RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS AIR FORCE BOARD FOR CORRECTION OF MILITARY RECORDS IN THE MATTER OF: DOCKET NUMBER: BC-2009-01060 COUNSEL: NONE HEARING DESIRED: NO ________________________________________________________________ THE APPLICANT REQUESTS THAT: He receives a direct promotion to the grade of colonel. ________________________________________________________________ THE APPLICANT CONTENDS THAT: It took significant time to get his officer performance report (OPR) and his promotion recommendation form (PRF) corrected, which diminished his chances for promotion by the Calendar Year 2003 (CY03) Colonel Central Selection Board (CSB) Special Selection Board (SSB). He feels the “Definitely Promote (DP)” rating he received on his PRF prevented his records from blending in with the other ten benchmark records. He understands that SSBs are the primary authority for out-of-cycle promotions; however, if a precedent has been set whereby the Board has given a direct promotion in the past, he believes his case warrants such a promotion. He contends an error on his OPR closing 23 February 2003 took one and one-half years to correct which cause his PRF to take over 14 months to process. Therefore, he feels the SSB process prejudices his IPZ record as an officer passed over several times, as well as the effects of receiving an unearned “DP.” The applicant’s complete submission is at Exhibit A. ________________________________________________________________ STATEMENT OF FACTS: The applicant is currently serving in the grade of lieutenant colonel with an effective and Date of Rank (DOR) of 1 April 1999. He was considered and nonselected for promotion to the grade of colonel by the CY03B, CY04A, CY05A, CY06A, CY07A, and the CY08A Colonel CSBs. Additionally, he was considered and nonselected by SSB for the CY03B Colonel CSBs on 25 Sep 06, 24 Sep 07, and 29 Sep 08, and the CY04A Colonel CSB, which convened on 22 Jan 07. The applicant's OPR profile for the last eight reporting periods follows: PERIOD ENDING OVERALL EVALUATION 08 Apr 01 Meet Standards (MS) 08 Apr 02 MS # 14 Feb 03 MS 14 Feb 05 MS 14 Feb 06 MS 14 Feb 07 MS 21 Dec 07 MS 21 Dec 08 MS # Top Report at the time he was considered and nonselected for promotion to the grade of Colonel by the CY03B Colonel CSB. The AFBCMR corrected the applicant’s record by replacing his “P” rating with a “DP” on his CY03B PRF. However, he was nonselected for promotion to colonel. Subsequently, he requested an opportunity to write a letter to the CY03B CSB addressing the “DP” which was corrected by the Board. His records were administratively corrected and he was again considered and nonselected by the CY03B CSB SSB. ________________________________________________________________ THE AIR FORCE EVALUATION: AFPC/DPSOO recommends denial. They found no relevant evidence of an error or injustice. They note the results of the CSBs were based on a complete review of the applicant’s entire selection record, assessing whole person factors such as job performance, professional qualities, depth and breadth of experience, leadership and education. Although officers may be qualified – in the judgment of selection board members vested with discretionary authority to make the selections –- he/she may not be the best qualified of those available for the limited number of promotion vacancies. Furthermore, granting a direct promotion would be unfair to all the other officers who have extremely competitive records but did not get promoted. Additionally, both Congress and the Department of Defense (DoD) have made clear their intent that errors ultimately affecting promotions should be resolved through the SSB process. The complete AFPC/DPSOO evaluation is at Exhibit C. ________________________________________________________________ APPLICANT'S REVIEW OF THE AIR FORCE EVALUATION: He notes that AFPC/DPSOO paints a very dismal picture of six nonselections from 2003. However, he is only challenging his IPZ 2003 board. The other boards were above-the-primary zone (APZ) and would not have mattered had he been promoted by the IPZ. The IPZ 2003 board promoted 44.7 percent (355 out of 795 candidates). If it wasn’t for the material error in his 2003 OPR, he very likely would have been promoted with the awarded “DP” on his PRF. He notes all of the SSBs prior to 2007 evaluated records with the material error. As a matter of fact, he requested his records not go before an SSB until his records were corrected. He met two SSBs with the corrected record; however, both SSBs evaluated his records as a six-time pass over lieutenant colonel with a “DP.” He feels this prejudiced him from receiving a fair evaluation. Further, he believes because of the SSB process, the chances are very high that his was the only record with a “DP” and could not transparently blend with the benchmark records. He was allowed to send a letter to the board and was not selected. In hindsight, his chances for promotion in the SSB process would have been better with a “P” recommendation because his records would have been able to blend better with the benchmark records. The applicant’s complete response, with attachments, is at Exhibit E. ________________________________________________________________ THE BOARD CONCLUDES THAT: 1. The applicant has exhausted all remedies provided by existing law or regulations. 2. The application was timely filed. 3. Insufficient relevant evidence has been presented to demonstrate the existence of error or injustice. The applicant’s complete submission was thoroughly reviewed and his contentions were duly noted, including his response to the Air Force evaluation; however, in our view, the Air Force office of primary responsibility (OPR) has conducted a thorough review of the evidence of record and addressed the issues presented by the applicant and we are in agreement with its opinion and recommendation. We do not find the applicant’s assertions and the documentation presented in support of his appeal sufficiently persuasive to override the rationale provided by the OPR. The applicant was afforded opportunities through the correction of records process and subsequently received SSB consideration for several promotion boards, and was nonselected. He now asserts because of slow responses to his appeals and specific corrections to his record, his promotion record is now prejudiced because they cannot blend with the benchmark records being considered under the SSB process; we are not so convinced. In our view, the SSB process is the best method to compete for promotion on a fair and equitable basis. Therefore, in view of the above, and in the absence of evidence to the contrary, we find no basis to recommend granting the requested relief. ________________________________________________________________ THE BOARD DETERMINES THAT: The applicant be notified that the evidence presented did not demonstrate the existence of material error or injustice; that the application was denied without a personal appearance; and that the application will only be reconsidered upon the submission of newly discovered relevant evidence not considered with this application. ________________________________________________________________ The following members of the Board considered AFBCMR Docket Number BC-2009-01060 in Executive Session on 26 January 2010, under the provisions of AFI 36-2603: The following documentary evidence was considered: Exhibit A. DD Form 149, dated 18 Mar 09. Exhibit B. Applicant's Master Personnel Records. Exhibit C. Letter, AFPC/DPSOO, dated 30 Apr 09. Exhibit D. Letter, SAF/MRBR, dated 22 May 09. Exhibit E. Letter, Applicant, dated 3 Jun 09. Panel Chair