Houston Chronicle

Student debt among factors driving increase this year in Army recruiting

- By Dan Lamothe

A year after falling about 6,500 people short of its recruiting goal, the Army expects to meet its target for 2019, senior Army officials said Tuesday, citing programs that help with student debt as one factor.

The Army enlisted more than 68,000 new active-duty soldiers, exceeding its goal for the year. The service attributed the improvemen­t to an overhauled recruiting effort that included more recruiters, a shift to primarily online advertisin­g and an emphasis on 22 cities that were outside of the Army’s traditiona­l stronghold­s in southern and southeaste­rn states.

“We made some pretty dramatic changes in this process,” Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy told reporters at the Pentagon. The service, he said, “had to do some soul-searching” after falling so far short in 2018.

The boost in recruiting comes as the Army prepares to grow gradually in coming years, said Gen. James McConville, the service’s top general. The service intended to have about 478,000 soldiers at the end of fiscal year that closes in September, and will instead have between 481,000 and 483,000.

The recruiting bump also comes despite nationwide unemployme­nt of about 3.7 percent. The service traditiona­lly is able to recruit more people when the economy is weaker.

Maj. Gen. Frank Muth, the commanding officer of Army Recruiting Command, cited rising college debt is a part of the equation. The average student has $31,000 in loans, he said, a figure backed by several studies.

McCarthy said the Army presents not only a way to pay tuition, but positions in “one of the most extraordin­ary organizati­ons on Earth.”

“That entire package together is a great opportunit­y,” he said.

McCarthy said he would turn to an economist to assess whether anything will be done to bring down student debt in the next few years but predicted “it’s probably going to be a very hard trend to change.”

“The cost of education in America continues to rise,” he said.

But a change in strategy also paid dividends.

Muth and McCarthy said the service saw large improvemen­ts in recruiting in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and Boston, among the 22 cities it emphasized. Overall, the cities averaged a 15 percent increase in enlistment, though some, such as Seattle, fell short.

The efforts in those cities included visits by senior Army leaders, who met with local officials and school administra­tors and sought to build better relationsh­ips.

“More so than anything we have to do the right thing and go in there and introduce ourselves,” McCarthy said. “They’ve got a tight window every day where they’ve got the kids in the classroom, and they’ve got to get them through the curriculum. A lot of times, it’s just, ‘What is the right venue for us to insert ourselves and come introduce the high school students to the Army?’”

The Army has reoriented to focus heavily on generating recruiting leads from esports, online competitio­ns centered on video games. It also establishe­d 44 “virtual recruiting stations” in which recruiters reach out through text messages and social media. The Army gained about 3,000 enlistment­s from the effort.

 ?? Gregory Bull / Associated Press file ?? Recruits take their oath at a San Diego ceremony in 2017. The Army missed its recruiting goal last year, but it likely will meet a lower target this year.
Gregory Bull / Associated Press file Recruits take their oath at a San Diego ceremony in 2017. The Army missed its recruiting goal last year, but it likely will meet a lower target this year.

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