Army Looking at Longer Tour Options for Army Servicemembers and Families, McConville Says

October 16, 2019

Army Chief Gen. James McConville said Wednesday he wants longer tour options for Army families, saying the traditional system requiring new duty station moves every three years is antiquated, Stripes.com reported.
“I don’t see why people can’t stay four, five, six, seven, eight, nine years,” McConville said during a town hall at the Association of the U.S. Army’s annual meeting in Washington, D.C., according to the report.
The military has periodically struggled with permanent change-of-station (PCS) move seasons that peak during summer break, and McConville said the Army is reviewing moves and suggested longer tours could be an option, the report said.
“Part of the future that we see in the talent management system is we do look at preferences … where you want to go and what you want to do.” McConville said. “If we can accommodate that (longer tours), why shouldn’t we?”
The Army’s current system moving most soldiers every three years is “industrial age,” McConville said, according to the report.
Distributing moves year-round rather than during summer has also been rejected, McConville also said.
“I don’t sign up for that,” McConville said. “I sign up for making less moves or stabilizing people longer, but we’re not going to have the soldier moving in March and the kids getting pulled out of school.”
McConville’s remarks reflect Army plans for a new talent management system overhaul to improve matching soldiers’ skills with the service’s requirements, while also reporting soldiers’ preferences to remain at a location, the report said.
 Army photo by Sgt. Ryan Jenkins

October 16, 2019

Recent News

Snap of the Week

Snap of the Week

Naval Academy plebes climb the Herndon Monument, a tradition symbolizing the successful completion of the midshipmen’s freshman year. The class of 2027 completed the climb in 2 hours, 19 minutes and 11 seconds. Navy photo by Stacy Godfrey

In Our Communities

In Our Communities

More than 74,000 residents of Whidbey Island, Washington could suffer long-term health impacts from the noise of jets stationed at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, according to a University of Washington study, The Seattle Times reported. Researchers said the impact...

$2 Billion Aid Package Will Help Ukraine Build Its Own Weapons

$2 Billion Aid Package Will Help Ukraine Build Its Own Weapons

A new $2 billion aid package the State Department announced Thursday will help build a Ukraine Defense Enterprise Program, according to Defense News. The fund will help Ukraine buy weapons from other countries while “investing in Ukraine’s defense industrial base,...

NDAA Draft Asks for DOD Study on Privatizing Barracks

NDAA Draft Asks for DOD Study on Privatizing Barracks

The House Armed Services Committee’s draft National Defense Authorization Act indicates lawmakers may not be ready to privatize more barracks, as Military.com reported. “Members aren’t completely bought into privatizing all housing,” a senior Republican committee aide...

PAST STORIES