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2/12/20032 Army Inspection Policy and Guidance A Review for Leaders
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2/12/20033 AGENDA OIP –What it is –How to develop an OIP General Information on Inspections –Definition –Categories –Types 14 Principles for Good Inspections
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2/12/20034 O I P AR 1-201, paragraphs 3-2 to 3-5 The Inspections Guide,-Section 2-2 and Chapter 5- COMMAND INSPECTION STAFF INSPECTION IG INSPECTION AuditsStaff-Assistance Visits The Organizational Inspection Program (OIP) The integration of inspections
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2/12/20035 The Commander’s plan for inspections! The Organizational Inspection Program (OIP) A Commander’s program and a command responsibility Reviewed and updated annually Provides the commander an organized management tool to identify, prevent or eliminate problem areas Integrated into the Training Management (and QTB) Process described in FM 7-0, Training the Force Complements and reinforces other evaluations Minimizes the duplication of evaluations IG advises the Commander, trains local inspectors, and evaluates the effectiveness of the OIP
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2/12/20036 OIP: Battalion The basic building blocks of the OIP Includes Command Inspections (Initial and Subsequent) and Staff Inspections Focuses on areas that immediately impact on readiness and reinforce goals and standards Teaching and training is a goal of company-level command inspections
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2/12/20037 OIP: Brigade The brigade OIP normally includes Command Inspections, Staff Inspections, and Staff Assistance Visits The brigade OIP focuses on units and functional areas At a minimum, the brigade OIP will include inspections of subordinate OIPs and the brigade headquarters company The brigade OIP must complement the battalion commanders’ programs and avoid redundancy
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2/12/20038 OIP: Division/School & Center (TRADOC) Consists primarily of Staff and IG Inspections Command Inspections at the division level are often limited to separate companies Focus is on the Division’s ability to execute plans and policy At a minimum, the Division OIP should: –verify the effectiveness of subordinate OIPs (an IG role) –protect subordinate commands from unnecessary inspections –disseminate lessons learned –complement Battalion and Brigade OIPs
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2/12/20039 OIP: MACOM Consists primarily of Staff and IG Inspections Command Inspections at the MACOM level may be limited to separate companies Focus is on the MACOM ability to execute plans and policy At a minimum, the MACOM OIP should: –verify the effectiveness of subordinate OIPs (an IG role) –protect subordinate commands from unnecessary inspections –disseminate lessons learned –complement subordinate OIPs
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2/12/200310 Developing an OIP The OIP written policy should: –Designate an overall OIP coordinator (usually G3 / S3, or CoS / XO) –Articulate the commander’s overall inspection guidance –Assign responsibilities for staff members and subordinate commanders –Address relevant categories of inspections (Command, Staff, and IG) as they pertain to the command by frequency, focus, and so on –Capture all inspections that affect the command, prioritize them, and eliminate some if redundant or not necessary –Establish the standards and scope for each type of inspection (general, special, and follow-up) –Explain how to use local IG to help train inspectors
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2/12/200311 Army Inspection – Definition “An evaluation which measures performance against a standard and should identify the cause of any deviation. All inspections start with compliance against a standard. Commanders tailor inspections to their needs.” AR 1-201, Glossary A standard is the way things should be
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2/12/200312 General Inspection. Broad in scope, oriented on units, and designed to look at all aspects of the organization. Special Inspection. Focused on specific functions, programs, procedures, problems, or issues; these inspections also look at groups of related problems or procedures. The special inspection facilitates the systemic approach to an inspection and is the preferred type of IG Inspection. Follow-up Inspection. Review the effectiveness of corrective actions taken as a result of a previous inspection. The Inspections Guide, Section 2-2 Types of Inspections
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2/12/200313 Command Inspection Staff Inspection Inspector General Inspection AR 1-201, Paragraphs 3-2 to 3-5 Categories of Inspections
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2/12/200314 Command Inspections Commander actively participates A scheduled, formal event Initial Command Inspection –AR 1-201 requires for all company or detachment level commands –Other Command Inspections are optional or at discretion of the commander Subsequent Command Inspection
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2/12/200315 Initial Command Inspection Required for Company Commanders (or like commands such as detachments) – within 90 days of assumption of command for the AC – within 180 days of assumption of command for the RC Included on the training schedule and should be briefed at QTB Comprehensive inspection that identifies unit strengths and weaknesses Helps commanders establish goals, standards, and priorities…may be used to develop DA Form 67-9-1, OER Support Form The inspecting commander must be present and participating in the inspection!
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2/12/200316 Initial Command Inspection Cannot be used to evaluate the company commander Not used to compare units Results go to the inspected unit commander only (IG can get generic results) Can not be done by the staff alone
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2/12/200317 Subsequent Command Inspection Measures progress and reinforces goals and objectives established in the Initial Command Inspection The commander determines the scope, format, timing, and frequency of the Subsequent Command Inspection The commander may use the results of the Subsequent Command Inspection to evaluate the company commander The inspecting commander must be present and participating
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2/12/200318 Staff Inspection Led by a staff member of a functional area Focuses on a single functional area or a few related areas Conducted by a staff member technically qualified in the functional area Should complement Command and IG Inspections Compliance oriented
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2/12/200319 AR 20-1, Paragraph 6-3, and AR 1-201, Paragraph 3-5 Inspector General Inspection Inspector General inspections: –Pursue systemic issues –Identify substandard performance, determine the magnitude of the deficiency, and seek the reason for the deficiency (the root cause) –Teach systems processes and procedures –Identify responsibility for corrective actions –Spread innovative ideas
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2/12/200320 The Inspections Guide, Section 3-3 NON-COMPLIANCE DON’T KNOW CAN’T COMPLYWON’T COMPLY NEVER KNEW FORGOT TASK IMPLIED FEW RESOURCES DON’T KNOW HOW IMPOSSIBLE NO REWARD NO PENALTY DISAGREE The Root Cause Analysis Model
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2/12/200321 Principles of Army Inspections (DRAFT AR 1-201, para. 2.2) Purposeful Coordinated Focused on Feedback Instructive Followed-up
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2/12/200322 Bottom Line Good leaders inspect…inspections are a leadership tool –Formal –Informal Inspections done properly strengthen the chain of command Inspections help Commanders find “ground truth” Inspections help Commanders “calibrate” eyeballs of subordinates to the correct standard Teach your subordinates how to inspect…no one else is
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