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Marines end use of photos in assignments, promotions
by Ed Adamczyk
Washington DC (UPI) Aug 28, 2020

The U.S. Marine Corps, starting next week, will no longer include photographs of personnel in the training or assignments selection process in an effort to reduce gender and racial bias.

The policy, announced in July, goes into effect Sept. 1, according to the Marine Corps.

"Photographs are not authorized information for promotion boards and selection processes pertaining to assignment, training, education, and command," an administrative order issued Wednesday said in part.

The ban includes official photographs from personnel files of individual Marines.

The policy change comes after Secretary of Defense Mark Esper issued a guidance message in July to all service branches, calling for the end to of photographs in selection processes.

The move will help the military better reflect diversity in its ranks and ensure "equal opportunity for all who serve," the guidance said.

The U.S. Army ended its use of photographs following Esper's memo, on Aug. 1.

The Navy and Air Force have each started reviews of perceived bias. The branches initiated reviews of diversity and bias within their ranks after protests this summer over the deaths of several Black civilians at the hands of law enforcement officials.


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Pentagon policy for immigrant troops violates citizenship law, judge rules
Washington DC (UPI) Aug 26, 2020
A federal judge struck down a Pentagon policy which slows the citizenship path of non-citizens in the U.S. military. The overturned policy required a potential citizen to serve at least 180 days in active service, or one year as a reservist, to qualify for certification leading to citizenship. A class action lawsuit filed in April by eight active duty service members, seven long-time permanent U.S. residents and one Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, plaintiff, contended th ... read more

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