Posted on Aug 12, 2014
DOD hair policy changed, what do you say as leaders?
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Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class (SW/AW) Jessica Sims (Photo courtesy HM2 Jessica Sims)
By Andrew Tilghman
Staff writer
FILED UNDER
News
Uniforms
Dreadlocks, cornrows, twisted braids and other hairstyles popular among African American women will be more accepted across the military after a forcewide review of hairstyle policies prompted several changes, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said.
The three-month review came after a spate of complaints that service-level grooming policies were racially biased against black women who choose to wear their hair naturally curly rather than use heat or chemicals to straighten it.
“Each service reviewed its hairstyle policies to ensure standards are fair and respectful while also meeting military requirements,” Hagel wrote in a letter to lawmakers on Capitol Hill notifying them of the changes Monday. “These reviews were informed by a panel of military personnel of mixed demographics reflective of our diverse force.”
Three services — the Army, Navy and Air Force — have authorized additional hair styles, Hagel said.
The Marine Corps agreed to hold a special meeting of its uniform board later this year and is conducting a forcewide survey about whether the “twist” or “dreadlocks” styles should be permitted while in uniform.
The review concluded that the terms “matted and unkempt,” which the Army and Air Force used to describe some dreadlocks and braids, are “offensive” and were removed from service grooming policies, Hagel said.
For some women, the hair regulations were derailing otherwise promising careers. For example, Navy Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class Jessica Sims, a 12-year sailor, wears her hair in long, tightly twisted locks pulled into a bun when she’s in uniform.
No commanders ever complained about her hair, Sims said, until she was assigned as a teacher at the Navy’s boot camp, Recruit Training Command Great Lakes in Illinois. There, the 32-year-old sailor with an unblemished record was told to cut her hair or wear a wig, and when she refused, her commanders processed her for separation for “serious misconduct.”
Sims’s case was put on hold recently by Navy Secretary Ray Mabus, who asked for additional review.
Hagel’s policy made service-specific changes:
Army:
■ Increased the size of authorized braids, cornrows and twists and eliminated the spacing requirement.
■ Authorized temporary two-strand braids.
■ Authorized a ponytail during physical training.
■ Eliminated the terms “matted and unkempt” from grooming policy.
Navy
■ Authorized two-strand twists.
■ Authorized multiple braids to hang freely if they remain above the collar and encompass the whole head.
Air Force
■ Authorized two-strand twists, French twists and Dutch braids.
■ Changed the term “dreadlocks” to “locs.”
■ Eliminated the terms “matted and unkempt” from grooming policy.
Marine Corps
■ Will convene a special uniform board this summer to consider expanding authorized hair styles.
Sent from my iPad
By Andrew Tilghman
Staff writer
FILED UNDER
News
Uniforms
Dreadlocks, cornrows, twisted braids and other hairstyles popular among African American women will be more accepted across the military after a forcewide review of hairstyle policies prompted several changes, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said.
The three-month review came after a spate of complaints that service-level grooming policies were racially biased against black women who choose to wear their hair naturally curly rather than use heat or chemicals to straighten it.
“Each service reviewed its hairstyle policies to ensure standards are fair and respectful while also meeting military requirements,” Hagel wrote in a letter to lawmakers on Capitol Hill notifying them of the changes Monday. “These reviews were informed by a panel of military personnel of mixed demographics reflective of our diverse force.”
Three services — the Army, Navy and Air Force — have authorized additional hair styles, Hagel said.
The Marine Corps agreed to hold a special meeting of its uniform board later this year and is conducting a forcewide survey about whether the “twist” or “dreadlocks” styles should be permitted while in uniform.
The review concluded that the terms “matted and unkempt,” which the Army and Air Force used to describe some dreadlocks and braids, are “offensive” and were removed from service grooming policies, Hagel said.
For some women, the hair regulations were derailing otherwise promising careers. For example, Navy Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class Jessica Sims, a 12-year sailor, wears her hair in long, tightly twisted locks pulled into a bun when she’s in uniform.
No commanders ever complained about her hair, Sims said, until she was assigned as a teacher at the Navy’s boot camp, Recruit Training Command Great Lakes in Illinois. There, the 32-year-old sailor with an unblemished record was told to cut her hair or wear a wig, and when she refused, her commanders processed her for separation for “serious misconduct.”
Sims’s case was put on hold recently by Navy Secretary Ray Mabus, who asked for additional review.
Hagel’s policy made service-specific changes:
Army:
■ Increased the size of authorized braids, cornrows and twists and eliminated the spacing requirement.
■ Authorized temporary two-strand braids.
■ Authorized a ponytail during physical training.
■ Eliminated the terms “matted and unkempt” from grooming policy.
Navy
■ Authorized two-strand twists.
■ Authorized multiple braids to hang freely if they remain above the collar and encompass the whole head.
Air Force
■ Authorized two-strand twists, French twists and Dutch braids.
■ Changed the term “dreadlocks” to “locs.”
■ Eliminated the terms “matted and unkempt” from grooming policy.
Marine Corps
■ Will convene a special uniform board this summer to consider expanding authorized hair styles.
Sent from my iPad
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 40
Personally and professionally - I don't give a rat's a$$ whether you have twists or not. My only professional concern is: if you're assigned to a ship - can you don the OBA/SCBA mask, get a solid seal and put on the rest of the firefighting gear without special dispensation from the militant whiners. If you can get into your firefighting gear, go down into the deep, dark, nasty overheated air (1500 degrees+) without (a) your shoes, socks, underwear, bra melting to your skin (b) your hair catching on fire because you have to have "grease" to pack it down in order to be in regs (c) your nails cutting up/through the gloves - then I don't care what your hair is braided into. On my watch, that's all that matters.
If I'm in the engineroom - my world gone to $hit, fuel fires roaring and I'm hiding in the bilge, soaked in fuel/AFFF, breathing through an eebd or air system - goddammit all I want to hear is that Halon system going off, the AFFF pump growling and howling, the remotely controlled valves shutting everything in my space to OFF and the 1MC telling the firefighting teams to enter the space to get me the hell out. I don't care if you're braided or bald - can you do the job to save me, my shipmates and my ship?
If I'm in the engineroom - my world gone to $hit, fuel fires roaring and I'm hiding in the bilge, soaked in fuel/AFFF, breathing through an eebd or air system - goddammit all I want to hear is that Halon system going off, the AFFF pump growling and howling, the remotely controlled valves shutting everything in my space to OFF and the 1MC telling the firefighting teams to enter the space to get me the hell out. I don't care if you're braided or bald - can you do the job to save me, my shipmates and my ship?
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Sgt Samantha Jee
Honestly, I hated having so much hair gel in my hair just to please other people anyway. I agree with you both. Putting my hair up was an unneeded pain, and for someone who worked 12 hours in a building with no windows, who cares what your hair looks like? I cut my hair just so I wouldn't have to listen to some other stupid Marine tell me my hair is messed up.
Remember, "white socks in combat kill people."
Remember, "white socks in combat kill people."
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PO1 (Join to see)
PO1 Shannon Drosdak Take good care of our Navy - leave it better than you found it!
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PO1 Shannon Drosdak
thank you George! I hope I can.... And Samantha, I know how you feel, but I work with food so it's actually easier to deal with long hair over short, I would still have to find a way to pin it all up. and the white socks kill me!!! The trick white feet socks with black from the ankles up HA!
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Sgt Samantha Jee
Shannon, that makes more sense. Just had one of our former Navy cooks in town tell me the same thing.
I don't know if you remember the white socks issue from 2012/2013 or not, but I had kind of the same attitude towards that, who cares what a person is wearing underneath the uniform or with their hair as long as the job gets done and everyone comes home (slightly) sane.
I don't know if you remember the white socks issue from 2012/2013 or not, but I had kind of the same attitude towards that, who cares what a person is wearing underneath the uniform or with their hair as long as the job gets done and everyone comes home (slightly) sane.
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I'm a Soldier of color with natural hair and have NO problem with being in compliance with the Reg. Yes I love to wear my braids and twist but they are professional at all times. If you hair is matted I will let you know, being natural is no excuse. A lot of females complain about the regulation but yet you didn't comply before the changes. Most of us come to work looking like we're going to the club not work. The eyelashes and fingernail are out of control even now and the regulation has changed. It's the senior NCO's that are still violating the regulation and expect the Soldiers to follow the rules. We are no longer setting the standard. You join the Army and it comes with rules and regulation if you don't like it go OCS(On city streets) that's right get out!!! We always go with culture and religion when it comes to the military you are told the rules when you sign if you had a problem then that was the time to back out. Some will say they were not told, ok but when you were you still had the same choice. Why stay this long if it's against your culture or religion? If we didn't push the envelope so much this wouldn't have been an issue, think about that. Now with the tattoos we should have never changed the rules and wouldn't have had the problems we have now. BLUF when in this uniform you should look professional at all times.
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