Wednesday, November 27, 2019
High Year of Tenure In The US Military
High Year of Tenure In The US MilitaryHigh Year of Tenure In The US MilitaryIn the military, throughout the career of a soldier, airman, Marine, or sailor, members are expected to advance in rank and pay grade every few years.An enlisted person must be promoted within certain time frames during their career, or they must separate from the service. This is known as the High Year of Tenure (HYT). The Army High Year of Tenure program is calledthe zurckhalten control point As long as you are not neglecting your duties and have not been in serious trouble, an enlisted person with more than six years of service and less than 20 years of service (retirement eligible) who is involuntarily separated (under honorable conditions) is entitled to receive involuntary separation pay (severance pay). In short (for example), if an Air Force E-4 does not get promoted to E-5 by the time he/she has 8 years of military service, the member will be forced to separate.These rules are strictly enforced espec ially during times of downsizing and force reduction. Air Force Active and Reserves High Year of Tenure These guidelines apply to active personnel and members of the Reserves. E-4 - 8 yearsE-5 - 15 yearsE-6 - 22 yearsE-7 - 26 yearsE-8 - 28 yearsE-9 - 30 years Army Retention Control Point Like the Air Force, unterstellung apply to active duty and Reserves members. E-1 to E-3 - 5yearsE-4 - 8 yearsE-4 (Promotable) - 10yearsE-5 - 14 yearsE-5 (Promotable) - 15 yearsE-6 - 20 yearsE-6 (Promotable) - 20 yearsE-7 - 24 yearsE-7 (Promotable) - 26 yearsE-8 - 30 yearsE-8 (Promotable) - 30 yearsE-9 - 30 years The Army has also changed the maximum age an enlisted member can remain on active dutyfrom 55 years to 62 years. Navy High Year of Tenure These guidelines apply to active-duty members E-1, E-2 - 4 yearsE-3 5 yearsE-4 - 8 years*E-5 - 14 years (20 years for Reserves)E-6 - 20 yearsE-7 - 24 yearsE-8 - 26 yearsE-9 - 30 years And these guidelines apply to Navy Reserves members E-1, E-2 - 6 yearsE-3 - 10 yearsE-4 - 12 yearsE-5 - 20 yearsE-6 - 22 yearsE-7 - 24 yearsE-8 - 26 yearsE-9 - 30 years Marine Corps Active Duty High Year of Tenure E-4 - 8 yearsE-5 - 10yearsE-6 - 20 yearsE-7 - 22 yearsE-8 - 27 yearsE-9 - 30 years An E-5 who has been passed over twice for promotion to E-6 may be separated at the end of their current enlistment, even if they have less than 13 years of service. An E-6 who has been passed over twice for promotion to E-7 may be separated at the end of their current enlistment, even if they have less than 20 years of service. An E-7 or E-8 may exceed 20 years of service only if they have not been passed over twice for promotion. Marine Corps (Reserves) High Year of Tenure E-4 - 8 yearsE-5 - 10 yearsE-6 - 20 yearsE-7 - 22 yearsE-8 - 27 yearsE-9 - 30 years Coast Guard High Year of Tenure E-1 / E-2 - Cannot reenlistE-3/E-4 - 10years active Coast Guard service or 10 years active military service, whichever is greater.E-5 - 16 yearsE-6 - 20 y earsE-7 - 24 yearsE-8 - 26 yearsE-9 - 30 years As with just about every standard and rule in the military, there are waivers available for a person seeking to fight the high year tenure workforce management rules and standards. A member seeking to submit a waiver should do so within 10 months of his/her HYT date and have a justifiable reason why that person should be kept in the military. Usually, under-manning of your skill and experiences is good enough reason or the service member will be deployed at the time of your high year tenure date.Obviously, a waiver will need the immediate chain of command support and letters of recommendation.
Friday, November 22, 2019
This diet is easier (and cheaper) than the Mediterranean diet
This diet is easier (and cheaper) than the Mediterranean dietThis diet is easier (and cheaper) than the Mediterranean dietThe Mediterranean Diet has enjoyed quite the banner year.The most recent development might have occurred during a presentation at the American Psychiatric Associations 2019 annual meeting just this May. There, researchers motioned that adherence to the fruit and legumes rich diet can protect against the development of symptoms of depression in old age. Each unit intake increase of the most popular element of the diet, (vegetables) was associated with a 20% lower increase of instances of the mental illness. Researchers at Washington University seconded this finding, adding, that the omega three fatty acids featured in the Mediterranean diet, have been shown to yield concrete reductions to depressive moods. According to the authors, individuals that adhere to the diet are 33% less likely to develop depression.Follow Ladders on FlipboardFollow Ladders magazines on Fl ipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and moraMichelle Qaqundah recently wrote up a paper that got published in the Natural Journal of Medicine, positing that the Mediterranean diet can lower your risk of cardiovascular disease, neurodegenerative diseases, diabetes, and even cancer.The study found a 17% and 12% decreased cancer mortality in men and women following the Mediterranean diet after five years of follow-up, Qaqundah concluded in the report.A hard act to follow no doubt, but as far as The World Health Organization is concerned, there, in fact, looms a worthy contender.The diet is in the detailsThe Nordic Diet is the brainchild of a team of scientists, nutritionists and chefs birthed back in 2004 as a method of mitigating a growing obesity trend in Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, and Iceland. Although many experts have already pointed out that some of the foods featured in the diet werent actually around when the ancient Nords reigned, t he fundamental personality of the diet is based on the produce intake adopted by the Scandanavians.Already, in its young life, it has been studied to promote weight loss, without restricting calorie intake. Moreover, because the diet champions food that is locally sourced and sustainably farmed, votaries also get to pride themselves on being environmentally conscious. The rules are simple enough eat a ton of berries, vegetables, legumes, potatoes, whole grains, nuts, seeds, rye, breads, fish, seafood, low-fat dairy, herbs spices, and canola oil (more on that one in a bit). Occasionally eat free-range eggs, cheese, and yogurt, eat red meat and animal fats even less, and steerresolutely clear ofsugar-sweetened beverages, added sugars, processed meats, food additives, and refined beinahe foods. Simply put, the Nordic Diet is a critique of the excessive sugar and fat intake of the western diet, with double the fiber and seafood to boot.You might be having a hard time distinguishing betw een what I just described and the Mediterranean diet. Its true, the differences are subtle, but the World Health Organization believes the tenous contrasts deserve our consideration.Firstly, the biggest difference has to be The Nordic Diets privilege of canola and rapeseed oil, two departures from the Meddereennean diets love of olive oil. Canola and rapeseed oil are super rich in monosaturated fats which are known to promote heart health. Also, the diets origin means its contents, are primarily foods that can grow in colder climates, think kale, cabbage, brussels sprouts, etc.Save a little dough (but dont eat dough)By and large seasonal produce is more affordable than fruits that are out of season. Vegetables are the nucleus of the diet. Instead of greens being chosen to accommodate the meat, The Nordic Diet operates in reverse. A diet that sees foods like broccoli, cabbage, and berries headline main courses will by default be much cheaper than the western diet which red meat heavy , and even the Mediterranean diet which favors the typically pricier fish. It should also be noted that the Nordic Diet accepts canned fish and frozen veggie and fruits into its regimen. Seasonal produce is cheaper, canned fish is cheaper, frozen fruits are cheaper, The Nordic Diet is cheaper.For these discrepancies, however insignificant they may seem, The World Health Organization has officially endorsed the Nordic Diet as the optimal diet over the Mediterranean diet for people looking to lose weight on a budget. A bold claim, against a diet that has gained so much acclaim in recent years. However, in WHOs defense, just last year an 82-year-old woman suffering from dementia claimed to regain her memory after adhering to a diet that is eerily similar to the Nordic Diet.Sylvia Hatzner claims that after eating berries, leafy vegetables, kale, spinach broccoli, sweet potatoes, oats and abstaining from fatty and processed foods her condition drastically improved. Her, son Mark Hatnzer, would also engage in cognitive task with his mother, the both of them allowing for the occasional treat of dark chocolate.You might also enjoyNew neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happyStrangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds10 lessons from Benjamin Franklins daily schedule that will double your productivityThe worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs10 habits of mentally strong people
Thursday, November 21, 2019
Italian Scientists Win Ig Nobel for Random Promotion Theory
Italian Scientists Win Ig Nobel for Random Promotion TheoryItalian Scientists Win Ig Nobel for Random Promotion TheoryLast year Career-Line introduced you to the Peter Principle and the three Italian scientists who bucked the system with their own take on the Peter Principle. University of Catania scientists Andrea Rapisarda, Cesare Garofaloa and Alessandro Pluchinos random promotion theory says that an organization that promotes employees at random, as opposed to by merit is mora efficient, as reported by Business Standards Leslie DMonte in Funny Ideas Can Make You Think.The Random Promotion theory was awarded an Ig Nobel, which honors achievements that first make people laugh, and then make them think and in the process spur peoples interest in science, medicine, and technology, says Italian news site Life in Italy.Would random promotions at your company make your work harder than you work now, less than you work now, or have no affect on your work habits? Answer in the comments b elow.
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