Posted on Mar 21, 2016
CPT Russell Pitre
9.66K
9
12
3
3
0
3ff702dc
I got out of the guard a while back and went into the private sector. I still maintain a lot of contacts to back in the Guard and Active side of the Army. So I just found something that is just sounded ridiculous. I know what an Inter-State Transfer is. It is something you can do in the Guard. But from what this CPT told me is that his state told him they don't have to release him.

To me that is some BS. It sounds like a threat than anything else. So this CPT is about to move to another state due to his civilian career but he is looking at flying back to his home state. This can't be right.

Is there some regulation about this? Can a state stop you from going to another state's National Guard? Where is the regulation on this? If this were a civilian employer they would have been sued for every trying anything like this.
Posted in these groups: Army national guard logo Army National Guard
Edited 8 y ago
Avatar feed
Responses: 8
LTC Hbpc Physician Assistant
2
2
0
It was like pulling teeth. R+R seems to trump the needs or wants on an individual officer. It took 15 months to make the IST official and complete. Other have pointed out, and I agree, you do a reset in obtaining reputation and political capital in a new landscape. It looks simple on paper, though.
(2)
Comment
(0)
CPT Russell Pitre
CPT Russell Pitre
8 y
15 months?!? That is insane. I don't know how that is possible. That is what I was wondering. I guess he was right.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
MAJ Ph D Candidate
2
2
0
CPT Pitre, I've done it twice - once from NY to DC and again from DC to VA because my civilian jobs changed. I actually have to do another one to Ohio for another upcoming change in civ jobs. The process is onerous but not complicated. You need to secure a Conditional Release Memo (usually on a 4187) and meet whatever requirements there are for the new state. I found that most states won't block the transfer unless they are being difficult. If you are moving, it's unrealistic (and IG usually agrees) to expect you to drive 8+ hours to get to drill.

The problem is the National Guard's system of "what have you done for me lately," where OERs aren't a good enough reputation for you. The transfers set me back 2-3 years of reputation building both times I did it. It cost me a unit vacancy promotion to CPT (2 years) and caused a delay in finding a company command because none of the senior officers in the state knew who I was. Even my gaining NCOs told me they were a little leery about getting some new reject officer before I got there (my 1SG and I had a good laugh about this one). It eventually worked out, but I figured you would want to know the "risk."

Feel free to PM or email me if you want more info.
(2)
Comment
(0)
CPT Russell Pitre
CPT Russell Pitre
8 y
I figured as much. I will pass it along. Thanks for the info.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
CPT Multifunctional Logistician
1
1
0
I just completed an IST from NC to CA in January of this year. I was deployed with NCARNG to the Middle East 2014-2015. I alleviated some of the issues by informing my chain of command as early in the process as I could. My BTC was supportive of the decision because I did my research and had the reasons and answers up front before our discussion. I contacted CA about 8 months out and began correspondence.
I had a lot of help from the Brigade S1, whom I was on deployment with. And CA was more than helpful. My experience may not be the norm but the transition was smooth and quick once all the paperwork was in. I feel post-deployment helped and providing my intentions early for planning on both ends.
CAARNG has been great on job side as well. My civilian job fell apart and a temp position opened and they gave me a chance. I am more than appreciative.
I do say when you are performing the SUDAs until your IST is complete and you have a chance to help, take it. Those little tasks that you perform may be what gets you in. First impressions...
(1)
Comment
(0)
CPT Russell Pitre
CPT Russell Pitre
8 y
That is the first time I have ever heard of one going so well.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close