the United States 25 March 2013<br /><br />(3) Coordinate and approve participation by assigned RC forces in joint exercises<br />and training when on active duty for training or performing inactive duty for training;<br /><br />(3) RC forces on active duty for training or performing inactive-duty training may<br />be employed in connection with contingency operations only as provided by law, and when<br />the primary purpose is for training consistent with their mission or specialty.<br /><br />inactive duty training. Authorized training performed by a member of a Reserve<br />Component not on active duty or active duty for training and consisting of regularly<br />scheduled unit training assemblies, additional training assemblies, periods of appropriate<br />duty or equivalent training, and any special additional duties authorized for Reserve<br />Component personnel by the Secretary concerned, and performed by them in connection<br />with the prescribed activities of the organization in which they are assigned with or<br />without pay. Also called IDT. (Approved for incorporation into JP 1-02.)<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />BELOW DOD JOINT PUB Joint Publication 4-05 Joint MOBILIZATION PLAN uses of INACTIVE 21 February 2014<br /><br /><br />f. DODD 1235.13, Management of the Individual Ready Reserve (IRR) and the Inactive<br />National Guard (ING).<br /><br />Inactive National Guard. None. (Approved for removal from JP 1-02.)<br /><br />inactive status. Status of reserve members on an inactive status list of a Reserve<br />Component or assigned to the Inactive Army National Guard. (Approved for<br />incorporation into JP 1-02.)<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />BELOW DOD JOINT PUB 1-02 DICTIONARY OF TERMS "INACTIVE" uses defined and seemingly conflicting confusing misleading as ACTIVE MANDATORY DRILLING READY RESERVES are always PERFORMING whatever is ORDERED UNDER ORDERS in "INACTIVE" duty training IDT<br /><br />Joint Publication 1-02<br /><br />Department of Defense<br />Dictionary of<br />Military and Associated Terms<br /><br />inactive status — Status of reserve members on an inactive status list of a Reserve<br />Component or assigned to the Inactive Army National Guard. (JP 4-05)<br /><br />TII total inactive inventory<br /><br />inactive duty training — Authorized training performed by a member of a Reserve<br />Component not on active duty or active duty for training and consisting of regularly<br />scheduled unit training assemblies, additional training assemblies, periods of<br />appropriate duty or equivalent training, and any special additional duties authorized for<br />Reserve Component personnel by the Secretary concerned, and performed by them in<br />connection with the prescribed activities of the organization in which they are assigned<br />with or without pay. Also called IDT. See also active duty for training. (JP 1)<br /><br /><br /><br />BELOW YOU FIND ARMY JAG REVIEW OF the INACTIVE term Used <br /><br />THE ARMY<br />Headquarters, Department of the Army<br />Department of the Army Pamphlet 27-50-208 April 1990<br />Table of Contents <br /><br /><br />These drills are rather inappropriately called “inactive duty training’’ (IDT or drills), as though the reservist were some sort of inanimate object. <br /><br />Inactive duty training is defined as “duty under Section 206 of Title 37 or any other provision of law and special additional duties within the units to which they are assigned.” DOD Dir 1235.10, Ordering the Selected Reserve to Active Duty for Operational Missions (1989 draft).<br /><br />10 U.S.C. Q 672b provides that, at any time, an<br />authority designated by the appropriate Service Secretary<br />may involuntarily order to active duty any unit of the<br />Reserve component (Reserve or Guard) that is in an<br />“active status,” (i.e., not in the inactive or retired Reserve<br />or Guard)<br /><br />The “active status’’ requirement would seem to exclude the Inactive Standby and Retired Reserve. 10 U.S.C. lOl(25) (1982); DOD Dir 1235.9, Management and Mobilization of the Standby Reserve (July 8, 1986).<br /><br />The United States Code provides that inactive and retired personnel will not be called up unless there are not enough qualified active reservists in the Ready, Reserve.<br /><br />The legislative authority for these callups-the United States Code-uses a confusing number of different terms to describe the type of duty for the recalled service member. For instance, the Code uses the terms “active duty,” “inactive duty training,” “active duty training,” “full time training duty;’ “active duty (other than training),” “active duty other than for training,” “annual training duty” (ATD), and “active duty for training” (ACDUTRA). While the legislation is explained and implemented by a number of DOD and service regulations (which are constantly being updated to keep pace with the times)there seems to ’be no standard scheme for the use of these terms in regard to the type of duty they authorize. This alone may be justification enough to revamp the laws.<br /><br />Specialized Call-up Provisions<br />Involuntary Call-up Under the UCMJ I/<br />In response to the Court of Military Appeals decision in United States v. Cuput0,107 Congress in 1986 revised sections 2 and 3 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ). ln This revision changed the law to permit ordering a member of the Reserve components to active duty for investigation, trial by court-martial, or non-judicial punishment for offenses committed while on prior “active duty” or “inactive-duty training.” ln addressing the Caput0 decision, Congress clarified that a member of a Reserve component is not, by virtue of the termination of a period of active duty or inactive-duty training, relieved from amenability to jurisdiction under the UCMJ for an offense committed during prior active duty or inactive-duty training.110 Mon, 19 Jan 2015 02:06:15 -0500 IDT "Inactive" duty Training INACTIVE?! is it a inapropriate misleading term used to describe what is really going on? https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/idt-inactive-duty-training-inactive-is-it-a-inapropriate-misleading-term-used-to-describe-what-is-really-going-on <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Basically the discussion is in the end to help the United States through Congress and USCode and DOD and Department Branches change for the better.<br /><br />I specifically did research on INACTIVE and how it is being used inappropriately to describe ACTIVE MANDATORY STATUS on ORDERS RESERVISTs doing hazardous duties alongside Full Time Service Members, and the innuendos that INACTIVE carries and the Disparaging and sometimes second class lower tier lower appreciation or simply dogged Reservist may take grief for simply showing up to train and drill on ORDERS that are out of his control, and lastly as my research has shown, and as my research will give proof below in a CONGRESSIONAL COMMITEE task group 1997, INACTIVE innacurately describes current reservist training hazardous optemp stressor training and lack of health care and actual laws in USCODE that limit heath care based on ORDERS less then 30 days, as reported by the SEC of RSRVS and SEC of MANPWR and HEALTH <br /><br />This may not happen to a majority of RESERVIST. When a majority of RESERVIST are at RESERVE centers and not attached to COMPOSITE ACTIVE and RESERVE units in an AUGMENT unit in the HIGHEST-STATE of READINESS for QUICK RECALL and DEPLOYMENT.<br /><br />But for the few that did or do serve there INACTIVE duty TRAINING LIKE THIS, I believe there should be more protection and more appreciation especially in the terminology used to describe it.<br /><br />Lastly since WW 2 all conflicts used RESERVES to succeed and pull anything off. Simply, the AD manpower, is not enough, and to costly to maintain, between conflicts. And the RESERVES are kept in a high state of readiness. I lived it. I know. And I know it needs to improve. Sadly only because it can destroy the young man or woman in ways that few understand, mainly by putting young inexperierienced, men and women in HI-OPTEMP combat ACTIVE FUll TIME UNITS, in an AUGMEnT ROLE, forced to figure out how to take 2 days, 48 hours and learn and maintain hi level combat skills that the AD FULL TIME counterpart is living day in day out.<br /><br />At the very least the young inexperienced Soldier or Sailor will feel out of place and will be overwhelmed by the supreme pressure it is to try to learn and soak in full time active duty skill sets on just 2 days a month. It is impossible to have success a majority of times. I lived it. I know. I tried. And in the end I write this report, and ask what others think of INACTIVE to describe such situations.<br /><br /><br /><br /> <br /><br /><br />BELOW YOU WILL FIND snippets of a REPORT TO CONGRESS FROM SEC OF DEF RES AFFRS AND HEALTH AFFRS concerning RESERVIST like no time previous doing HAZARDOUS duties along side ACTIVE DUTY on IDT inactive duty training orders less then 30 days, a legal conundrum that lacks proper full ranging full spectrum health care from the wealthiest nations with the most advanced military and most well financed militaries, which puts a service member who is otherwise willing to risk his/her life even in training to defend his/her the UNITED STATES, puts a service member and dependents in a world of hurt when a reservist drilling incurs injury - becomes takes a boat load of stress on mental physical during training and becomes a major casualty or otherwise becomes incapacitated or sent back home with a possible multitude of symptoms of illness or injuries undealt with untreated uncared for etc etc..and it was all CALLED "INACTIVE" duty training And it was all captured in a REPORT to CONGRESS, I found that you can download yourself.<br /><br />--Report to Congress 1997-------<br />Prepared by: Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense For Reserve Affairs<br />Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense For Health Affairs<br />Section 746 of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 1997 directed the Department of Defense (DoD), in consultation with the Secretary of Transportation, to conduct a study and report to Congress on the means of improving the provision of uniform and consistent medical and dental care to members of the Reserve components (RCs)<br /><br />Since the end of the Cold War, and with the drawdown of the force, the role of the Reserve components has changed, and the use of the RCs in the performance of operational missions has increased dramatically. Reservists are now providing daily support to military operations around the world. This increased use results in a significant increase in exposure to injury, illness, disease, and death in the line of duty. As shown in Exhibit 1, Reserve component man-day contributions to Total Force missions have increased ten-fold from a 1989 benchmark. At the same time, the overall strength of the Reserve forces has decreased by nearly one quarter. As a result, the average Reservist’s exposure to injury and illness has increased significantly<br /><br />For example, on April 1, 1997, an Air Force Reserve C-130 aircraft crashed at Tegucigalpa, Honduras. Seven RC crew members survived this crash with incapacitating injuries. Although the survivors were entitled to incapacitation pay and medical treatment, prevailing restrictions precluded them from being retained on active duty for treatment of their injuries past the period of duty prescribed in their orders. Because length of duty status determines entitlements, their family members were not eligible for health care through the military’s TRICARE system. An Active or Reserve service member on orders for more than 30 days would have received retirement credit, pay and allowances, medical treatment for line of duty (LOD) injuries, comprehensive medical care for non-LOD conditions, and comprehensive medical care for family members. One survivor, who is married with three children under age five, noted, "I never thought in a million years that my family and I would not be covered if an accident occurred while serving my country." He also stated that, "If the Reservist/Guardsman knows that in a time of need, neither he nor his family will be protected, retention will be a serious problem…how can I continue to put my family in this predicament?" This example illustrates both the anachronistic scheme for the provision of health care and related benefits to Reserve component service members and the importance of modernizing the benefit scheme as a quality of life, force protection and recruiting and retention tool.<br /><br /> <br /><br /><br /><br /><br />BELOW DOD JOINT PUB Joint Publication 1<br />Doctrine for the Armed Forces<br />of the United States 25 March 2013<br /><br />(3) Coordinate and approve participation by assigned RC forces in joint exercises<br />and training when on active duty for training or performing inactive duty for training;<br /><br />(3) RC forces on active duty for training or performing inactive-duty training may<br />be employed in connection with contingency operations only as provided by law, and when<br />the primary purpose is for training consistent with their mission or specialty.<br /><br />inactive duty training. Authorized training performed by a member of a Reserve<br />Component not on active duty or active duty for training and consisting of regularly<br />scheduled unit training assemblies, additional training assemblies, periods of appropriate<br />duty or equivalent training, and any special additional duties authorized for Reserve<br />Component personnel by the Secretary concerned, and performed by them in connection<br />with the prescribed activities of the organization in which they are assigned with or<br />without pay. Also called IDT. (Approved for incorporation into JP 1-02.)<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />BELOW DOD JOINT PUB Joint Publication 4-05 Joint MOBILIZATION PLAN uses of INACTIVE 21 February 2014<br /><br /><br />f. DODD 1235.13, Management of the Individual Ready Reserve (IRR) and the Inactive<br />National Guard (ING).<br /><br />Inactive National Guard. None. (Approved for removal from JP 1-02.)<br /><br />inactive status. Status of reserve members on an inactive status list of a Reserve<br />Component or assigned to the Inactive Army National Guard. (Approved for<br />incorporation into JP 1-02.)<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />BELOW DOD JOINT PUB 1-02 DICTIONARY OF TERMS "INACTIVE" uses defined and seemingly conflicting confusing misleading as ACTIVE MANDATORY DRILLING READY RESERVES are always PERFORMING whatever is ORDERED UNDER ORDERS in "INACTIVE" duty training IDT<br /><br />Joint Publication 1-02<br /><br />Department of Defense<br />Dictionary of<br />Military and Associated Terms<br /><br />inactive status — Status of reserve members on an inactive status list of a Reserve<br />Component or assigned to the Inactive Army National Guard. (JP 4-05)<br /><br />TII total inactive inventory<br /><br />inactive duty training — Authorized training performed by a member of a Reserve<br />Component not on active duty or active duty for training and consisting of regularly<br />scheduled unit training assemblies, additional training assemblies, periods of<br />appropriate duty or equivalent training, and any special additional duties authorized for<br />Reserve Component personnel by the Secretary concerned, and performed by them in<br />connection with the prescribed activities of the organization in which they are assigned<br />with or without pay. Also called IDT. See also active duty for training. (JP 1)<br /><br /><br /><br />BELOW YOU FIND ARMY JAG REVIEW OF the INACTIVE term Used <br /><br />THE ARMY<br />Headquarters, Department of the Army<br />Department of the Army Pamphlet 27-50-208 April 1990<br />Table of Contents <br /><br /><br />These drills are rather inappropriately called “inactive duty training’’ (IDT or drills), as though the reservist were some sort of inanimate object. <br /><br />Inactive duty training is defined as “duty under Section 206 of Title 37 or any other provision of law and special additional duties within the units to which they are assigned.” DOD Dir 1235.10, Ordering the Selected Reserve to Active Duty for Operational Missions (1989 draft).<br /><br />10 U.S.C. Q 672b provides that, at any time, an<br />authority designated by the appropriate Service Secretary<br />may involuntarily order to active duty any unit of the<br />Reserve component (Reserve or Guard) that is in an<br />“active status,” (i.e., not in the inactive or retired Reserve<br />or Guard)<br /><br />The “active status’’ requirement would seem to exclude the Inactive Standby and Retired Reserve. 10 U.S.C. lOl(25) (1982); DOD Dir 1235.9, Management and Mobilization of the Standby Reserve (July 8, 1986).<br /><br />The United States Code provides that inactive and retired personnel will not be called up unless there are not enough qualified active reservists in the Ready, Reserve.<br /><br />The legislative authority for these callups-the United States Code-uses a confusing number of different terms to describe the type of duty for the recalled service member. For instance, the Code uses the terms “active duty,” “inactive duty training,” “active duty training,” “full time training duty;’ “active duty (other than training),” “active duty other than for training,” “annual training duty” (ATD), and “active duty for training” (ACDUTRA). While the legislation is explained and implemented by a number of DOD and service regulations (which are constantly being updated to keep pace with the times)there seems to ’be no standard scheme for the use of these terms in regard to the type of duty they authorize. This alone may be justification enough to revamp the laws.<br /><br />Specialized Call-up Provisions<br />Involuntary Call-up Under the UCMJ I/<br />In response to the Court of Military Appeals decision in United States v. Cuput0,107 Congress in 1986 revised sections 2 and 3 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ). ln This revision changed the law to permit ordering a member of the Reserve components to active duty for investigation, trial by court-martial, or non-judicial punishment for offenses committed while on prior “active duty” or “inactive-duty training.” ln addressing the Caput0 decision, Congress clarified that a member of a Reserve component is not, by virtue of the termination of a period of active duty or inactive-duty training, relieved from amenability to jurisdiction under the UCMJ for an offense committed during prior active duty or inactive-duty training.110 PO3 Aaron Hassay Mon, 19 Jan 2015 02:06:15 -0500 2015-01-19T02:06:15-05:00 Response by SSG Private RallyPoint Member made Jan 19 at 2015 3:15 AM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/idt-inactive-duty-training-inactive-is-it-a-inapropriate-misleading-term-used-to-describe-what-is-really-going-on?n=424699&urlhash=424699 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I am trying to understand fully what you are trying to state.<br /><br />Inactive is just that. Those individuals who are still under their eight year obligation and required to report in once a year for location purposes.<br /><br />As far as a Reserve or National Guard Member I believe that they can achieve quality training during their MUTA's as long as the Unit is focused fully on training. I have have served in both Active and National Guard. I can say that the training has been equal.<br /><br />It is the Leaders job to care about the quality of training their Unit receives and understand that ll of us can be called upon to serve the Nation. SSG Private RallyPoint Member Mon, 19 Jan 2015 03:15:28 -0500 2015-01-19T03:15:28-05:00 Response by SSgt Boyd Herrst made Feb 18 at 2018 7:38 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/idt-inactive-duty-training-inactive-is-it-a-inapropriate-misleading-term-used-to-describe-what-is-really-going-on?n=3367592&urlhash=3367592 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>So those that show up at armory and are just sitting around not doing a skill they were trained to do .. some bean-counter up the food chain is labeling them as inactive for training purpose.. (they showed up to be part of a ‘head-count’ <br />so the unit gets their federal cut of allocated funds.. does that read right or partially right. P.O. 3 Aaron Hassay? SSgt Boyd Herrst Sun, 18 Feb 2018 19:38:50 -0500 2018-02-18T19:38:50-05:00 Response by SSgt Boyd Herrst made Feb 18 at 2018 7:42 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/idt-inactive-duty-training-inactive-is-it-a-inapropriate-misleading-term-used-to-describe-what-is-really-going-on?n=3367604&urlhash=3367604 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I suppose I can thank those that madd it possible that I had an active drill weekend to do what I was trained to do (prepare and provide sustenance for assigned Airmen Personnel..).. SSgt Boyd Herrst Sun, 18 Feb 2018 19:42:48 -0500 2018-02-18T19:42:48-05:00 Response by SSG Rick Miller made Jun 2 at 2018 5:00 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/idt-inactive-duty-training-inactive-is-it-a-inapropriate-misleading-term-used-to-describe-what-is-really-going-on?n=3679547&urlhash=3679547 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>IDT quite simply means you are not incorporated into the ranks of the Regular Army for training purposes, key word being training. If you&#39;re doing real live missions, not in a training environment, you then fall under Title 8, or Title 10, I forget which. Whichever, you are ordered to temporary active duty. If it&#39;s you making up weekends or AT, then it stays IDT. SSG Rick Miller Sat, 02 Jun 2018 17:00:16 -0400 2018-06-02T17:00:16-04:00 2015-01-19T02:06:15-05:00