vxc961
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Folks can PM me to get in touch with CAPT Swift.Thanks Beans. I am hoping that someone in the BGO program on this and other threads knows who CAPT Swift is and how to contact him so that I can beg to stay in the IRR.
Folks can PM me to get in touch with CAPT Swift.Thanks Beans. I am hoping that someone in the BGO program on this and other threads knows who CAPT Swift is and how to contact him so that I can beg to stay in the IRR.
As a 5yr prior service recruiter, recruiting manual states over 30% is a no go. The chief mentioned with 80% put in for va after enlisting and while drilling. In this situation when the NOSC finds out during annual PHA, they will start Med board. If it is deemed the Med conditions related don’t interfere with his job or duty, he can stay in. Just can’t collect va and drill pay at same time.
Do you happen to have a link to that? I don't doubt it but that is the first time I have heard it being written down in a reg or being a hard and fast rule. As for whether it 'interferes' with the job or duty that seemed to be up to the individual NOSC's, the OS1 was asked to come back to the SELRES about 4 years after getting kicked out but with little over a year before qualifying for retirement he said no thanks.
View attachment 17722 View attachment 17723
You would only know it if you were a prior service recruiter.
I was wondering the same thing. I have not received anything, but I think I was able to get an exemption because I joined the Blue and Gold program.Has anyone gotten a “You’re done with the IRR now, welcome to USNR-S2” letter, or something else to that effect?
If you’re looking to get “out” out, why not just resign your commission? Did you take the SELRES affiliation money? Your CO and NOSC RESPAY would be the ones to ask, but I’m pretty sure you can buy that money out.I'm in SELRES, but I want out ASAP. Anyone know if I can I still xfer to IRR? (I don't actually want to stay in, I just want to be left alone quicker, so if they boot me after the transfer, that's fine with me)
Long answer:If you’re looking to get “out” out, why not just resign your commission? Did you take the SELRES affiliation money? Your CO and NOSC RESPAY would be the ones to ask, but I’m pretty sure you can buy that money out.
In that case I’d drop your letter, go IRR-ASP, and be done. I do know there’s a quick turn on that because a guy in my unit was going to do that until they canned correspondence courses—he wants the option to maybe come back. Seems VTU is taking him longer than he would have taken to just peace out.Long answer:
Because per instruction, resigning, which was my first choice, takes six months of lead time. I submitted my letter in October, and go figure, no one has seen it. Now, per recent NAVADMIN, resignations must be done online via NSIPS, as of January 1. I've been asking for 2 month for my command/the NOSC to get the routing set up in NSIPS so I can route the request. Still hasn't happened (and I can't do it for them). IRR (I've heard) can be prosessed in under 2 months.
Short answer:
IRR is the quickest way to be left alone.
I didn't take the money, and I'm well within my 2 year post active duty no mob time, so no reason I shouldn't be able to walk away.
I resigned from IRR a year ago; I filled in my letter and sent it PERS 9-something or other. They said "we got it" and a few weeks later a nice letter showed up saying "thanks for your service, have fun in COMCIVFOR."Long answer:
Because per instruction, resigning, which was my first choice, takes six months of lead time. I submitted my letter in October, and go figure, no one has seen it. Now, per recent NAVADMIN, resignations must be done online via NSIPS, as of January 1. I've been asking for 2 month for my command/the NOSC to get the routing set up in NSIPS so I can route the request. Still hasn't happened (and I can't do it for them). IRR (I've heard) can be prosessed in under 2 months.
Short answer:
IRR is the quickest way to be left alone.
I didn't take the money, and I'm well within my 2 year post active duty no mob time, so no reason I shouldn't be able to walk away.