The Fayetteville Observer

‘Be all you can be’

Fayettevil­le high school graduate named Army’s top recruiter of year

- Rachael Riley

From a young age, Sgt. 1st Class Shane Burroughs was around the Army.

Burroughs was born in the Caribbean country of Trinidad and Tobago but visited the U.S. when he was 5 years old and moved to Spring Lake in the early ‘90s with his mother and stepfather when he was 9.

His stepfather, Lennox Jobe, was a sergeant major in the 18th Airborne Corps; a deputy with the Cumberland County Sheriff’s Office after his military retirement; worked as a civilian contractor for 10 years in Iraq; and is now a Department of Veterans Affairs volunteer in Fayettevil­le.

After graduating from Pine Forest High School in 2005, Burroughs said, he was still “trying to figure out life.”

“Throughout high school, my stepfather had asked about my plans, and I was unsure and worked for two years making good money, but I wasn’t achieving the goals I wanted,” he said by phone Tuesday from the U.S. Virgin Islands, where he is now stationed.

Burroughs said he looked at his stepfather’s lifestyle and military achievemen­ts, compared it to civilian jobs and determined the military was the best fit for him.

“I humbled myself, went to the recruiting office, took the practice test and scored well,” he said.

He enlisted in the Army as a unit supply specialist in 2007, and his first duty station was in Germany.

Becoming an American

During the mid-2000s, Burroughs became a naturalize­d American citizen while deployed to Iraq.

Officials asked different units if anyone wanted to become a citizen, and Burroughs, volunteere­d, he said.

Representa­tives from the U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services visited their deployment location, and Burroughs said he was able to get his American citizenshi­p within three days.

“It was cool because I had my naturaliza­tion and citizenshi­p ceremony in Saddam Hussein’s palace, and my oath was administer­ed by Gen. (Ray) Odierno,” he said.

Recruiter of the Year

Last year, Burroughs was named the Army’s FY2023 Recruiter of the Year.

Though he recruited 26 enlistees in 2023, Burroughs said being named Recruiter of the Year required that 50% of those soldiers be in the regular Army, and he had to go through board interviews at the battalion, brigade and U.S. Army Recruiting Command levels.

Burroughs said he was asked to become a recruiter about four years ago and was originally to be assigned in California, but once leaders learned he was from an island nation they interviewe­d him for a “special assignment.”

“They didn’t tell me what it was, but said I’d fit in well,” he said.

He later learned he was one of three Army recruiters responsibl­e for the U.S. Virgin Islands, with a focus on the St. Thomas and St. John area. That was in 2019, and he is still there today.

Burroughs said its a challenge to recruit someone from “a beautiful place,” where everyone is not as familiar with military service as in the continenta­l U.S.

However, he said, some areas and people on the island seek financial opportunit­ies or want to go elsewhere. “It’s on us to push the Army’s message,” he said. “The main things I convey are the opportunit­ies. You can achieve goals in life, whether it’s to attend college, be debt-free or explore the world. And you get 30 days vacation and can select your job during the enlistment process. There are also bonuses based off test scores. It gives people the opportunit­y to create the lifestyle they want.”

If someone doesn’t score well on their Armed Services entrance exam known as the ASVA or doesn’t meet physical fitness requiremen­ts, Burroughs said he won’t “quit on them,” and dedicates his time to helping them improve.

Once he’s recruited someone, he said, he also keeps up with their Army career, which he frequently highlights on his recruiting social media page.

“My advice to them is to make the most out of their military careers and find a mentor and truly achieve all they can be,” he said. “Our current motto is, ‘Achieve every goal you have, and be all you can be.’”

Family

Burroughs said that as a recruiter, he also communicat­es with families the importance of the military because they are the ones who support soldiers.

He credits his own mother, Margaret Job, with supporting his and his stepfather’s careers, while having her own career as clinical director of Excel Tutoring & Personal Developmen­t, a counseling center, in Sanford.

“My mother is one of the most resilient, hardworkin­g and humble people I know,” he said. “She’s definitely held the family together while my stepdad or I were deployed.”

Reach military reporter Rachael Riley at rriley@fayobserve­r.com.

 ?? PROVIDED PHOTOS/SGT. 1ST CLASS SHANE BURROUGHS ?? Sgt. 1st Class Shane Burroughs, of Spring Lake, is recognized as the 2023 Army Recruiter of The Year by Secretary of the Army Christine Wormuth during the Dec. 9 Army-Navy football game.
PROVIDED PHOTOS/SGT. 1ST CLASS SHANE BURROUGHS Sgt. 1st Class Shane Burroughs, of Spring Lake, is recognized as the 2023 Army Recruiter of The Year by Secretary of the Army Christine Wormuth during the Dec. 9 Army-Navy football game.
 ?? ?? Sgt. 1st Class Shane Burroughs, of Spring Lake, is seen with his stepfather, retired Sgt. Maj. Lennox Jobe, and mother, Margaret Jobe.
Sgt. 1st Class Shane Burroughs, of Spring Lake, is seen with his stepfather, retired Sgt. Maj. Lennox Jobe, and mother, Margaret Jobe.

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