Serving Clovis, Portales and the Surrounding Communities
RANDOLPH AIR FORCE BASE, Texas — Effective Wednesday, Air Force officials here will implement policy changes to improve sourcing efficiency of 365-day deployments and ensure airmen receive adequate notification before deployment.
The new policy sets the deployment “accept or decline” option at three calendar days, streamlines the verification process and incorporates the air and space expeditionary force reclama process (request to cancel the selected airman) for 365-day taskings.
It also requires a medical pre-assessment for airmen attending combat skills training. Officials expect the changes to reduce or eliminate late reporting dates and provide airmen more lead time than the 60 days or less notification some currently experience.
“These changes are designed to streamline the process and provide airmen adequate time to prepare themselves and their families before departing on 365-day deployments,” said Maj. Gen. K.C. McClain, the Air Force Personnel Center commander.
More than 1,850 airmen are on 365-day deployments, and about one-third received less than 60 days notification. Several factors slowed the selection process such as short notice of the requirement, an increase in declinations, and medical profiles.
Reducing the “accept or decline” option to three calendar days provides more time to notify the next airman in line. If the third calendar day is a weekend or holiday, the official notification period is extended to the first duty day thereafter.
The verification process is streamlined by identifying the most eligible airman Air Force-wide rather than identifying a capability within a command. This will reclaim up to six days in the overall selection process while maintaining major command visibility.
The adoption of the AEF reclama process standardizes all deployment cancellation requests by routing them through major command vice commanders. This standardizes and automates the process, increasing major command and wing leadership visibility and placing the decision point with commanders in the field.