Connect with us

World News

US Military Eases Tattoo Rules To Boost Recruiting

Published

on

us-military-eases-tattoo-rules-to-boost-recruiting

The Air Force has tweaked its policy to allow for body art on the neck and hands

Neck and hand tattoos will no longer be prohibited under a policy revision designed to help ease a US military recruiting crisis, the Department of the Air Force announced on Wednesday. Previously, hand tattoos were limited to a single ring band on one hand. 

Service members were already allowed to have tattoos on areas of their body that would be covered by a dress uniform, such as their back, chest, arms and legs.

“We are starting to see some positive results of our training program, policy changes and our enhanced marketing efforts, but military recruiting will remain a long-term challenge,” said Major General Ed Thomas, commander of the Air Force Recruiting Service. “One of the leading barriers currently being tackled is the increased prevalence of hand and neck tattoos among America’s youth.”

Read more

FILE PHOTO.
Canadian military to allow skirts and hair coloring for soldiers

All branches of the US military struggled to meet their recruiting goals last year, leading to a 15,000-troop shortfall by the Army. The Air Force met its 2022 target for active-duty recruits, but only after sweetening enlistment bonuses twice and accelerating the start dates for people who had signed contracts to enter service in 2023. The Air National Guard and Reserve remain thousands of troops short of their targeted staffing levels.

Thomas has said that 2022 was the toughest recruiting year of the current century. The scramble to meet last year’s enlistment goal – pushing through recruits who normally would have waited a few months to start training – left the Air Force about 5,000 people behind the point where it usually begins a new year.

The Army missed its 2022 recruiting goal by 25%, even after easing its tattoo restrictions last year. The Air Force revised its rules in 2017 to eliminate size limits for body art on the chest, back, arms and legs. Markings that are obscene, racist or commonly associated with gangs are still prohibited, as are tattoos on the face, tongue and scalp.


READ MORE: US Air Force sets new diversity targets

The US military services have looked for ways to eliminate barriers to enlistment, such as easing fitness and academic requirements, as fewer and fewer Americans qualify for the recruiting pool. Nearly 71% of Americans born after 1997 are ineligible for military service, most commonly because they are too obese to qualify, according to Pentagon data.

 

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

World News

Another Boat Sinks Off Tunisia, Killing 19 African Asylum Seekers

Published

on

By

another-boat-sinks-off-tunisia,-killing-19-african-asylum-seekers

Latest deaths come as Italian media report that a record 2,000 refugees had arrived in Lampedusa within 24 hours.

Continue Reading

World News

‘My City Is Gone’: Powerful Tornado Kills Dozens In Mississippi

Published

on

By

‘my-city-is-gone’:-powerful-tornado-kills-dozens-in-mississippi

Death toll at 26 after a powerful storm that spawned a tornado tears through US states of Mississippi and Alabama.

Continue Reading

World News

Trump Holds First 2024 Campaign Rally, Slams Prosecutors

Published

on

By

trump-holds-first-2024-campaign-rally,-slams-prosecutors

Ex-US president casts 2024 contest in apocalyptic terms, compares investigations against him with ‘Stalinist Russia’.

Continue Reading

Trending