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News > Mullen: Military workplace needs more flexibility
Mullen: Military workplace needs more flexibility

Posted 11/30/2010 Email story   Print story

    


by Cheryl Pellerin
American Forces Press Service


11/30/2010 - WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- Recognizing and finding ways to accommodate the changing needs of servicemembers and their families with regard to the military workplace should be a priority for leaders, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said here Nov. 29.

Navy Adm. Mike Mullen spoke as part of a panel on work and life balance at the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation's Focus on Workplace Flexibility Conference.

More than 100 government, military and business leaders attended the conference.

"The ability to be the best we can be and carry out our missions is so central to our focus on our people, ... but more than our people, our families," Admiral Mullen said. "And while we've made significant strides, we still have a long way to go."

Allowing flexible options that affect the number of hours worked and the places where employees work is one way leaders can help in providing balance between work and family life, Admiral Mullen said. He cited flex time and compressed work weeks, part-time work, job sharing and teleworking as examples.

The federal focus on flexibility began March 31, when President Barack Obama spoke at a White House forum about modernizing the workplace to meet the needs of today's employees and their families.

"Workplace flexibility isn't just a women's issue," the president said. "It's an issue that affects the well-being of our families and the success of our businesses. It affects the strength of our economy (and) whether we'll create the workplaces and jobs of the future we need to compete in today's global economy."

For military leaders, Admiral Mullen said, more than nine years of war has put a new focus on families.

"We have to figure out a way to put our people and our families in the center of our universe and then move from there to generate the kind of success that we're capable of," he said.

Taking cues from the business world, military leaders must recognize the plight of service women who must choose between starting a family or continuing a military career, Admiral Mullen said.

Some women move to the private sector, where such flexibility is increasingly being accommodated, he said.

"We're in a search for talent just like everybody else, and we have to figure out a way to answer that particular issue, or we will be coming up short for a long time," Admiral Mullen said.

The military must continue to move forward in helping its workers balance their jobs and their lives, he said.

"Anybody who has dealt with change in business or in the military knows the continuous requirement to improve," he said. "We know we've made some marginal improvements, but we ... still have an awful long way to go."



tabComments
12/1/2010 1:00:54 PM ET
And while we're so mired in the excitement of integrating gays in the military has anyone even noticed the women who are still being treated as second-class citizens I think some education and training is in order for senior leaders on the rights of women to make choices about their careers and families without being punished for those choices.
Suzie, Texas
 
11/30/2010 11:44:37 PM ET
Taking cues from the business world, military leaders must recognize the plight of service women who must choose between starting a family or continuing a military career, Admiral Mullen said. What about the plight of both men and women who must choose between KEEPING their family or continuing a military career? I'm stuck with another three years of service before I can possibly get out, but my spouse has already indicated she's had enough of me never being around due to TDYs, exercises, deployments and now a remote tour.
Stuart, Osan
 
11/30/2010 12:54:23 PM ET
How about we stop cutting our force every year with this do more with less crap? Quit converting every possible GI position into civilian contracting, thinking we're saving money somehow. We're not saving any more versus a full time GI doing the same job. And stop outsourcing every possible menial job task to private sectors. Doesn't the government realize they're getting swindled by these private companies?
SC, Macdill
 
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