They’re going about it in a pretty measured way. This has been years in the making. I think, overall, it will be a good solution to several problems that seven outlined above.
Sounds like a great start to a point paper.....maybe get it published to get traction??I think a problem is that we are so focused on production, that once people are “fully qualified” in their platform they are probably a year or less away from being rotated out into shore duty. I’m not advocating directly for longer tours, but Christ at least in VP land it takes ~18 months for a level 300 tacco or PPC; you literally spend a majority of your time in the squadron upgrading. New NFOs show up to a sea tour knowing next to nothing other than how to strap in and do radio comms and it’s the fleets job to train them. Pilots are only capable of flying without killing us with minimal focus on tactics until ~1 year in. So at least for MPRA, we are delivering under qualified people to the fleet and making the squadrons teach them what arguably the FRS should be. It’s not the level 100s’ fault for being a burden until they get to 200 but especially for deployment check ins, it’s a PITA.
Edit: it’s purely bitching but not having a pilot and NFO SMTI/WTI in a squadron is hindering training and lethality all so the carrier can have a shooter. Disassociated sea tours make staff officers and skippers. I know we sign up to be officers first and aviators second, but come wartime I think the navy is going to wish those deckplate billets were manned by someone else so a quality LT who gave a shit can be airborne.
I hate that MPRA (and all non TACAIR communities really) will absolutely die on the hill of disassociated sea tours.I think a problem is that we are so focused on production, that once people are “fully qualified” in their platform they are probably a year or less away from being rotated out into shore duty. I’m not advocating directly for longer tours, but Christ at least in VP land it takes ~18 months for a level 300 tacco or PPC; you literally spend a majority of your time in the squadron upgrading. New NFOs show up to a sea tour knowing next to nothing other than how to strap in and do radio comms and it’s the fleets job to train them. Pilots are only capable of flying without killing us with minimal focus on tactics until ~1 year in. So at least for MPRA, we are delivering under qualified people to the fleet and making the squadrons teach them what arguably the FRS should be. It’s not the level 100s’ fault for being a burden until they get to 200 but especially for deployment check ins, it’s a PITA.
Edit: it’s purely bitching but not having a pilot and NFO SMTI/WTI in a squadron is hindering training and lethality all so the carrier can have a shooter. Disassociated sea tours make staff officers and skippers. I know we sign up to be officers first and aviators second, but come wartime I think the navy is going to wish those deckplate billets were manned by someone else so a quality LT who gave a shit can be airborne.
I hate that MPRA (and all non TACAIR communities really) will absolutely die on the hill of disassociated sea tours.
The worst O-4s we had in my JO squadron all spent a tour out of the cockpit in some way, (sadly including some WTIs…). The best ones all flew in some capacity for their “Disassociated” tours. (crazy concept, allowing people to continue to do the thing that the Navy spent 5-ish years and millions of dollars training them to do is a great return on investment).
In my opinion, the disassociated sea tour is one of the biggest killers of morale and retention. If the Navy could just find creative ways to fill those billets, they may have a fighting chance at keeping people around. Instead, they’re sending people kicking and screaming to a tour that they hate, only to make them bitter and giving them even more reason to drop their letter and go to the airlines.
I guess the question becomes what is more valuable, the return on investment for keeping someone flying for longer, or the exposure to the rest of the Navy. For guys going onto Joint staffs, or Command billets, it 100% makes sense for them to do so. But for ~95% of JOs? I don’t think so.I'm going to disagree with you gents about the disassociated tours. When I was a JO I hated the idea and thought the DHs were full of sh!t when they talked about how they enjoyed their disassociateds. Then I did mine (Shooter in Yokosuka).
Dude, before my disassociated I didn't know jack about the Navy. MPRA is a small, insulated world. It's theoretically possible that an MPRA officer could go all the way to post-DH before stepping out of the cockpit/tube (JO, RAG, super-JO, DH, right? with a year at the War College thrown in there somewhere) into a job on a joint staff (not necessarily THE Joint Staff). It's fascinating to me that someone go that long without seeing the Surface Navy up close and personal.
The Surface Navy (and the small part of that that CVNs represent) isn't the whole Navy, but it is probably the biggest single chunk. There were times that the disassociated wasn't fun--but I found it all to be of great value.
I lateral transferred and didn't go back to MPRA for a DH tour. But I probably would have had some catching up to do, for sure. But I do believe in the value of a disassociated tour.
I'm going to disagree with you gents about the disassociated tours. When I was a JO I hated the idea and thought the DHs were full of sh!t when they talked about how they enjoyed their disassociateds. Then I did mine (Shooter in Yokosuka).
Dude, before my disassociated I didn't know jack about the Navy. MPRA is a small, insulated world. It's theoretically possible that an MPRA officer could go all the way to post-DH before stepping out of the cockpit/tube (JO, RAG, super-JO, DH, right? with a year at the War College thrown in there somewhere) into a job on a joint staff (not necessarily THE Joint Staff). It's fascinating to me that someone go that long without seeing the Surface Navy up close and personal.
The Surface Navy (and the small part of that that CVNs represent) isn't the whole Navy, but it is probably the biggest single chunk. There were times that the disassociated wasn't fun--but I found it all to be of great value.
I lateral transferred and didn't go back to MPRA for a DH tour. But I probably would have had some catching up to do, for sure. But I do believe in the value of a disassociated tour.
MPRA jokes aside, who do you want filling all those shooter billets? I'm not sure Millington has enough post Div-O, hot running SWOs to fill them all . . . .I hate that MPRA (and all non TACAIR communities really) will absolutely die on the hill of disassociated sea tours.
The worst O-4s we had in my JO squadron all spent a tour out of the cockpit in some way, (sadly including some WTIs…). The best ones all flew in some capacity for their “Disassociated” tours. (crazy concept, allowing people to continue to do the thing that the Navy spent 5-ish years and millions of dollars training them to do is a great return on investment).
In my opinion, the disassociated sea tour is one of the biggest killers of morale and retention. If the Navy could just find creative ways to fill those billets, they may have a fighting chance at keeping people around. Instead, they’re sending people kicking and screaming to a tour that they hate, only to make them bitter and giving them even more reason to drop their letter and go to the airlines.
Take a chief or petty officer who has been in that division or field of work for a while and make them a warrant officer. They can fill does billets.MPRA jokes aside, who do you want filling all those shooter billets? I'm not sure Millington has enough post Div-O, hot running SWOs to fill them all . . . .
But . . . . it would be fun to watch LTJG spiccolli, fresh off his first DDG assignment man the bow cats, stressing about cross wind limitations and weight board numbers![]()