Posted on May 19, 2021
Above & Beyond Acoustic - "Miracle" Live from Porchester Hall (Official)
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Have you had your heart ripped out still able to see but wondering
30 fu----king years man
I think Rip Van Winkle fell asleep for 20 in the civil war woke up later
20 30 years what is the difference???
The Navy made you pay for your own Fu---Cking dental for battle mouth.....so you can survive world war 3 at Sea...which has all fallen out.. just to stay assigned to a guided missile frigate 22 years old, with a reserve package... broke living below the poverty line class 3 dental
Suicide Hospitals Hello !!!!
How do you date, when you are given a thing, an impossible subject, that the Navy won't even want to talk about?
A SAM Sea Air Mariner assigned to a FFG.
And to later find out that Navy Seaman have one of the most difficult positions creating one of the original disability laws in the Nation
An Act for the relief of sick and disabled seamen
Great Seal of the United States
Enacted by the 5th United States Congress
Effective September 1, 1798
Legislative history
Passed the House of Representatives on April 12, 1798 (Voice)
Passed the Senate on July 14, 1798 (Voice)
Signed into law by President John Adams on July 16, 1798
An Act for the relief of sick and disabled seamen[1] was passed by the 5th Congress. It was signed by President John Adams on July 16, 1798. The Act authorized the deduction of twenty cents per month from the wages of seamen, for the sole purpose of funding medical care for sick and disabled seamen, as well as building additional hospitals for the treatment of seamen.
You have to read the rest...
Man I need a girlfriend...
“Consideration to be accorded time, place, and circumstances of service”
------I asked the Navy IG to support.I will have to do my own Navy Mishap Investigation for a occupational operational injury in deck department assigned to a FFG with a reserve package--a almost 100% road to dark--
Navy & Marine Corps
Mishap and Safety
Investigation
SOURCE OF INJURY OR OCCUPATIONAL ILLNESS
80 Vehicles (POV, GMV, aircraft, off-road, rail, ships,
canoes, forklift)
GLOSSARY G-6
INJURY AND OCCUPATIONAL ILLNESS CLASSIFICATION CODES
The following Codes and Descriptions will be used for entries on
the SIREP for personnel who experience an injury or occupational
Illness.
____Where did this start? This ODD situation you would find yourself 18 assigned 1994---
1976 Annual Defense Department Report
Another more important initiative is our plan to man some of our active surface combatants at 80% of active manning, relying on selected reserve personnel to fill the remaining billets upon mobilization.”
Admittingly, there are some potential problems involved in the 80/20 concept, most of which center around the interrelated factors of maintenance and operational tempo. The concept is predicated on the assumption that the understrength active crew, augmented by reserves during drill periods, would be able to maintain their ship in adequate material condition and conduct the required training for basic combat missions.”
--------11 years before you join in 1994 the Navy Top Dog is stating this for the reserve side of the NRF FFG
1983
NAVAL RESERVE FORCE ASW FRIGATE MANPOWER STUDY FINAL REPORT
A Joint Project Between
THE CHIEF OF NAVAL RESERVE
Captain Milton L. Boykin, USNR-R
and
THE MOBILIZATION CONCEPTS DEVELOPMENT CENTER
NATIONAL DEFENSE UNIVERSITY
Commander Hardy L. Merritt, USNR
NRF ships also have active-duty fleet support assignments which means that
they are occasionally not in port when the reservists arrive to drill. Some
reservists have driven long distances to the ship only to find themselves
temporarily assigned to the Naval Reserve Center. When they report aboard the
NRF ships, the active-duty personnel assigned as part of the ship's crew
sometimes resent their arrival, feeling that if they were assigned to a
regular fleet ship they would probably not have to work on the weekends.
Because of these conditions, those required to drill aboard NRF ships are
often dissatisfied and are frequently perceived as poor performers.
Under the NRF Frigate authorizations, the crew consists of approximately 60
percent active duty and 40 percent inactive-duty reservists for FFG-7 class
ships, and approximately 50 percent active duty and 50 percent inactive-duty
reservists for FF-1052 class ships. Not only is there a manpower problem
supporting the existing Naval Reserve Force ships (DDs and MSOs), but there is
a future manpower problem of even larger proportions in manning the new
FF-1052 / FFG-7 class ships.
SUMMARY OF FINDINGS
13. Sea pay plus a $10.00 per drill bonus is adequate compensation for tne
relatively more arduous drill requirements of being assigned to a NRF ship.
However, this compensation is a necessary but not sufficient condition for
long term retention. Reservists are not primarily motivated by money,
provided that an equitable compensation level is achieved. Rather, drilling
reservists are motivated to maintain their affiliation primarily through sound
leadership and management within the reserve unit.
---------You certainly dont know you will be assigned to these NRF Ships 1994 at 18 with a SAM reserve contract
6th QRMC Report - Volume 1 AUGUST 1988
Unit Incentive Pay for Enlisted Selected Reservists
The 6th QRIC recommends that legislation be prepared to
permit the Secretary of the Navy to authorize payment,
under a two year test program, of "Naval Reserve Fleet Pay"
to enlisted Selected Reserve members serving on NRF ships.
Section 305a of title 37, United States Code, defines sea duty
as "duty performed by a member while permanently or temporarily
assigned to a ship, ship-based staff, or ship-based aviation
unit, ... the primary mission of which is accomplished
underway." No distinction in law is made between active or
reserve personnel who may be assigned to the same ship. In
fact, Selected Reservists in the Naval Reserve meet the same
qualifications as their active counterparts; namely, they are
permanently assigned to the NRF ship, perform duties aboard that
ship, and the ship has been designated under regulations of the
Secretary of the Navy as a ship whose primary mission is
accomplished underway. Nevertheless, these individuals accrue
creditable sea duty time only during periods of ADT. The Navy
acknowledges that the existing system of sea duty computation
may be inequitable, but has concluded that credit for sea duty
time is linked by statute to eligibility for Career Sea Pay.
This PBD included a proposed Selected Reserve Unit Incentive Pay. This
initiative would authorize the payment of an incentive pay to
Selected Reserve enlisted personnel who voluntarily affiliate
and train with certain high priority units which are
inadequately manned. It would permit payment of a $10 incentive
pay per drill period for five drills per month. This Navy
initiative was developed to help meet manpower needs for
personnel assigned to the Naval Reserve Fleet (NRF) and for
hospital corpsman assigned to Marine Corps Reserve units.
-----wow 21 years old and that extra $600 a year for hazardous duty special pay will certainly nothing
25 APR 1997
COMNAVRESFOR INSTRUCTION 1001.5C
Subj: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES FOR THE SELECTED RESERVE (SELRES)
NRF. . . . . . . . . . . Naval Reserve Force
The entry will reflect the starting, stopping, or idling
of the members’s counter per SECNAVINST 7220.77c. Activities where personnel
normally experience a large number of brief sea duty periods, such as fleet
training units, may make a quarterly summary entry of sea duty days credited
each member.
1403. Special Pay and Allowances. Naval Reservists may also receive other
military compensation, whether pay or allowances, when authorized by Congress,
depending on the nature of their duty assignment, their military speciality,
where they are stationed, and the duration of their orders.
a. Naval Reserve Fleet Pay. Reservists assigned to NRF Ships (specified
in COMNAVSURFRESFOR annual message) are authorized an additional $10 per IDT
period up to 60 IDT periods per FY.
b. Diving Duty Pay.
c. Aviation Career Incentive Pay (ACIP).
d. Special Pay (Medical).
e. Special Pay (Other). Certain other Reservists (such as submariners,SEALS , etc.)
---------1997 is the year still assigned to the ffg and someone in the government is stills debating if you at 21 need health care..or what about vA support????!!!!!!!!!-------
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Nov. 24, 1997
Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen said Nov. 18 the summit will address the full spectrum of health care issues, entitlements and legislative policies affecting the readiness of reserve
components in the post-Cold War world.
In Phase I, slated for late November in Washington, summit participants will evaluate prevailing laws and policy relating to reserve component health care.
Participants will identify legislative and policy changes necessary to ensure members of the reserve components receive health care benefits that are consistent with the increased reliance on
today's reserve force.
"We have a vested interest in the health readiness of our reserve component personnel," said Dr. Ed Martin, acting assistant secretary of defense for health affairs.
Beginning late December, the second phase of the summit will address incapacitation and disability issues. In mid-January 1998, the third phase will address reserve component access to VA
benefits and programs.
Recognizing the increased reliance on the reserve components in recent years, Cohen said, "We must ensure their medical readiness to achieve a truly integrated total force. I am pleased that this
summit is a partnership effort - with the DoD, the private sector and VA all working together."
(from a DoD release)
Contact Author
-------------------Does reality go somewhere? What is happening to someone with a reserve enlistment---Or is it ignored as it did not harm them---
--------------More reports---those pesky reserves, we want to save money by making these enlistments, then we use them more and they are getting injured?? And that cost money??? Lets study that!!!! / Don’t forget to send that humanitarian aid to africa ok! Or Mexico! Or get some federal housing budgeting for some kids then never joined the military and are delinquents in the street robbing or looting---
Means of Improving the Provision of
Uniform and Consistent Medical and Dental Care to
Members of the Reserve Components
Report
To
Congress
Prepared by: Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense For Reserve Affairs
Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense For Health Affairs
INTRODUCTION
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). In response to this congressional requirement, two major areas were identified and evaluated: (1) reserve component health care and (2) force health protection. These topics encompass the circumstances under which medical and dental care may be provided to Reserve component service members and the means of meeting medical readiness standards for deploying those service members. To ensure a comprehensive review of the many issues related to the provision of medical care to reservists, the Department established a working summit, which included representatives from the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Active and Reserve components and the DoD medical community. Additionally, to support this evaluation, the Department also contracted with Birch & Davis Associates, Inc. The following report is submitted in response to section 746 and reflects the department�s assessments and recommendations. The report develops recommendations for ensuring that medical treatment, entitlements, and readiness for RC members are sufficient and in parity with those provided to Active component (AC) members. The recommendations will help ensure uniform and consistent health care and related benefits for RC members that correlate with duty status and risk of illness or injury.
BACKGROUND
During the Cold War, a reservist incurred limited exposure to potential hazards during periods of duty (active or inactive duty). The focus for the RC was on training for mobilization. The Reserve components consisted principally of a force whose use upon mobilization would be to provide augmentation and replacement manpower for the Active components. In contrast, the focus of the Active components was on fulfilling operational requirements.
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.
Secretary Cohen�s goal for the 21st century is a seamless Total Force that integrates active and reserve components and provides the national command authority the flexibility and interoperability necessary for the full range of military operations. To achieve this goal, all residual barriers, structural and cultural, to integration of the Active and Reserve components of the force must be eliminated.
Current legislation and policy reflect the historic use of reservists by structuring medical and dental care, incapacitation, and disability entitlements according to length of assignment: 30 days or less or more than 30 days. However, it is the performance of duty, not the length of duty, that creates the risk for harm. Reservists now work side by side with AC members and perform the same missions as AC members. Yet, when a reservist is injured performing one of those missions, entitlement to health care, pay, and family support is different from that of the AC member. RC benefits currently are based on the length of duty rather than the performance of duty. The increased exposure to risk associated with increased reliance on the RC has resulted in an increasing number of line of duty injuries to reservists and has served to highlight the disparity between Active and Reserve component medical benefits and entitlements, despite exposure to similar levels of risk.
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?"
------------
but all that won't make a difference..
an honorable discharge Sh--T on at the VA
I have more pride..then they can write books about
Pride enough to confront ignorance...
I needed a homeless housing
Well screw you reservist...we in a position of your claim for support..interpret the Constitution Preamble "WE THE PEOPLE"...that we in administration jobs...never even Swore an Oath to Defend...Never did 1 push up in Bootcamp...deny your application...as you had a reserve enlistment...and you can appeal this...and THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE...go back to that house you can not pay rent in...and where the landlord is sexually touching you ... you can have endless appeals denials appeals for homeless housing voucher...
Yes there is another part of the same government...use those funds to rapidly...get to ....all these people jumping or border...with assistance support a warm blanket a place to stay food you know the hole bit!
We are America!
And That US AID better go save people in other countries while the young people who signed Contracts to be in the military are not completely taken care of..
--------
WHO WE ARE
USAID leads international development and humanitarian efforts to save lives, reduce poverty, strengthen democratic governance and help people progress beyond assistance.
On behalf of the American people, we promote and demonstrate democratic values abroad, and advance a free, peaceful, and prosperous world. In support of America's foreign policy, the U.S. Agency for International Development leads the U.S. Government's international development and disaster assistance through partnerships and investments that save lives, reduce poverty, strengthen democratic governance, and help people emerge from humanitarian crises and progress beyond assistance.
Assistance to Foreign Countries
U.S. foreign assistance has always had the twofold purpose of furthering America's interests while improving lives in the developing world. USAID carries out U.S. foreign policy by promoting broad-scale human progress at the same time it expands stable, free societies, creates markets and trade partners for the United States, and fosters good will abroad.
USAID works in over 100 countries to:
Promote Global Health
Support Global Stability
Provide Humanitarian Assistance
Catalyze Innovation and Partnership
Empower Women and Girls
30 fu----king years man
I think Rip Van Winkle fell asleep for 20 in the civil war woke up later
20 30 years what is the difference???
The Navy made you pay for your own Fu---Cking dental for battle mouth.....so you can survive world war 3 at Sea...which has all fallen out.. just to stay assigned to a guided missile frigate 22 years old, with a reserve package... broke living below the poverty line class 3 dental
Suicide Hospitals Hello !!!!
How do you date, when you are given a thing, an impossible subject, that the Navy won't even want to talk about?
A SAM Sea Air Mariner assigned to a FFG.
And to later find out that Navy Seaman have one of the most difficult positions creating one of the original disability laws in the Nation
An Act for the relief of sick and disabled seamen
Great Seal of the United States
Enacted by the 5th United States Congress
Effective September 1, 1798
Legislative history
Passed the House of Representatives on April 12, 1798 (Voice)
Passed the Senate on July 14, 1798 (Voice)
Signed into law by President John Adams on July 16, 1798
An Act for the relief of sick and disabled seamen[1] was passed by the 5th Congress. It was signed by President John Adams on July 16, 1798. The Act authorized the deduction of twenty cents per month from the wages of seamen, for the sole purpose of funding medical care for sick and disabled seamen, as well as building additional hospitals for the treatment of seamen.
You have to read the rest...
Man I need a girlfriend...
“Consideration to be accorded time, place, and circumstances of service”
------I asked the Navy IG to support.I will have to do my own Navy Mishap Investigation for a occupational operational injury in deck department assigned to a FFG with a reserve package--a almost 100% road to dark--
Navy & Marine Corps
Mishap and Safety
Investigation
SOURCE OF INJURY OR OCCUPATIONAL ILLNESS
80 Vehicles (POV, GMV, aircraft, off-road, rail, ships,
canoes, forklift)
GLOSSARY G-6
INJURY AND OCCUPATIONAL ILLNESS CLASSIFICATION CODES
The following Codes and Descriptions will be used for entries on
the SIREP for personnel who experience an injury or occupational
Illness.
____Where did this start? This ODD situation you would find yourself 18 assigned 1994---
1976 Annual Defense Department Report
Another more important initiative is our plan to man some of our active surface combatants at 80% of active manning, relying on selected reserve personnel to fill the remaining billets upon mobilization.”
Admittingly, there are some potential problems involved in the 80/20 concept, most of which center around the interrelated factors of maintenance and operational tempo. The concept is predicated on the assumption that the understrength active crew, augmented by reserves during drill periods, would be able to maintain their ship in adequate material condition and conduct the required training for basic combat missions.”
--------11 years before you join in 1994 the Navy Top Dog is stating this for the reserve side of the NRF FFG
1983
NAVAL RESERVE FORCE ASW FRIGATE MANPOWER STUDY FINAL REPORT
A Joint Project Between
THE CHIEF OF NAVAL RESERVE
Captain Milton L. Boykin, USNR-R
and
THE MOBILIZATION CONCEPTS DEVELOPMENT CENTER
NATIONAL DEFENSE UNIVERSITY
Commander Hardy L. Merritt, USNR
NRF ships also have active-duty fleet support assignments which means that
they are occasionally not in port when the reservists arrive to drill. Some
reservists have driven long distances to the ship only to find themselves
temporarily assigned to the Naval Reserve Center. When they report aboard the
NRF ships, the active-duty personnel assigned as part of the ship's crew
sometimes resent their arrival, feeling that if they were assigned to a
regular fleet ship they would probably not have to work on the weekends.
Because of these conditions, those required to drill aboard NRF ships are
often dissatisfied and are frequently perceived as poor performers.
Under the NRF Frigate authorizations, the crew consists of approximately 60
percent active duty and 40 percent inactive-duty reservists for FFG-7 class
ships, and approximately 50 percent active duty and 50 percent inactive-duty
reservists for FF-1052 class ships. Not only is there a manpower problem
supporting the existing Naval Reserve Force ships (DDs and MSOs), but there is
a future manpower problem of even larger proportions in manning the new
FF-1052 / FFG-7 class ships.
SUMMARY OF FINDINGS
13. Sea pay plus a $10.00 per drill bonus is adequate compensation for tne
relatively more arduous drill requirements of being assigned to a NRF ship.
However, this compensation is a necessary but not sufficient condition for
long term retention. Reservists are not primarily motivated by money,
provided that an equitable compensation level is achieved. Rather, drilling
reservists are motivated to maintain their affiliation primarily through sound
leadership and management within the reserve unit.
---------You certainly dont know you will be assigned to these NRF Ships 1994 at 18 with a SAM reserve contract
6th QRMC Report - Volume 1 AUGUST 1988
Unit Incentive Pay for Enlisted Selected Reservists
The 6th QRIC recommends that legislation be prepared to
permit the Secretary of the Navy to authorize payment,
under a two year test program, of "Naval Reserve Fleet Pay"
to enlisted Selected Reserve members serving on NRF ships.
Section 305a of title 37, United States Code, defines sea duty
as "duty performed by a member while permanently or temporarily
assigned to a ship, ship-based staff, or ship-based aviation
unit, ... the primary mission of which is accomplished
underway." No distinction in law is made between active or
reserve personnel who may be assigned to the same ship. In
fact, Selected Reservists in the Naval Reserve meet the same
qualifications as their active counterparts; namely, they are
permanently assigned to the NRF ship, perform duties aboard that
ship, and the ship has been designated under regulations of the
Secretary of the Navy as a ship whose primary mission is
accomplished underway. Nevertheless, these individuals accrue
creditable sea duty time only during periods of ADT. The Navy
acknowledges that the existing system of sea duty computation
may be inequitable, but has concluded that credit for sea duty
time is linked by statute to eligibility for Career Sea Pay.
This PBD included a proposed Selected Reserve Unit Incentive Pay. This
initiative would authorize the payment of an incentive pay to
Selected Reserve enlisted personnel who voluntarily affiliate
and train with certain high priority units which are
inadequately manned. It would permit payment of a $10 incentive
pay per drill period for five drills per month. This Navy
initiative was developed to help meet manpower needs for
personnel assigned to the Naval Reserve Fleet (NRF) and for
hospital corpsman assigned to Marine Corps Reserve units.
-----wow 21 years old and that extra $600 a year for hazardous duty special pay will certainly nothing
25 APR 1997
COMNAVRESFOR INSTRUCTION 1001.5C
Subj: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES FOR THE SELECTED RESERVE (SELRES)
NRF. . . . . . . . . . . Naval Reserve Force
The entry will reflect the starting, stopping, or idling
of the members’s counter per SECNAVINST 7220.77c. Activities where personnel
normally experience a large number of brief sea duty periods, such as fleet
training units, may make a quarterly summary entry of sea duty days credited
each member.
1403. Special Pay and Allowances. Naval Reservists may also receive other
military compensation, whether pay or allowances, when authorized by Congress,
depending on the nature of their duty assignment, their military speciality,
where they are stationed, and the duration of their orders.
a. Naval Reserve Fleet Pay. Reservists assigned to NRF Ships (specified
in COMNAVSURFRESFOR annual message) are authorized an additional $10 per IDT
period up to 60 IDT periods per FY.
b. Diving Duty Pay.
c. Aviation Career Incentive Pay (ACIP).
d. Special Pay (Medical).
e. Special Pay (Other). Certain other Reservists (such as submariners,SEALS , etc.)
---------1997 is the year still assigned to the ffg and someone in the government is stills debating if you at 21 need health care..or what about vA support????!!!!!!!!!-------
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Nov. 24, 1997
Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen said Nov. 18 the summit will address the full spectrum of health care issues, entitlements and legislative policies affecting the readiness of reserve
components in the post-Cold War world.
In Phase I, slated for late November in Washington, summit participants will evaluate prevailing laws and policy relating to reserve component health care.
Participants will identify legislative and policy changes necessary to ensure members of the reserve components receive health care benefits that are consistent with the increased reliance on
today's reserve force.
"We have a vested interest in the health readiness of our reserve component personnel," said Dr. Ed Martin, acting assistant secretary of defense for health affairs.
Beginning late December, the second phase of the summit will address incapacitation and disability issues. In mid-January 1998, the third phase will address reserve component access to VA
benefits and programs.
Recognizing the increased reliance on the reserve components in recent years, Cohen said, "We must ensure their medical readiness to achieve a truly integrated total force. I am pleased that this
summit is a partnership effort - with the DoD, the private sector and VA all working together."
(from a DoD release)
Contact Author
-------------------Does reality go somewhere? What is happening to someone with a reserve enlistment---Or is it ignored as it did not harm them---
--------------More reports---those pesky reserves, we want to save money by making these enlistments, then we use them more and they are getting injured?? And that cost money??? Lets study that!!!! / Don’t forget to send that humanitarian aid to africa ok! Or Mexico! Or get some federal housing budgeting for some kids then never joined the military and are delinquents in the street robbing or looting---
Means of Improving the Provision of
Uniform and Consistent Medical and Dental Care to
Members of the Reserve Components
Report
To
Congress
Prepared by: Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense For Reserve Affairs
Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense For Health Affairs
INTRODUCTION
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). In response to this congressional requirement, two major areas were identified and evaluated: (1) reserve component health care and (2) force health protection. These topics encompass the circumstances under which medical and dental care may be provided to Reserve component service members and the means of meeting medical readiness standards for deploying those service members. To ensure a comprehensive review of the many issues related to the provision of medical care to reservists, the Department established a working summit, which included representatives from the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Active and Reserve components and the DoD medical community. Additionally, to support this evaluation, the Department also contracted with Birch & Davis Associates, Inc. The following report is submitted in response to section 746 and reflects the department�s assessments and recommendations. The report develops recommendations for ensuring that medical treatment, entitlements, and readiness for RC members are sufficient and in parity with those provided to Active component (AC) members. The recommendations will help ensure uniform and consistent health care and related benefits for RC members that correlate with duty status and risk of illness or injury.
BACKGROUND
During the Cold War, a reservist incurred limited exposure to potential hazards during periods of duty (active or inactive duty). The focus for the RC was on training for mobilization. The Reserve components consisted principally of a force whose use upon mobilization would be to provide augmentation and replacement manpower for the Active components. In contrast, the focus of the Active components was on fulfilling operational requirements.
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.
Secretary Cohen�s goal for the 21st century is a seamless Total Force that integrates active and reserve components and provides the national command authority the flexibility and interoperability necessary for the full range of military operations. To achieve this goal, all residual barriers, structural and cultural, to integration of the Active and Reserve components of the force must be eliminated.
Current legislation and policy reflect the historic use of reservists by structuring medical and dental care, incapacitation, and disability entitlements according to length of assignment: 30 days or less or more than 30 days. However, it is the performance of duty, not the length of duty, that creates the risk for harm. Reservists now work side by side with AC members and perform the same missions as AC members. Yet, when a reservist is injured performing one of those missions, entitlement to health care, pay, and family support is different from that of the AC member. RC benefits currently are based on the length of duty rather than the performance of duty. The increased exposure to risk associated with increased reliance on the RC has resulted in an increasing number of line of duty injuries to reservists and has served to highlight the disparity between Active and Reserve component medical benefits and entitlements, despite exposure to similar levels of risk.
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?"
------------
but all that won't make a difference..
an honorable discharge Sh--T on at the VA
I have more pride..then they can write books about
Pride enough to confront ignorance...
I needed a homeless housing
Well screw you reservist...we in a position of your claim for support..interpret the Constitution Preamble "WE THE PEOPLE"...that we in administration jobs...never even Swore an Oath to Defend...Never did 1 push up in Bootcamp...deny your application...as you had a reserve enlistment...and you can appeal this...and THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE...go back to that house you can not pay rent in...and where the landlord is sexually touching you ... you can have endless appeals denials appeals for homeless housing voucher...
Yes there is another part of the same government...use those funds to rapidly...get to ....all these people jumping or border...with assistance support a warm blanket a place to stay food you know the hole bit!
We are America!
And That US AID better go save people in other countries while the young people who signed Contracts to be in the military are not completely taken care of..
--------
WHO WE ARE
USAID leads international development and humanitarian efforts to save lives, reduce poverty, strengthen democratic governance and help people progress beyond assistance.
On behalf of the American people, we promote and demonstrate democratic values abroad, and advance a free, peaceful, and prosperous world. In support of America's foreign policy, the U.S. Agency for International Development leads the U.S. Government's international development and disaster assistance through partnerships and investments that save lives, reduce poverty, strengthen democratic governance, and help people emerge from humanitarian crises and progress beyond assistance.
Assistance to Foreign Countries
U.S. foreign assistance has always had the twofold purpose of furthering America's interests while improving lives in the developing world. USAID carries out U.S. foreign policy by promoting broad-scale human progress at the same time it expands stable, free societies, creates markets and trade partners for the United States, and fosters good will abroad.
USAID works in over 100 countries to:
Promote Global Health
Support Global Stability
Provide Humanitarian Assistance
Catalyze Innovation and Partnership
Empower Women and Girls
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