Coast Guard Case Study

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1. A significant portion of the Coast Guard is not required to maintain any physical fitness standard. Requiring boatcrew members and law enforcement personnel to pass the physical fitness test; it puts a burden on the members for the extra time to maintain this standard. To change the current boat crew physical fitness test to a Coast Guard wide physical fitness test. It would benefit the Coast Guard and start to create a healthier lifestyle. The Coast Guard should require all members to pass the boat crew physical fitness standards. 2. It would benefit the Coast Guard by holding everyone to the same standard. Currently the only members that have to do a physical fitness test are boat crew. Air crews have to do a swim test, but no run, pushups or sit ups. The rest of the Coast Guard has no test. There should not be just one group of people held to one standard and not really a standard for everyone else. The Navy, Marines, Army, and Air Force have some type of a physical fitness test, and it is required by all hands. For example the Navy requires all members to participate in a Physical Fitness Assessment (PFA) what is included in a PFA is a medical screening (PHA), a body composition assessment (BCA), and a physical readiness …show more content…

In March of 2015 Navy Times article with ADM Zukunft confirmed that the Coast Guard will not have a service wide fitness test. One of his arguments is that it is not feasible to work out on some of our smaller platforms like the 87 foot patrol boat, “the vomit comets”. Members on these platforms are already held to a physical fitness standard because they are in boat crew and law enforcement positions. They are required to work out and pass the test every six months. Furthermore there is plenty of time to maintain this standard. Most 87 foot patrol boats have to get at least 2,000 hours underway. With 8,760 hours in a year, that leaves 6,760 hours for everything else. To workout 5 hours a week, that would only come to 260 hours a

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