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CAP Talk  |  General Discussion  |  The Lobby  |  Topic: ACA
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Author Topic: ACA  (Read 5336 times)
COL Land
Recruit

Posts: 47
Unit: HQ, USAC

U.S. Army Cadet Corps
« Reply #20 on: October 18, 2007, 06:47:03 PM »

See thats the thing.  There is no real database on line to find a local ACA unit.  We can fill out the request info form, but I like to do my own research sometimes!


That's true, no unit locater.   In part, because we are somewhat IT-challenged (or more accurately, IT-overloaded), and in part, because there are so many units in the formation process it's hard to keep up.   Any Web-Gods out there?   I'd be glad to chat! ;)

As for the Panhandle, I have a unit which started at Fort Walton Beach, but moved up to Fort Rucker due to our drill format (one weekend a month).   If you wand the CO's contact info, PM me.

R,
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JOSEPH M. LAND, SR.
COL, GS, USAC       
Chief of Staff              www.goarmycadets.com
Headquarters, U.S. Army Cadet Corps

"ADVENTURE BEGINS HERE!"
Who_knows?
Seasoned Member

Posts: 364
Unit: PCR-001

« Reply #21 on: October 18, 2007, 06:50:29 PM »

Are there units in Washington state?
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Larry Mangum, Lt Col CAP
Deputy Emergency Services Director
Pacific Region HQ
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tedda
Alt-F4 pilot
Salty & Seasoned Contributor

Posts: 1,105
Unit: very nice

« Reply #22 on: October 18, 2007, 07:20:51 PM »

Ninne... er, that IT guy better get his poop in a group soon and recruit you guys a web designer. :D
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Major Lord
Salty & Seasoned Contributor

Posts: 1,061

« Reply #23 on: October 18, 2007, 07:23:45 PM »

CDRLand,

Certainly no offense was intended in regards to the phrase: "making things up" , Perhaps a better way to phrase this is to say that we were all struggling with how we could transition the program to California, and that I personally could not make all the sacrifices required to start an ACA unit from Scratch. Chris Ross has done a fine job for you in this area. I have the utmost respect for ACA and would love to get involved in  your program when I have the time to give it the attention it deserves. I stand by my statement that the CAP Cadet program suffers from hypogonadisim and that we need the influence of ACA to keep us on the right track.

Major Lord
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COL Land
Recruit

Posts: 47
Unit: HQ, USAC

U.S. Army Cadet Corps
« Reply #24 on: October 18, 2007, 07:47:04 PM »

Are there units in Washington state?


Several young people, and even some adults, have shown interest...but, no adults from Washington who are willing to lead the formation of a unit.

R, 
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JOSEPH M. LAND, SR.
COL, GS, USAC       
Chief of Staff              www.goarmycadets.com
Headquarters, U.S. Army Cadet Corps

"ADVENTURE BEGINS HERE!"
COL Land
Recruit

Posts: 47
Unit: HQ, USAC

U.S. Army Cadet Corps
« Reply #25 on: October 18, 2007, 08:09:29 PM »

Certainly no offense was intended in regards to the phrase: "making things up" (snip) ...I stand by my statement that the CAP Cadet program suffers from hypogonadisim and that we need the influence of ACA to keep us on the right track.


No problem, and no offense taken, at all.   We're glad to set the standard!   ;D

Hooah!

R,

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JOSEPH M. LAND, SR.
COL, GS, USAC       
Chief of Staff              www.goarmycadets.com
Headquarters, U.S. Army Cadet Corps

"ADVENTURE BEGINS HERE!"
PHall
Salty & Seasoned Contributor

Posts: 1,707

« Reply #26 on: October 18, 2007, 08:50:12 PM »

 Any Web-Gods out there?   I'd be glad to chat! ;)


You have two of them already. Captains Ninness and Stanford.
Just don't tell them who ratted them out! ;)
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COL Land
Recruit

Posts: 47
Unit: HQ, USAC

U.S. Army Cadet Corps
« Reply #27 on: October 18, 2007, 09:21:30 PM »

Any Web-Gods out there?   I'd be glad to chat! ;)


You have two of them already. Captains Ninness and Stanford.
Just don't tell them who ratted them out! ;)


The "Captains Duo" are both heavily involved in Program Development (we have some great training materials, especially our leadership programming), so they've dodged the "Web-God" bullet.   I have to fine someone with the time, talent, desire and passion (I know, asking a lot) to do the job right.   

For an example of our IT successes, feel free to take a look at http://www.cadtrak.acacadets.org/manual/  .   

R,
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JOSEPH M. LAND, SR.
COL, GS, USAC       
Chief of Staff              www.goarmycadets.com
Headquarters, U.S. Army Cadet Corps

"ADVENTURE BEGINS HERE!"
sandman
Seasoned Member

Posts: 304

« Reply #28 on: December 09, 2007, 05:06:38 PM »

I'm impressed with the program overall. After having a bit of a PM chat with LTC Land and having a few details cleared up, I think I can say I'm about ready to hang up my CAP blues (ready to retire anyway) and switch over to the ACA.

An interesting note is that the Naval Cadet and Marine Cadet program is going into the history books soon as the US Army embraces the ACA Army Cadets as their own cadetting program.

The US Army will be an open field for a cadet program. Ground pounding will be an obvious part of the program and who's to say that a ground SAR program couldn't become a reality?

The US Army has a fantastic aviation component and O-rides could be interesting; who's to say that an ACA cadet couldn't ride in USAF equipment? That's what the USAF does is gives rides to the US Army to get them into battle!

The US Army also has a large maritime component. Who's to say that an Army Cadet couldn't earn a "surface warfare" qualification or take an "O-ride" on a US Army ship (or Navy, USCG, etc)?

The US Army Corps of Engineers has such a great presence throughout the U.S. with a large component of their employees as civilians, who's to say that MOU's couldn't be struck to allow ACA Army Cadets to participate in studying and saving "the environment"? What Birkenstock wearing parent wouldn't like that (especially noting that most of the employees are civilians and scientists)?

Could the Army Cadets outpace the CAP (or for that matter, the USNSCC or Young Marines)? Hard to tell. It would depend a great deal on the amount of funding received from the US Army and more importantly.....finding adult leadership willing to take on such a project.

Bling. Yes our favorite subject. I think the ACA has it good with metal rank, etc. I would like to see the development of an alternative uniform for "fuzzies" and those of us "out of standards" that is much more than a polo shirt/slacks combo. Hopefully a "BDU" type uniform for the aforementioned people could be developed soon.

Anyway, just had to chime in. I look forward to the further success of the ACA!

v/r
LT
(former US Army medical NCO)
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Captain, US Army (Active Duty)
LT, US Merchant Marine
Major, Civil Air Patrol
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RiverAux
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« Reply #29 on: December 09, 2007, 05:12:44 PM »

No, the limiting factor is the Army's interest in taking on liability for using them in an "operational" fashion.  CAP and the AF have a pretty large infrastructure associated with using cadets in that fashion that the Army would have to develop.  Could it be done?  Sure, but will it?  Keep in mind that some changes in federal laws would be necessary to do much of anything. 

Personally, I would be a bit hesitant to make any switch unless there were some concrete moves by the Army along these lines.  Until then they're just rumors. 

If I were the Army I would be very reluctant to set up another CAP-like situation wherein they did not have total control of the program.
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sandman
Seasoned Member

Posts: 304

« Reply #30 on: December 09, 2007, 05:15:00 PM »

No, the limiting factor is the Army's interest in taking on liability for using them in an "operational" fashion.  CAP and the AF have a pretty large infrastructure associated with using cadets in that fashion that the Army would have to develop.  Could it be done?  Sure, but will it?  Keep in mind that some changes in federal laws would be necessary to do much of anything. 


Agreed. That is a component of funding.
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Captain, US Army (Active Duty)
LT, US Merchant Marine
Major, Civil Air Patrol
Academy Admissions Partner (LT), USCG Auxiliary
LT, US Naval Sea Cadets
Admiral (NE)
RiverAux
Too Much Free Time Award
***
Posts: 8,437

« Reply #31 on: December 09, 2007, 05:22:14 PM »

After a little scouting on the ACA web site, it does appear that they are moving the direction you're talking about http://www.acacadets.org/PDF/acanote0705.pdf but apparently more twoards a Young Marines-USMC, Naval Sea Cadets-USN relationship rather than a CAP-AF relationship. 
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sandman
Seasoned Member

Posts: 304

« Reply #32 on: December 09, 2007, 05:27:24 PM »

After a little scouting on the ACA web site, it does appear that they are moving the direction you're talking about http://www.acacadets.org/PDF/acanote0705.pdf but apparently more twoards a Young Marines-USMC, Naval Sea Cadets-USN relationship rather than a CAP-AF relationship. 


Negative Sir,

The Navy and Marine components of the ACA are being disestablished and will only have one component...The US Army!
LTC Land could probably provide more info as to the time frame for the change to an Army only cadet structure but I understand it will happen sometime early in 2008.

v/r
LT
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Captain, US Army (Active Duty)
LT, US Merchant Marine
Major, Civil Air Patrol
Academy Admissions Partner (LT), USCG Auxiliary
LT, US Naval Sea Cadets
Admiral (NE)
RiverAux
Too Much Free Time Award
***
Posts: 8,437

« Reply #33 on: December 09, 2007, 05:37:00 PM »

I meant that what was left was going to have the same sort of relationship with the Army as those other organizations have with "their" services rather than the somewhat more direct control AF has over CAP.
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mikeylikey
Banned

Posts: 3,769

« Reply #34 on: December 09, 2007, 05:44:26 PM »

Interesting.  I have never heard of any of this before.  The Army (United Stated Army) has said anything about supporting a Cadet Program like this? 

They already have the Largest Cadet Program in the Country.....JROTC and ROTC.  They completely controll it.

On a side note USACC.....is an acronym already used by US Army Cadet Command, part of Accessions Command at Ft Knox.  If this does go through, I wonder if they will be the lead organization.  They already run the JROTC and ROTC programs.
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What's up monkeys?
RiverAux
Too Much Free Time Award
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Posts: 8,437

« Reply #35 on: December 09, 2007, 05:51:49 PM »

They've apparently only got about 30 units according to their web page so I'm not surprised that you haven't heard of them.  Of course, the Young Marines were about that small not long ago and they're exploded. 

You do wonder why the Army would want to do this since as you said, they've already got a huge program. 
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mikeylikey
Banned

Posts: 3,769

« Reply #36 on: December 09, 2007, 06:03:43 PM »

I searched their site and could find nothing about creating a new partnership with the Army.  Unless they are holding off on announcing it, I will wait and see.  UNLESS someone here has some insight.
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What's up monkeys?
sandman
Seasoned Member

Posts: 304

« Reply #37 on: December 09, 2007, 06:08:44 PM »

They've apparently only got about 30 units according to their web page so I'm not surprised that you haven't heard of them.  Of course, the Young Marines were about that small not long ago and they're exploded. 

You do wonder why the Army would want to do this since as you said, they've already got a huge program. 


Well, I have been given some interesting information, and of course cannot pass it on at this time. Look for the ACA to start increasing in force and structure within the next few years not in competition with JROTC and ROTC, but as a seperate community based cadet program. Remember the limitations that JROTC and ROTC have such as kowtowing to the school board, limitations of training, and geographical limitations (many schools do not have such a program).
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Captain, US Army (Active Duty)
LT, US Merchant Marine
Major, Civil Air Patrol
Academy Admissions Partner (LT), USCG Auxiliary
LT, US Naval Sea Cadets
Admiral (NE)
mikeylikey
Banned

Posts: 3,769

« Reply #38 on: December 09, 2007, 06:16:45 PM »

They've apparently only got about 30 units according to their web page so I'm not surprised that you haven't heard of them.  Of course, the Young Marines were about that small not long ago and they're exploded. 

You do wonder why the Army would want to do this since as you said, they've already got a huge program. 


Well, I have been given some interesting information, and of course cannot pass it on at this time. Look for the ACA to start increasing in force and structure within the next few years not in competition with JROTC and ROTC, but as a seperate community based cadet program. Remember the limitations that JROTC and ROTC have such as kowtowing to the school board, limitations of training, and geographical limitations (many schools do not have such a program).


Thanks!  This is like saying "I know something you don't know".  QUESTION......will we eventually have something to read in the near future.  I am very interested now. 
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What's up monkeys?
JohnKachenmeister
Salty & Seasoned Contributor

Posts: 3,074
Unit: SER-FL-122

Myspace
« Reply #39 on: December 09, 2007, 06:37:50 PM »

The Army is struggling to meet its recruitment goals, so I think its a good move to create a long-term program to support the Army with motivated high-school age youth.

The Air Corps started the CAP cadet program for the same reasons in World War II, when the Air Corps was carrying the lion's share of the overseas combat, and suffering the lion's share of casualties as a result.
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Lt. Col. John Kachenmeister, CAP
Mitchell Award, 1966.
Republic of Vietnam Service, 1969-1970 (Ruled "Inappropriate" by the NLO, 2009).
Gill Robb Wilson Award #2604, 2008.
Declared a "Threat to National Security" by the Secretary of DHS, 2009.
Facing Congressional investigation for opposing the Muslim Victory Mosque at Ground Zero, 2010
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CAP Talk  |  General Discussion  |  The Lobby  |  Topic: ACA
 


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