by Rich Lamance
Air Force News Service
2/21/2014 - ORLANDO (AFNS) -- Getting
top performing Airmen promoted sooner, changing the EPR system,
streamlining the enlisted and officer professional education programs
and developing a roadmap for the Air Force for the next three decades
were some of the topics discussed by the Air Force's top officer during
the 30th annual Air Force Association Warfare Symposium and Technology
Exposition Feb. 20.
Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark A. Welsh III spoke to an audience of
Airmen, members of industry and AFA, providing an update on Air Force
issues that ranged from fiscal realities over the upcoming decades to
come to aircraft and equipment modernization to issues affecting Airmen
today and in the future.
Welsh spoke to Airmen directly about several myths and misconceptions
floating throughout the Air Force on the issue of education
requirements, both private and professional. He emphasized the having a
Community College of the Air Force degree will still be a requirement,
but the requirement for bachelor's degrees and higher will be revised in
the years ahead.
For professional military education, he said the current schools aren't
going away, but there will be streamlined versions. "On the right hand
side of the page, we're still going to require Airman Leadership School,
we're still going to have the NCO Academy and the Senior NCO Academy,"
said Welsh .
"The only difference is that the NCO Academy and the Senior NCO Academy
are going to be blended learning in the future. We're already doing the
beta test on the Senior NCO Academy, and requiring the correspondence
course before residency. It will actually shrink the length of the
residence course, and it will not repeat the lessons found on the online
version. It's not a CBT type of learning. It's more involved than that.
So, that will be tested this fall, and we'll go fully operational next
spring."
Welsh said that Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force James Cody and
the MAJCOM chiefs are also looking into the effectiveness of the current
EPR, with a primary focus on Airmen promotion into the senior NCO
ranks.
"Let me tell you the guidance I gave him that started all this. I told
them I was concerned that a really average tech sergeant can make master
sergeant at the same time as a phenomenal tech sergeant. I was
concerned that the reality is that your job performance doesn't have
anything to do with it.
"As long as you don't shoot yourself in the foot, you're going to get a 5
EPR and it will be WAPS testing and time in service and time in grade
that makes the difference. RAND did a study for us that showed a 1.4 or
1.6 percent difference, that's the impact of your performance when
making master sergeant. There's something wrong with that."
Fundamentally Welsh said "I want our best tech sergeants to make master
sergeant first. There needs to be logical time in service, time in grade
requirements, but we need our best performers to be senior NCOs faster
so we can use them longer to lead our Air Force. And I don't know any
master sergeant who wouldn't agree with that. That doesn't mean we
haven't had qualified people in the past get promoted, it means our best
people aren't moving forward quicker."
Welsh said that during a mock board held last year, overseen by Cody,
there was about a 25 percent difference between who was promoted by the
mock board, handled more like a senior master sergeant board, where
records are scored, and weighting is based upon job performance versus
how the traditional board turned out. And in one career field, the chief
of staff noted that the best performers were not promoted under the
current system.
"Job performance is what we should value most. It's not quarterly
awards, volunteer work off duty, although those things are wonderful,
but when it comes to promoting people at the senior grades, both officer
and enlisted, job performance is what should matter most to us."
In the officer ranks, Welsh said there is a misconception that a
master's degree is required at a certain level for promotion. He
believes many officers feel it is at the rank of major. He said
currently there is no requirement for a master's degree at any rank.
Welsh said he is going to recommend to the secretary that there should
be a requirement. "We're going to look at to get promoted to the rank of
colonel would require a master's degree. If you get picked up at
school, you'll get it at school,"
He would like to make it a requirement before you get considered for
promotion to major, lieutenant colonel or colonel to have squadron
officer school, intermediate service school or senior service school
complete before you get promoted.
"Squadron officer school is changing - we're shrinking the course.
There's going to be a 100 percent opportunity for active officers to go.
Don't take it by correspondence. If you get within a year of the
major's board and you've been operationally deferred, go take it then.
We're going to give you a chance to go. For intermediate service school,
or senior service school, don't take it by correspondence. In fact
we're going to keep you from taking it by correspondence. Just wait and
get it done when you go. You'll get a master's degree at the same time.
Quit double dipping on everything. We do not have to operate that way.
In fact it is our job at the front of the room, (talking about MAJCOM
commanders) -- all our senior raters have to understand that we have to
change this.
"It's about job performance, guys. I want young officers doing their
jobs, doing as good as they can, then going home and be young husbands,
young wives, young mothers and fathers, young friends, young buddies.
Have a life. We can do that and still have a very good Air Force."
In terms of where we're headed as an Air Force during the decades ahead,
Welsh feels it's important to look at where we've been for the last 70
years.
"The Air Force has had a lot of guiding concepts we've walked through.
We've actually gone through strategic bombardment at end of World War II
in the late 40s, early 50s, to nuclear deterrence after the Korean War,
as we built up the Strategic Air Command and the world's greatest
strategic force."
The chief of staff said we drifted to air land battle during the 70s and
80s, and "we picked up global reach global power and parallel warfare,
counter-terrorism to support counter insurgency operations, global
vigilance, global reach and global power - question for us now is, so
what's next?
Welsh said the Air Force put out a vision document about a year ago that
focused on Airmen and believes that, since 1947, they are the primary
reason behind the service's success.
"They are the engine that drives this service. We put out a vision on
global reach and power to remind Airmen that our core missions haven't
changed since 1947. Airmen need to see where they fit, directly or
indirectly in those core missions."
Welsh said that last year Air Force leaders worked on a resource
strategy called Air Force 2023. It's not an Air Force strategy, it's a
resource strategy designed to get us to the end of sequestration. We
need a strategy...we're writing it. It will be done by June."
He said there's going to be a 30-year look to "make sure we don't get
our feet stuck in today, and never get to the point where we can see
over that 30-year hill." He added that the plan has to include strategic
assessment and valid threat assessment, and "it has to include
strategic priorities, different lines of operations, from science and
technology to keep us moving in the right direction to stay on the
leading edge of technology.
Welsh said that the second piece of this is a 20-year look. He said the
idea is to bring the multiple master plans that we have that are done by
our core function leads around the Air Force and integrate them into a
single Air Force master plan.
"This is going to be important for us because it allows us to make those
strategic trades across those portfolios that we have been struggling
to get done for the past few years. Everybody's working hard at it, but
the process doesn't make it simple. We're going to predict what our top
lines are going to be for 20 years, then we're going to tie our hands
and try to live within them.
"If a program succeeds, can we proceed? If it fails can we go to a plan
B. Are there pivot points we can identity where we have to look at the
world around us and make changes, and production buy numbers or
technologies we're pursuing and look at our science and technology
priorities, as well as what's going on around us in the world. And
attached to that master plan are flight plans and road maps for such
things as ISR, bombers or human capital development."
Finally Welsh said we have the 10-year look, our resource strategy
"We're going to balance the budget for 10 years, we're going to try to
hold ourselves to that. The first five years becomes the POM input
(5-year budget), then we roll it up and do it again. Balance it again so
we keep reality within our funding streams. And the projections we're
making down the road."
Welsh talked about some of the aircraft, weapon and equipment priorities
during the years ahead to maintain air superiority. He mentioned
getting the F-35 fielded, getting 4th and 5th generation aircraft to
share data between them, missile and weapons upgrades and space and
cyber superiority as key issues. He said that while not always popular,
it's not too early to look at the 6th generation of aircraft.
Welsh concluded his remarks with a simple bottom line for the success of
the Air Force -- is its Airmen and the core values they represent.
"These core values are who we are. They are what we stand for and they
are what this uniform represents. If there are people in the Air Force
who don't think they stand for the same thing, if these don't represent
their values, they need to find another profession."
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