NukeWorker Forum
Career Path => Navy Nuke => Navy:Getting In => Topic started by: robatworldnet on Aug 30, 2017, 08:38
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I've searched the forums and haven't seen anything that addresses the issue specifically.
EDIT: removed some details to protect the inocent ...
My question: is there a formal appeal process for waivers?
Thanks in advance, any and all advice is greatly appreciated
-Rob.
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Your best would be to have your son talk to the recruiter about appealing the waiver rejection. Not all recruiters may be familiar with the process for doing that so try talking to a couple different recruiters to ask about it if your son's recruiter doesn't know or doesn't think it can be done. The Navy can be pretty strict when it comes to drugs however so they may not reconsider. He could try other branches of the military who might grant a waiver as well. I.E. the Navy rejecting the waiver won't prevent him from joining other branches (although they could reject granting a waiver as well.)
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Here's the policy: Drug charges of any kind are disqualifying for military service.
The waiver process exists to allow exceptions for more minor infractions if the military needs additional personnel. If recruiting is healthy, the waiver won't be granted and there's nothing you can do to 'appeal' it.
In regards to your son, this looks like the charge is relatively recent and occurred after he was a legal adult. This certainly doesn't help his case.
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I appreciate your responses. He'll talk to the recruiting division LCPO next since the recruiter is washing her hands. Not sure how the NAVY went from Traffic Court to Trafficking.
Thanks for the reply,
-Rob.
If the charge included p.w.i. and he pleaded guilty and paid a hundred dollars just to be done with it he messed up and the USN don't owe him a job, and don't need the people bad enough to grant the waiver,....
try the Army cause the Air Force is just about as uptight as the Navy,....
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I'm assuming you meant owi, and no the charge above is the only charge. No impaired driving, no drugs of any kind in the car. There were 2 others in the car, but it was his car and he was driving so he got the ticket. No arrest just a traffic ticket, fine paid in traffic court. And he is clean, I did the lab pee test myself.
-Rob.
nope, I meant p.w.i.
possession with intent,..
it is a chargeable degree, even as a "civil" offence,...
p.w.i. adds the degree of intent to the offence,...
you can be charged with battery, you can also be charged with aggravated battery,...
you can be charged with possession, you can also be charged as possession with intent,...
I am not a lawyer, but I always hire one, because lawyers know what the long term consequences of any guilty plea might be,..
whatever your son plead guilty to in 2016 is jacking up his life in 2017,...
lesson learned is "always hire a lawyer, a good lawyer",...
he might still be paying that lawyer off here in 2017, but he just might be getting into the USN in 2017 also,...
maybe after 4 years in the Army, the Navy may give him a waiver,...
I dunno 'cause the services change their entrance standards quite a lot from one era to the next,...
one of those Navy recruiters may very well know,...
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...18yos aren't smart enough to stop digging when they're in a hole....
true that,...
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Update: fast forward almost a year ... now 21yo son kept his life clean, learned a bit from his mistakes, moved to a different recruiting district and reapplied with a proper accounting of exactly what he did and what he did not do. He processed through MEPS on Monday is in DEP awaiting the next step.
-Rob.
Thanx for the feedback
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Fast forward another year and a half ... just attended my son's swearing in ceremony at MEPS. He's in the air, on his way to RTC!
-Rob.
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Fast forward another year and a half ... just attended my son's swearing in ceremony at MEPS. He's in the air, on his way to RTC!
-Rob.
+K
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Fast forward another year and a half ... just attended my son's swearing in ceremony at MEPS. He's in the air, on his way to RTC!
-Rob.
Thats awesome
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Persistence may be one of the most powerful forces. It is courages' associate.
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Any man that determined to get in the Navy should get in. Thankfully, getting out is typically easy. Power follows steam demand.
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Any man that determined to get in the Navy should get in. Thankfully, getting out is typically easy. Power follows steam demand.
Last sentence not true
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Like slaying grouper in a drum. Specific target responded expediently, and although one of the smartest men alive, again demonstrates that a review of basic PWR reactor principles is required. NRC.gov has a 4.0 explanation of the process.Life is good.
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Yet a BWR doesnt work that way..
Technically a civilian PWR only works partly that way.
I heard one I have SRO licenses for both and also heard once I teach it
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So the Navy has BWRs? If you read THE WHOLE barrage of posts...it is all about the Navy. So, yes, in the Navy..power does follow steam demand. He was comparing the this man's progress in the Navy to steam demand at a Navy Nuclear Power Plant...try to keep up or qualify your statements.
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And on the commercial side, 2/3 of the plant in the US are PWRs (https://www.nrc.gov/reactors/power.html), which follow the same rules as navy plants (except for using boron concentration to control power vice rods)
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For a guy that constantly attacks people for not reading posts...this is hysterical.