Posted on Jun 7, 2017
PO3 Physical Therapist Assistant
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Work evaluations should be how individuals are chosen for advancement. But these days, work evals are based not nearly as much as they should be on quality of work. Some who is not a good or productive worker might get a better eval because he volunteers more or is seen more by the command when the one deserving is too busy working or carrying the weight of the other. Comments on this or opinions?
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Responses: 11
PO1 Robert Johnson
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Since I retired in 1990, I'm not familiar with the current system of promotion. In my time, we were given written exams based on our rate/rank after we met Time in Rate requirements. The exam was administered to all eligible persons in that rate Navy wide. If you passed the exam with a high enough score, your records were evaluated for performance evaluations, awards and sea/shore rotations. if too many others in the same situation scored higher on these evaluations, you were assigned a status of PNA (passed but not advanced, but if you scored well and chosen for advancement, depending on your command, you could put on the new rank (Frocked) but would not be paid until your date came up. (usually within 2-3 months.) There were some advantages to this but many disadvantages as well. For instance; some people do not do well taking tests while others find it a breeze. The sailor who was in an MOS that had few or no sea billets were at a distinct disadvantage. From one exam cycle to the next, the focus could change. For the HMs one cycle could be heavy on medical administration and very little on medicine and then the next cycle could be reversed. The point is that I don't think that there will ever be an advancement system that is going to satisfy everyone.
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SSgt Geospatial Intelligence
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PO3 (Join to see) this is a sad reality in the Air Force, too. You can be a kickass operator in whatever job you do, but if you don't volunteer & have enough community service hours, you get passed up by Johnny Dipshit.
For what it's worth, the CMSAF is working hard to do away w/ this crap, so I hope MCPON can do the same for you guys!
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SSgt Geospatial Intelligence
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TSgt (Join to see) - nope, which goes to the underlying toxic management (cuz, lets face it, they're not leading, they're managing) that our beloved Force is suffering through right now. I have a buddy currently going through Flight School & he said its horrible on that end. Said he's looking for a Guard unit that'll take him so he doesn't have to deal w/ the "awesomeness" that the active side has right now.
If I can manage to get back in, that's the route I'm going to take - Air Guard.
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TSgt Ncoic, Cyber Operations
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SSgt (Join to see) - Active and Guard each have their own beasts/nightmares though. The question becomes which ones will you tolerate more?
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SSgt Geospatial Intelligence
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TSgt (Join to see) - ain't that the truth, brother. If I were younger I'd go back active, but I've aged past that option. Will age past guard eligibility in 2.5 years, though.
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TSgt Ncoic, Cyber Operations
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SSgt (Join to see) - Okay. Well, hopefully everything works out for you and good luck.
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SCPO Combat Systems Electronics Leading Petty Officer
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First I'll ask what are you basing your opinion on? Is this the situation you are in compared to another Sailor who was advanced? If yes do, you know if he received a better eval than you, or what his past evals were? Do you know what his exam score was? Time in rate? The point I'm getting at is just because he was advanced and you weren't doesn't mean the command thinks he is a better Sailor.

Now, If you are working a lot more than the other Sailor is then this should be apparent when comparing your evals together, if not that is a leadership problem. If the command is placing more weight during rankings on community service, collateral duties, etc. than it does with how a Sailor is contributing to the mission(doing your job) then that is a command problem.

The eval I made Chief from(and the few before it) had three main bullets: How I was performing as a leader, How I was doing my job, How I was performing the 1 collateral duty I had. There was 1 line about my community service.

Point is, I don't think what you write about is Navy wide or is the type of Sailor Big Navy wants to promote. Even with the perfect eval system can be biased in favor of the Sailor the command perceives is better if that is the culture of the command. This is where things like the Chief Board can correct that. There's a lot you can get from an eval and can tell about a Sailor without ever meeting them. It's not all about the EP. Could all the ranks benefit from having a board like CPO and above do? Maybe but it might not be very practical.

Last thing I'll add is the Navy is making changes to its eval system for the first time in 20 years however, the details of the changes are still vague.
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PO3 Christopher Jonah Nelson
PO3 Christopher Jonah Nelson
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SCPO (Join to see) The way the system is is highly subject to favouritism and fraternization. I was in a command where an E4 was advanced to E5 3 months after he was caught drinking on base at age 19. The only reason he didn't go to mast is because the person he was drinking with was his LPO, an E6 who regularly went drinking (and on long liberty) with the entire Chief's Mess. The E4 bragged openly about receiving an EP eval 4 weeks after being caught, and in the same sentence would often say that he made second by less than 5 points. In my opinion, this sailor should have been given 45/45 for underage and possibly lost E4, but because he was fraternizing he was given opportunities that the rest of the command wasn't.
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SCPO Combat Systems Electronics Leading Petty Officer
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>1 y
PO3 Christopher Jonah Nelson Which system are you referring, the eval system? Your situation is not a problem with the eval system, but a shitty Command Leadership/Climate issue. Your command enabling fraternization has nothing to do with the eval system.

You're right though, he should of gone to mast and at the least received an adverse eval which would of made him ineligible for promotion
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PO3 Christopher Jonah Nelson
PO3 Christopher Jonah Nelson
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SCPO (Join to see) I agree that the chain of command failed the entire division, but the eval system as it stands requires the CMDCM to sign it when he has little to no contact with the sailors themselves. The oversight controls that are in place to prevent just such a situation from happening are being ignored, and that's a fault of the system itself. The oversights need to be stronger, I think.
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SCPO Combat Systems Electronics Leading Petty Officer
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PO3 Christopher Jonah Nelson - The CMDCM doesn't sign evals. For E-4s it is usually the LCPO, DIVO and the Department Head. E-5s usually go up to the XO and E-6+ go up to the CO.
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