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News > Mullen: Workplace flexibility focuses on families, children
Mullen: Workplace flexibility focuses on families, children

Posted 2/1/2011 Email story   Print story

    


by Cheryl Pellerin
American Forces Press Service


2/1/2011 - WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- Military families, and especially children in those families who have grown up against the backdrop of 10 years of war, are the focus of the military's effort to make workplace flexibility an increased priority, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said here Feb. 1.

Navy Adm. Mike Mullen spoke during a news conference announcing a new partnership on workplace flexibility between the Society for Human Resource Management and the Families and Work Institute.

"People are our absolutely most important resource, and we've said that (during) the totality of my career," Admiral Mullen said. "All of us who have led, whether in peace or in war, we know that. But what's happened over the course of the last 10 years is that we have moved to a much broader and deeper understanding of what that means."

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

For military leaders, Admiral Mullen said, a decade of war has put a new focus on families.

"I'm in the best military that has ever existed, and in great part because of our families, but we have got to continue to change," he said, noting that the services have put a great deal of effort into spouses' needs and those of the 70 to 80 percent of military households in which both parents work.

Such dual career-path households are "a requirement as seen by families these days," the chairman said.

"But what is emerging is a requirement, from my perspective, (is the need) to understand much more the needs of children" in those families, he added.

Because of the time service members have spent away from home, the chairman said, many children have spent years without their fathers or mothers.

"We've got 15-year-old kids who, from the beginning of the time they started to understand what their parents did," have lived in the shadow of war, Admiral Mullen said. "We've got 18- and 19-year olds who were 10 when the war started, and they went off to college this year or last year and don't know their parents that well because Mom or Dad -- mostly Dad -- has been away for at least 50 percent ... of their teenage years."

The services must hold on to such families, Admiral Mullen said.

To do so, he added, "We're going to have to reach into different places than we've reached in the past."

Service leaders must listen to those who have been at home and consider how to create the kind of flexibility and excellence that have made today's military superb, the chairman said.

"This is an imperative for us," he added. "This is a strategic imperative for our country."



tabComments
2/8/2011 3:05:01 PM ET
Chief Schneider thanks for your sacrifice and congrats on your rank...but don't be so bitter to Noname...she's identifying an issue maintainers and their families have dealt with for a long time. The amount of sacrifice and suffering we all endure is not a competition and spending 8 hours sleep time with the family doesn't really count. Your kids need you around not just the idea of you.
SM, NM
 
2/3/2011 5:06:44 PM ET
I hope they had a nice photo op with this announcement.
Sgt Whoever, conus
 
2/3/2011 1:19:03 PM ET
Cut the red tape and let more civilians deploy to fill non-combat roles instead of sending an airman that just got back six months ago to another base to sit in an office and fill a slot because they needed a body. There's plenty willing ready and able.
J, TX
 
2/3/2011 11:07:31 AM ET
The idea is great, however with the new phase of force reductions coming soon this just means more deployments with less dwell time. Today's many joint operations are quickly taking a toll on AF deployments. More and more airmen are returning home from deployments and will deploy again less than a year later. The AEF theory wasn't meant to support two wars.
william baros, Kabul Afghanistan
 
2/3/2011 8:41:09 AM ET
Noname in PACAF - I AM one of the parents Adm Mullen is referring to and I DO have children who barely know me. All my EOD Airmen and I have lived with 11 dwells for years now just to return home so our wives and children can confront the memories and horrors of war in our dreams with us before we're in combat again. You're lucky to have eight hours each day and weekends with your spouse. Though I'd never give up the opportunity to stand beside one of my EOD Airmen on the battlefield, if you feel you're getting run into the ground come walk in my shoes.
CMSgt Schneider, Eglin AFB
 
2/2/2011 12:18:38 AM ET
I think that this new thinking is great except there is one problem with it. Family time is important but so is our mission. I have a husband that works on the flight line and 16 hour days are a normal day for him and unfortunately his direct supervision is in the same boat and their hands are tied. Work work work and more work. Our flight line guys are getting run into the ground moral is low and no one cares about them nor the families. The AF has been very good to us and I am a proud AF wife. I believe that our military leaders in Washington want to put the focus back on the families but I think for now it's just a pipedream.
Noname, somewhere in PACAF
 
2/1/2011 5:34:43 PM ET
I am all for making changes to help families, but where is the support for the single military members who are still single because of all their deployments?
OTG, Sacramento Calif.
 
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