USA TODAY US Edition

ARMY SETTLES FOR RECRUITS WHO ARE LESS QUALIFIED

Military must compete with civilian job market in growing economy

- Tom Vanden Brook @tvandenbro­ok USA TODAY

Faced with increasing demand for new soldiers, the Army has reached deeper into the pool of marginally qualified recruits, offered hundreds of millions in bonuses and relaxed the process for granting waivers for marijuana use.

The Army will reach its goal of 80,000 new soldiers without compromisi­ng quality, predicted Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Snow, who leads the service’s recruiting command. Congress has reversed trends begun in the Obama administra­tion to downsize the military. An additional headwind for recruiting in all the service branches: a growing economy in which the civilian job market, not the military, attracts young people.

“It’s in an environmen­t where unemployme­nt is 4.5%,” Snow said. “We’ve got our work cut out for us.”

So long as the Army, the largest of the armed services, continues to tinker at the margins by accepting a small number of recruits with lower qualificat­ions, it won’t encounter the problems it did in the mid-2000s, said Beth Asch, an expert on military recruiting at the non-profit RAND Corp.

In 2005, as long, hazardous deployment­s to Iraq and Afghanista­n became common, the Pentagon relaxed standards for recruits who had fared poorly on standard military exams. Those who scored in the lower

third of the tests, so-called Category Four recruits, had been limited to 2% of new troops. The standard was relaxed to 4% and was exceeded at times.

The hazard of accepting recruits with poor qualificat­ions was highlighte­d by a case from

2006 in which an Iraqi girl was raped and her family killed by soldiers, one of whom required waivers for minor criminal activity and poor educationa­l background to join the Army.

Smarter soldiers, RAND has found, are better fighters.

In the past fiscal year, 2017, the active-duty Army recruited nearly 69,000 soldiers, and 1.9% belonged to Category Four. That’s up from 0.6% in 2016. The lowest figure in recent years was in 2013 when it dipped to 0.2% Recruiting was easier several years ago, Asch noted, when the economy was recovering from the deep recession.

The Pentagon requires that the services accept no more than 4% of recruiting classes from Category Four.

The Army needs a steady flow of recruits throughout the year to fill spots in basic and advanced training courses. Accepting more recruits from Category Four in the winter and spring — its toughest months for recruiting — kept those seats full, Snow said.

Granting the services more flexibilit­y in accepting recruits on the margins, or some who admitted smoking marijuana, can save money on bonuses without affecting the military’s ability to fight, Asch said.

Last year, the Army spent $424 million on bonuses for recruits. That’s up from $284 million in fiscal year 2016 and dwarfs the $8.2 million paid out in 2014.

Granting more waivers to recruits who admitted smoking marijuana — drug use is prohibited in the military — reflects its legal status in several states, Snow said. Prospectiv­e soldiers must vow not to use again.

Previously, a two-star officer such as Snow had to grant the waiver. That authority has been delegated to the level of a lieutenant colonel, he said.

The change was made for fiscal year 2017 when 506 waivers were granted. In 2016, there were 191 waivers.

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