Chicago Sun-Times

Army wants more female recruiters ..........................................

- Tom Vanden Brook

The Army needs more female recruiters over the next several years as it gears up for the end of the ban on women serving in tens of thousands of combat-related jobs, according to a top recruiting official.

Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Snow, in an Oct. 4memo to the top Army personnel officer, has requested an annual boost in the percentage of female recruiters by 1% per year until 2018 “to improve the recruitmen­t of females for Army service.”

Women, Snow said, are 23% better at recruiting women than men. “Increasing the number of females on recruiting duty will improve the effectiven­ess of recruiting women,” he wrote.

The request comes as the Pentagon moves to open all its frontline combat units, including special operations forces, to women by year’s end. The services may request an exemption for a combat specialty if they can document that women cannot perform the required tasks.

Thus far, no such waiver requests have been made public. However, the Marine Corps released a study last month showing that all-male units outperform­ed those that included women, suggesting that the service may seek a waiver for its ground combat forces.

“Regardless of the final decision, a number will be open,” Snow said in an interview. “It’s going to be important.”

Snow, who leads the Army’s recruiting command, also wants more female recruiters because they’re underrepre­sented compared with the rest of the Army. Women make up about 9% of the Army’s recruiters, while they are 15% of its nearly 500,000 soldiers.

“I am concerned that as a recruiting force I don’t have the same number of women that exist out in the operationa­l Army,” Snow said.

The Army should be less concerned about the gender of its recruiters than policies that could make military careers more attractive to women, said Todd Harrison, a military budget expert at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. Expanded maternity leave and greater predictabi­lity in geographic moves are among the family friendly policies that the Pentagon is studying, Harrison said.

“The bigger issue is not who you are using as the face of the recruiter, but what are you offering women in terms of pay and benefits and quality of life,” Harrison said.

The Army struggled tomeet its quota of 59,000 recruits for the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30. Signing up more women will help meet its goal of 62,500 for the current year.

Young women make up 50% of those eligible to join the service, according to Snow.

“The bigger issue is not who you are using as the face of the recruiter, but what are you offering women in terms of pay and benefits and quality of life.” Todd Harrison, military budget expert

 ?? JESSICA MCGOWAN ?? 1st Lt. Shaye Haver, left, and Capt. Kristen Griest at their graduation at the U.S. Army's Ranger School on Aug. 21 at Fort Benning, Ga. The two are the first women ever to complete the school.
JESSICA MCGOWAN 1st Lt. Shaye Haver, left, and Capt. Kristen Griest at their graduation at the U.S. Army's Ranger School on Aug. 21 at Fort Benning, Ga. The two are the first women ever to complete the school.

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