From Military.com:
“Army Redesigns Leave Forms to
Simplify Time-Off Requests”
The Army recently rolled out a
major update to leave regulations that includes changes ranging from more
user-friendly leave forms to clearer descriptions of the service's parental
leave policy. The June 3 revision of Army Regulation 600-8-10, which covers
leaves and passes, is part of the largest update to Army military leave policy
in more than a decade, Larry Lock, chief of Compensation and Entitlements for
the Army's G-1 office, said in an Army news release. "We're an
all-volunteer force since 1973, and to sustain our force we want to take care
of our people," Lock said in the release. "One way to do that is to
streamline the process for requesting leave and enhance morale by encouraging
soldiers to take time off." Based on input from soldiers, the service
improved the Department of Army Form 31, or Request and Authority for Leave,
which has not been updated since 1993, Lock said. "To be a more usable
form ... the Army updated the DA Form 31 to make sure commanders and soldiers
clearly understand what type of leave was chargeable and what type was
non-chargeable," he said. "Soldiers, Army leaders and commanders need
to keep track of leave, for personnel reasons and for audit purposes."
Soldier feedback resulted in
larger fields for leave address, remarks and organizational address. While it
is not required by regulation, soldiers can now enter three or more addresses
where they expect to stay while on leave, the release added. The revised
regulation also updates DA Form 4179, or Leave Log, to help personnel officials
track the absences requested, approved or disapproved for soldiers in their
organizations, according to the release. Both the new DA Form 31 and the new DA
Form 4179 are available on the Army Publishing Division website. The revised
policy includes more explanation of the military parental leave policy (MPLP)
the service launched last year. "The leave policy associated with
childbirth can be somewhat confusing, and the revised regulation helps soldiers
navigate through the different leaves," Lock said in the release. The MPLP
applies to active-service soldiers, Reserve component soldiers performing
active Guard and Reserve duty or full-time National Guard duty for a period in
excess of 12 months, and Reserve Component soldiers performing duty under a
call or order to active service in excess of 12 months, according to the policy
regulation. There are three different types of leave associated with the birth
of a child: maternity convalescent leave, primary caregiver leave and secondary
caregiver leave. New mothers are authorized 42 days of non-chargeable maternity
convalescent leave upon release from the hospital or birthing center. If two
soldiers are married, only one member of each couple may be designated the
primary caregiver and one designated the secondary caregiver, according to the
regulation. The primary caregiver is authorized 42 days of non-chargeable
primary caregiver leave that must be taken within 12 months of qualifying birth
events, but it does not all have to be taken in a continuous block, according
to the release. The secondary caregiver is authorized 21 days of non-chargeable
secondary caregiver leave, which also needs to be used within 12 months of the
qualifying birth and is not required to be taken in a continuous block. Previously,
a parental leave of only 10 non-chargeable days was available for non-birth
parents and had to be used within 45 days after the birth. While much of the
MPLP policy has not changed, "the Army is striving to help troops better
understand their benefits, especially the young soldiers who make up the
majority of new Army parents," Lock said.
Soldiers earn 30 days of paid
leave per year, beginning with their first year on the job. "Every month,
soldiers have the personal responsibility to verify the accuracy of their leave
and earnings statements, which shows their balance, the amount of leave they
used during the current fiscal year, and the number of leave days they will
lose if they don't take it before the end of the fiscal year," Lock said. Soldiers
may request a non-chargeable absence to volunteer in a semi-official capacity
at major events for organizations such as the Boy Scouts and Girls Scouts, the
release states. This was previously authorized by AR 600-8-10, but it now falls
under an umbrella category of "Administrative Absences," Army
officials said. While scouting events are not named in the regulation,
volunteering for such an activity "would be considered a non-chargeable
absence from duty, which may be granted ... to perform a semi-official activity
benefiting the service and the soldier," according to the regulation. The
Remarks section, beginning on Oct. 31, will state the maximum leave soldiers
can carry over at the end of the fiscal year, and when the ability to carry
more than 60 days will expire, the release states.
One of the biggest leave
problems, Lock said, is getting soldiers to take their leave. "Soldiers
are very dedicated to their jobs, to the point that they are reluctant to take
leave," he said. "It is good to know that they are really dedicated,
but they also need to make their own well-being and their families a priority. "It
is a commander's role to grant time off, when possible, but it is still the
responsibility of every soldier to manage their own leave."
^ This article says that “One of
the biggest leaves problems….. is getting soldiers to take their leave.” Maybe
now that the leave forms are simplified and, hopefully, easier to understand,
more Soldiers will start taking their leave. ^
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