230 likes | 421 Views
Sexual Assault Prevention and Response (MRRS). Presentation to the Defense Task Force on Sexual Assault in the Military Services 14 August 2008. Ray Bruneau Section Head. OVERVIEW. Policy : MCO 1752.5 published Sep 04 Revised, MCO 1752.5A published Feb 08
E N D
Sexual Assault Prevention and Response(MRRS) Presentation to the Defense Task Force on Sexual Assault in the Military Services14 August 2008 Ray Bruneau Section Head
OVERVIEW • Policy: • MCO 1752.5 published Sep 04 • Revised, MCO 1752.5A published Feb 08 • CMC White Letter 03-05 (“Collateral Misconduct”) • MARADMINS 248/05, 490/05, 564/06 • HQMC Role: Plans, Resources, Training, Reporting • Lead: Deputy Commandant for Manpower & Reserve Affairs (DCM&RA), via Director, Personal Readiness Division (MR) • Staff: Task-organized under charter according to mission • Program Manager – Sexual Assault Prevention & Response Section (MRRS) • Adjunct Staff – Manpower Plans & Policies Division (MP), Staff Judge Advocate (JA), Security & Law Enforcement Division (PSL), Training & Education Command (TECOM) • Supporting Staff – Chaplain (REL), Health Services (HS), NCIS • Command Role: Execute program • Lead: Commanders (Bn/Sqdn-equivalent and above) • Supporting: Installation Commanders (for tenant commands & separate units) • Staff: SARC (for GCMCA-level), Uniformed Victim Advocates (UVAs – Unit level) • Supporting: Victim Advocates, SARC, MTF, Clergy, JAs, CID, NCIS
OVERVIEW • Caring for Victims: • Medical care provided via Navy Medical • Advocacy provided via existing FAP VAs & volunteer UVAs • Advocates are neither care-givers nor counselors • Counselors available via M&FS 24/7 (in garrison) • Holding Offenders Accountable: • NCIS investigates • Commanders decide on prosecution • Collateral misconduct • Quality of evidence needed for conviction
CRITICAL COMPONENTPERSONNEL - HQMC • Current MRRS • Permanent staff: • Section Head • Administrative Assistant • Augments: • Training Coordinator (mobilized Reserve) • Advocate Specialist (contractor) • Database Coordinator (contractor) • Adjunct Staff: on-call support, mission specific • Meets at least quarterly, more often if needed • Liaison with other HQMC stakeholders (parent agencies); TECOM, JA, MP, PSL • Future • Contract-to-NSPS conversion • Advocate Specialist • Database Administrator • Reserve demobilization: replace with NSPS FTE • Training Specialist • Expansion: new NSPS FTE position • Program Coordinator
CRITICAL COMPONENTPERSONNEL – “FIELD” • Current – collateral duty • Commands • SARC • Installations • SARC • Administrative Assistant (discretionary) • Units • MAGTFs – Unit SARCs • Deploying Bn/Sqdn or equivalent - UVA • Future – fulltime civilians • Regions
FACILITIES • Current • Collateral Duty assignments – no facilities required • Use of command resources • Future • Will we need more space? • Increases in manpower require increased equipment (IT, desks, etc.)
TRAINING • Current • Responder training • Initial awareness training • Annual awareness training • PME-level training • Future • Annual awareness training • PME-level training • Commander training
DATA COLLECTION • SAIRD • Module w/in CIBRS • Updating to v.2 • DCRMS • Expected to field in early FY-09 • Objections from other Services
REPORTING • Data Customers • CMC • OSD • Congress • NCIS • CLEOC • DONCJIS
ACCOMPLISHMENTS • Implementation • Program is less than 5 years old • Over 2,000 Marines have received SART • Lessons Learned • USMC SARC Conference • Continuous Improvement Process • Positive Climate Surveys • Marine Corps Climate Assessment Survey 2007 • DMDC Workplace & Gender Relations Assessment 2006
CHALLENGES • OPTEMPO & Focus of Effort • Nature of the Crime & Impact on Expedient Care • Collateral Misconduct • Young & vigorous Force • Political Volatility
CONSTRAINTS/RESTRAINTS • What we have to do • Support Victims • Maintain good order & discipline • Protect individual rights • What we can’t do • Short-circuit military justice system • Disadvantage others • Interfere with local jurisdiction
HOW TO HELP • What do we want? • Honest appraisal • Back up recommendations with actions • Be part of the solution
MEDICAL • To be provided separately
PASTORAL CARE • Provided by U.S. Navy Chaplains Corps
CHAPLAIN TRAINING • Formal training: • New accessions receive SAPR training in Chaplain Basic Course • SAPR for supervisory and senior supervisory Chaplains and Religious Program Specialists (RP) • Informal training: • Chaplains and RP trained at regional/area-wide events • Distance learning (DL) for deployed Chaplains and RPs
SPECIALIZED TRAINING • OPR: Office of the Chief of Navy Chaplains (N977) • Program scope: provide tailored training to chaplains and RPs in SAPR policy • “Stakeholders:” • Commander, Navy Installations Command (N9) • Marine Corps • USCG • Naval Chaplain School • Training: • Non-deployed units, installations, and training commands: • Provide specialized training in group settings, to include material on restricted and non-restricted reporting and chaplain confidentiality. • “By-name” roster of chaplains and RPs who complete training maintained by Chief of Navy Chaplains (N977) • For deployed units: • Develop DL products • Track chaplain/RP training completion across DoN and USCG
CURRENT STATUS • Challenges: getting training to deployed units • Constraints: expertise required to convert training products into DL format does not currently exist within the Chaplain Corps • “Way Ahead:” • Near-term: continue manual tracking of training compliance for chaplains and RPs in fleet concentration areas • Mid-term: • Develop DL products • Ensure DL product provides tracking mechanisms to ensure Chaplain Corps-wide compliance with “by-name” granularity
SEXUAL ASSAULT PREVENTION AND RESPONSE QUESTIONS ?