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COL John Hudson
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I am in full agreement with Sgt. Maj. of the Army Daniel A. Dailey's strategy, "...said he and the Chief of Staff recently signed a memo stating that Soldiers are either deployable or non-deployable and the Army will no longer assign a non-deployable leader to a unit or organization." This has been a long time coming and is, indeed, LONG overdue in my opinion. Our Command encompassed the three states of California, Arizona, and Utah. I have personally fielded too many questions and problems (in my roll as IG) from 'homesteaders' and others with similar attitudes that when faced with opportunity to occupy a position offering advancement, turned it down in favor of staying safe on home base and looking for every excuse NOT to complete MOSQ or attend annual AD training (then come to me whining, crying or carping about how mistreated they were!). CMS Dailey's excellent grasp of such issues and offering refreshingly firm leadership should go a long way in defeating some of the slack attitudes still inhabiting military billets. The U.S. Military (Army, Air Force, Navy, Marines, Coast Guard) both Active and Reserve components, is NOT a game! It exists for and welcomes individuals who WANT to be a part of something and will make the efforts necessary to achieve both personal and organizational goals . It's NOT an organization for those looking for a no-effort paycheck for little more than showing up for roll call.
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SFC Craig Dalen
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Sounds about right
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LTC Chief Of Public Affairs And Protocol
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I believe there is still a place for many non-deployable Soldiers. Often there is a vast wealth of experience in a non-deployable Soldier that would be lost. We would often have to re-learn those lessons. These Soldier can be used in planning and admin roles.
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TSgt Logistics Management Specialist
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Sir, I agree, as long as they deserve it. We have TDA units that they could be slotted into. My opinion is that the Medical Board should determine if that individual could fit into that role. If it is not a medical issue due to wear and tear the Army puts us through, then I do not know what else could allow a Soldier to stay in without meeting Army Standards. MOSQ, PME, APFT, and Marksmanship are the Soldiers' responsibility with guidance through unit training programs. I feel that the Army Reserves should also implement a regulation requiring Reservists to complete their MOSQ and PME within 6 months or less. I see many reservists that enter the reserves either from high school or active duty transfer that simply dodge IDT and scheduling of MOSQ and PME due to "other" commitments.
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