RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS
AIR FORCE BOARD FOR CORRECTION OF MILITARY RECORDS
IN THE MATTER OF: DOCKET NUMBER: 98-00495
INDEX CODE: 131
COUNSEL: FRED L. BAUER
HEARING DESIRED: YES
_________________________________________________________________
APPLICANT REQUESTS THAT:
1. His promotion to the grade of master sergeant (E-7) be restored.
2. He be reinstated to active duty with back pay and allowances.
_________________________________________________________________
APPLICANT CONTENDS THAT:
His career was damaged as a result of discrimination. The primary
person responsible for the discrimination was an Operating Room
Supervisor, although others were influenced by her (supervisor)
attitudes. The applicant was given questionable Letters of
Counseling, Letters of Reprimand with an unfavorable information file
(UIF). A control roster action contributed to a denial of a promotion
to the grade of master sergeant. This, in turn, resulted in the
applicant having to retire early on 1 March 1995 because of high year
of tenure (HYT) rules.
Applicant’s submission is attached at Exhibit A.
_________________________________________________________________
STATEMENT OF FACTS:
Applicant reenlisted in the Regular Air Force on 3 December 1985 for a
period of four (4) years in the grade of technical sergeant (E-6). He
had two extensions of enlistment.
The applicant received four Letters of Counseling (LOCs) on
13 December 1993, 26 January 1994, 10 May 1994 and 10 June 1994. He
also received a Letter of Reprimand (LOR) and was placed on the
control roster, effective 12 July 1994. Placement on the control
roster automatically established an Unfavorable Information File (UIF)
on the applicant.
The applicant was selected for promotion to the grade of master
sergeant (E-7) during the 95A7 promotion cycle with a Promotion
Sequence Number (PSN) 00071.0 which would have been incremented on
1 August 1994. However, when the applicant was placed on the control
roster on 12 July 1994, it rendered him ineligible for promotion for
cycle 95A7.
The applicant was forced to separate due to being at his High Year of
Tenure (HYT - the maximum amount of time he could be in the Air Force
in his grade).
Applicant was released from active duty on 28 February 1995 and
honorably retired on 1 March 1995 under the provisions of AFR 36-3203
(Voluntary Retirement: Maximum Service or Time In Grade). He served
20 years, 4 months and 24 days of active military service.
_________________________________________________________________
AIR FORCE EVALUATION:
The Chief, Commander’s Programs Branch, HQ AFPC/DPSFC, states that
counseling helps people use good judgment, assume responsibility, and
face and solve their problems. Counselors (commanders, supervisors
and other persons in authority) help subordinates develop skills,
attitudes, and behaviors that are consistent with maintaining the Air
Force’s readiness. The AF Form 174, Record of Individual Counseling
(RIC) documents a counseling session and provides a record for
performance evaluations. Letters of counseling may be filed in the
UIF by themselves or as an attachment to another document.
The use of the Letter of Reprimand (LOR) by commanders and supervisors
is an exercise of supervisory authority and responsibility. The LOR
is used to reprove, correct and instruct subordinates who depart from
acceptable norms of conduct or behavior, on or off duty, and helps
maintain established Air Force standards of conduct or behavior. A
reprimand is a stronger degree of official censure than a counseling.
The 12 July 1994 LOR cited AFR 35-9, the military leave regulation and
reprimanded the applicant for failing to get his commander’s
permission to take leave outside the continental United States
(CONUS). However, AFI 36-3003, Military Leave Program, was in effect
at the time the applicant took his leave. The AFI advises commanders
to ensure members applying for leave in a foreign country comply with
foreign government procedures as required by the Department of Defense
(DOD) Foreign Clearance Guide and security procedures prescribed for
visits to communist or communist-controlled countries. The AFI did
not specifically state the applicant needed his commander’s approval
to go overseas. It allows commanders to delegate leave approval
authority to first line supervisors. The applicant intended to take
his family to Germany via Military Air, leave his wife and daughter
there for a visit, and return home without them. His dependents
decided to return home with the applicant. Due to the difficulty in
obtaining a return flight to CONUS, the applicant called his
supervisor to request a leave extension that was approved.
Control rosters are used by commanders to set a six-month observation
period for individuals whose duty performance is substandard or who
fail to meet or maintain Air Force standards of conduct. UIFs may be
used by commanders to form the basis for a variety of adverse actions
as they relate to the member’s conduct, bearing, behavior, integrity
and so forth, or less than acceptable duty performance. Commanders
have the option to remove an enlisted member’s UIF early.
AFPC/DPSFC states that the applicant’s supporting documentation
attests that the applicant’s supervisor made racial slurs about the
applicant, told lies abut him and, that the supervisor and commander
were “best of friends.” Given the applicant’s duty section’s climate,
AFPC/DPSFC is concerned that the applicant may have been targeted by
his supervisor, and punished/reprimanded for actions that others
routinely do without ramifications.
A complete copy of the Air Force evaluation is attached at Exhibit C.
The Chief, Inquiries/AFBCMR Section, Enlisted Promotion & Military
Testing Branch, HQ AFPC/DPPPWB, states that if the AFBCMR voids the
applicant’s placement on the Control Roster, which was the basis for
his ineligibility for promotion to the grade of master sergeant, and
he is otherwise qualified, he would be entitled to restoration of his
grade. Only the placement on the Control Roster renders a member
automatically ineligible for promotion. If the Board determines the
applicant should have been promoted 1 August 1994, he would not have
completed the two year active duty service commitment (ADSC) at the
time of retirement on 1 March 1995.
A copy of the Air Force evaluation, with attachment, is attached at
Exhibit D.
The Retirement Branch, HQ AFPC/DPPRR, states that if the Board
determines the applicant should have been promoted to the grade of
master sergeant effective 1 August 1994, he would have incurred a two-
year ADSC of 31 July 1996. Additionally, by being promoted to the
grade of master sergeant, applicant’s High Year of Tenure (HYT) would
be 24 years of active service, giving him a HYT date of 1 November
1998. If the Board promotes the applicant to master sergeant and
determines the 1 March 1995 retirement date will remain in effect,
applicant will be retired in the grade of master sergeant and the
unserved portion of the two-year ADSC will be waived.
A copy of the Air Force evaluation is attached at Exhibit E.
_________________________________________________________________
APPLICANT’S REVIEW OF AIR FORCE EVALUATION:
Copies of the Air Force evaluations were forwarded to the applicant
and counsel on 22 June 1998 for review and response. Counsel states
that it is the hope that the Board will accept the suggestions of the
Air Force evaluations and grant the applicant the requested relief.
The applicant is willing to serve the remaining months to complete his
HYT to 1 November 1998.
Counsel’s and Applicant’s responses are attached at Exhibit G.
_________________________________________________________________
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 probable error or injustice. After a thorough review
of the evidence of record and applicant’s complete submission, we are
not persuaded that his promotion to the grade of master sergeant
should be restored or that he should be reinstated to active duty with
back pay and allowances. All of his contentions are duly noted;
however, we do not find these assertions, in and by themselves,
sufficiently persuasive to favorably consider the applicant’s
requests. We note that the Chief, Commander’s Programs Branch, HQ
AFPC//DPSFC, believes that approval of the applicant’s requests may be
appropriate based on a review of the Letters of Counseling (LOC) and
Letters of Reprimand (LOR). However, we do not agree. On reaching
our conclusions, we considered the following:
a. The applicant is alleging that his Operating Room (OR)
supervisor was discriminating against him. He submits a statement
from a coworker who attests that applicant’s supervisor made racial
slurs about him (applicant) to others and also told lies about him.
However, this statement does not prove there was discrimination. It
is the opinion of the coworker. If the applicant believed he was
being discriminated against, he should have filed a Social Actions or
Inspector General (IG) complaint. Other than the coworker’s
statement, there is no additional evidence that indicates there was
discrimination against the applicant.
b. With regard to the Letters of Counseling and Letters of
Reprimand the applicant contends were questionable, it appears that
for approximately a period of a year he was having problems in the
performance of his duties. The applicant alleges that the primary
person responsible was his operating room supervisor. However, we
note that the Letters of Counseling and the Letters of Reprimand were
administered by several different supervisors. The control roster
action, along with the applicant’s removal from the master sergeant
promotion list, was administered by the 14th Medical Group Commander.
Therefore, it does not appear that there was one person solely
responsible for the counselings and reprimands that the applicant
received. In view of the above and absent persuasive evidence to the
contrary, we find that applicant has failed to sustain his burden of
establishing the existence of either an error or an injustice
warranting favorable action on these requests.”
4. The documentation provided with this case was sufficient to give
the Board a clear understanding of the issues involved and a personal
appearance, with or without counsel, would not have materially added
to that understanding. Therefore, the request for a hearing is not
favorably considered.
_______________________________________________________________________
_____________________
THE BOARD DETERMINES THAT:
The applicant be notified that the evidence presented did not
demonstrate the existence of probable 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 this application in
Executive Session on 15 April 1999, under the provisions of AFI 36-
2603.
Mr. Richard A. Peterson, Panel Chair
Mr. Gregory W. Den Herder, Member
Mr. Grover L. Dunn, Member
The following documentary evidence was considered:
Exhibit A. DD Form 149, dated 12 February 1998, w/atchs.
Exhibit B. Applicant's Available Master Personnel Records.
Exhibit C. Letter, HQ AFPC/DPSFC, dated 30 Apr 98.
Exhibit D. Letter, HQ AFPC/DPPPWB, dated 6 May 98.
Exhibit E. Letter, HQ AFPC/DPPRR, dated 9 Jun 98.
Exhibit F. Letter, AFBCMR, dated 22 Jun 98.
Exhibit G. Counsel’s Letter, dated 29 Jul 98, w/atch.
RICHARD A. PETERSON
Panel Chair
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