This site is for mothers of kids in the U.S. Navy and for Moms who have questions about Navy life for their kids.

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Choose your Username.  For the privacy and safety of you and/or your sailor, NO LAST NAMES ARE ALLOWED, even if your last name differs from that of your sailor (please make sure your URL address does not include your last name either).  Also, please do not include your email address in your user name. Go to "Settings" above to set your Username.  While there, complete your Profile so you can post and share photos and videos of your Sailor and share stories with other moms!

Make sure to read our Community Guidelines and this Navy Operations Security (OPSEC) checklist - loose lips sink ships!

Join groups!  Browse for groups for your PIR date, your sailor's occupational specialty, "A" school, assigned ship, homeport city, your own city or state, and a myriad of other interests. Jump in and introduce yourself!  Start making friends that can last a lifetime.

Link to Navy Speak - Navy Terms & Acronyms: Navy Speak

All Hands Magazine's full length documentary "Making a Sailor": This video follows four recruits through Boot Camp in the spring of 2018 who were assigned to DIV 229, an integrated division, which had PIR on 05/25/2018. 

Boot Camp: Making a Sailor (Full Length Documentary - 2018)

Boot Camp: Behind the Scenes at RTC

...and visit Navy.com - America's Navy and Navy.mil also Navy Live - The Official Blog of the Navy to learn more.

OPSEC - Navy Operations Security

Always keep Navy Operations Security in mind.  In the Navy, it's essential to remember that "loose lips sink ships."  OPSEC is everyone's responsibility. 

DON'T post critical information including future destinations or ports of call; future operations, exercises or missions; deployment or homecoming dates.  

DO be smart, use your head, always think OPSEC when using texts, email, phone, and social media, and watch this video: "Importance of Navy OPSEC."

Follow this link for OPSEC Guidelines:

OPSEC GUIDELINES

Events

**UPDATE 4/26/2022** Effective with the May 6, 2022 PIR 4 guests will be allowed.  Still must be fully vaccinated to attend.

**UPDATE as of 11/10/2022 PIR vaccination is no longer required.

**UPDATE 7/29/2021** You now must be fully vaccinated in order to attend PIR:

In light of observed changes and impact of the Coronavirus Delta Variant and out of an abundance of caution for our recruits, Sailors, staff, and guests, Recruit Training Command is restricting Pass-in-Review (recruit graduation) to ONLY fully immunized guests (14-days post final COVID vaccination dose).  

FOLLOW THIS LINK FOR UP TO DATE INFO:

RTC Graduation

**UPDATE 8/25/2022 - MASK MANDATE IS LIFTED.  Vaccinations still required.

**UPDATE 11/10/22 PIR - Vaccinations no longer required.

RESUMING LIVE PIR - 8/13/2021

Please note! Changes to this guide happened in October 2017. Tickets are now issued for all guests, and all guests must have a ticket to enter base. A separate parking pass is no longer needed to drive on to base for parking.

Please see changes to attending PIR in the PAGES column. The PAGES are located under the member icons on the right side.

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Navy Speak

Click here to learn common Navy terms and acronyms!  (Hint:  When you can speak an entire sentence using only acronyms and one verb, you're truly a Navy mom.)

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Navy.com Para Familias

Visite esta página para explorar en su idioma las oportunidades de educación y carreras para sus hijos en el Navy. Navy.com

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Plan would expand active-duty billet process

By Mark D. Faram and Philip Ewing - Staff writers
Posted : Tuesday Mar 3, 2009 5:59:09 EST

Reservists could begin competing with active-duty sailors for active-duty billets within the next two years if personnel officials succeed in creating what they hope will be a close new alignment between the active and reserve sides of the Navy.

If changes go as planned, a reservist could log into the current detailing system and apply — just as active sailors do — for an open position. If picked by the detailer and the command, he would move back to the active side, possibly sign a multiple-year agreement to take the orders, and report for duty.

It would all take place in a Navy without the traditional barriers to moving freely between the active and reserve sides of the service, leading to a major change in how sailors spend their Navy careers.

Chief of Naval Personnel Vice Adm. Mark Ferguson hopes the first step could take place later this year, when officials want to be able to move a sailor from active to reserve status — and back again — in as little as 72 hours per transfer.

The vision is to make the move routine and not need a wartime mobilization authority or require a sailor to visit an active or reserve recruiter, which is how it’s done today.

Instead, a sailor would change his status with a mouse click, and his pay, personnel and medical records would automatically follow. This, officials say, could lead to active sailors heading to the reserve with the promise they can return, and allow reserve sailors to compete for active-duty billets.

“I need to be able to bring reserves on quickly and, in the flexible environment of the future, to be able to allow actives to move into the reserve for periods of time and come back,” Ferguson said.

Personnel officials are calling the idea “sailor for life,” a phrase inherited from former Chief of Navy Reserve Vice Adm. John Cotton. The Navy would track sailors from day they enlist through retirement, all the while providing options for them to serve on active duty or in different states of readiness in the reserve.

A flexible force
The more easily people can switch from the active to the reserve component and back, the longer they’ll want to stay in the Navy, said Chief of Navy Reserve Vice Adm. Dirk Debbink.

“Life has a way of coming at you in unexpected ways,” he said. “You’re locked in; you’re a sailor for life … when all of a sudden your mother takes ill. There’s a car accident that affects you in some way. You have a fantastic opportunity that affects you, somebody comes and says, ‘Would you like to go to MIT and get your master’s degree?’ … and as sad as it is, you say, ‘I need to leave this Navy I love so dearly.’ With the Navy Reserve, you don’t need to say that.”

It won’t just give individual sailors more flexibility with their choices. If the Navy can get its simpler transitions to work, active-duty commanders will gain a new “surge capability,” Ferguson said, enabling them to call more quickly upon experience and talent in the reserve force.

One example could be what Ferguson called a Navy “cyber force” of reserve computer specialists who could be activated quickly to help with tomorrow’s Internet conflicts.

The faster active-to-reserve switch also bypasses Navy Recruiting Command, which can take weeks to issue orders to a naval operational support center, Debbink said. The new process will give people more time to get acquainted with their new assignments and new shipmates.

Other goals include having active and reserve sailors draw a single Navy paycheck, rather than a check from a separate reserve bureaucracy, and enabling sailors to keep their Navy enlisted classifications, rather than having to reapply for them as reservists because those details did not transfer between databases.

Debbink and Ferguson acknowledged that several barriers remain before Big Navy will be able to treat active and reserve sailors interchangeably.

For example, the Navy and Navy Reserve calculate retirement points differently, Ferguson said, so the Navy needs to determine how it will equitably count time spent on duty by active and reserve sailors

Views: 679

Replies to This Discussion

Hi ladies, I have a nephew who is in the reserve program and he would LOVE to go enlisted. All of his efforts to switch to an enlisted program have met with a brick wall. I believe most recently he was told, AFTER he completes his eight year contract with the reserves THEN he can enlist.

At any rate, came across this article today in the Navy Times and thought you might want to see what could be on the horizon for the reservists.
wow! Thanks for sharinf this one....I like it!
This is very interesting! Be interesting to see how it pans out. It may open some doors for my son as he also is in the Reserves and so far likes the Navy lifestyle. He was told he could switch to active any time, but of course that was not true, so now he may have an option open to him if he decided that is what he wants to do. Thanks for sharing this!
I was encouraged by it as well, I hope it works out for those reservists that want to be enlisted.
Mary, I had found this article which searching going from reserve to active last nite too. I showed it to my son. So it will be interesting to see what happens with all this.
Thanks for sharing - my son often mentions wanting to take an active duty assignment so this would be great for him.
I read about this and my son is very encouraged if they do manage to put this in place. It sure makes sense and they will get so much more out of the Sailors in the Reserves and allow the active duty Sailors time to pursue college or be home for family needs. Hope they cane get this in place soon.

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