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Home Front
US Navy auctioning off unwanted assignments
2003-08-12
Edited for brevity.
The Navy has embarked on a revolutionary move to staff its hardest-to-fill positions: open them up to online auction. The Wall Street Journal has the scoop (subscription required):
For decades, when the Navy needed to fill an unpopular job in a distant place, it simply ordered a sailor and his or her family to move. Recently, it took a different tack. To keep skilled sailors in the service -- which entails keeping their families happy -- Navy officials put some of those out-of-favor jobs up for online auction, a la eBay.

Among the first to bite was Petty Officer 1st Class Elishaine Moses. He offered to take a job in Yokuska, Japan, but only if the Navy was willing to bump up his salary by $350 a month. He doesn’t want to live in Japan. Nor does his wife. But they figured an extra $350 a month would go a long way toward a down payment on a house. "My No. 1 goal in life right now is to save enough money to build a house," his wife, Shana Moses, says.

In the new system, sailors will be able to bid on jobs that no one wants. Ships with vacancies also will be able to bid for sailors that they really want. The Navy is even considering allowing sailors who are particularly good at their jobs to apply for positions that would traditionally go to higher-ranking officers...

I’m not too sure how this would go over in all branches of service. "Sure, Sarge, I’ll take point--for an extra $1,000!"
Posted by:Dar

#6  Saint, you get extra pay for serving overseas. This is actually a good way to keep troops in hard to fill slots. I would much rather have that guy that wanted to go to Japan than forcing someone to go. The Air Force used to allow personnel to 'homestead' at locations (mostly overseas) and it really helped with the manning. They also offered extra incentives to remain at remote locations (like Korea). There were several people that had lived there for more than 10 years when I was stationed there. That's a lot of Kimchi eating! Of course Osan AB looks more like 'little USA' than it does a Korean Town, Burger King, Pizza, etc.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge (VRWC CA Chapter)   2003-8-12 3:47:41 PM  

#5  I know the Coast Guard has a semi-similar system. If you took ice-breaker duty you got to choose your next assignment. Similar, but I think wiser because it doesn't screw up the pay scales, etc.
Posted by: Yank   2003-8-12 3:45:07 PM  

#4  Wonder how the budget is gonna handle the Antarctic assignments.
Posted by: Yank   2003-8-12 3:43:10 PM  

#3  Big changes. When I was in, most detailers would try their best to get you something you liked, but if all they had were s**t jobs, you were shafted. I actually got a pretty plum final tour from a guy who said he was making up for my previous assignment.
Posted by: Hodadenon   2003-8-12 3:34:28 PM  

#2  USN Assignment Incentive Pay here.
Posted by: Steve   2003-8-12 2:21:25 PM  

#1  how is it that he gets paid more? normally pay is tied to rank or another special inclusion like hazardous duty pay or a housing allowance or some other such thing. I've never heard of anyone having their pay adjusted for a specific job as part of a negotiation or incentive.

maybe the navy has some kind of technical kicker pay that the army doesn't have?

-DS
Posted by: DeviantSaint   2003-8-12 1:21:28 PM  

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