DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT A: Approved for public release; distribution is
unlimited.
DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY
HEADQUARTERS UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS
3000 MARINE CORPS PENTAGON
WASHINGTON DC 20350-3000
MCO 1610.7B
M&RA (MMRP-30)
5 Jun 2023
MARINE CORPS ORDER 1610.7B
From: Commandant of the Marine Corps
To: Distribution List
Subj: PERFORMANCE EVALUATION SYSTEM (PES)
Ref: See enclosure (1)
Encl: (1) References
(2) Performance Evaluation System Order
1. Situation. This Order revises the policies, procedures, and standards
for the operation and maintenance of the Marine Corps Performance Evaluation
System (PES) in accordance with the references (a) through (ac), and the
submission of fitness reports for Marines in the rank of sergeant through
major general as required by article 1129 of reference (a) and paragraph
2500.3 of reference (b).
2. Cancellation. MCO 1610.7A.
3. Mission. To notify all on the distribution list of the modification of
Marine Corps Order (MCO) 1610.7, and publish revisions and innovations to the
PES.
4. Execution
a. Commander’s Intent and Concept of Operations
(1) Commander’s Intent. This Order replaces MCO 1610.7A in
accordance with the Commandant of the Marine Corps (CMC) directive.
(2) Concept of Operations. The fitness report provides the primary
means for evaluating a Marine’s performance to support the Commandant’s
efforts to select the best qualified personnel for promotion, career
designation, retention, resident schooling, command, and duty assignments.
The completion of fitness reports is a critical leadership responsibility.
Inherent in this duty is the commitment of our commanders and all reporting
officials to ensure the integrity of the system by giving close attention to
accurate marking, narrative assessment, and timely reporting. Every
commander and reporting official must ensure the scrupulous maintenance of
the PES. Inaccurate evaluations only serve to dilute the actual value of
each report.
b. Subordinate Element Missions. Commanders and Officers-In-Charge
(OICs) must ensure that all reporting officials and Marines (sergeants and
above) under their charge are well versed in the spirit and intent of this
Order.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
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c. Coordinating Instructions. Submit all recommendations concerning
this Order to the CMC, Manpower Management Records and Performance Branch
(MMRP-30) via the appropriate chain of command.
d. Summary of Changes. The major modifications to this Order are as
follows:
(1) Chapter 1: Added “Diversity and Equal Opportunity” paragraph.
(2) Chapter 2: Clarified “Seniority Issues” paragraph.
(3) Chapter 3: Moved adverse related items (drug, alcohol, violence
reporting) from chapter 3 to chapter 5.
(4) Chapter 3: Removed the requirement to provide a directed comment
for the omission of “AN/AR” reports.
(5) Chapter 3: Clarified “AR” reporting requirements.
(6) Chapter 3: Clarified the “Exception to Policy” paragraph for
observed reports of less than ninety days.
(7) Chapter 3: Authorized “Extended” “EN” reports.
(8) Chapter 4: Added “Marines Executing Unique Billets” paragraph.
(9) Chapter 4: Amended “Commendatory Material” paragraph.
(10) Chapter 4: Moved adverse related items (“Derogatory Material”,
“Disciplinary Action”, not recommended for promotion, etc.) from chapter 4 to
chapter 5.
(11) Chapter 4: Clarified “Physical Fitness Test/Combat Fitness Test
(PFT/CFT)” reporting scenarios; added vignettes to illustrate various
situations.
(12) Chapter 4: Updated height, weight, body fat reporting guidance
for pregnant/postpartum Marines, and Marines diagnosed with a new/worsening
condition.
(13) Chapter 4: Removed the requirement to provide a directed
comment for “NMED”.
(14) Chapter 4: Removed the requirement to comment on section A,
item 8h “Status” for extended reports and reports where the Marine is not
recommended for promotion.
(15) Chapter 4: Added U.S. Space Force to Service Abbreviations.
(16) Chapter 4: Clarified “Directed Comments” definition,
consolidated “Directed Comments”, and updated “Unacceptable Comments”
paragraph.
(17) Chapter 5: Reformatted the chapter. Consolidated all adverse
items from the order into chapter 5. Clarified the routing process and the
RS, RO, and 3OS responsibilities.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
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(18) Chapter 6: Cancelled waivers in perpetuity. Added the
requirement for reporting officials requesting a waiver to provide an updated
request each time the order is written and/or revised.
(19) Chapter 6: Clarified the “Remedial Promotion” paragraph. Added
vignettes.
(20) Chapter 6: Amended “Combat” report criteria.
(21) Chapter 8: Clarified the responsibility to conduct annual PES
training; paragraph 4. Added examples of effective training topics.
(22) Chapter 9: Clarified the commanding officers responsibility to
educate Marines annually on the PES.
(23) Appendix A: Updated the active component
Sgt/SSgt/LtCol/Col/BGen and the reserve/active reserve
Sgt/SSgt/GySgt/1stSgt/MSgt/Maj/LtCol/Col/BGen reporting period end date.
(24) Appendix F: Revised the “Reporting Senior (RS) Checklist”.
(25) Appendix G: Updated format.
5. Administration and Logistics
a. This Order is published electronically and can be accessed on-line
via the Marine Corps Electronic Library (MCPEL) at:
http://www.marines.mil/News/Publications/ELECTRONICLIBRARY.aspx
.
b. For commands without access to the Internet, hard copy and CD-ROM
versions of Marine Corps directives can be obtained through Marine Corps
Publications Distribution System.
c. Records created as a result of this Order shall be managed according
to National Archives and Records Administration-approved dispositions per
reference (c) to ensure proper maintenance, use, accessibility and
preservation, regardless of format or medium.
d.
Privacy Act. Any misuse or unauthorized disclosure of Personally
Identifiable Information (PII) may result in both civil and criminal
penalties. The DON recognizes that the privacy of an individual is a
personal and fundamental right that shall be respected and protected. The
DON's need to collect, use, maintain, or disseminate PII about individuals
for purposes of discharging its statutory responsibilities will be balanced
against individuals' right to be protected against unwarranted invasion of
privacy. All collection, use, maintenance, or dissemination of PII will be
in accordance with the Privacy Act of 1974, as amended (reference (d)) and
implemented per reference (e).
e. Records Management. Records created as a result of this directive
shall be managed according to National Archives and Records Administration
(NARA)-approved dispositions per SECNAV M-5210.1 to ensure proper
maintenance, use, accessibility and preservation, regardless of format or
medium. Records disposition schedules are located on the Department of the
Navy/Assistant for Administration (DON/AA), Directives and Records Management
Division (DRMD) portal page at:
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
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https://portal.secnav.navy.mil/orgs/DUSNM/DONAA/DRM/Records-and-Information-
Management/Approved%20Record%20Schedules/Forms/AllItems.aspx. Refer to
MCO 5210.11F for Marine Corps records management policy and procedures.
f. Department of Defense (DD) forms mentioned in this Order are
available at http://www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/infomgt/forms/index.htm
;
Naval Operations (OPNAV) and Navy/Marine Corps (NAVMC) forms are available at
https://navalforms.documentservices.dla.mil.
6. Command and Signal
a. Command. This Order is applicable to the Marine Corps Total Force.
b. Signal. This Order is effective the date signed.
JAMES F. GLYNN
Deputy Commandant,
Manpower and Reserve Affairs
PCN: 10202100000
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
i
TABLE OF CONTENTS
IDENTIFICATION TITLE PAGE
Introduction ................................................vii
1. Purpose.........................................vii
2. Status..........................................vii
3. Scope...........................................vii
4. Responsibility..................................vii
5. Publications Listing............................vii
6. Organization....................................vii
7. Changes.........................................vii
Chapter 1 CONCEPTS AND OVERVIEW...........................1-1
1. Scope...........................................1-1
2. Purpose.........................................1-1
3. Objective of the System.........................1-2
4. Significance of the Fitness Report..............1-2
5. Key Concepts....................................1-3
6. Evaluation Cycle................................1-4
7. General Responsibilities........................1-5
8. Authority.......................................1-5
Chapter 2 REPORTING CHAIN AND RESPONSIBILITIES............2-1
1. Purpose.........................................2-1
2. General Description.............................2-1
3. Reporting Senior (RS)...........................2-1
4. Reviewing Officer (RO)..........................2-2
5. Third Officer Sighting..........................2-3
6. Commandant of the Marine Corps (CMC)............2-4
7. Commanders......................................2-4
8. Senior Marine Representatives (SMRs)............2-4
9. Senior Enlisted Advisors (SEAs).................2-4
10. Special Situations..............................2-4
Chapter 3 SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS.........................3-1
1. General.........................................3-1
2. Fitness Report Submission Schedule..............3-1
3. Reporting Occasions.............................3-1
4. Details for Reporting Occasions.................3-2
5. Minimum Observation Requirements................3-7
6. Not Observed (N/O) Reports......................3-9
7. Extended Reports................................3-10
8. When Fitness Reports Are Not Allowed............3-10
9. Fitness Reports for Marines in an Unauthorized
Absence (UA) or Deserter........................3-10
Chapter 4 FITNESS REPORT PREPARATION......................4-1
1. General Administrative Instructions.............4-1
MCO 1610.7B
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IDENTIFICATION TITLE PAGE
2. Instructions for Completing Senior Officer
Reports.........................................4-2
3. Unique Billet Instructions......................4-4
4. Instructions for Completing Section A
(Administrative Information)....................4-5
5. Instructions for Completing Section B
(Billet Description)............................4-16
6. Instructions for Completing Section C
(Billet Accomplishments)........................4-18
7. Instructions for Completing Sections D, E, F, G,
and H...........................................4-20
8. Section D – Mission Accomplishment..............4-24
9. Section E – Individual Character................4-27
10. Section F - Leadership..........................4-30
11. Section G – Intellect and Wisdom................4-35
12. Section H - Fulfillment of Evaluation
Responsibilities................................4-38
13. Instructions for Completing Section I
(Reporting Senior’s Directed and Additional
Comments).......................................4-39
14. Instructions for Completing Section J
(Certification).................................4-43
15. Instructions for Completing Section K
(Reviewing Officer Comments)....................4-43
16. Instructions for Completing Section L ..........4-48
17. Instructions for Completing Reports on Marines with
Classified Duties...............................4-50
18. Directed Comments...............................4-50
Chapter 5 ADVERSE REPORT PROCEDURES.......................5-1
1. Adverse Reports.................................5-1
2. Governing Regulations...........................5-1
3. Definitions.....................................5-2
4. Adverse Report Process..........................5-8
5. Timing of Reporting Adversity...................5-8
6. Reporting Senior (RS) Responsibilities and
Instructions....................................5-14
7. RO Responsibilities and Instructions............5-19
8. 3OS Responsibilities and Instructions...........5-22
9. MRO Responsibilities and Instructions...........5-23
10. Adverse Specific Directed Comments..............5-25
Chapter 6
SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS............................6-1
1. General Information.............................6-1
2. Waivers of Policy...............................6-1
3. Unique or Unusual Situations....................6-1
4. Academic and Training Duty......................6-3
5. Fitness Reports for Defense Counsel or
Military Judges.................................6-5
6. Remedial Promotion..............................6-5
7. Set Aside/Disapproved Grade Reductions..........6-6
8. Non-Marine Reporting Officials..................6-6
MCO 1610.7B
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IDENTIFICATION TITLE PAGE
Chapter 7 HANDLING AND SUBMISSION OF COMPLETED REPORTS....7-1
1. General Information.............................7-1
2. Attachments to Reports..........................7-1
3. Modifications to Submission Deadlines
for Unique or Unusual Situations................7-1
4. Submission of Completed Reports.................7-2
5. Access to Completed Reports.....................7-2
Chapter 8 HEADQUARTERS MARINE CORPS FUNCTIONS.............8-1
1. General Information.............................8-1
2. Performance Evaluation Section (MMPR-30)
Responsibilities................................8-1
3. Career Counseling Section (MMRP-50).............8-2
4. Education.......................................8-3
5. Master Brief Sheet (MBS)........................8-4
6. Reporting Senior (RS) Profile...................8-4
7. Relative Value..................................8-6
8. Reviewing Officers Profile......................8-7
9. Official Military Personnel File (OMPF).........8-7
10. Correction of Fitness Report Records............8-8
11. Missing Fitness Reports.........................8-9
12. Late Fitness Reports............................8-10
13. Policy Compliance Measures......................8-10
Chapter 9 FITNESS REPORT AUDIT PROGRAM (FRAP).............9-1
1. General Information.............................9-1
2. Audit and Correction............................9-1
3. Records Availability............................9-4
4. Requirements of the Privacy Act of 1974.........9-4
5. Action..........................................9-5
Chapter 10 SUBSTANTIVE CORRECTIONS PROCESS.................10-1
1. Purpose.........................................10-1
2. Substantive Correction Defined..................10-1
3. Petition Process................................10-1
4. Performance Evaluation Review Board (PERB)......10-4
5. Board for Correction of Naval Records (BCNR)....10-4
APPENDIX A ANNUAL FITNESS REPORT SCHEDULE (AN AND AR
REPORTS)........................................A-1
APPENDIX B AUTOMATED PERFORMANCE EVALUATION SYSTEM
(A
-PES).........................................B-1
APPENDIX C MASTER BRIEF SHEET (MBS) - EXPLANATION..........C-1
APPENDIX D MASTER BRIEF SHEET (MBS) - FITNESS REPORT
LISTING.........................................D-1
MCO 1610.7B
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IDENTIFICATION TITLE PAGE
APPENDIX E REPORTING SENIOR (RS)/REVIEWING OFFICER (RO)
SUMMARY.........................................E-1
APPENDIX F REPORTING SENIOR (RS) CHECKLIST.................F-1
APPENDIX G SAMPLE ADMINISTRATIVE CORRECTION REQUEST
LETTER..........................................G-1
APPENDIX H OFFICIAL MILITARY PERSONNEL FILE (OMPF) AND MASTER
BRIEF SHEET (MBS) SELF-AUDIT PROCEDURES.........H-1
APPENDIX I NORMAL AND ADVERSE FITNESS REPORT ROUTING
CHAIN...........................................I-1
APPENDIX J GLOSSARY OF ACRONYMS AND ABREVIATIONS...........J-1
INDEX ................................................IND-1
MCO 1610.7B
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REF-1 Enclosure (1)
References
(a) U.S. Navy Regulations, 1990
(b) Marine Corps Manual w/Changes 1-3
(c) SECNAV M-5210.1 w/Change 1
(d) 5 U.S.C. 552a
(e) SECNAVINST 5211.5F
(f) MCO 5215.1K w/Admin Change 1
(g) MCO 1500.61
(h) Manual for Courts-Martial, 2019 Edition
(i) MCO 5300.17A
(j) MCO 1000.6
(k) MCO 1754.11A
(l) On-line Manpower Codes Lookup Guide (NOTAL)
(m) MCO P1070.12K w/Change 1
(n) SECNAV M-1650.1
(o) MCO P1400.32D w/Changes 1-2
(p) MCO 3574.2M
(q) MCO 6100.13A w/Change 4
(r) MCO 6110.3A w/Change 3
(s) MCO 1200.18
(t) DoDI 1300.19
(u) MCO 5100.29C w/Changes 1-2
(v) MCO 5210.11F
(w) MCO 5510.18B
(x) MCO 5354.1F
(y) MCO 5800.16 w/Change 7, Vol 1-17(z) MCO P1510.94 w/Change 1
(aa) MCO 1650.19J w/Change 1
(ab) MCO 1900.16 w/Change 2
(ac) MCO 1553.4B
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
INTRO-1 Enclosure (2)
Introduction
1. Purpose. This Order publishes the policies, procedures, and
administrative instructions for the operation and management of the PES.
2. Status
a. Requirements in this Order are binding on all commanders, OICs, and
personnel serving as reporting officials.
b. Any deviation from instructions in this Order must be authorized by
the CMC (MMRP-30).
3. Scope. This Order defines performance evaluation authority and
responsibilities and contains instructions for the preparation, submission,
and processing of Marine Corps fitness reports. The role of Headquarters
Marine Corps (HQMC) is to maintain the PES and Official Military Personnel
File (OMPF).
4. Responsibility. The currency, accuracy, and modification of this Manual
is the responsibility of the CMC (MMRP-30). Distribution is the
responsibility of the HQMC Administration and Resource Management Division
(AR). HQMC staff agencies and field commands are responsible for timely
entry of changes and physical maintenance of their copies of this Manual.
5. Publications Listing. This Order is published electronically and can be
accessed on-line via the MCPEL at:
http://www.marines.mil/News/Publications/ELECTRONICLIBRARY.aspx.
6. Organization. This Manual is organized in chapters numbered sequentially
and listed in the contents.
7. Changes. Changes to this Order will follow instructions in the current
edition of reference (f). Record all changes on the Record of Changes page.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
1-1 Enclosure (2)
Chapter 1
Concepts and Overview
1. Scope
a. The Marine Corps PES provides for the periodic reporting, recording,
and analysis of the performance and professional character of Marines in the
grades of sergeant through major general. Its fundamental concepts are
accuracy, accountability, simplicity, and consistency of policy and
evaluation methods. Achieving these concepts requires standardization of the
evaluation chain, supervision throughout the system, and the education of all
participants in the system. Reporting Seniors (RSs) document their
observations and assessment of the performance and character of a Marine on
NAVMC 10835, United States Marine Corps (USMC) Fitness Report via the
Automated Performance Evaluation System (A-PES) per the instructions in
Appendix B. The fitness report document, through communication to the CMC,
provides a history of a Marine’s performance and potential.
b. A-PES is the primary means of preparation and submission of the
fitness report. Those without access to A-PES, may access the Adobe filler
or .pdf version of the fitness report, which can be downloaded from the
Performance Evaluation Section website under MMRP, on the Manpower and
Reserve Affairs Department, HQMC website at www.manpower.usmc.mil
.
c. The Fitness Report is:
(1) A vital portion of a Marine’s OMPF held at HQMC by the CMC
(MMRP).
(2) Not a communication to, nor a counseling document for, the
Marine.
d. The PES comprises the policies, procedures, and responsibilities for
the preparation, processing, and maintenance of fitness reports. Reports
must provide accurate and complete profiles of the professional qualities of
Marines.
e. For purposes of brevity, this Order uses the term reporting officials
to refer to the RS, the RO, and the 3OS when appropriate. Abbreviations:
(1) RS refers to the Reporting Senior.
(2) RO refers to the Reviewing Officer.
(3) RS’s and RO’s mean possessive forms.
(4) RSs and ROs mean plural form.
(5) MRO refers to the Marine Reported On.
(6) 3OS refers to the Third Officer Sighter.
2. Purpose. Primarily, the PES supports the centralized selection,
promotion, and retention of the most qualified Marines of the Active and
Reserve Components. Secondarily, the PES aids in the assignment of personnel
and supports other personnel management decisions as required.
MCO 1610.7B
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1-2 Enclosure (2)
3. Objectives of the System. Reporting officials report the credible and
accurate recording of the history of an individual’s performance to members
of a promotion or special selection board. The PES must accomplish the
following objectives:
a. Accurate Fitness Reports. The evaluation must:
(1) Reflect an assessment of performance of assigned duties and
responsibilities against an understood set of requirements, individual
capacity, and professional character.
(2) Focus on observed individual performance during a designated
period.
(3) Report facts and the reporting official’s objective judgments
based on Marine Corps standards, not conjecture.
(4) Ensure narrative portions of the evaluation are clear in their
meaning and free of ambiguities and innuendoes.
b. Preventing Inflation. Countering inflation begins with the reporting
officials, specifically the RS and RO, who must accurately report a Marine’s
performance.
(1) The design of this report limits the ability of RSs to
unjustifiably inflate a Marine’s performance.
(2) Reports must be based on a Marine’s performance vice sociability.
Reporting officials can inadvertently render these controls ineffective by
preparing and submitting fitness reports that fail to adhere to both the
letter and the spirit of this Order.
c. Timely Receipt. Timely receipt of fitness reports by HQMC ensures
complete and accurate updates of Marines’ OMPFs. Fitness reports are due
within 30 days of the end of the reporting period for normal reports or 60
days for adverse reports. As a leadership responsibility, reporting
officials and commanders must ensure timely submission of fitness reports.
For late reports, see chapter 8, paragraph 12.
d. Ensuring Complete Records. The submission of administratively and
procedurally correct fitness reports will expedite processing, thereby
ensuring a complete, continuous record of each Marine’s performance and
potential.
e. Providing Information for Selection Boards. Fair and accurate
personnel management decisions require complete fitness report records for
all Marines. The culmination of accurate, fair, and timely fitness reports
is a documented history of individual performance and potential required by
HQMC selection boards.
4. Significance of the Fitness Report. The Commandant’s guidance for the
PES, as stated by General Charles Krulak, 31st CMC, is:
"The completed fitness report is the most important information component in
manpower management. It is the primary means of evaluating a Marine’s
performance. The fitness report is the Commandant’s primary tool available
MCO 1610.7B
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1-3 Enclosure (2)
for the selection of personnel for promotion, retention, career designation,
resident schooling, command, and duty assignments. Therefore, the completion
of this report is one of an officer’s most critical responsibilities.
Inherent in this duty is the commitment of each reporting senior and
reviewing officer to ensure the integrity of the system by close attention to
accurate marking and timely reporting. Every officer serves a role in the
scrupulous maintenance of this evaluation system, ultimately important to
both the individual and the Marine Corps. Inflationary markings only serve
to dilute the actual value of each report, rendering the fitness report
ineffective. Reviewing officials will not concur with inflated reports."
-Gen. Charles Krulak
5. Key Concepts
a. Fairness. The fitness report is a communication between reporting
officials and the CMC, via the commander with oversight responsibilities (see
paragraphs 7d of this chapter and chapter 2, paragraph 7). Reporting
officials must provide objective and thorough evaluations.
(1) ROs and commanders must take active roles in mentoring and
communicating to ensure that RSs adhere to the spirit and intent of this
Order.
(2) Influence or pressure by ROs or commanders to modify fitness
report marks or comments is unacceptable, except to ensure that reporting
officials adhere to Marine Corps policy.
b. Focus. The fitness report is a documentation of observations and
assessments of individual performance, personal qualities, character, and
potential to serve at a more senior level. The fitness report is not:
(1) A disciplinary tool.
(2) A lever to exert influence.
(3) A counseling document for the MRO.
c. Measurement. RSs must evaluate against missions, duties, tasks, and
standards as communicated by the RS to the MRO. Measure Marines against
known Marine Corps values and soldierly virtues, not against a personal set
of precepts and unreasonable expectations.
d. Ethics. Professional ethics constitute one of the foundations of the
PES. Reporting officials must preserve the high standards of Marine Corps
integrity and moral courage. Personal biases have absolutely no place in the
process.
e. Diversity and Equal Opportunity. The Marine Corps is dedicated to
equality of treatment and opportunity for all personnel without regard to
race, religion, color, sex (including pregnancy), gender, gender identity,
sexual orientation, or national origin. The Marine Corps strives to maintain
a professional working environment in which a Marine's race, religion, color,
sex (including pregnancy), gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, or
national origin will not impact his or her professional opportunities. The
Marine Corps' Performance Evaluation System shall be implemented to ensure
Marines are fairly evaluated and not disadvantaged because of their race,
MCO 1610.7B
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1-4 Enclosure (2)
religion, color, sex (including pregnancy), gender, gender identity, sexual
orientation, or national origin.
f. Avoiding Zero Defects. Reporting officials must consider that
Marines develop by having the latitude to make mistakes. Reporting officials
must encourage initiative, aggressiveness, creativity, courage, and
development of warfighting skills, and not dampen these traits by fostering
an environment where Marines fear making mistakes. Attaining perfection
certainly is a legitimate goal, but rarely is it a reality. The realistic
goal is to experience, learn, and grow professionally.
g. Counseling
(1) The PES and counseling, as addressed in reference (g), are
separate but complementary. Leaders must counsel Marines to transmit the
guidance, performance standards, and direction important for the MRO’s
success and continued development.
(2) The complementary relationship between the counseling process and
the PES begins when the RS and MRO meet to develop the MRO’s billet
description. It then becomes a regular and continuous process with
additional sessions to review billet descriptions, establish new goals, and
develop performance. As a result, the performance evaluation process should
not produce any surprises for the MRO.
(3) Periodic performance evaluation can also help clarify and
crystallize the subjects on which the counseling process should focus. Any
counseling program which relies on final evaluations as a tool to force
behavioral changes is without merit and must be avoided.
(4) The PES highlights past performance; counseling shapes future
performance. The fitness report is not a counseling tool.
6. Evaluation Cycle
a. Marine-Reported-On (MRO) and Reporting Senior (RS) Develop Billet
Description. The evaluation cycle begins with the MRO and the RS developing
a clear understanding of the RS’s expectations. Within the first 30 days of
the reporting relationship, the MRO and the RS will meet to establish and
formalize a billet description for the MRO that focuses on the essential
elements of the MRO’s billet in specific and concise terms.
b. Marine-Reported-On (MRO) Provides Summary of Accomplishments. Prior
to the end of the reporting period, the MRO shall provide a summary of
accomplishments to the RS. The CMC directs the use of the MRO Worksheet
(MROW) for billet description and summary of accomplishments documentation;
however, the RS can begin a fitness report without receiving an MROW. The
summary of accomplishments provides the MRO an opportunity to highlight
significant events, awards, and professional military education (PME)
accomplishments of which the RS may not be aware.
c. Reporting Senior (RS) Action. The RS completes the evaluation per
the provisions of this Order and forwards the report to the RO.
d. Reviewing Officer (RO) Action. The RO completes his or her portion
of the evaluation and reviews the report, ensuring it is accurate and
MCO 1610.7B
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1-5 Enclosure (2)
administratively correct. The RO then forwards the report to the CMC (MMRP-
32).
e. Headquarters Marine Corps (HQMC) Action. The CMC (MMRP-30) reviews
the report for adherence to policy and correctness, then processes and files
the report in the MRO’s OMPF, thus completing the cycle.
7. General Responsibilities
a. Marine-Reported-On (MRO). The MRO is the subject of the fitness
report. The MRO shall submit a summary of accomplishments to the RS via the
MROW prior to the end of the reporting period. The MRO must possess a clear
understanding of the concepts of the PES, his or her role in accomplishing
the unit’s mission, and the expectations of the RS.
b. Reporting Officials. All reporting officials play a key role in the
evaluation process and must know the policies and procedures set forth in
this Order, ensuring strict adherence to the objectives and tenets of the
PES.
c. All Leaders. Many billet assignments are not self-explanatory and
Marines do not always work within their military occupational specialty
(MOS). All leaders must ensure their Marines understand the mission and
their individual responsibilities specifically, by defining tasks and
standards expected, and resources available to complete those tasks. In the
case of enlisted fitness reports, the RS may include the MRO’s immediate
enlisted or civilian supervisors in the evaluation and review process. The
technique is a matter of choice to the RS, but one method is to require the
MRO’s supervisor to write a separate evaluation of the Marine. This
recommendation then becomes one additional source the RS uses in the
completion of the final fitness report. Additionally, inclusion of the
unit’s senior enlisted leadership (i.e., the first sergeant, sergeant major,
or Staff Noncommissioned Officer-In-Charge (SNCOIC)) in the review process
will help ensure equitable reporting while guarding against unintended
inflation.
d. Commanders. As representatives of the CMC, all commanders must
ensure reporting officials uphold PES policy. Regardless of the
communicative nature of the fitness report between the reporting officials
and the CMC, commanders retain responsibility for proper submission of
reports. The influence of personal example, leadership, and strong PES
education programs best ensures the integrity and credibility of the system.
The Fitness Report Audit Program (FRAP), addressed in Chapter 9, provides
commanders multiple tools to help their Marines ensure their records are
complete.
e. Headquarters Marine Corps (HQMC). MMRP-30 promulgates policy and
processes, maintains fitness report information, and serves as the
administrator of the PES.
8. Authority. The CMC vests central authority and responsibility for the
PES in the Deputy Commandant, Manpower and Reserve Affairs (DC M&RA). This
Order is the only authorized policy for the system. Additional PES policy
requirements published in other Marine Corps directives are not authorized
unless specifically approved by the central authority or referenced in this
Order.
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5 Jun 2023
2-1 Enclosure (2)
Chapter 2
Reporting Chain and Responsibilities
1. Purpose. The reporting chain applies to the Active and Reserve
Components and accomplishes the following objectives:
a. Provides the most accurate information available to the CMC on the
performance, character, and potential of every Marine who receives a fitness
report.
b. Evaluates performance, character, and potential of each MRO by those
reporting officials most directly responsible for the daily activities of the
MRO.
c. Ensures the perspectives of at least two reporting officials on each
report.
d. Ensures standardization of reporting responsibilities throughout the
Marine Corps.
e. Enforces the policies and procedures established by this Order.
2. General Description. The reporting chain consists only of the RS, the
RO, the 3OS, when applicable, and the CMC. The MRO is not part of the
reporting chain. The reporting chain will not always equate to the formal
chain of command because of operating requirements and organizational
structures. The succeeding paragraphs discuss in detail the roles and
responsibilities of each member of the reporting chain as well as additional
key personnel and/or entities involved in performance evaluations.
3. Reporting Senior (RS)
a. Definition. The RS is the first commissioned or warrant officer (or
civilian supervisor GS-9/equivalent or above) in the reporting chain senior
to the MRO. In unique situations, senior enlisted Marines may serve as an RS
with an approved policy waiver from MMRP-30. As the officer/supervisor
closest to the MRO, the RS is directly responsible for the Marine’s daily
tasking and supervision. The RS is in the best position to observe the
Marine’s performance and character. This immediate officer/supervisor
relationship applies equally to both operating and supporting establishments.
Commanding officers, OICs, and officers specifically authorized by the RO may
be the RS for officers of the same grade (see paragraphs 4c (5) and 10d of
this chapter).
Note: The RS profile for a Marine who transitions to the civilian sector and
serves as a reporting official does not reset.
b. Role. The RS must establish and clearly convey duties and
responsibilities to the MRO (see chapter 4, paragraph 4) and observe,
evaluate, and accurately report on the Marine’s performance, professional
qualities, and potential.
(1) Inherent in this duty is the commitment of the RS to preserve the
integrity of the PES by having the moral courage to report with utmost
accuracy. Inflated markings, patronizing comments, and other techniques
designed to "game the system" and give the MRO an undeserved advantage over
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
2-2 Enclosure (2)
contemporaries are acts of misplaced loyalty and ultimately hurt the
institution.
(2) When a level of leadership or supervision exists between the RS
and the MRO (i.e., a SNCOIC), the RS must ensure free communication of input
and feedback among all parties regularly throughout the reporting period.
c. Responsibilities. The RS must:
(1) Provide in-depth observation of the MRO’s performance,
professional qualities, and potential as detailed in Chapter 4. The RS
should pay particular attention to Marines at remote locations and on special
assignments to ensure accurate evaluations of these Marines.
(2) Establish and formalize, or review section B (Billet Description)
at the outset of each reporting period (within the first 30 days); determine
or make necessary adjustments to the billet description; and counsel the MRO
on his or her duties, responsibilities, and the RS’s expectations. Ensure
the Marine begins an MROW in A-PES.
(3) Assess the information provided by the MRO on the MROW and report
that information on the MRO’s fitness report as deemed appropriate.
(4) Determine fitness report requirements for subordinate Marines and
prepare the reports (see Chapter 3, Submission Requirements).
(5) Review the MMRP website, addressed in chapter 1, paragraph 1,
within the first 30 days the MRO is assigned to the RS, and each reporting
occasion thereafter to ensure the accuracy of the reporting period and to
identify any fitness report date gaps, overlaps, or missing reports.
Note: The RS will assist the MRO in resolving date gaps per chapter 8,
paragraph 10.
(6) Accurately complete sections A through I with appropriate marks
and justifications, and the RS’s Certification in section J-1 (see Chapter
4).
(7) Forward fitness reports to the RO in a timely manner in order to
comply with the time limit set forth in this Order. Do not sign the report
prior to the end of the reporting period unless special circumstances dictate
otherwise.
(8) Although not required by this Order, the RS should counsel the
MRO throughout the reporting period per reference (g).
(9) Refer to Chapter 5 for guidance on preparing adverse reports.
4. Reviewing Officer (RO)
a. Definition. The RO is the first commissioned or warrant officer (or
civilian supervisor GS-10/equivalent or above) senior in grade to the RS and
the officer directly responsible for the primary tasking, supervision, and
evaluation of the RS. In unique situations, senior enlisted Marines may
serve as ROs with an approved policy waiver from MMRP-30.
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2-3 Enclosure (2)
Note: The RO profile for a Marine who transitions to the civilian sector and
serves as a reporting official does not reset.
b. Role. As the critical link in the reporting chain and the key to the
viability of the PES, ROs must provide the experienced leadership,
supervision, and detached point of view necessary to ensure consistent,
accurate, and unbiased evaluations. ROs ensure adherence to policy and, as
the last officer/supervisor in the normal reporting chain, are responsible
for all subordinate performance evaluation activities. The RO must focus on
eliminating inflated marks, and unwarranted and unclear comments. ROs have
two principal means to accomplish this purpose:
(1) The knowledge by all concerned that ROs will closely scrutinize
reports prior to forwarding them to HQMC. Stated in terms of commander’s
intent, the RO will not concur with inflated reports.
(2) Formal evaluation of the RS (as an MRO) for fulfillment of his or
her evaluation responsibilities as an RS.
c. Responsibilities. The RO must:
(1) Make every reasonable effort to know the professional
capabilities of the Marines whose reports they review.
(2) Ensure the accuracy and timely submission of fitness reports and
take corrective action to eliminate inflated and/or late fitness report
submissions.
(3) Complete section K, to include narrative comments on the MRO’s
career potential (not to be confused with the RS’s requirement of capturing
the MRO’s performance), and provide seasoned insights to evaluations (see
chapter 4, paragraph 15). Write and grade only from what you personally know
or have gleaned from objective documentation of the MRO’s performance.
(4) Educate subordinates regarding fitness report responsibilities,
PES policies (e.g., inflation control), and proper evaluation methods.
(5) Assess adverse reports and adjudicate factual differences between
the RS’s evaluation and any statement by the MRO, and forward adverse reports
to the appropriate officer for third officer sighting (see chapter 5,
paragraph 5).
Note: When disagreement exists between an RS and MRO as to whether a report
is adverse, the RO will make the determination.
(6) Ensure completed fitness reports arrive at HQMC within 30 days
(or 60 days for adverse reports) of the end of the reporting period.
(7) Assume the RS responsibilities upon death, incapacitation, or
relief for cause of an RS. The amplifying guidance in chapter 2, paragraph
10e applies.
(8) Refer to Chapter 5 for guidance on adjudicating adverse reports.
5. Third Officer Sighter (3OS). The duties and responsibilities of a third
officer sighter involve adverse fitness reports. See chapter 5 for specific
instructions.
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5 Jun 2023
2-4 Enclosure (2)
6. Commandant of the Marine Corps (CMC). Chapter 8 describes the HQMC
functions regarding PES management. DC M&RA, as the Commandant’s direct
representative, establishes all policies regarding the PES.
7. Commanders. All commanders have a responsibility to review reports at
the command level for adherence to policy to include inflated markings,
insufficient justifications or unwarranted comments. Direct involvement is
especially significant at the operational battalion and squadron level. This
not only helps to maintain the integrity of the PES, it allows commanders the
opportunity to assess their subordinates’ performance as reporting officials.
It is highly recommended that commanders include senior enlisted and command
staff in the fitness report process.
8. Senior Marine Representatives (SMR). The senior Marine officer
representative of a command, staff, or agency external to the Marine Corps is
responsible to provide non-Marine RSs and ROs guidance and education on the
policies of this Order. Additionally, the senior Marine representative must
review all fitness reports for administrative correctness and may comment on
the MRO, as appropriate, per instructions in chapter 6, paragraph 8b.
9. Senior Enlisted Advisors (SEAs). Though not in the reporting chain, all
SEAs have the responsibility to assist reporting officials and commanders in
completing and processing enlisted fitness reports per the provisions of this
Order. It is highly encouraged that reporting officials include their senior
enlisted leadership for administrative overview.
10. Special Situations. The following amplifying guidance applies to
special situations:
a. Adverse Reports. Because of the sensitive nature and impact of
adverse reports, reporting officials will ensure they handle adverse reports
in accordance with Chapter 5.
b. Non-Marine Reporting Officials
(1) Definitions, roles, and responsibilities of the RS and RO are
applicable to officers of other branches of the Armed Services, officers of
foreign nations, and civilians in positions of authority under whom the MRO
may serve.
(2) RS authority for civilian supervisors starts at the GS-9 level or
equivalent (see chapter 2, paragraph 3a). Retired military members should
state their prior service, retired rank, and number of years in both military
and government service in the section I or K comments.
c. Multiple and Simultaneous Regular Duty Assignments
(1) Infrequently, operational necessity will require assigning
Marines to more than one primary duty, with each having its own operational
(reporting) chain. When applicable, submit separate reports via each
reporting chain. Reporting officials shall ensure the MRO and all reporting
officials are aware of the reporting relationships and requirements at the
beginning of the reporting period. These are separate and distinct reporting
occasions per chapter 3, paragraph 3c as applicable. Forward each report for
review through the appropriate reporting chain. The RS will explain the
circumstances which warranted a simultaneous report.
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5 Jun 2023
2-5 Enclosure (2)
Note: Begin section I with the following statement: "Simultaneous report."
(2) Examples:
(a) The MRO is a regimental commander also serving as a camp
commander. The MRO can receive reports from both the division and base
commanding officer.
(b) The MRO belongs to a non-Marine command, but as a result of a
letter of instruction or similar document, has specific Marine Corps
responsibilities to the senior Marine officer present. The latter may submit
a simultaneous report addressing Marine Corps matters only.
d. Seniority Issues. The following rules apply:
(1) The RS will never be junior in grade to the MRO.
(2) In situations where the MRO is the same grade as the RS, the RS
may:
(a) Elevate the reporting chain one level to the next senior
officer or equivalent civilian supervisor.
(b) Choose to maintain the current reporting chain. It must be
clear based on billet that the MRO is serving subordinate to the RS. If not
clearly defined, the RO should comment in section K that the MRO is serving
in a billet subordinate to the RS.
(3) The RO will never be junior in grade to the RS.
(4) When the RO is the same grade as the RS, the RO should indicate
in section K that the RO holds a senior billet to the RS or is granted
seniority to the RS by another authority source.
e. Reporting Seniors (RS) Death, Incapacitation, or Relief. When an RS
dies, becomes physically or mentally incapacitated, or is relieved for cause,
process the report as follows:
(1) The RO, acting as the RS, will complete a Change of Reporting
Senior (CH) report on all affected Marines and forward the reports for review
to the next senior officer in the reporting chain.
(2) The next senior officer to the new RS will become the RO for all
affected Marines. The new RO will include a mandatory comment in section K
stating that the reporting chain was modified in accordance with chapter, 2,
paragraph 10e and that this is the reason for the report submission. Submit
an observed evaluation if ample opportunity for observation exists.
(3) The former RO will continue as the new RS, pending the
replacement of the original RS. If a permanent replacement is due for
assignment within 90 days, the former RO will delay the CH report until that
time to avoid repetitious reporting and duplication of effort.
f. Modifications to the Standard Reporting Chain. The reporting chain
applies throughout the Marine Corps and to all assignments external to the
Marine Corps. Authorized modifications to this reporting chain are:
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5 Jun 2023
2-6 Enclosure (2)
(1) Commanding generals may modify the reporting chain for as long as
necessary when unusual operational or command relationship situations exist.
The RO will specify the reason in section K and must identify, by billet, the
commanding general who authorized the modification.
(2) Commanders may request permanent
waivers from the CMC to alter the
reporting chain for unique operational situations (see chapter 6, paragraph
2).
(3) For MROs assigned to duty external to the Marine Corps (see
chapter 6, paragraph 8).
(4) Battalion-level commanders or higher may modify the reporting
chain on a case by case basis when unresolved conflicts and lack of
professional objectivity by the reporting officials exists. Commands should
initiate this action when compromising circumstances occur that may prevent
either the RS or the RO from exercising professional objectivity in a
particular situation. The RS or RO may also elect to request this
modification, when in their opinion, a perception of a lack of professional
objectivity may serve to invalidate a report. The RO must explain the change
in the section K.
(5) When the Reporting Senior (RS) is a Flag Officer or Equivalent.
The intent of the PES is that whenever possible, two different officers will
serve as the RS and the RO for a report, especially when the report is
adverse in nature. However, on reports for colonel and below, if the RS is a
general officer or equivalent and the review would be nothing more than an
administrative review, the RS is authorized to also serve as the RO. In the
event that the RS also serves as the RO, section K must be completed as
follows:
(a) Mark the section K-3, Comparative Assessment pyramid.
(b) Make a comment in section K-4 stating that the RS is also
serving as the RO. Make additional comments as desired.
(c) Sign and date block K-5.
(d) Place personal information in section A, both blocks 10a and
11a.
(e) Forward the completed report to the CMC, MMRP-32.
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5 Jun 2023
3-1 Enclosure (2)
Chapter 3
Submission Requirements
1. General. The PES provides a continuous chain of fitness reports that
cumulatively covers every day a Marine serves in the grade of sergeant
through major general. Submit fitness reports only as specifically required
by this Order and only by individuals in a Marine's proper reporting chain as
defined in chapter 2.
2. Fitness Report Submission Schedule. Submit fitness reports as the
occasions defined in this chapter occur or per the schedule in Appendix A,
whichever occurs first.
Note: See chapter 7, paragraph 3 when combat or other unique operational
situations preclude the timely submission of fitness reports.
3. Reporting Occasions
a. Reporting occasions explain relationship changes between RSs and
MROs. They are designed to:
(1) Obtain a continuous chain of fitness reports on each Marine.
(2) Reduce those situations wherein a Marine has two RSs.
(3) Provide meaningful reports for every primary billet assignment.
b. Occasions for General Officers
(1) Generals and Lieutenant Generals will not receive performance
evaluations.
(2) Major Generals' reporting occasions are Change of Reporting
Senior, Transfer, Grade Change, To Temporary Duty, and From Temporary Duty.
(3) Brigadier Generals' reporting occasions are Change of Reporting
Senior, Transfer, GC, To Temporary Duty, From Temporary Duty, and Annual.
c. Occasions for Grades Sergeant Through Colonel. Marines in the grades
of Sergeant through Colonel require fitness reports for any of the thirteen
occasions listed below.
Note: When more than one occasion occurs simultaneously, use the occasion
that appears highest on the list.
Occasion Code
Grade Change GC
CMC Directed DC
Change of Reporting Senior CH
Transfer TR
Change of Duty CD
To Temporary Duty TD
From Temporary Duty FD
End of Service EN
Change in Status CS
Annual (Active Component) AN
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3-2 Enclosure (2)
Annual (Reserve Component) AR
Semiannual (Lieutenants only) SA
Reserve Training RT
4. Details for Reporting Occasions
a. Grade Change (GC). Submit a GC report when a Marine is promoted,
frocked, reverted to enlisted grade, or reduced.
(1) The ending date of the report is the actual day the action
occurs, not the date of rank recorded for pay and lineal purposes.
(2) Submit a GC report for grade reductions resulting from Non-Judicial
Punishment (NJP). The ending date of the report is the date the NJP occurred.
However, reporting officials will not submit the report in APES until the
appeal process is complete.
(3) Submit a report for grade reductions resulting from summary,
special, or general court-martial action when the Convening Authority (CA)
approves the sentence or when automatic reduction provisions set forth in
reference (h) are effected.
Note: If the appeal process subsequently sets aside or disapproves the grade
reduction, see Chapter 6 for guidance to correct the fitness report record.
(4) Do not submit GC reports for promotions of Reserve members in the
Standby or Individual Ready Reserve (IRR), except for those members in duty
status.
(5) Items le (Grade) and lf (DOR) in section A should reflect the
grade being promoted from, not the grade promoted to.
(6) Marines that are frocked enjoy all the rights and privileges of
the “frocked to” rank. All subsequent fitness reports will reflect the new
grade, and the Marine’s fitness reports will be recorded on the RS and RO’s
profiles in the new grade. For reporting purposes, the Marine will receive a
GC report when they are frocked. On subsequent reports, enter “FROCKED” in
the date of rank for any reports that are required between the date the
Marine is frocked until the date the Marine’s date of rank is effective for
pay purposes. A fitness report shall not be submitted solely based on the
effective date of rank for pay purposes.
b. Directed by the Commandant of the Marine Corps (DC). Submit a DC
report when significant administrative, commendatory, or adverse action by
the MRO occurs that requires immediate reporting to CMC. Additionally, HQMC
will use DC reports for administrative fillers to remove date gaps from a
Marine's records.
(1) The report must cover the period from the end date of the MRO's
last report to the date the action occurred.
(2) The RS must consider the entire evaluation period when preparing
the report, not just the action that caused the report.
(3) Occasionally, a Marine is subject to commendatory material that
warrants immediate reporting to CMC. Examples include:
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5 Jun 2023
3-3 Enclosure (2)
(a) The Marine is awarded a combat award for valor at the Silver
Star or higher level.
(b) The Marine is awarded a Service-wide eligible award such as
the Leftwich Trophy or the Hulbert Trophy.
(4) Begin section I of all DC reports by stating the reason for
submission.
(5) The Reporting Senior (RS) must submit a Directed by the
Commandant of the Marine Corps (DC) report for the following specific
actions:
(a) When a Marine is the subject of disciplinary action (refer to
chapter 5 for adverse report procedures). However, if the Marine is reduced
in grade, submit a GC report to document the conviction and reduction.
(b) When a Marine is declared to be in a deserter status (see
chapter 3, paragraph 9).
(c) When remedial promotion to sergeant occurs (see chapter 6,
paragraph 6).
(d) When Missing in Action or Prisoner of War status occurs (see
chapter 6, paragraph 3d).
(e) When the Deputy Commandant, Aviation (DC AVN) determines that
a respondent to a Flight Status Selection Board (FSSB) is subject to
revocation of orders to duty in a flight status, revocation of right to wear
aviation insignia, or placed in a probationary flight status as addressed in
reference (i).
1. Do not report any negative recommendations of a Field
Flight Performance Board (FFPB) until the final adjudication by a FSSB is
complete.
2. Assignment to conditional flight status is not adverse
and shall not be reported on a fitness report.
(f) When the Judge Advocate General of the Navy suspends or
revokes a Marine judge advocate’s certification under Article 26(b), UCMJ,
Article 27(b), UCMJ, or Rule for Courts-Martial (R.C.M) 502(d)(3).
(6) Do not submit a Directed by the Commandant of the Marine Corps
(DC) report:
(a) To transmit recommendations to promotion or selection boards.
(b) To cover a commendatory action more appropriately covered by
an award or decoration.
(c) In lieu of disciplinary action.
(d) To report the mobilization, demobilization, activation, or
deactivation of Reserve Marines.
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5 Jun 2023
3-4 Enclosure (2)
(e) When a Marine has been relieved for cause, unless the relief
is simultaneously accompanied with adjudicated disciplinary action, as
outlined in chapter 5, paragraph 3e, the correct occasion code for
documenting a Marine’s relief is a TR, TD, or CD.
c. Change of Reporting Senior (CH). Submit a CH report when the RS
leaves for reasons other than TAD (i.e., transfer, reassignment within the
same command, retirement, etc.) but the MRO remains in the same billet.
d. Transfer (TR). Submit a TR report when the MRO leaves for reasons
other than TAD (i.e., transfer, reassignment within the same command,
extended deployment, etc.) but the RS remains in the same billet. Use the TR
occasion when an IMA, or SMCR Marine inter-unit transfers.
e. Change of Duty (CD). Submit a CD report when the MRO has a
significant change in primary duty under the same RS.
f. To Temporary Duty (TD). The MRO’s parent command must submit a TD
report when a Marine goes on a temporary duty assignment lasting 31 days or
longer under a different RS. These guidelines also apply for members who are
Individual Mobilization Augmentees (IMA), members of the Selected Marine
Corps Reserve (SMCR), or members who are activated, mobilized, or have orders
to perform Active Duty Operational Support (ADOS) under a different RS for 31
days or longer.
(1) The report must cover the period from the end date of the MRO’s
last report to the day before the MRO goes to temporary duty. Do not submit
the report until the MRO actually departs for TAD.
(2) The RS at the parent command must submit a retroactive "to TD"
report when a Marine on a temporary duty assignment projected to last 30 or
less days gets extended to 31 days or longer.
Note: This situation also applies when a Marine is sent without “official”
TAD orders to work at another command awaiting resolution of administrative
or disciplinary/investigative matters.
(3) The MRO’s parent command has no additional fitness report
submission requirement for Marines on temporary duty for 31 days or longer.
(4) If the RS at the parent command deems an MRO’s temporary duty
assignment lasting 30 days or less significant, address it in section C
and/or section I of the MRO’s next report per chapter 4, paragraphs 6 and 13.
(5) In those cases of Marines having multiple TAD sites, where each
TAD site requires submission of a completed report, each TAD site will submit
a TD report sending the Marine to the next TAD site with the final TAD site
submitting the required "FD" report returning the Marine to their parent
command.
Note: Do not submit TD reports for Marines attending Weapons and Tactics
Instructor (WTI) Course as student or support personnel.
g. From Temporary Duty (FD). The RS at the command where the MRO is
assigned temporary duty must submit an FD report when a Marine terminates a
temporary duty assignment. These guidelines apply for members of the IMA and
SMCR who are activated, mobilized, or have orders to perform ADOS under a
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5 Jun 2023
3-5 Enclosure (2)
different RS for 31 days or longer, prior to returning to their parent
command awaiting demobilization, deactivation, or terminating ADOS orders.
(1) The report must cover the period from the end date of the MRO’s
last report to the day before the MRO departs to return to their parent
command.
(2) Due to the significance of temporary duty assignments, the RS
must submit an observed report, unless the temporary assignment is an
academic environment or an observed evaluation is not feasible. The RS must
explain in section I why an FD report is N/O.
(3) Early termination of temporary duty originally projected to last
31 days or longer requires submission of an FD report. The RS must state the
reason for the early termination in section I.
(a) Termination for cause requires the appropriate processing and
review in accordance with Chapter 5.
(b) Only submit a N/O report when the early termination prevents
meaningful appraisal and is not due to a relief for cause.
(4) See chapter 6, paragraph 4 for guidance on academic duty.
(5) While a Marine is in a temporary duty status (lasting 31 days or
longer) the RS must capture all required reporting occasions outlined in the
beginning of this chapter. For annual occasions (Active and Reserve
Components), only submit reports when the occasion occurs during a period of
temporary duty lasting six months or longer. If the annual occasion occurs
during a period of temporary duty of less than six months, defer the report
and capture the MRO’s performance in the FD report.
h. End of Service (EN). Submit an EN report for all Active Component
Marines terminating active duty and all Marines in any Component separating
from the service. The only exception to this requirement is for Marines who
retire/transfer to the Fleet Marine Corps Reserve with 20 years of service or
greater.
(1) Adverse EN reports shall be submitted when required by the
circumstances described in chapter 5, paragraph 1.
(2) EN reports may be sent to HQMC when the Marine commences leave
awaiting separation (i.e. terminal leave) or when a Marine commences
Permissive Temporary Additional Duty (PTAD) in conjunction with terminal
leave; specify period covered by PTAD/terminal leave as a period of non-
availability in section I.
(3) EN reports will not be added to either the RS or RO profile and
will not generate a relative value or comparative assessment on the MBS.
i. Change in Status (CS). Submit a CS report when Reserve Component
Marines transfer to the IRR or when an active component Marine transfers to
the IRR for career intermission.
j. Annual Active Duty (AN). Submit an AN report for all Marines serving
on the Active Duty List (ADL), and who are considered for promotion by an
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5 Jun 2023
3-6 Enclosure (2)
Active Component board in the grades of sergeant through brigadier general,
excluding Second and First Lieutenants.
(1) The report must cover the period from the end date of the MRO's
last report to the last day of the month specified in the submission schedule
at Appendix A.
(2) Omit the annual report when:
(a) The MRO is in a temporary duty status, other than academic
duty, for less than six months (see paragraph 4g of this chapter).
(b) The MRO is attending formal academic training under Permanent
Change Of Station (PCS/TEMINS) orders of less than 12 months duration. In
this case, include the annual period on the Transfer (TR) report.
(c) Another reporting occasion under the same RS occurred 60 days
or less prior to the end date of the annual report (i.e., a GC or CD report).
(d) When the report comes due under a new RS within 89 days or
less of the establishment of the RS-MRO relationship.
(e) It is known in advance another reporting occasion will occur
within 30 days after the ending date for the report.
Note: The report may not be omitted in anticipation of disciplinary or
administrative separation actions.
k. Annual Reserve Duty (AR)
(1) Active Reserve: AR reports for Active Reserve component Marines
executing orders will follow the same observation and omission criteria for
active duty Marines as listed in this chapter.
(2) IMA, SMCR: AR reports must be observed regardless of drills and
periods of active duty performed. If the MRO did not attend any drills or
complete any periods of active duty during the period, the report should be
marked N/O.
(3) EAD recruiters: While performing extended active duty, EAD
recruiters will follow the same observation and omission criteria for active
duty Marines as listed in this chapter.
(4) Omit the AR report under the same conditions identified in
paragraph 4j(2) of this chapter.
l. Semiannual Active Duty (SA). Submit a SA report for all active duty
Second Lieutenants and First Lieutenants. Reserve lieutenants serving on
active duty will follow the report schedule that corresponds to their
component code (i.e. reserve, active).
(1) The report must cover the period from the end date of the MRO's
last report to the last day of the month specified in the submission schedule
at Appendix A.
(2) Omit the SA report if:
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3-7 Enclosure (2)
(a) It is the first report by the RS on the MRO, and the period
of observation is 30 days or less. Include the period in the next report
due.
(b) It is known in advance that another reporting occasion will
occur within 30 days after the ending date for the report.
Note: The report may not be omitted in anticipation of disciplinary or
administrative separation actions.
m. Reserve Training (RT)
(1) For IMA, SMCR, and IRR members only, submit an observed fitness
report upon completion of annual training, and anytime a reservist completes
active duty for a period of 12 to 30 days. If the RS believes that an
observed fitness report would not be appropriate, the RS may write a N/O
report; however, the RS must make a directed comment in section I stating why
the report rates an exception. When this occurs, the RS that writes the
MRO’s annual reserve fitness report must account for the MRO's performance
for that period of time in the next reporting occasion.
(2) RSs may omit the RT report for reservists performing annual
training and active duty periods of 12-30 days if they write the MRO's annual
reserve report. When this occurs, the RS must include observations of the
MRO's performance during annual RT in the next reporting occasion. Section I
directed comments apply (see chapter 4, paragraph 18).
(3) RT reports will not be counted when calculating date gaps since
these reports normally overlap other reporting periods.
(a) The beginning date of the MRO’s first fitness report occasion
which occurs after the RT report must start a day after the end date of the
MRO’s fitness report prior to the RT report:
Fitness Report Dates Fitness Report Occasion
1. 20101001-20110930 AR (Report prior to RT report)
2. 20120601-20120615 RT
3. 20111001-20120901 GC (1st report after RT report)
(b) If fitness report three was started on 20120616, the MRO
would have a fitness report date gap from 20111001 to 20120531.
5. Minimum Observation Requirements
a. Minimum Observation Time
(1) RSs must submit observed reports for all reporting occasions
covering periods of 90 days or longer.
(2) RSs must submit observed reports for periods covering 31 days or
longer for:
(a) All reports on active duty Lieutenants who have completed
their primary MOS school.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
3-8 Enclosure (2)
(b) From Temporary Duty (FD) reports.
Note: See chapter 6, paragraph 4d for periods of academic and training duty
lasting more than 31 days.
b. Periods of Non-availability. Periods of 30 or more consecutive days
when the MRO or the RS was not available to perform his or her duties at the
reporting command or organization constitute non-availability and do not
count when determining minimum observation time for submission of an observed
report.
Note: RSs must identify periods of non-availability in section I.
c. Exception to Policy. For periods of 89 days or less, RSs shall not
submit an observed report unless their observation results from meaningful
personal contact that is not normally obtainable in a standard work setting.
Reminder: Annual reports may be omitted in certain instances (example: if
the occasion is due within 89 days or less of the establishment of the RS-MRO
relationship). See chapter 3, paragraph 4j(2).
(1) Meaningful personal contact is defined as a significant increase
in quantity and quality of observation during the reporting period. Examples
include:
(a) MRO and RS executing extended field exercises during the
reporting period (e.g. 75 day reporting period with 60 days spent executing
Integrated Training Exercise).
(b) MRO and RS working side by side in a combat operations center
over a 60-day period.
(c) Drill Instructor and Series Commander (e.g. 70 day reporting
period where 70 days were spent on-cycle).
(2) The RS will explain the extent of the increase in quantity and
quality of observation in section I. Three things must be clear in the
section I comments:
(a) The RS is requesting an exception to policy.
(b) What significant events occurred which lead to an increase in
quality and quantity of observation.
(c) How the circumstances created an increase in quantity and
quality of observation and the extent of (hours/day, days/week) observation.
(3) The information provided to the CMC is significant and provides a
fair assessment of the MRO.
d. Co-location. The MRO and the reporting officials are not required to
be co-located in order for observation to occur.
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5 Jun 2023
3-9 Enclosure (2)
6. Not Observed (N/O) Reports
a. Reporting Officials should take all possible action to reduce N/O
fitness reports. N/O reports diminish the amount of useful information in a
Marine's performance record, take valuable time to prepare and process, and
provide only continuity to a Marine's record. Consecutive N/O reports from
the same RS should be avoided when possible. Reminder: Annual reports may
be omitted if the occasion is due within 89 days or less of the establishment
of the RS-MRO relationship.
b. Submit Not Observed (N/O) Reports for the following situations:
(1) When the RS has insufficient observation of the MRO and the
reporting period does not meet the minimum observation requirement prescribed
for submission of an observed report per the provisions of paragraph 5 of
this chapter.
(2) Upon termination of the MRO from temporary duty or
drop/disenrollment from a formal school or course in 30 days or less. When
this situation occurs, the RS must explain the reason in section I. See
chapter 4, paragraph 13d(1) for legal situations; chapter 4, paragraph 13d
(10) and chapter 5, paragraph 6f(13) for medical situations; and chapter 6,
paragraph 4d(2) when reporting on academic duty.
(3) When the MRO is assigned to a degree completion, MECEP,
fellowship, or other programs when observed time is unfeasible, regardless of
length. At a minimum the report should indicate satisfactory progression in
curriculum.
(4) Company grade officers who have not yet completed their primary
MOS school. Exceptions for aviation students at the FRS exist as described
in Chapter 6, paragraph 4h(6).
c. RSs must complete section B (Billet Description) on all N/O reports.
d. To the extent possible, both the RS and the RO may provide comments
in sections I and K to better inform promotion and selection boards regarding
the performance and potential of the MRO.
e. N/O reports can be rendered adverse. If the report is adverse, the
provisions of Chapter 5 apply.
f. Only pages 1 and 5 of N/O reports will be completed and submitted for
processing.
g. Mark block 7c, (Recommended For Promotion), “N/A” for N/O reports.
h. RO Action. The minimum observation requirements outlined in
paragraph 5 of this chapter do no pertain to the RO as explain in chapter 4,
paragraph 14. The RS’s evaluation is N/O for varied and valid reasons, the
period covered may be sufficient for a meaningful RO assessment.
Consequently, the RO is free to mark section K-3, Comparative Assessment, and
comment as appropriate in K-4.
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5 Jun 2023
3-10 Enclosure (2)
7. Extended Reports
a. Extended reports are intended for use when an MRO's performance has
not changed since the submission of the last AN, AR, or SA report and another
reporting occasion comes due within 89 days or less.
Note: No other occasion can be extended.
b. The extended report must reflect the current reporting occasion.
c. Do not extend adverse or not observed AN, AR, and SA reports.
d. Only section A of page 1 and page 5 of extended reports will be
completed and submitted for processing.
e. AN, AR, SA reports may be extended into the EN report if the
observation period prior to the start of terminal leave does not exceed 89
days. Example: MRO receives their AN report on 31 March. MRO starts
terminal leave on 15 June. MRO’s EAS date is 10 July. The reporting period
exceeds 89 days, but the observation period does not. The RS is allowed to
document the dates of terminal leave in Section I and submit the EN report as
an extended report. In these situations it is acceptable to extend the AN
report since the total observation of the MRO since the AN report was 89 days
or less. The RS must document the terminal leave period as non-availability.
f. Reviewing Officer (RO) Action
(1) If the RO is the same as the previous report on the MRO and the
RO’s evaluation of the MRO’s potential has not changed, the RO may select
“Extended by RO” in A-PES. The comment “My observation remains the same”
will appear in K-4.
(2) If the RO is the same as the previous report on the MRO and the
RO’s evaluation of the MRO’s performance has changed, the RO must mark K-1,
K-2, and K-3 according to the RO’s observation of the MRO during the
reporting period and provide comments in K-4.
8. When Fitness Reports Are Not Allowed. Do not submit fitness reports for:
a. A Marine serving as president, member, or recorder of a selection
board.
b. A Marine serving as a member of a court-martial. In the preparation
of a fitness report, RSs must not consider or evaluate the MRO's performance
of duty as a member of a court-martial (see Article 37, in Appendix 2 of
reference (h)).
c. Members of the President’s Own, United States Marine band, MOS 5511.
d. The death of the MRO.
e. The Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps.
9. Fitness Reports for Marines in an Unauthorized Absence (UA) or Deserter
Status. Special administrative procedures apply when a Marine is in a UA or
deserter status. Complete reports according to the following instructions:
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
3-11 Enclosure (2)
a. If a Marine is in a UA status and a fitness report occasion comes
due, do not submit the report until such time as the Marine is declared a
deserter or returns from UA.
(1) If a Marine is declared a deserter, the MRO’s RS at that time
must submit a DC report per the provisions of paragraph 4b of this chapter.
(a) Ensure the report covers the period from the end date of the
MRO’s last report to the day the MRO is declared a deserter.
(b) Submit the report without the MRO’s signature in item 2 of
section J (see chapter 4, paragraph 14c(5)).
Note: Upon return, the MRO can submit a rebuttal on an addendum page to
MMRP-32.
(c) If the RS transfers prior to the MRO being declared a
deserter, see paragraph 11c of this chapter
(2) If a Marine returns from UA prior to being declared a deserter,
delay submitting a fitness report until any pending disciplinary action
occurs. Report the period of UA and subsequent disciplinary action per the
provisions of chapter 5, paragraph 3e.
b. When a Marine has returned from a deserter status:
(1) Delay submitting a fitness report until any pending disciplinary
action occurs. Report the disciplinary action per the provisions of chapter
5, paragraph 3e.
(2) Reflect the period of time lost while in a deserter status in
section I.
(3) In the event the disciplinary action finds the Marine not guilty,
or dismisses all charges, and the MRO received a DC fitness report upon
declaration as a deserter, the Marine can follow the provisions of Chapter 10
to correct the record.
c. If the RS transfers while a Marine is in a UA status, but prior to
the MRO being declared a deserter, the RS must:
(1) Submit a CH report with the termination date of the report being
the day the RS transfers.
(2) Reflect the period of UA in section I as time lost.
(3) Submit the report without the MRO’s signature in item 2 of
section J (see chapter 4, paragraph 14c(5)).
Note: Upon return, the MRO can submit a rebuttal on an addendum page to
MMRP-32.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-1 Enclosure (2)
Chapter 4
Fitness Report Preparation
1. General Administrative Instructions
a. The design of the fitness report form facilitates the documentation
of essential and critical information in a simple and direct manner.
b. Sensitivity and Privacy of Fitness Report Information. Reporting
officials must establish and enforce procedures that ensure all personnel
treat completed fitness reports as privileged information and that only
personnel requiring knowledge of the reports view them. This will normally
include:
(1) The members of the reporting chain.
(2) The commander or his or her designated representative (e.g.,
executive officer and sergeant major or senior enlisted advisor in the case
of enlisted reports).
(3) Those administrative personnel involved in the processing of
reports.
c. Preparation of the Fitness Report
(1) Automated Preparation of Reports. Refer to Appendix B for
information and detailed instructions concerning the electronic preparation
and submission of fitness reports using the A-PES. Reporting officials will
use this capability when it is available. Electronic preparation and
submission of reports significantly assists reporting officials to write and
submit administratively correct and timely reports.
(2) When Access to Automated Performance Evaluation System (A-PES)
Does Not Exist. Complete the fitness report using the writeable NAVMC 10835
form available on the MMRP-30 webpage. All fitness reports will be typed,
not handwritten. The RO or 3OS, as applicable, will submit the completed
fitness report to the CMC (MMRP-32) through one of the following methods:
(a) Scan the signed report and email a readable copy to the MMRP-
32 email account at: [email protected].
(b) Mail the original report, while maintaining a complete copy,
to the following address:
Commandant of the Marine Corps
(Code MMRP-32)
2008 Elliot Road
Quantico, VA 22134-5030
(c) Hand deliver the original report to the following location:
Fitness Report Processing Section (MMRP-32)
Building 2008, Room 261
Quantico, VA 22134
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5 Jun 2023
4-2 Enclosure (2)
(3) Site Commanders/Inspector-Instructors within Marine Forces
Reserve (MARFORRES) and Reserve Support Units will assist in the preparation
of fitness reports for individuals of the Marine Corps Reserve assigned to
the Individual Mobilization Augmentee (IMA) program, IRR or as applicable
when administrative assistance is not available or distances prevent
operational sponsors from providing support.
d. Attached Pages. When attaching pages to the fitness report form, the
RO or 3OS (as applicable) will indicate in section L that addendum pages are
attached.
Note: Addendum pages (paragraph 15 of this chapter) and unique performance
evaluation forms from non-Marine commands or institutions (chapter 6,
paragraph 8) are the only documents authorized for attachment. No pages or
forms will be stapled to the NAVMC 10835.
2. Instructions for Completing Senior Officer Reports
a. General Officer Report Instructions
(1) Submit typed performance evaluations for general officers using
standard naval letter format.
(2) ROs may type their endorsement in section K, item 4 of the
fitness report, attach a typed endorsement, or provide handwritten comments
on the Reporting Senior’s evaluation letter.
(3) Submit a completed section A (items 1,2,3,4,10, and 11 only) of
the fitness report with the letter.
(4) The CMC will endorse all general officer reports. If prepared
through A-PES, forward completed reports to the CMC for endorsement.
Note: If prepared using the .pdf form, forward completed reports for review
to:
Senior Leader Management Branch (MMSL)
3280 Russell Road, Suite 305
Quantico, VA 22134-5103
b. Colonel, Chief Warrant Officer 5, Sergeant Major, and Master
Gunnery
Sergeant Report Instructions
(1) Colonel, Chief Warrant Officer 5, Sergeant Major, and Master
Gunnery
Sergeant fitness reports will consist of pages 1 and 5, and
addendum page(s) as appropriate.
(2) Section A will be completed per the provisions of this order.
(3) RSs are not to complete sections B and C on page
1.
That
information, however, will be addressed on an addendum page in
letter-
style narrative, similar to general officer reports.
(4) Grading of the 14 attributes on pages 2, 3, and 4 will not
occur.
The RS
's
consideration and evaluation of those attributes, and
required section I comments (paragraph 13 of this chapter), as applicable,
will be
addressed in letter-style narrative on the addendum
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-3 Enclosure (2)
page(s).Additionally, specific comments on potential for promotion and
assignments to command, staff, and advanced schooling are desired. The
use of addendum pages for
these comments is essential in fully
automating, forwarding, and processing
reports.
The number of addendum
pages is not limited, but concise narrative is desired.
(5) When the RS is a flag officer or equivalent and a RO chain
does not exist per chapter 2, paragraph 4, and one is not otherwise
prescribed, special handling instructions of such a situation are
contained in chapter 2, paragraph 10f (5).
(6) N/O (chapter 3, paragraph 6) and extended (chapter 3,
paragraph 7) fitness reports require only pages 1 and 5 with
justification comments entered in section I.
(7) If observation and knowledge of MRO 's performance permits,
the RO
shall complete items K-1, K-2, and K-3 per the provisions of
paragraph 14 of
this chapter. The RO's directed and evaluative comments
in item K-4 may be
extended onto an addendum page, if needed. The number
of addendum pages is
not limited, but concise narrative is desired.
(8) Due to the unique use of Colonel, Chief Warrant Officer 5,
Sergeant
Major, and Master Gunnery Sergeant fitness reports, ROs should
specifically
address the items listed below as applicable, in regards to the
MRO's current
assignment and future potential.
Fitness Reports written on
Lieutenant Colonels, Master Sergeants and First Sergeants are encouraged, but
are not required to, incorporate this language within their section I and/or
K comments as appropriate.
(a) Articulate the MRO 's ability to serve at the next level
with an
emphasis on how that MRO uses his or her authority, persuasion,
and
personality to accomplish tasks.
(b) Discuss the MRO
's
operational competence in a complex,
demanding-ever changing environment while maintaining the ability to
adapt in
order to effectively eliminate friction and identify gaps.
(c) Summarize the MRO
's
ability to manage commander
's
intent
and
execute higher expressed goals while fostering a positive command
climate
with an emphasis on readiness, mission, diversity, and
accountability.
(d)
Describe the MRO’s ability to develop and mentor subordinates,
peers, and seniors within their respective billet assignments or commands.
(e)
Discuss the MRO's capability to manage time, resources, and
constraints while executing sound and timely decisions that benefit the
organization assigned.
(f)
Capture the MRO's ability to utilize their foresight in order
to
identify future problems and mitigate those issues using their ingenuity and
insight gained from previous experience.
(9) All pages with signature lines will be signed, as applicable.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-4 Enclosure (2)
3. Marines Executing Unique Billets (Commander, Executive Officer, Base/Camp
Commander, Student, Instructor, Aviator, Planner)
a. Certain billets throughout the Marine Corps require that Marines
exercise skills that are unique to those specific billets. Reporting
officials should outline specific duties associated with these unique billets
in the MRO’s billet description and billet accomplishments, and comment on
the MRO’s ability to execute these duties with mandatory comments. This
informs the CMC on the MRO’s potential to serve in the same billet at a
higher level of command. Examples below.
b. Base or Camp Commander’s efforts towards improving conditions of
housing, and their ability to address housing and facilities concerns.
c. Extent of fulfillment of the execution and oversight of the command's
safety policy, when applicable, but especially when MRO is filling an
executive officer's or deputy commander's billet with their safety
responsibilities.
d. Evaluate a commander’s ability to set a command climate that is non-
permissive of misconduct and prohibited activities as defined by reference
(x).
e. Evaluate a commander’s procedural and substantive compliance with the
information and personnel security program as directed by reference (w).
f. Evaluate a commanders completion of required command climate
assessments as directed by reference (x).
g. Evaluate a commander’s focus on, and ability to achieve, the
command’s retention mission.
h. Evaluate a commander’s ability to foster an environment that
prioritizes professional military education completion to meet the
requirements prescribed in reference (o) and described by reference (ac).
i. Extent to which all Marines, especially those whose billet
specifically involves planning, supervision, training, and operational
responsibilities, exhibit Operational Risk Management (ORM) ability to
accomplish the mission. Specifically, skills in identifying hazards,
assessing those hazards for risk, making risk acceptance decisions, applying
controls to minimize the risk, and supervision.
Note: Reference (u), regarding operational risk, outlines the integral part
ORM plays in training and planning at all levels to optimize operational
capability, readiness, and mission accomplishment.
j. In the case of Marine aviators and flight officers, comment on pure
flying proficiency and when applicable, in terms of aeronautical leadership,
airborne judgment, or use of aeronautical assets. Some examples are: An
aircraft commander, flight leader designations, tactical air coordinator
(ground and airborne), mission commander, WTI or any other aeronautically
designated Marine in a position of tactical leadership.
k. Successful completion of a school or formal course of instruction, or
reasons for drop or disenrollment, when applicable. Assess the MRO’s
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-5 Enclosure (2)
capacity for learning, and their potential to excel in more advanced
schooling or schooling external to the Marine Corps.
l. Formal instructor’s ability to effectively communicate instruction
and their willingness and effectiveness in providing curriculum refinement
recommendations.
4. Instructions for Completing Section A (Administrative Information)
a. Item 1, (Marine Reported On). Complete as follows:
(1) Item 1a, (Last Name). Enter the MRO’s last name (and suffix
(e.g., JR), if appropriate).
(2) Item 1b, (First Name). Enter the MRO’s first name.
(3) Item 1c, (MI). Enter the MRO’s middle initial (without a
period). If no middle initial, leave this item blank.
(4) Item 1d, (DOD ID). Enter the MRO’s DoD Identification Number
(DOD ID), expressed as 10 digits without spaces or hyphenation. This number
is the most critical administrative item of information entered on the form.
An incorrect or missing DOD ID number will preclude or delay the entry of the
report into the Marine’s record.
(5) Item 1e, (Rank). Enter the MRO’s rank using the appropriate rank
abbreviation:
Enlisted Officer
SGT 1STSGT WO 2NDLT LTCOL
SSGT MGYSGT CWO2 1STLT COL
GYSGT SGTMAJ CWO3 CAPT BGEN
MSGT CWO4 MAJ MAJGEN
CWO5
(6) Item 1f, (DOR). Enter the MRO’s date of rank in the 8-digit
format (YYYYMMDD) for the rank listed in item 1e.
Note: Enter "FROCKED" for frocked Marines.
(7) Item 1g, (PMOS). Enter the 4-digit code representing the MRO’s
PMOS.
(8) Item 1h, (BILMOS). Enter the 4-digit code representing the MOS
specified for the billet and identified in the organization’s table of
organization (T/O). If there is no duty MOS for the billet or if the MRO is
a student, then enter "N/A".
b. Item 2, (Organization). When using A-PES, the MCC, RUC, and Unit
Description will automatically populate based on Marine Corps Total Force
System (MCTFS) information. Ensure the correct codes are used to represent
the MRO’s assigned unit during the reporting period. Complete as follows:
(1) Item 2a, (MCC)
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5 Jun 2023
4-6 Enclosure (2)
(a) For Active Component, AR, SMCR, and IMA members enter the 3-
character code that identifies the MRO’s assigned monitored command (e.g.,
"121" indicates the 1st Marine Division). Reference (l) lists current MCC
codes. When mobilized in the Reserve Component, use the mobilization MCC.
(b) For IRR members under Reserve Counterpart Training (RCT) or
reservists performing active-duty operational support (ADOS) orders, use the
MCC of the unit at which they performed the duty.
(2) Item 2b, (RUC). Enter the 5-character numeric code that
identifies the specific command or unit to which a Marine is assigned for
duty (e.g., "11320" indicates 2nd Battalion, 11th Marines). Reference (l)
contains the listing for all RUCs. For Reserve members serving on active
duty away from their parent command, other than annual training, enter the
RUC of the unit at which they performed the duty.
(3) Item 2c, (Unit Description). Enter the name of the Marine’s
parent organization. When the report is on a Marine in a TAD status,
identify the command to which the MRO is attached for TAD purposes. Avoid
local abbreviations and acronyms in descriptive titles; use only standard
abbreviations identified in reference (m).
c. Item 3, (Occasion and Period Covered). Complete as follows:
(1) Item 3a, (OCC). Enter the two-letter code from chapter 3,
paragraph 3c that identifies the appropriate reporting occasion for the
report.
(2) Item 3b, (From/To). Enter the 8-digit (YYYYMMDD) beginning
(from) and ending (to) dates of the reporting period.
(a) The beginning date is the first day after the ending date of
the last submitted report; check the date gap tracker tool on the MMRP Tab
via A-PES.
(b) The ending date of the reporting period for Marines who
receive promotions, commissions, frockings, and reductions is the day the
Marine is actually promoted, commissioned, frocked, or reduced.
(c) RSs should identify periods of non-availability section I
(see chapter 3).
(3) Item 3c, (Type). Enter the 1-letter code that identifies the
type of duty being reported as follows:
(a) "N" for normal peacetime reporting.
(b) "C" for combat (see paragraph 18b(1)(c) of this chapter for
directed comment requirements and chapter 6, paragraph 3e for Combat Report
Criteria).
(c) "J" for joint duty (see paragraph 18b(1)(c) of this chapter
for directed comment requirements and description of circumstances that
warrant a joint report).
(d) "B" for both combat and joint (see paragraphs listed above
for “C” and “J” type reports).
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-7 Enclosure (2)
(e) "A" for academic and training duty (see chapter 6, paragraph
(4)). Use code "A" for students only.
d. Item 4, (Duty Assignment (Descriptive Title)). Enter the abbreviated
description of the duty assignment and the command level to which the MRO is
assigned.
(1) The RS may use clearly recognizable abbreviations from
reference (m).
(2) Use the title that most clearly describes the primary duty and
responsibilities of the MRO; it need not be the T/O billet title (e.g., T/O
lists the MRO as a squadron pilot and the line number indicates assistant
operations officer).
e. Item 5, (Special Case). Complete as follows:
(1) Item 5a, (Adverse). Mark this block with an “X” to indicate that
the contents of the report constitute an adverse evaluation of the MRO.
Refer to Chapter 5 when preparing an adverse report.
Note: If the RO renders the report adverse, ensure the block is marked with
an "X", especially when using the .pdf form.
(2) Item 5b, (Not Observed). Mark this block with an “X” to indicate
that the report is N/O per the provisions of chapter 3, paragraph 6.
Note: If marked, the RS will not complete sections C through H.
(3) Item 5c, (Extended). Mark this block with an “X” to indicate
that the report is extended per the provisions of chapter 3.
Note: If marked, the RS will not complete sections B through H.
f. Item 6, (Marine Subject of:). Complete as follows:
(1) Item 6a, (Commendatory Material)
(a) Mark the block with an "X" if the MRO was the subject of any
of the following:
1. Presentation of a personal military decoration as defined
in reference (n).
Note: Do not mark this block for award recommendations. The RS can address
the circumstances surrounding the award recommendation in section I as
appropriate; however, the RS cannot discuss pending award recommendations per
reference (n).
2. Presentation of a Certificate of Commendation.
3. Presentation of a foreign, joint, other service, or
federal department/agency award that has been concurred with, and authorized
by, the Manpower Management Military Awards (MMMA) Branch, HQMC. If the
member is found to be ineligible or not authorized to retain the foreign,
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-8 Enclosure (2)
joint, or federal department/agency award, the performance evaluation should
not be commendatory.
4. Presentation of a certificate of scholarship achievement
presented upon graduation from a formal course of instruction (not to be
confused with a course completion certificate or diploma). This also applies
to civilian education if the MRO is named for a scholastic achievement such
as the Dean’s List or the Honor Roll.
5. Presentation of a certificate as the honor/distinguished
graduate or Gung Ho award recipient from a resident PME school.
(b) Receipt of a Campaign, Expeditionary, or Service Award (ie.
HSM, OVSM), unit decoration, Letter of Appreciation, Meritorious Mast,
Command Coin, or a certificate for achieving a high score on either the PFT
or CFT is not considered commendatory material for fitness report purposes.
(c) The RS must provide a directed comment on the nature of the
commendatory material in section I.
(d) Do not submit award citations or other commendatory
documentation with the fitness report.
(2) Item 6b, (Derogatory Material). This mark will render the report
adverse; refer to Chapter 5 for a detailed definition of derogatory material
and for procedures on completing adverse fitness reports.
(3) Item 6c, (Disciplinary Action). This mark will render the report
adverse; refer to Chapter 5 for a detailed definition of disciplinary action
and for procedures on completing adverse fitness reports.
g. Item 7, (Recommended For Promotion). Promotion reflects recognition
of consistent competitive performance over a career. The burden for that
consistency belongs with the MRO. Item 7 permits the RS to recommend the MRO
for promotion based on his or her exhibited performance during the reporting
period and the RS’s assessment of that performance and the Marine’s
potential.
(1) Mark block 7a (Yes) if the RS recommends the MRO for promotion
with contemporaries. Marking block 7a indicates the RS considers the MRO
promotable when eligible for consideration for selection for promotion. Also
mark when report is identified in item 5 section A as "extended".
(2) Mark block 7b (No) if RS does not recommend the MRO for promotion
with contemporaries. This mark will render the report adverse; refer to
Chapter 5 for procedures on completing adverse fitness reports.
(3) Mark block 7c, (N/A) if:
(a) The reporting occasion for the report is a GC.
(b) The MRO is a Chief Warrant Officer 5, LDO Lieutenant Colonel,
Sergeant Major, or Master Gunnery Sergeant.
(c) Item 5b (Not Observed) is marked in section A.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-9 Enclosure (2)
(4) Accelerated Promotion. Do not mark any block if the RS
recommends the MRO for promotion ahead of contemporaries (accelerated
promotion).
(a) RSs should reserve an accelerated promotion recommendation
strictly for the Marine who is "the one above" and who is eminently capable
of immediately assuming the responsibilities of the next higher grade.
(b) Per the provisions of reference (n), regarding enlisted
promotions, the accelerated promotion program is designed to provide
selection opportunity to Sergeants and Staff Sergeants who do not meet the
DOR or AFADBD (USMC and AR) or PEBD (IRR/SMCR) cutoff required for below-zone
consideration, are PME complete, and who are otherwise eligible for
promotion.
(c) The only effect of recommending a Sergeants or Staff
Sergeants for accelerated promotion is that the Marine will be added to the
below zone on the next promotion board if the Marine does not currently meet
the criteria to be in the below zone. A recommendation for accelerated
promotion does not guarantee that a Marine will be considered for promotion.
The president of the promotion board is the ultimate authority on which
packages are approved for consideration.
(d) Reporting Senior (RS) Action
1. Enter the following statement at the conclusion of the
Directed Comments in section I: "I recommend that the MRO be considered for
promotion ahead of contemporaries."
2. Attach a separate addendum page to the fitness report per
paragraph 16 of this chapter. Provide supporting rationale for the
recommendation. This is a separate and distinct procedure from the
narratives that report performance in sections C and I and any justifications
for sections D through H.
(e) Reviewing Officer (RO) Action Separate from the mark in
section K, item 2, the RO must make a specific concurring or non-concurring
comment in section K concerning the recommendation for accelerated promotion.
Non-concurrence is not considered adverse.
Note: If the RO’s knowledge and observation of the MRO is insufficient, the
RO should comment on this fact in section K, stating that he or she can
neither concur nor non-concur with the recommendation for accelerated
promotion.
h. Item 8, (Special Information). Complete as follows:
(1) Item 8a, (QUAL). Enter the two-letter code from the list below
that reflects the MRO’s rifle qualification status and pistol qualification
status in the block, if the qualification occurred during the reporting
period. Enter the rifle qualification code as the first letter and the
pistol qualification code as the second letter.
Rifle/Pistol Codes
D - (distinguished) N - (not required)
E - (expert) U - (unqualified)
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-10 Enclosure (2)
S - (sharpshooter) X - (required did not fire)
M - (marksman)
(a) Marksmanship data will reflect the MRO’s results per
reference (p), the entry-level and sustainment marksmanship training with the
service rifle and service pistol, that occurred during the reporting period
and were officially recorded in MCTFS.
(b) Use the code "D" for a Marine who is exempt from qualifying
because he or she is a distinguished shooter. Refer to reference (p) for
requirements to maintain the distinguished shooter qualification.
(c) Use codes "E", "S", or "M" as appropriate to reflect the
MRO’s qualification/requalification classification.
(d) Use code "N" if:
1. The MRO is not required to requalify or the requirement
is waived per the exceptions to qualifications described in reference (p).
2. The MRO cannot requalify due to a domestic violence
conviction and falls under the provisions of the 30 September 1996 Lautenberg
Amendment to the Gun Control Act of 1968.
Note: Only comment per chapter 5, paragraph 6f(12).
3. The MRO was required to qualify but the event was not
scheduled during the reporting period.
Note: Code "N" has no adverse connotations.
4. The MRO qualified, requalified, or failed to qualify
during the current annual qualification period, but the event occurred during
a previous reporting period.
(e) Use code "U" for a Marine who fails to qualify/requalify.
Note: Code "U" has adverse implications if the RS deems the MRO’s failure to
qualify resulted from a lack of effort or negligence on the part of the MRO
per reference (p).
(f) Use code "X" if the MRO was required to, but did not, fire
during the annual qualification/requalification period (i.e., medical
reasons, TAD, etc.).
Note: Code "X" has adverse implications if the RS deems the MRO did not fire
because of a lack of due diligence on the part of the Marine. In this
context, lack of due diligence reflects the MRO failing to get scheduled on a
firing detail or ignoring a scheduled range assignment.
(g) A directed comment is required for codes “U” or “X”. The RS
must explain if they believe that the MRO was or was not complicit or
negligent in their failure to qualify/requalify, or failed to exercise due
diligence. This negligence may render the report adverse. See chapter 5 for
adverse report instructions.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-11 Enclosure (2)
(2) Item 8b, (PFT). Enter the four-letter/digit code from the list
below. PFT data will reflect the MRO's results per MCO reference (q) which
occurred during the reporting period and is the most recent score officially
recorded in MCTFS.
Note: PFTs taken for CG or IG inspections or as part of formal school or
course induction will also be appropriately recorded in item 8b. A failure
of any officially sanctioned PFT renders the report adverse.
Physical Fitness Test (PFT) Codes
A - (passed with lst class, 3-digit score)
B - (passed with 2nd class, 3-digit score)
C - (passed with 3rd class, 3-digit score)
F - (failed, 3-digit score)
RDNT - (required did not take)
NMED - (not medically qualified)
PART - (passed partial PFT)
NREQ - (not required)
(a) If the MRO passes the PFT, use codes "A", "B", or "C"
together with the three-digit score as appropriate to report the MRO's
passing PFT result.
(b) If the MRO failed the PFT, use code "F" together with the
three-digit score to report the MRO's failure of the PFT (e.g. “F135” vice
“F0”). If the MRO achieves a passing overall score, but failed to achieve
the minimum score on a single event, the RS must state which event the MRO
failed. This code renders the report adverse. See chapter 5 for adverse
report instructions.
(c) If the MRO failed, but later passed a PFT during the
reporting period, item 8b will reflect “C150”. The RS must include the MRO’s
remediated PFT score by event in section I, and include a directed comment
stating the MRO failed a PFT during the reporting period. This code renders
the report adverse. See Chapter 5 for adverse report instructions.
(d) Use code "RDNT" if the MRO was required to, but did not take
the PFT.
Note: Code "RNDT" has adverse implications if the RS deems the MRO did not
take the PFT because of a lack of due diligence on the part of the Marine.
The RS must provide an amplifying comment in section I when using this code.
(e) Use code "NMED" if the MRO is unable to take or pass the PFT
because of a medical condition.
(f) Use code "PART" if the MRO took and passed a partial PFT.
Note: The RS must provide a directed comment in section I that specifies the
event(s) completed and the MRO’s score for the event(s) completed. The RS
shall not include comments that detail the reason(s) why the MRO completed a
partial PFT. The RS may indicate that the MRO was on light/limited duty, but
must not state the reason why the MRO was on light/limited duty.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-12 Enclosure (2)
(g) Use the code "NREQ" if:
1. The MRO did not run a PFT because none was required
during the reporting period.
2. The PFT requirement was waived for units deployed to a
combat zone, the RS must state the waiver authority in section I.
(h) If the MRO is pregnant/postpartum (first twelve months after
the date of the birth event), use code "NMED". If the MRO voluntarily took
the PFT during the reporting period, report the result using the appropriate
PFT code.
(3) Item 8c, (CFT). Enter the four-letter/digit code from the list
below. CFT data will reflect the MRO's results per MCO reference (q) which
occurred during the reporting period and is the most recent score officially
recorded in MCTFS.
Note: CFTs taken for CG or IG inspections or as part of formal school or
course induction will also be appropriately recorded in item 8b. A failure
of any officially sanctioned CFT renders the report adverse.
Combat Fitness Test (CFT) Codes
A - (passed with lst class, 3-digit score)
B - (passed with 2nd class, 3-digit score)
C - (passed with 3rd class, 3-digit score)
F - (failed, 3-digit score)
RDNT - (required did not take)
NMED - (not medically qualified)
PART - (passed partial CFT)
NREQ - (not required)
(a) If the MRO passes the CFT, use codes "A", "B", or "C"
together with the three-digit score as appropriate to report the MRO's
passing CFT result.
(b) If the MRO failed the CFT, use code "F" together with the
three-digit score to report the MRO's failure of the CFT (e.g. “F135” vice
“F0”). If the MRO achieves a passing overall score, but failed to achieve
the minimum score on a single event, the RS must state which event the MRO
failed. This code renders the report adverse. See Chapter 5 for adverse
report instructions.
(c) If the MRO failed, but later passed a CFT during the
reporting period, item 8b will reflect “C150”. The RS must include the MRO’s
remediated CFT score by event in section I, and include a directed comment
stating the MRO failed a CFT during the reporting period. This code renders
the report adverse. See Chapter 5 for adverse report instructions.
(d) Use code "RDNT" if the MRO was required to, but did not take
the CFT.
Note: Code "RNDT" has adverse implications if the RS deems the MRO did not
take the CFT because of a lack of due diligence on the part of the Marine.
The RS must provide an amplifying comment in section I when using this code.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-13 Enclosure (2)
(e) Use code "NMED" if the MRO is unable to take or pass the CFT
because of a medical condition.
(f) Use code "PART" if the MRO took and passed a partial CFT.
Note: The RS must provide a directed comment in section I that specifies the
event(s) completed and the MRO’s score for the event(s) completed. The RS
shall not include comments that detail the reason(s) why the MRO completed a
partial CFT. The RS may indicate that the MRO was on light/limited duty, but
must not state the reason why the MRO was on light/limited duty.
(g) Use the code "NREQ" if:
1. The MRO did not run a CFT because none was required
during the reporting period.
2. The CFT requirement was waived for units deployed to a
combat zone, the RS must state the waiver authority in section I.
(h) If the MRO is pregnant/postpartum (first twelve months after
the date of the birth event), use code "NMED". If the MRO voluntarily took
the CFT during the reporting period, report the result using the appropriate
CFT code.
(4) Item 8d, (HT (in.)). Enter the MRO's accurate height in inches.
Note: The height from the MRO’s most recent official weigh-in, as outlined
in reference (r), must be used.
(5) Item 8e, (WT)
(a) Enter the MRO's accurate weight in pounds.
Note: The weight from the MRO’s most recent official weigh-in, as outlined
in reference (r), must be used.
(b) If the MRO's weight exceeds the maximum allowable standard,
enter the MRO's body fat percentage in item 8f (Body Fat).
(c) If the MRO was diagnosed with a new or worsening medical
condition which unexpectedly caused weight gain, or if the MRO is pregnant or
in the postpartum period (first 12 months after the date of the birth event),
omit the weight and enter the four letter code "EXMP".
(6) Item 8f, (Body Fat)
(a) Enter the MRO's body fat percentage as a one or two-digit
number if the MRO's weight exceeds the standard. Example: Enter “9” for an
MRO whose body fat percentage is 9 percent, or “21” for an MRO whose body fat
percentage is 21 percent.
(b) Leave this item blank if the MRO’s weight is within maximum
allowable standards or the MRO is pregnant/postpartum (first 12 months after
the date of the birth event).
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-14 Enclosure (2)
(c) If the body fat percentage reported is greater than the
maximum allowed for the MRO’s age group per reference (r), the report is
adverse unless:
1. Section I contains a directed comment that an
appropriately credentialed health care provider diagnosed the individual’s
weight condition to be the result of an underlying cause or associated
disease process.
2. Section I contains a directed comment that the MRO has
been granted a BCP waiver per reference (r).
3. Section I contains a directed comment, “MRO is exempt
from body fat limits due to his/her PFT and CFT scores”; or, “MRO is within
body fat limits due to the one percent allowance given for his/her PFT and
CFT scores.”
(d) See paragraph 18b(6)(c) of this chapter and chapter 5,
paragraph 1c(2) for additional instruction in the event the MRO’s body fat
percentage is within the acceptable standards, but the MRO’s military
appearance is not acceptable.
(7) Item 8g, (Reserve Component). Use this item for Reserve
Component Marines only. The RS must enter the abbreviation SMCR, IMA, IRR,
or AR reflecting the Reserve Component to which the Marine belonged during
the reporting period.
(8) Item 8h, (Status). Use this item only for gunnery sergeants.
(a) Enter "F" if the MRO's promotion preference as indicated on
the MROW is first sergeant or "M" if the preference is master sergeant.
(b) Leave this item blank for all other grades, and on "GC"
reports.
(c) The RS must comment in section I, recommending what grade the
gunnery sergeant is best qualified to fill. This comment is the RS’s
observation and is not required to agree with the MRO’s preference in this
block.
Note: No comment is required for N/O reports, extended reports, or reports
where the RS does not recommend the MRO for promotion (section A, item 7b).
(d) RSs must ensure the accuracy of the MRO's preference entered
in the block. The RS may not change the MRO’s indicated preference, even if
the RS does not agree with the selected preference. Once HQMC processes the
report, this item cannot be administratively changed by MMRP. Substantive
corrections of this nature must be changed by the Performance Evaluation
Review Board (PERB) or Board for Correction of Naval Records (BCNR).
(9) Item 8i, (Future Use). Leave blank.
i. Item 9, (Duty Preference). Completion of items 9a and 9b is
optional. RSs may comment as deemed necessary in section I concerning the
MRO’s duty preferences.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-15 Enclosure (2)
(1) Item 9a, (Code). Enter the three-character code indicating the
MRO’s first, second, and third duty preference.
(a) Use the geographic duty preferences codes and monitored
command codes (not school codes) in reference (l).
(b) Indicate three duty preferences for Marines in the AR
Program.
(c) Leave item 9a blank for SMCR or IRR Marines.
(2) Item 9b, (Descriptive Title). Enter the titles for the duty
preferences indicated in item 9a. Leave item 9b blank for SMCR or IRR
Marines.
j. Item 10 (Reporting Senior). Complete as follows:
(1) Item 10a, (Last Name). Enter the RS’s last name.
(2) Item 10b, (Init). Enter the RS’s first and middle initials.
(3) Item 10c, (Service). Enter the abbreviation from the list below
that represents the RS’s service affiliation.
Service Abbreviations
U.S. Marine Corps - USMC Army National Guard - ANG
U.S. Army - USA Air Force National Guard - AFNG
U.S. Air Force – USAF Civilian - CIV
U.S. Navy - USN Foreign Military Service – FMS
U.S. Coast Guard - USCG (FMS on .pdf only)
U.S. Space Force - USSF
(4) Item 10d, (DOD ID). Enter the RS’s 10-digit DOD ID number
without spaces or hyphenation. Leave blank if the RS does not have a DOD ID
number.
(5) Item 10e, (Rank)
(a) Enter the abbreviation from the list below that represents
the RS’s military rank.
Officers (USMC, USA, USAF, USSF)
WO - Warrant Officer CWO4 - Chief Warrant Officer 4
CWO2 - Chief Warrant Officer 2 CWO5 - Chief Warrant Officer 5
CWO3 - Chief Warrant Officer 3
2NDLT - Second Lieutenant COL - Colonel
1STLT - First Lieutenant BGEN - Brigadier General
CAPT - Captain MAJGEN - Major General
MAJ - Major LTGEN - Lieutenant General
LTCOL - Lieutenant Colonel GEN – General
Officers (USN, USCG)
WO - Warrant Officer CWO4 - Chief Warrant Officer 4
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-16 Enclosure (2)
CWO2 - Chief Warrant Officer 2 CWO5 - Chief Warrant Officer 5
CWO3 - Chief Warrant Officer 3
ENS - Ensign CAPT - Captain
LTJG - Lieutenant Junior Grade RDML - Rear Admiral Lower Half
LT - Lieutenant RADM - Rear Admiral Upper Half
LCDR - Lieutenant Commander VADM - Vice Admiral
CDR - Commander ADM - Admiral
(b) If the RS is a civilian, enter the appropriate grade without
using a dash (i.e., “GS11” vice “GS-11”).
(c) If the RS is a foreign military officer, use the equivalent
U.S. military grade.
(6) Item 10f, (Duty Assignment). Enter the RS’s duty assignment.
k. Item 11, (Reviewing Officer). Complete as follows:
(1) Item 11a, (Last Name). Enter the RO’s last name.
(2) Item 11b, (Init). Enter the RO’s first and middle initials.
(3) Item 11c, (Service). Enter the abbreviation from the list for
item 10c that represents the RS’s service affiliation.
(4) Item 11d, (DOD ID). Enter the RO’s 10-digit DOD ID number
without spaces or hyphenation. Leave blank if the RO does not have a DOD ID
number.
(5) Item 11e, (Rank)
(a) If the RO is a member of the U.S. military, enter the
abbreviation from the list for item 10e that represents the RO’s military
rank.
(b) If the RO is a civilian, enter the appropriate grade without
using a dash (i.e., “GS15” vice “GS-15”).
(c) If the RO is a foreign military officer, use the equivalent
U.S. military rank abbreviation from the list for item 10e.
(6) Item 11f, (Duty Assignment). Enter the RO’s duty assignment.
5. Instructions for Completing Section B (Billet Description)
a. Purpose. This section of the fitness report provides the reporting
senior an opportunity to describe the scope of duties which form the basis
for evaluating the MRO during the reporting period. The billet description
should not restate the prerequisites of the Marine’s MOS; it should highlight
for the reader of the report the nature of the billet and the MRO’s
significant responsibilities as they relate to the accomplishment of his or
her unit’s or organization’s mission during the reporting period.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-17 Enclosure (2)
b. Process
(1) Given the report’s space limitations, the MRO’s billet
description must focus on the essential elements of his or her billet in
specific and concise terms.
(2) RSs must complete section B for all reports except extended
reports.
(3) At a minimum, the RS should describe those duties and
responsibilities considered most important; it should frame the RS’s
expectation of the MRO. It must focus on acceptable standards vice goals.
(4) Within 30 days of establishing the reporting relationship between
the RS and the MRO, the RS and MRO should meet to establish and formalize the
MRO’s billet description. The RS should ensure that the MRO begins a MROW.
(5) This does not mean that a billet description developed at the
start of the reporting period is inflexible. What appears in section B must,
by necessity, be a guideline; it is subject to adjustment, addition, and
deletion based upon the dynamic nature of any single reporting period.
(6) Section B does not necessarily remain the same from one reporting
period to the next.
(7) Section B is not a contract between RS and MRO, but a general
understanding between the two of the basic duties inherent to the billet.
c. Structure and Content
(1) RSs must restrict section B comments to the space provided; no
additional comments or addendum pages are authorized.
(a) Make entries using bulletized text format.
(b) Precede each entry by a distinctive mark (e.g., a circle or
dash).
(2) Entries will highlight the MRO’s significant primary, additional,
and special duties assigned by the RS.
(a) Limits on space require the RS to determine those areas
deemed most important for that reporting period.
(b) Billet descriptions for Marines in unique billets as
described in paragraph 3 of this chapter should highlight unique expectations
of this billet.
(3) When preparing this section:
(a) Omit superlative adjectives, needless statistics, and
imprecise phrasing.
(b) Make comments objective so as not to create any unintended
valuation of the particular billet.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-18 Enclosure (2)
(c) Normal capitalization rules apply. Do not use UPPERCASE,
underlining, "quotation marks," boldface, italics, or punctuation (#!&%?...)
in exclamation.
(4) Limit abbreviations and acronyms to those widely understood and
included in the service glossary of acronyms and terms in reference (m).
(5) As appropriate, use specific performance standards in section B.
Performance standards are part and parcel of the discussions between RS and
MRO. Such specifics are elements of the personal counseling program that the
RS conducts within the unit, forming the basis for a continuing program of
direction, discussion, guidance, and correction. Select the most significant
standards; do not try to list them all.
(6) Unique Billets: Reporting officials should highlight during the
initial counseling and include on the performance evaluation, their
expectations for duties that are unique to certain billets (i.e. Commanders,
Executive Officer, Base/Camp Commander, Student, Instructor, Aviator,
Planner). See paragraph 3 of this chapter.
d. Modifications to the Billet Description. An MRO’s billet description
is not an inflexible, unchanging element of the performance report and should
never be viewed as final.
(1) It is an integral, fundamental link to an effective PES and will
receive the greatest attention at the beginning of an evaluation period when
the MRO is new to a billet, and at the end of a marked period when the RS and
MRO review and update the billet description as appropriate.
(2) During the course of the reporting period, the RS can change or
modify the billet description. The completed billet description should
reflect significant duties and responsibilities performed by the MRO over the
course of the reporting period.
(3) To ensure understanding, the RS must, as soon as practical,
discuss any changes in the billet description with the MRO. The duties and
responsibilities list serves to guide the MRO, RS, and RO in the focus and
direction of the performance evaluation, and shall not tie the hands of the
RS in creating a professionally objective report of the MRO’s performance.
6. Instructions for Completing Section C (Billet Accomplishments)
a. Purpose. While section B concentrates on the MRO’s assigned duties,
the focus in section C is on what the MRO accomplished (the MRO’s results and
achievements). Section C must:
(1) Highlight the MRO’s accomplishments that the RS considers most
significant for the reporting period. (If applicable, reporting of adverse
performance should be reserved for sections D through H and in the section I
narrative documentation.)
(2) Complement the information contained in section B by providing an
accurate account of exactly what the Marine accomplished in the billet.
(3) Be objective rather than qualitative in nature.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-19 Enclosure (2)
(4) List only the results and achievements themselves and avoid all
reference to personal qualities or potential impact of the MRO’s
contributions.
Note: The RS will assess how well the Marine performed assigned duties in
sections D through I.
(5) Section C is not completed for extended and N/O reports.
b. Process. When MROs submit their section A data to their RS, they
should also submit a list of billet accomplishments. The MROW provides a
vehicle for this process. Additionally, the RS may find counseling notes and
unit input helpful in compiling a list of the Marine’s accomplishments for
the reporting period.
(1) Completing section C requires the RS to prioritize the Marine’s
accomplishments and contributions for the reporting period.
(2) Items in section C must relate directly to assigned duties even
though these responsibilities may not appear in section B.
Note: Do not reference the MRO’s participation as a member of a selection
board or court-martial.
c. Structure and Content
(1) RSs must restrict section C comments to the space provided; no
additional comments or addendum pages are authorized.
(a) Make entries using bulletized text format.
(b) Precede each entry by a distinctive mark (e.g., a circle or
dash).
(c) Do not address awards, other commendatory material, adverse
material, or disciplinary action in section C. The RS should address
commendatory and adverse items in justification comments for sections D
through H and in the section I narrative.
(2) Use section C to explain the results of the MRO’s execution of
his or her billet responsibilities during the reporting period.
(3) When preparing this section:
(a) Omit superlative adjectives, needless statistics, and
imprecise phrasing.
(b) Make comments objective, avoid creating any unintended
valuation of the particular billet.
(c) Normal capitalization rules apply. Do not use UPPERCASE,
underlining, "quotation marks," boldface, italics, or punctuation (#!&%?...)
in exclamation.
(4) Entries in section C should be short and direct, using words and
phrases commonly understood by most Marines. The RS should complete section
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-20 Enclosure (2)
C with the reader in mind, avoiding the use of acronyms and terms specific to
one community or MOS.
(5) Unique Billets: Reporting officials should highlight the
accomplishment of duties that are unique to certain billets (i.e. Commanders,
Executive Officer, Base/Camp Commander, Student, Instructor, Aviator,
Planner). See paragraph 3 of this chapter.
7. Instructions for Completing Sections D, E, F, G, and H
a. General. The fitness report describes the "whole Marine" both on and
off duty. This picture goes beyond the MRO’s assigned duties (section B) and
what the Marine accomplished (section C); it also records the manner in which
the Marine discharged those duties and responsibilities. Sections D, E, F,
G, and H comprise 14 attributes that give the RS a broad cross-section of
areas to evaluate the MRO that the Marine Corps deems most important.
Note: The RS shall mark the attribute in section H N/O for all Marines who
do not have reporting official responsibilities.
(1) The report divides the 14 attributes into five sections:
(a) Mission accomplishment.
(b) Individual character.
(c) Leadership.
(d) Intellect and wisdom.
(e) Fulfillment of evaluation responsibilities
(2) Collectively, these attributes provide a clear picture of the
Marine’s demonstrated capacities, abilities, and character.
b. Performance-Anchored Rating Scales (PARS). Sections D, E, F, G, and
H include PARS for each of the 14 attributes that form the heart of the
fitness report.
(1) Performance-Anchored Rating Scales:
(a) Provide complete descriptors for each evaluated attribute.
For each attribute, the PARSs reflect:
1. The definition of the attribute.
2. Descriptions of levels of demonstrated performance
related to the attribute.
3. A marking gradient.
(b) Reduce the requirement for written comments, provide
objectivity and consistency, and center on Marine Corps expectations.
(c) Evaluate the MRO against definitive degrees of performance.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-21 Enclosure (2)
(2) Markings of "A" to "H" correspond to three scaled descriptions to
stimulate the RS’s cognitive reasoning in making the appropriate selection.
(3) The scales run from left to right; each attribute is distinctly
separate from the others.
c. Marking Philosophy. A marking philosophy refers to the weight a RS
assigns to the PARS for individual attributes. For example, a certain RS may
treat the “B” PAR as a below-average mark, the “C” PAR as an average mark,
the “D” PAR as an above-average mark, and so on.
(1) A marking philosophy serves two primary purposes:
(a) It provides RSs with a method to measure the efforts and
abilities of Marines across the 14 attributes.
(b) It serves as a practical scale that, when explained at the
onset of the reporting relationship, and when coupled with PARS criteria,
objectively communicates a RS’s expectations.
(2) Marking philosophies are unique to individual RSs.
(3) The PARS descriptors provide the framework for RSs to develop
their own marking philosophy. Once a RS has decided on a marking philosophy,
they must maintain that same marking philosophy for all ranks and all MOSs
for the entirety of their career. If a RS were to change their marking
philosophy mid-career it would have drastic effects on the Marines for whom
they had previously written fitness reports.
(4) The performance evaluation process has the potential to be a
subjective process. It is the RS’ responsibility to eliminate as much
subjectivity as possible by developing objective criteria, similar to the
provided “PARS descriptors,” for each individual PAR for all 14 attributes.
(a) For example, a RS, keeping his or her marking philosophy in
mind, must set criteria for what rates an A, B, C, D, E, F, and G PAR for the
“Performance” attribute for a Sergeant, Staff Sergeant, Gunnery Sergeant,
etc. They must then repeat this process for the remaining 13 attributes.
(b) Unlike a RS’s marking philosophy, PAR criteria will not
remain the same for all ranks, or all MOSs/billets. The RS’s PAR criteria
must be adapted for each rank and each MOS/billet.
1. For example, the criteria that warrants a “D” attribute
mark for the “Leading Subordinates” attribute of a sergeant with an infantry
MOS must be kept in perspective of the billet the MRO has been placed in, and
the MRO’s exhibited effort within that billet. It is unlikely that the
billet a sergeant with an administrative MOS is going to be placed in is
going to be identical to the billet that an infantry sergeant is placed in.
In other words, you are not going to expect the administrative sergeant to be
an expert at leading squad-level field exercises and effective squad-level
fields of fire; similarly, you would not expect an infantry sergeant to be an
expert at verifying unit diary entries and appropriately tasking Marine Corps
Total Force Structure responsibilities.
2. The same rationale applies for Marines of different
ranks. If “D” denotes above-average performance within a RS’s profile, then
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
4-22 Enclosure (2)
it should do so regardless of the MRO’s rank; however, the criteria that
justifies the “D” attribute mark for a staff sergeant is going to be much
different than the criteria that justifies that same mark for a master
sergeant.
Note: If a RS does not establish distinct PAR criteria for each separate
rank, then inflation will be rampant amongst the higher ranking profiles.
(c) In order to establish accurate PAR criteria that will remain
valid throughout the RS’s career, it is essential that reporting officials:
1. Thoroughly understand an MRO’s billet and
responsibilities.
2. Receive mentoring from experienced Marines on realistic
PAR criteria for all 14 attributes for all ranks.
(5) For each attribute the RS must, at a minimum, give consideration
to the individual’s grade, experience within grade, and accumulated
experience as a Marine.
(6) There is no place for "welcome aboard" reports or other
techniques that skew performance records.
(7) Fitness reports document performance during a defined period for
a specific set of duties and responsibilities as defined in the billet
description.
(8) All Marines grow personally and professionally, but each does so
within the bounds of their personal ability. The Marine, by individual
performance over the course of a career, develops a record on his or her own
merits.
(9) Few Marines can excel in all aspects of their duties. A Marine
who is an exceptional leader could be only average in writing skills or
knowledge. A Marine who displayed decisiveness in one billet may display
hesitancy in another. Only accurate evaluations of each case in the context
of time and circumstance will provide the CMC a clear picture of an
individual.
(10) A Marine for whom an RS can find no deficiencies in a given area
is not, by definition or default, a Marine deserving an "F" or "G" marking;
the MRO may well be a solid, commendable "B" or "C".
(11) The purpose of sections D, E, F, G, and H is not to find fault,
nor is it to exaggerate the competence of individuals, but rather to
objectively evaluate Marines on their own merits. Attribute grades should be
earned, not given; they should reflect the MRO’s exhibited efforts and
results; the marks should not be based on a preconceived or artificial
fitness report average.
(12) RSs must not inflate performance. The CMC (MMRP-30) will
scrutinize RSs’ grading histories in accordance with chapter 8, paragraph 13
and return noncompliant reports.
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5 Jun 2023
4-23 Enclosure (2)
d. Marking Procedures. The RS must:
(1) Review the descriptors in each PARS thoroughly.
(2) Determine the position on the scale that best reflects the
performance or behavior of the MRO during the evaluation period. Grades are
earned by the MRO’s displayed efforts and apparent results; they are not
given to attain a perceived fitness report average or relative value.
e. Mandatory Justifications. All "A," "F," or "G" marks require written
justification in the block provided below each section. Do not justify "B,"
"C," "D," "E," or "H" marks.
(1) Discussion
(a) Unacceptable Performance. An "A" in any of the attributes
constitutes an unsatisfactory marking and renders the entire report adverse
(see paragraph 4e(1) of this chapter and chapter 5).
1. A single event or action may be significant enough to
support an unsatisfactory marking.
2. The RS must specifically address the unacceptable
performance or deficiency and the conditions under which it occurred in the
"JUSTIFICATION" space provided.
(b) Distinguished (Exceptional) Performance. The scaled measures
"F" and "G" describe exceptional, sustained performance throughout the
reporting period.
1. Rarely should isolated incidents, of themselves, merit a
marking in either of these blocks.
2. Marines marked under "G" should reflect “a truly
extraordinary level of performance rarely observed…”; the few, truly
extraordinary Marines observed during the course of one’s career. This mark
demands significant justification to support such a determination.
(2) Administration
(a) Normal capitalization rules apply. Do not use UPPERCASE,
underlining, "quotation marks," boldface, italics, and punctuation (#!&%?...)
in exclamation.
(b) Reporting Seniors (RSs) must:
1. Use an addendum page when additional space is needed for
justifying an "A", "F", or "G" mark.
2. Use an addendum page when more than one attribute in a
section requires justification for an "A", "F" or "G" mark; identify the
attribute being addressed D-1, D-2, etc., as applicable.
(c) Support justification for superior markings with concrete
examples that reflect the MRO’s efforts and accomplishments of the subject
trait or characteristic over the course of the reporting period.
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5 Jun 2023
4-24 Enclosure (2)
1. Since the category description tells how it was done, the
justification narrative is what was done – concrete examples without
exaggeration.
2. A one-time accomplishment, unless of such noteworthy
character as to be appropriate, does not justify an "F" or "G" marking.
(d) Justifications must withstand three tests; they must be:
1. Verifiable.
2. Substantive.
3. Quantifiable (where possible).
(e) In the case of an adverse marking, the justification must
clearly describe the nature and conditions of the observed poor performance
with appropriate clarity and breadth to support the mark.
f. Not Observed (N/O). The RS should mark block "H" for those instances
when the period of observation precludes an accurate assessment. N/O marks
should be the exception.
8. Section D - Mission Accomplishment
a. General
(1) Reporting officials should begin every performance evaluation by
asking themselves these fundamental questions:
(a) On the basis of the duties I assigned over the course of this
reporting period, how well did the MRO perform?
(b) How efficient was the MRO in using the resources at their
disposal?
(c) How would I assess this Marine’s level of proficiency in the
skills needed for this particular billet?
(2) In section D, Mission Accomplishment, the RS provides the CMC
answers to the above questions.
(a) These assessments give an overall picture of an evaluated
Marine’s ability and success getting the job done during the reporting
period.
(b) Mission Accomplishment addresses both the ends (results) and
the means (how the MRO achieved those results). Section D contains two
evaluated attributes that are distinct, separate components of Mission
Accomplishment, which, when taken together, provide a balanced overall
picture of the Marine: Performance and Proficiency.
b. Performance
(1) Definition. Results achieved during the reporting period. How
well those duties inherent to a Marine’s billet, plus all additional duties,
formally and informally assigned, were carried out. Reflects a Marine’s
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5 Jun 2023
4-25 Enclosure (2)
aptitude, competence, and commitment to the unit’s success above personal
reward. Indicators are time and resource management, task prioritization,
and tenacity to achieve positive ends consistently.
(2) Scaled Measurements
(a) "B" marking - Meets requirements of billet and additional
duties. Aptitude, commitment, and competence meet expectations. Results
maintain status quo.
(b) "D" marking - Consistently produces quality results while
measurably improving unit performance. Habitually makes effective use of
time and resources. Improves billet procedures and products. Positive
impact extends beyond billet expectations.
(c) "F" marking - Results far surpass expectations. Recognizes
and exploits new resources; creates opportunities. Emulated; sought after as
expert with influence beyond unit. Impact significant; innovative approaches
to problems produce significant gains in quality and efficiency.
(3) Discussion
(a) Performance is a comparison of results versus expectations.
Every leader has the responsibility to clearly identify expected standards of
performance when assigning tasks. The RS must:
1. Ensure that the MRO understands those standards.
2. Use performance standards as a gauge in measuring
results. Whereas some subordinates fall short of our expectations, others
consistently meet or even surpass what we expect of them.
(b) With performance, the RS makes an overall assessment of the
Marine’s level of accomplishments during the reporting period. This
evaluation takes into account what the Marine had to work with (budget,
personnel, material) in accomplishing the tasks assigned and how efficiently
and economically the MRO employed his or her available resources.
(c) In addition, answers to the following questions will help
determine the appropriate Performance mark:
1. How effective was the MRO in managing time?
2. How thorough was the MRO in ensuring the job was done
right every time?
(d) What kind of impact did the MRO’s personal performance have
within and outside the unit?
c. Proficiency
(1) Definition. Demonstrates technical knowledge and practical skill
in the execution of the Marine’s overall duties. Combines training,
education, and experience. Translates skills into actions which contribute
to accomplishing tasks and missions. Imparts knowledge to others. Grade
dependent.
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5 Jun 2023
4-26 Enclosure (2)
(2) Scaled Measurements
(a) "B" marking - Competent. Possesses the requisite range of
skills and knowledge commensurate with grade and experience. Understands and
articulates basic functions related to mission accomplishment.
(b) "D" marking - Demonstrates mastery of all required skills.
Expertise, education and experience consistently enhance mission
accomplishment. Innovative troubleshooter and problem solver. Effectively
imparts skills to subordinates.
(c) "F" marking - True expert in field. Knowledge and skills
impact far beyond those of peers. Translates broad-based education and
experience into forward thinking, innovative actions. Makes immeasurable
impact on mission accomplishment. Peerless teacher, selflessly imparts
expertise to subordinates, peers, and seniors.
(3) Discussion
(a) Proficiency is the MRO’s skill level. Some skills, such as
writing ability and time management, are common to many different types of
billets. Other skills relate specifically to particular billets and billet
MOSs. Reference (s) identifies specific grade-dependent skill levels that
the CMC expects Marines to maintain.
Note: Use this attribute to assess the aeronautical ability and aircraft-
specific tactical proficiency of Marine aviators as appropriate.
1. Leaders can measure these skills in a fairly objective
manner. Directives do not formally define all job-related skills; for those
not defined, the RS must rely on his or her own technical expertise and
knowledge of the billet requirements to determine a Marine’s proficiency.
2. When evaluating proficiency, the RS must consider all the
skills relevant to the Marine’s billet and assess the MRO’s skill level based
on observed performance.
3. The RS has the obligation to provide the MRO the tools to
avoid failure (i.e., proper direction, necessary performance counseling, and
the resources to get the job done).
(b) Though closely related, performance and proficiency each
warrant independent evaluation. A Marine under an RS’s charge may be
performing satisfactorily in his or her daily duties, but lacks individual
skills. Fellow Marines may be carrying the extra load, covering for a
weakness in individual proficiency in order not to hurt the section or
platoon. Conversely, one of the RS’s Marines may not have met his or her
expectations for performance, even though they clearly have the necessary
skills for the job. This Marine, for whatever reason, lacks the motivation
to fully apply individual talents and get the job done right.
(c) Example. SSgt Smith is an enlisted recruiter at Recruiting
Substation (RSS) Norfolk, Virginia. This is his first tour on recruiting
duty, and he’s been on the job for about 8 months, since completing recruiter
school. As the Commanding Officer, Recruiting Station (RS) Richmond, you are
SSgt Smith’s reporting senior and his annual fitness report is due.
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5 Jun 2023
4-27 Enclosure (2)
1. You measure the success of your recruiters primarily on
two key indicators: production and basic training completion rate. Smith’s
"production" - his ability to meet his assigned recruiting goals - has
generally been satisfactory, although he fell below production goals two
months during this reporting period. Smith’s basic training completion rate
- how well his recruits fare at Parris Island - is among the lowest in your
command.
2. You dispatched a training team from your headquarters
about halfway through this reporting period to help Smith identify and
correct problem areas affecting his production. Two months ago you
personally visited Smith at his office, went along on a home interview with a
potential applicant, and spoke at length with his SNCOIC about Smith’s
performance. From all that you have heard and can observe, Smith handles
himself well when conducting interviews, and seems better organized than a
good many of your more experienced recruiters. Overall, however, he cannot
seem to meet the objectives you have laid out for him.
(d) Explanation. In the situation above, while SSgt Smith’s
performance was clearly not up to par with your expectations, his proficiency
- his skill level - remained high. Your markings in the performance
attribute should not influence your markings under proficiency. SSgt Smith
rates a fairly high marking in this particular attribute - his demonstrated
mastery of those skills required to perform his duties would likely warrant a
marking of "C" or "D".
1. Proficiency or skill level is observable. Marines
demonstrate their proficiency on the job, and we can measure their expertise
by watching them in action.
2. Performance, on the other hand, focuses on the results
achieved. In assessing performance we consider only the outcome, rather than
the means of achieving those results.
9. Section E - Individual Character
a. General
(1) These attributes distinguish the Marine as an individual and are
of the greatest interest to the Marine Corps. Individual Character completes
the picture of a "whole Marine."
(2) Sections D, F, and G measure qualities that focus on getting the
job done. The Individual Character section focuses on measurable traits of
the MRO’s individual character such as distinctive mental, physical, moral,
and behavioral qualities that each Marine needs. This section contains three
attributes: Courage; Effectiveness under stress; and Initiative.
b. Courage
(1) Definition. Moral and physical strength to overcome danger,
fear, difficulty or anxiety. Personal acceptance of responsibility and
accountability, placing conscience over competing interests regardless of
consequences. Conscious, overriding decision to risk bodily harm or death to
accomplish the mission or save others. The will to persevere despite
uncertainty.
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4-28 Enclosure (2)
(2) Scaled Measurements
(a) "B" marking - Demonstrates inner strength and acceptance of
responsibility commensurate with scope of duties and experience. Willing to
face moral or physical challenges in pursuit of mission accomplishment.
(b) "D" marking - Guided by conscience in all actions. Proven
ability to overcome danger, fear, difficulty or anxiety. Exhibits bravery in
the face of adversity and uncertainty. Not deterred by morally difficult
situations or hazardous responsibilities.
(c) "F" marking - Uncommon bravery and capacity to overcome
obstacles and inspire others in the face of moral dilemma or life-threatening
danger. Demonstrated under the most adverse conditions. Selfless. Always
places conscience over competing interests regardless of physical or personal
consequences.
(3) Discussion. Courage has two components: moral and physical.
Too often, courage connotes only physical bravery, especially to junior
Marines.
(a) Reporting officials should consider moral courage of equal
importance to physical bravery. In peacetime, a Marine has more
opportunities to display moral courage than physical courage, and has a duty
to do so.
(b) Physical courage is possible in specific instances, such as
on the battlefield or in emergencies.
(c) Tests involving moral courage occur in wartime, peacetime,
and in everyday life. Examples include but are not limited to:
1. Delivering bad news to a commander or disagreeing with a
senior.
2. Addressing a military appearance/weight problem with a
close subordinate.
3. Counseling subordinates honestly.
4. Assigning Marines to required life-threatening missions.
5. Resisting negative peer pressure.
6. Maintaining integrity when facing a moral dilemma.
(d) Regardless of the type of courage displayed, a Marine
exhibiting courage places others’ needs above his or her own.
c. Effectiveness Under Stress
(1) Definition. Thinking, functioning, and leading effectively under
conditions of physical and/or mental pressure. Maintaining composure
appropriate for the situation, while displaying steady purpose of action,
enabling one to inspire others while continuing to lead under adverse
conditions. Physical and emotional strength, resilience, and endurance are
elements.
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4-29 Enclosure (2)
(2) Scaled Measurements
(a) "B" marking - Exhibits discipline and stability under
pressure. Judgment and effective problem-solving skills are evident.
(b) "D" marking - Consistently demonstrates maturity, mental
agility, and willpower during periods of adversity. Provides order to chaos
through the application of intuition, problem-solving skills, and leadership.
Composure reassures others.
(c) "F" marking - Demonstrates seldom-matched presence of mind
under the most demanding circumstances. Stabilizes any situation through the
resolute and timely application of direction, focus, and personal presence.
(3) Discussion. Effectiveness under stress means working well under
pressure.
(a) It requires strength and stamina - physical and mental - and
has two results: mission success and inspiring others.
(b) The ability to maintain focus on the task at hand enables
both mission success and the ability to inspire others.
(c) Effectiveness under stress is not the same as courage.
1. Courage involves actions where the Marine has overcome
fear and obstacles in order to accomplish the mission.
2. Effectiveness under stress involves presence of mind
under adverse conditions, retaining mission focus and continuing to function.
Examples include but are not limited to:
a. Battalion S-6 officer repeatedly working through
losses of communication during operational exercises or contingencies.
b. Marine Security Guard detachment commander
maintaining mission focus during civil strife, unrest, and direct action
against U.S. property and citizens.
c. Base facilities chief responding to a natural
disaster involving destruction of property and loss of life.
d. Initiative
(1) Definition. Action in the absence of specific direction. Seeing
what needs to be done and acting without prompting. The instinct to begin a
task and follow through energetically on one’s own accord. Being creative,
proactive and decisive. Transforming opportunity into action.
(2) Scaled Measurements
(a) "B" marking - Demonstrates willingness to take action in the
absence of specific direction. Acts commensurate with grade, training, and
experience.
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4-30 Enclosure (2)
(b) "D" marking - Self-motivated and action-oriented. Foresight
and energy consistently transform opportunity into action. Develops and
pursues creative, innovative solutions. Acts without prompting. Self-
starter.
(c) "F" marking - Highly motivated and proactive. Displays
exceptional awareness of surroundings and environment. Uncanny ability to
anticipate mission requirements and quickly formulate original, far-reaching
solutions. Always takes decisive, effective action.
(3) Discussion. Initiative is acting without being told.
(a) Initiative permits the Marine to seize circumstances and
achieve mission success.
(b) Without initiative, a Marine merely reacts to events.
Initiative enables the Marine to identify or create opportunities and exploit
them.
(c) Initiative differs from boldness: initiative enables the
Marine to seize control over events in a preemptive manner; boldness is
decisive action.
(d) Judgment might improve as a Marine gains experience and
years, but initiative is unique and does not necessarily increase with age.
10. Section F - Leadership
a. General. Leadership is the primal force that drives all military
organizations. Leaders at all levels are essential to mission
accomplishment. The quality of its leadership will determine the overall
value of the force.
(1) Identifying effective leaders is a primary goal of the fitness
report. While most achieve the missions tasked, some do not. Most
leadership styles are obvious at first glance. Others take much longer to
become apparent, but are no less effective. The Marine Corps recognizes many
leadership styles as effective.
(2) This section focuses on the most important aspects of leadership.
Each evaluated area serves to provide information that gives a more
comprehensive picture of the individual’s effectiveness as a leader. The
overall view provides an understanding of the individual’s leadership style.
The section has five attributes: Leading subordinates; Developing
subordinates; Setting the example; Ensuring well-being of subordinates; and
Communication skills.
(3) Reporting officials must view the term “subordinates” in a
generic sense. Certain billets will not have individuals directly under the
MRO’s charge; however, this does not mean the MRO does not exhibit these
traits in executing day-to-day responsibilities. All sergeants and above are
leaders and have leadership responsibilities regardless of their billets.
(4) Leaders set the tone and must foster a climate of "equal
opportunity" within their units by optimally integrating all members of the
team to accomplish the mission regardless of race, religion, ethnic
background, or gender.
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4-31 Enclosure (2)
b. Leading Subordinates
(1) Definition. The inseparable relationship between leader and led.
The application of leadership principles to provide direction and motivate
subordinates. Using authority, persuasion, and personality to influence
subordinates to accomplish assigned tasks. Sustaining motivation and morale
while maximizing subordinates’ performance.
(2) Scaled Measurements
(a) "B" marking - Engaged; provides instructions and directs
execution. Seeks to accomplish mission in ways that sustain motivation and
morale. Actions contribute to unit effectiveness.
(b) "D" marking - Achieves a highly effective balance between
direction and delegation. Effectively tasks subordinates and clearly
delineates standards expected. Enhances performance through constructive
supervision. Fosters motivation and enhances morale. Builds and sustains
teams that successfully meet mission requirements. Encourages initiative and
candor among subordinates.
(c) "F" marking - Promotes creativity and energy among
subordinates by striking the ideal balance of direction and delegation.
Achieves highest levels of performance from subordinates by encouraging
individual initiative. Engenders willing subordination, loyalty, and trust
that allow subordinates to overcome their perceived limitations. Personal
leadership fosters highest levels of motivation and morale, ensuring mission
accomplishment even in the most difficult circumstances.
(3) Discussion. Assessing leadership is difficult, particularly
those styles that are not always immediately obvious.
(a) Better leaders employ varied methods to get the best from
their subordinates.
(b) They lead through the quiet times and not just the busy
activities.
(c) This attribute assesses the MRO’s achievements in terms of
applied leadership; success should manifest itself in increased subordinate
and unit performance.
(d) The scope of an individual’s leadership expands further than
the number of people under his or her immediate charge; it is also a measure
of how one inspires, directs, influences, and persuades others by words and
deeds. These qualities can be assessed even when the MRO is not filling a
“formal” leadership billet.
c. Developing Subordinates
(1) Definition. Commitment to train, educate, and challenge all
Marines regardless of race, religion, ethnic background, or gender.
Mentorship. Cultivating professional and personal development of
subordinates. Developing team players and esprit de corps. Ability to
combine teaching and coaching. Creating an atmosphere tolerant of mistakes
in the course of learning.
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4-32 Enclosure (2)
(2) Scaled Measurements
(a) "B" marking - Maintains an environment that allows personal
and professional development. Ensures subordinates participate in all
mandated development programs.
(b) "D" marking - Develops and institutes innovative programs, to
include PME, that emphasize personal and professional development of
subordinates. Challenges subordinates to exceed their perceived potential
thereby enhancing unit morale and effectiveness. Creates an environment
where all Marines are confident to learn through trial and error. As a
mentor, prepares subordinates for increased responsibilities and duties.
(c) "F" marking - Widely recognized and emulated as a teacher,
coach and leader. Any Marine would desire to serve with this Marine because
they know they will grow personally and professionally. Subordinate and unit
performance far surpassed expected results due to MRO’s mentorship and team
building talents. Attitude toward subordinate development is infectious,
extending beyond the unit.
(3) Discussion. This attribute seeks to assess the leader’s capacity
to "fine-tune" the team. Given that most leaders will achieve basic
proficiency in the training of their unit, you can best judge exceptions in
this area by the degree of honing that the leader achieves. The following
questions provide assistance:
(a) Does the Marine seek to prepare subordinates to assume
greater responsibility at short notice?
(b) Does the Marine challenge subordinates to seek their own
knowledge and develop their analytical skills?
(c) Does the Marine tolerate honest mistakes, and pace the
program on the development of subordinates, rather than on the achievement of
objectives; or, in the words of General Lejeune, "Does the leader teach and
coach, or simply instruct?"
(d) Does the Marine develop and implement a PME program that
emphasizes attendance to required PME prior to promotion eligibility?
d. Setting The Example
(1) Definition. The most visible facet of leadership: how well a
Marine serves as a role model for all others. Personal action demonstrates
the highest standards of conduct, ethical behavior, fitness, and appearance.
Bearing, demeanor, and self-discipline are elements.
(2) Scaled Measurements
(a) "B" marking - Maintains Marine Corps standards for
appearance, weight, and uniform wear. Sustains required level of physical
fitness. Adheres to the tenets of the Marine Corps core values.
(b) "D" marking - Personal conduct on and off duty reflects
highest Marine Corps standards of integrity, bearing, and appearance.
Character is exceptional. Actively seeks self-improvement in wide-ranging
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4-33 Enclosure (2)
areas. Dedication to duty and professional example encourage others’ self-
improvement efforts.
(c) "F" marking - Model Marine, frequently emulated. Exemplary
conduct, behavior, and actions are tone-setting. An inspiration to
subordinates, peers, and seniors. Remarkable dedication to improving self
and others.
(3) Discussion. Leadership depends on personal credibility and a
commitment to excellence.
(a) Leaders who do not demonstrate self-discipline, personal
organization, physical fitness, and respect for the Corps fail to fully meet
the responsibility of their offices.
(b) Beyond the physical aspects of leadership, being fully
knowledgeable in the directives that guide appearance, fitness, conduct, and
other areas is essential in creating the aura of authority.
(c) Paramount is a personal commitment to our core values; a
belief that these values are central to the Corps’ ethos and status in
American society. The health and vitality of the Corps’ uniqueness depends
on it.
e. Ensuring Well-Being Of Subordinates
(1) Definition. Genuine interest in the well-being of Marines.
Efforts enhance subordinates’ ability to concentrate/focus on unit mission
accomplishment. Concern for family readiness is inherent. The importance
placed on welfare of subordinates is based on the belief that Marines take
care of their own.
(2) Scaled Measurements
(a) "B" marking - Deals confidently with issues pertinent to
subordinate welfare and recognizes suitable courses of action that support
subordinates’ well-being. Applies available resources, allowing subordinates
to effectively concentrate on the mission.
(b) "D" marking - Instills and/or reinforces a sense of
responsibility among junior Marines for themselves and their subordinates.
Actively fosters the development of and uses support systems for subordinates
which improve their ability to contribute to unit mission accomplishment.
Efforts to enhance subordinate welfare improve the unit’s ability to
accomplish its mission.
(c) "F" marking - Noticeably enhances subordinate well-being,
resulting in a measurable increase in unit effectiveness. Maximizes unit and
base resources to provide subordinates with the best support available.
Proactive approach serves to energize unit members to "take care of their
own," thereby correcting potential problems before they can hinder
subordinates’ effectiveness. Widely recognized for techniques and policies
that produce results and build morale. Builds strong family atmosphere.
Puts motto “Mission first, Marines always” into action.
(3) Discussion. From their first days in training, Marines learn the
imperative of taking care of their subordinates. The phrase "Marines take
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4-34 Enclosure (2)
care of their own" captures the spirit of this facet of leadership. The
primary reason for this emphasis is the time-tested observation that military
units perform better when their leadership looks to the well-being of their
members.
(a) A leader’s efforts in ensuring subordinates’ welfare and
their families’ quality of life reduces the Marines’ burden, allowing them to
concentrate more effectively on accomplishing the unit’s mission. A concern
is that a leader’s efforts may be so aggressive that Marines get the
impression that the leader will always fix their problems for them.
(b) The leader’s policies and actions must instill a sense of
personal responsibility among junior Marines for themselves and their
subordinates.
(c) Efforts to ensure subordinate welfare should never take
priority over or come at the expense of the unit’s mission or effectiveness.
Taking care of Marines is inherent to accomplishing the mission.
f. Communication Skills
(1) Definition. The efficient transmission and receipt of thoughts
and ideas that enable and enhance leadership. Equal importance given to
listening, speaking, writing, and critical reading skills. Interactive,
allowing one to perceive problems and situations, provide concise guidance,
and express complex ideas in a form easily understood by everyone. Allows
subordinates to ask questions, raise issues and concerns, and venture
opinions. Contributes to a leader’s ability to motivate as well as counsel.
(2) Scaled Measurements
(a) "B" marking - Skilled in receiving and conveying information.
Communicates effectively in performance of duties.
(b) "D" marking - Clearly articulates thoughts and ideas,
verbally and in writing. Communication in all forms is accurate,
intelligible, concise, and timely. Communicates with clarity and verve,
ensuring understanding of intent or purpose. Encourages and considers the
contributions of others.
(c) "F" marking - Highly developed facility in verbal
communication. Adept in composing written documents of the highest quality.
Combines presence and verbal skills that engender confidence and achieve
understanding irrespective of the setting, situation, or size of the group
addressed. Displays an intuitive sense of when and how to listen.
(3) Discussion. The ability to communicate is vital.
(a) Without this skill orders may be misunderstood, directives
may be confused, and the potency of good leadership becomes diluted.
(b) This is an everyday skill that all Marines must practice and
refine.
(c) Skill in listening to - and hearing - what others offer is as
important as what we say or write.
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11. Section G - Intellect and Wisdom
a. General. Ultimately, leadership depends on decision making; the
quality of a leader’s judgment enhances decision making. Marines can improve
their skill in both areas through individual personal effort to increase and
expand their knowledge base.
(1) We measure a Marine’s intellect and wisdom indirectly through
three assessed attributes: PME; Decision making-ability; and Judgment.
(2) The Intellect and Wisdom section measures the MRO’s efforts to
grow intellectually and to use the knowledge gained to benefit both personal
and unit performance.
(a) The assessment of intellectual efforts and performance
provides a critical indicator of an MRO’s ability to learn and reason, as
well as the capacity for knowledge and understanding.
(b) Most importantly, this assessment highlights the MRO’s
ability to use intellectual skills to make viable and timely decisions.
b. Professional Military Education (PME)
(1) Definition. Commitment to intellectual growth in ways beneficial
to the Marine Corps. Increases the breadth and depth of warfighting and
leadership aptitude. Resources include resident schools; professional
qualifications and certification processes; non-resident and other extension
courses; civilian educational institution coursework; a personal reading
program that includes (but is not limited to) selections from the Marine
Corps Professional Reading Program; participation in discussion groups and
military societies; and involvement in learning through new technologies.
(2) Scaled Measurements
(a) "B" marking - Maintains currency in required military skills
and related developments. Has completed or is enrolled in appropriate level
of PME for grade and level of experience. Recognizes and understands new and
creative approaches to service issues. Remains abreast of contemporary
concepts and issues.
(b) "D" marking - PME outlook extends beyond MOS and required
education. Develops and follows a comprehensive personal program which
includes broadened professional reading and/or academic course work; advances
new concepts and ideas.
(c) "F" marking - Dedicated to lifelong learning. As a result of
active and continuous efforts, widely recognized as an intellectual leader in
professionally related topics. Makes time for study and takes advantage of
all resources and programs. Introduces new and creative approaches to
service issues. Engages in a broad spectrum of forums and dialogues.
(3) Discussion. While an all-around education is important, the
subjects that our Marines concentrate on that can improve their leadership
and warfighting abilities are of most concern.
(a) It is imperative that leaders encourage Marines to better
themselves through the study of military-related topics.
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4-36 Enclosure (2)
(b) Many times when we think of PME we automatically focus on the
Marine Corps College of Distance Education and Training (CDET) courses. The
PME attribute measures much more, and includes all efforts to increase
understanding of the military art. PME can be as varied as:
1. Resident schools (e.g., the Staff NCO Academy or
Expeditionary Warfare School).
2. Studies in preparation for a MAWTS-1 or Top Gun
certification course.
3. Marine Corps and other service non-resident courses, CDET
courses, and other service or government agency extension courses.
4. Personal reading program and/or participation in
professional military societies and/or discussion groups.
5. Civilian education courses that allow Marines to improve
their military-useful skills, such as diesel engine repair, leadership,
communications, or software engineering. This type of education is generally
associated with Electronic Based Distance Learning credit for reserve
Marines, and enhances unit mobilization readiness.
(c) PME does not include civilian education programs that do not
enhance a Marine’s leadership, warfighting acumen, or MOS skills.
Note: The RS may highlight an MRO’s participation in non-PME civilian
education programs in section I as deemed appropriate.
c. Decision-Making Ability
(1) Definition. Viable and timely problem solution. Contributing
elements are judgment and decisiveness. Decisions reflect the balance
between an optimal solution and a satisfactory, workable solution that
generates tempo. Decisions are made within the context of the commander’s
established intent and the goal of mission accomplishment. Anticipation,
mental agility, intuition, and success are inherent.
(2) Scaled Measurements
(a) "B" marking - Makes sound decisions leading to mission
accomplishment. Actively collects and evaluates information and weighs
alternatives to achieve timely results. Confidently approaches problems;
accepts responsibility for outcomes.
(b) "D" marking - Demonstrates mental agility; effectively
prioritizes and solves multiple complex problems. Analytical abilities
enhanced by experience, education, and intuition. Anticipates problems and
implements viable, long-term solutions. Steadfast, willing to make difficult
decisions.
(c) "F" marking - Widely recognized and sought after to resolve
the most critical, complex problems. Seldom matched analytical and intuitive
abilities; accurately foresees unexpected problems and arrives at well-timed
decisions despite fog and friction. Completely confident approach to all
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problems. Masterfully strikes a balance between the desire for perfect
knowledge and greater tempo.
(3) Discussion. The difference between leaders and followers is
that, while both may make decisions, we hold the former accountable for them.
(a) Leadership is decision-making.
1. We expect all leaders to be capable of solving problems
and making decisions, and some are certainly better at it than others.
2. More often than not, because of time constraints, leaders
must make decisions with incomplete information.
3. We rely on our self-confidence and strength of conviction
when faced with making decisions based upon limited information.
4. Markings in this section should reflect competence in
making not only routine decisions, but also those decisions of greater
importance with far-reaching consequences.
(b) Decision-making ability also measures the quality and
timeliness of the decisions themselves, taking into account the time and
information available to the Marine.
1. Do not confuse willingness to make more difficult
decisions in a timely manner with hasty, "snap" judgments.
2. Marines who tend to make snap judgments frequently
neglect available information and often fail to consider the possible
consequences of their decisions.
(c) Some situations require quick decisions in order to take full
advantage of fleeting opportunities. Other situations call for a more
prudent, methodical approach, allowing one the time to collect and examine
more information before reaching a decision. Still others will be made in
times of uncertainty when it would be safer and easier to either postpone a
decision or avoid it altogether.
(d) An important aspect of decision-making is the Marine’s
intuitive ability to distinguish between these various situations and with
logical reasoning, act accordingly with resolve.
d. Judgment
(1) Definition. The discretionary aspect of decision-making. Draws
on core values, knowledge, and personal experience to make wise choices.
Comprehends the consequences of contemplated courses of action.
(2) Scaled Measurements
(a) "B" marking - Majority of judgments are measured,
circumspect, relevant, and correct.
(b) "D" marking - Decisions are consistent and uniformly correct,
tempered by consideration of their consequences. Able to identify, isolate,
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5 Jun 2023
4-38 Enclosure (2)
and assess relevant factors in the decision making process. Opinions sought
by others. Subordinates personal interests in favor of impartiality.
(c) "F" marking - Decisions reflect exceptional insight and
wisdom beyond this Marine’s experience. Counsel sought by all; often an
arbiter. Consistent, superior judgment inspires the confidence of seniors.
(3) Discussion. While the PME and decision making ability attributes
help to describe the intellectual performance and capacity of the Marine,
they provide an incomplete picture without a measure of judgment.
(a) Judgment is an essential element of intellect; without it the
Marine has only two of the needed tools to work with: education and the
capacity to make decisions.
(b) Judgment is the vehicle that allows the Marine to use those
tools in a discretionary manner and make the right decision or offer the best
option.
(c) Judgment takes an even more critical role as the Marine Corps
increases its reliance on subordinates who can operate effectively under
decentralized command and control, relying on commander’s intent, mission-
type orders, and sometimes difficult rules of engagement.
(4) The difference between Judgment and Decision-Making Ability.
Though closely related, judgment and decision-making ability each warrant
independent evaluation. Some Marines exhibit common sense, but have trouble
reaching a decision. They lack confidence in making a call and do not
balance good judgment with effective decision-making. Other Marines never
shy away when a situation calls for a decision, but they do not think the
situation through before they act. They make rash decisions that rarely
produce the expected result and compounding enthusiastic, but poor, decision-
making.
12. Section H - Fulfillment of Evaluation Responsibilities
a. Purpose. Accomplishing the objectives of the PES per the provisions
of this Order is the responsibility of every reporting official. Section H:
(1) Measures the level to which reporting officials fulfill their
responsibilities.
(2) Establishes a direct method of ensuring that reporting officials
accomplish the objectives of the PES by evaluating their efforts to submit
accurate, timely, and uninflated evaluations.
(3) As a stand-alone evaluated area, it highlights the importance of
accurate, uninflated, and timely reporting.
(4) Must be marked N/O for all enlisted Marines, except for the few
individuals specifically authorized by HQMC to act as reporting officials
through an exception to policy letter.
b. Definition. The extent to which the MRO, serving as a reporting
official, conducted, or required others to conduct, accurate, uninflated, and
timely evaluations.
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c. Scaled Measurements
(1) "B" marking - Occasionally submitted untimely or administratively
incorrect evaluations. As RS, submitted one or more reports that contained
inflated markings. As RO, concurred with one or more reports from
subordinates that were returned by HQMC for inflated marking.
(2) "D" marking - Prepared uninflated evaluations which were
consistently submitted on time. Evaluations accurately described performance
and character. Evaluations contained no inflated markings. No reports
returned by RO or HQMC for inflated marking. No subordinates’ reports
returned by HQMC for inflated marking. Few, if any, reports were returned by
RO or HQMC for administrative errors. Section Cs were void of superlatives.
Justifications were specific, verifiable, substantive, and where possible,
quantifiable and supported the markings given.
(3) “F" marking - No reports submitted late. No reports returned by
either RO or HQMC for administrative correction or inflated markings. No
subordinate reports returned by HQMC for administrative correction or
inflated markings. Returned procedurally or administratively incorrect
reports to subordinates for correction. As RO, non-concurred with all
inflated reports.
d. Discussion
(1) The scales allow little tolerance for submitting or forwarding
inflated reports. One instance as either a RS or RO can result in a mark of
"B" in this attribute.
(2) The scales allow some tolerance for submitting or forwarding
administratively incorrect reports. For example, a Marine could have a "few"
reports returned from either the RO or HQMC for administrative errors and
still receive a mark of "D" but depending on the context, a "C" mark might be
more appropriate.
(3) An MRO (evaluated as an RS) whose reports exhibit flagrant
inflation, multiple administrative errors, severe untimeliness, or any
combination thereof warrants a mark of "A".
13. Instructions for Completing Section I (Reporting Senior’s Directed and
Additional Comments)
a. Purpose. Section I provides the RS a location for entering
mandatory, and directed comments prohibited elsewhere in the report.
b. Discussion. The RS will populate section I with both mandatory and
directed comments. The RS:
(1) Will make mandatory comments to provide a word picture for all
observed reports.
(2) Will ensure the report is consistent. There is no scale to
“match” the attribute markings with the section I comments; however, the RS
must take care when making section I comments to ensure that the comments
neither conflict with, nor obscure, the remainder of the evaluation.
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4-40 Enclosure (2)
(3) Should avoid the temptation to intentionally mark attributes in a
manner that ensures the report will be at the bottom of their profile, while
simultaneously writing laudatory comments in section I to mislead the MRO
into believing the overall report is laudatory. If the MRO was not meeting
expected performance standards, see chapter 5.
(4) May provide additional comments on the MRO’s conduct,
performance, or activity outside the areas evaluated in the report if deemed
of sufficient importance to include in the evaluation to more thoroughly
define the "whole Marine." This may include such areas as community service,
voluntary service, or similar endeavors.
(5) Must ensure the comments are not gratuitous.
(6) Unique Billets: Reporting officials should provide mandatory
comments that highlight the accomplishment of duties that are unique to
certain billets (i.e. Commanders, Executive Officer, Base/Camp Commander,
Student, Instructor, Aviator, Planner). See paragraph 3 of this chapter.
c. Format and Style
(1) Format. The space made available should be sufficient in all but
the most unusual circumstances. Format comments in the following manner:
(a) Mandatory Comments. Mandatory comments (i.e., the word
picture) will always be listed first. Mandatory comments are those required
to give the CMC a more complete picture of the MRO’s professional character,
performance, and potential which are not readily apparent from attribute
marks or other narrative portions of the report. Mandatory comments should
address topics such as performance, proficiency, potential, and other traits
that describe the MRO utilizing the “whole Marine” concept. They should also
address any conflicts within the fitness report, or the RS’s profile, that
are not immediately apparent to a board member (i.e. the RS has a small
profile that consists of only exceptional Marines, which causes a follow-on
fitness report to be drastically understated). If the length of the
mandatory comments and other comments exceeds the space provided in section
I, the RS will use an addendum page to complete his or her comments.
(b) Directed Comments. Directed comments are those required by
this Order and provide the CMC amplifying information on information
contained in sections A, J, and K and provide details and context to specific
markings and values that may not be evident through the markings and values
themselves. Begin each directed comment with the entry “Directed Comment”
and a reference to its origination in the report (e.g., "Directed Comment.
Sect A, Item 6a:"). See paragraph 18 of this chapter for a list of required
directed comments. See chapter 5 for adverse item specific directed
comments.
(c) Additional Comments. The RS may enter additional comments as
deemed appropriate.
1. Additional comments address areas not directly related to
performance as a Marine, but that demonstrate other important aspects of the
MRO’s character, such as community involvement or volunteer activities.
2. The RS must not exceed the space provided in section I
for additional comments, unless they made directed comments and the combined
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4-41 Enclosure (2)
length of directed comments and additional comments exceeds the space
provided, in which case the RS will use an addendum page to complete his or
her entries.
(2) Style. When preparing section I:
(a) Omit superlative adjectives, superfluous statistics, and
imprecise phrasing.
(b) Make comments objective, concise, and clear in intent.
(c) Normal capitalization rules apply. Do not use UPPERCASE,
underlining, "quotation marks", boldface, italics, or punctuation (#!&%?…) in
exclamation.
d. Unacceptable Comments. The RS will not comment on the following
situations:
(1) Reference to pending NJP, courts-martial, civil/criminal action,
fact-finding board, or investigation.
(a) Discussion of these matters, if the MRO was found innocent or
non-culpable, would be premature and prejudicial, thereby unfairly penalizing
the Marine.
(b) Once the pending action is complete and the Marine is found
accountable, then include the results in the reporting period when
adjudication is completed. For the specific handling of NJP, court-martial,
or civilian conviction, see chapter 5.
(c) Reference to the results of an informal investigation, fact
finding body, or a FSSB should only be made if the MRO is found to be
negligent or culpable, or if the findings are otherwise adverse. Do not
reference to the results of an FFPB since all negative recommendations must
be forwarded to a FSSB for final adjudication.
(2) Mention of any suspected criminal activity, particularly
suspected drug use. Suspicion is not a basis for recording in official
personnel files.
(3) Reference to recommendations for administrative reduction,
withholding of promotion pending resolution at higher authority, in process
administrative separation proceedings, or administrative separation
proceedings that resulted in the retention of the MRO. Same reasons as
paragraph 13e(1)(a) of this chapter apply.
Note: If the basis for the adverse proceeding was substantiated through the
process even though the MRO was not reduced/separated, and the basis for the
adversity was not previously captured in a fitness report, the adverse
material may be mentioned in the MRO’s fitness report; however, the adverse
proceedings themselves cannot be mentioned.
(4) Reference to the issuance of non-punitive letters of admonition,
caution, or reprimand may not be mentioned; however, the underlying facts may
be included as described in reference (y) per the instructions of paragraph
4f(2) of this chapter. RSs must report a Letter of Censure issued by the
Secretary of the Navy.
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4-42 Enclosure (2)
(5) Indication that the MRO voluntarily entered an inpatient or
outpatient alcohol treatment center when the situation which led to the
volunteering did not affect the individual's performance of duty.
(a) Such information is irrelevant to the process and scope of
the fitness report, and should be treated like any other period of
hospitalization not affecting performance.
(b) This is a recognized medical problem, best addressed by
medical authorities.
(6) Reference to minor traffic violations such as a speeding
citation.
Note: Reckless driving convictions where the ingestion of alcohol was a
factor, and other lesser charges of driving under the influence are not
considered minor offenses.
(7) Reference to prior non-selection for promotion or career
retention.
(8) Reference to whether the MRO’s spouse does or does not support
command, social, volunteer functions, and the like. The positive
contribution Marine spouses make to the military and civilian communities are
a proud and appreciated tradition, but spouses need to be free to make those
choices.
Note: RSs are not evaluating spouses' performance.
(9) Comments based on an individual's gender.
(a) Gender-related comments (e.g., charming, attractive woman,
handsome man, best woman officer, etc.) are gratuitous and not acceptable.
(b) Limit references to gender pronouns: he, she, him, his, her,
hers, himself, herself.
(10) Comments pertaining to medical issues (physical and/or
psychological) that do not affect the MRO's performance of duties or diminish
his or her effectiveness as a leader (e.g., pregnancy, postpartum, etc).
(11) Comments concerning the MRO's personal or family problems that
do not affect performance or diminish effectiveness to lead.
(12) Comments pertaining to the MRO's status as a single parent,
unless the MRO has failed to make necessary provisions in case of deployment
or manipulates the situation as an excuse for tardiness and frequent
unplanned time off or leave.
(13) Comments regarding the MRO’s potential for civilian employment.
(14) Comments identifying minor limitations, shortcomings, occasional
lapses, or weakness in an otherwise overall positive performance. These
comments serve no constructive purpose, foster a zero-defect mentality, are
most often counseling comments for the MRO, and not germane to the overall
evaluation.
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(15) Comments to a selection board members indicating that the MRO
should be considered for “merit reorder”.
(16) Recommendations to selection board members for the MRO to be
briefed as a “4”, “5”, etc. Recommendations should be left to the board room
to make their own determination based on the population of candidates.
These
types of comments can have negative impacts on how a briefer ranks MRO, and
may not be factually accurate based on the other Marines in the boards
population.
14. Instructions for Completing Section J (Certification)
a. Purpose. Section J gives the document legal standing and safeguards
the integrity of the reporting process and provides the MRO the opportunity
to acknowledge and address the adverse nature of any report.
b. Process. Once section J is complete, to include the MRO's statement
(when applicable), the RS must forward the report to the RO for his or her
comments.
c. Item 1 (RS Certification). Item 1 requires the RS to certify that
the report is truthful and prepared without prejudice or partiality and
presupposes the RS considered all aspects of the MRO's performance known to
the RS at the time he or she completes the report.
(1) If the report is completed utilizing the A-PES system, the RS
must inform the MRO that the RS portion of the report is complete. The RS
must also discuss his or her marking philosophy and comments with the MRO
prior to routing the report to the RO. Since the MRO can obtain a signed
copy of the report from within A-PES, the RS is not required to provide a
signed copy of the report to the MRO.
(2) The RS must sign item 1 and record the date signed in the
appropriate blocks using the 8-digit (YYYYMMDD) format.
(3) If the report is not produced within the A-PES system, the RS
must provide a signed copy of the report to the MRO.
(4) If the RS makes any changes to the report subsequent to informing
the MRO that the report is complete, the RS must inform the MRO that changes
were made to the report and explain the changes.
(5) In those situations when the RS submits a DC or CH report for a
Marine in a UA or deserter status (per the provisions of chapter 3,
paragraphs 11a or 11c), the CMC waives the requirement for the RS to inform
the MRO.
d. Item 2 (Acknowledgment by the MRO when the Report is Adverse). See
chapter 5.
15. Instructions for Completing Section K (Reviewing Officer Comments)
a. Purpose. Section K formalizes the RO's involvement in the PES.
b. Discussion. The RO must certify the administrative correctness of
the entire report and complete items one through six. Items one through six
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characterize the level of observation the RO had of the MRO, provide the RO
the opportunity to concur or non-concur with the RS’s assessment
(specifically or in totality), give the RO the opportunity to compare the MRO
to other Marines of that grade, and provide comments concerning the MRO’s
potential.
c. Structure and Content
(1) The RO must complete section K as described below even if the RS
submits a "not observed" or "extended" report. If an RS does not have
sufficient observation but the RO does, the RO will concur with the RS’s
insufficient observation and complete section K as described below.
(2) Item 1 (Observation). The RO must indicate whether or not he or
she had sufficient knowledge and observation of the MRO to effectively
complete items 2 through 4 of section K.
(a) There are no hard guidelines on what constitutes sufficient
knowledge and observation. In some circumstances an RO gets to know a great
deal about an MRO in an extremely short time, and in other cases, the RO may
never gain sufficient observation regardless of how long both serve in the
same command. Because of the requirement to comment on potential, as well as
their critical role in safeguarding the integrity of the PES, ROs should make
every effort to come to know the Marines whose reports they will review.
(b) Mark an "X" in the appropriate block, indicating either
sufficient or insufficient observation. The RO must complete items 2 through
4 of section K if observation is marked sufficient in item 1. Do not
complete items 2 through 4 if item 1 reflects insufficient observation,
unless the RO is including directed comments as outlined by paragraph 18 of
this chapter, is recommending the MRO for accelerated promotion, or
performing duties as required by chapter 5 (adverse reports).
(3) Item 2, (Evaluation). The RO must concur or non-concur with the
report.
(a) Mark an "X" in the appropriate block.
(b) If the RO marks the non-concur block, provide amplifying
comments in item 4. The RO must comment on the specific item(s) that they do
not agree with (i.e. specific attribute marking or comment) and indicate if
they believe the mark to be understated or inflated. See paragraph 15d(2) of
this chapter for required action by the RO before non-concurring with a
report.
(4) Item 3, (Comparative Assessment). Item 3 provides the RO an
opportunity to compare the MRO to all Marines (both past and present) of the
grade whose professional abilities are known to the RO. Focus on the MRO's
potential.
(a) Consider all the MRO's attributes.
(b) Weigh the MRO's performance as an indicator of future
potential for service at more senior positions.
(c) Mark an "X" in the appropriate block ensuring it accurately
reflects your comparative assessment of the MRO. The mark should be
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consistent with your RO profile; a MRO you are assessing in back-to-back
reporting periods, and whose performance remains constant, should receive at
least the same mark as you assigned to the prior report.
(d) See explanations in chapter 3, paragraphs 6h and 7e for N/O
and extended reports, respectively.
(5) Item 4, (Reviewing Officer Comments). The RO is in a unique
position to add depth to the report and to assist the CMC in distinguishing
among Marines. The RO must provide directed comments as applicable on all
reports, and must provide mandatory comments on all reports where they
indicate “sufficient observation”. Although the RS may opt for a N/O report,
the RO is not precluded from providing his or her own assessment and
comments.
Note: Unacceptable comments in paragraph 13e of this chapter also apply to
the RO.
(a) Mandatory Comments. The RO will follow the same general
rules and guidelines listed above. Additionally, the RO should comment on
the MRO's performance and potential as follows:
1. If observation and knowledge of the MRO's performance
permit, ROs must provide comments on the MRO's performance during the
reporting period.
2. At a minimum, the RO should amplify his or her
comparative assessment mark. The RO should evaluate the MRO's potential for
continued professional development to include promotion, command assignment,
resident PME, and retention. By amplifying the RO assessment mark, the RO
has the ability to put things into context for the reader that is not
immediately apparent (e.g., disparity between profile placement and
comments); it is not a tool for ROs to explain why the MRO is a poor
performer. As appropriate, the RO should put the RS's marks and comments in
perspective.
3. The assessment will reflect the RO's careful
consideration of all information available. This may include personal
observation, a review of the MRO's Officer Qualification Record (OQR)/Service
Record Book (SRB), additional input from the RS, academic achievements, and
observations of other leaders.
4. For those cases in which the RS makes the report extended
and the RO is the same as on the previous report, the RO may either:
a. Make the following comment "My comments remain the
same" and mark the comparative assessment the same as the prior report; or
b. Add new comments as deemed appropriate and mark the
comparative assessment scale as applicable.
5. Unique Billets: Reporting officials should provide
mandatory comments that highlight the accomplishment of duties that are
unique to certain billets (i.e. Commanders, Executive Officer, Base/Camp
Commander, Student, Instructor, Aviator, Planner). See paragraph 3 of this
chapter.
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(b) Directed Comments. Listed in paragraph 18 of this chapter.
(c) Format. The RO must limit comments to the space available;
the only authorized RO use of an addendum page is for adjudicating adverse
reports.
(d) Style. When preparing this item:
1. Omit superlative adjectives, superfluous statistics, and
imprecise phrasing.
2. Make comments objective and written so as to not create
any unintended valuation of the particular billet.
3. Normal capitalization rules apply. Do not use UPPERCASE,
underlining, "quotation marks," boldface, italics, or punctuation (#!&%?...)
in exclamation.
(6) Item 5, (RO Certification). Sign and date the certification on
the date actually completed.
(7) Item 6, (Acknowledgment by the MRO when the Report is Adverse).
See chapter 5.
d. Administrative Review Process. Regardless of the extent of
observation, the RO remains responsible for conducting an administrative
review of the report. ROs must ensure adherence to policy and are
responsible for all subordinate performance evaluation activities. The RO’s
signature in section K of the report certifies that he or she reviewed the
report for administrative correctness per the following guidelines:
(1) Review Procedures. The RO should develop a personalized review
procedure to ensure consistency. Regardless of the RO’s chosen procedure, he
or she must consider the following:
(a) Section A. The RO must:
1. Check for accuracy.
2. Consider the MRO’s choices for future assignments. Are
these consistent with the MRO’s experience, capacities, and the needs of the
individual and the Marine Corps?
3. Ensure the RS makes the appropriate directed comments in
section I for marks and codes requiring directed comments per the provisions
of this Order.
(b) Sections B and C. The RO must ensure:
1. Section B (Billet Description) entries are consistent
with the duty assignment (descriptive title) listed in item 4 of section A
and conform to the following structure and content standards:
a. Ensure comments are objective and do not convey any
unintended valuation of the particular billet. Avoid community jargon and
those terms not familiar to the average Marine.
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Note: Paying close attention to words and phrasing is critical to avoid
indications of relative merit or value attendant to specific duties and
responsibilities.
b. Ensure the RS excludes words and/or phrases that
divert attention from a precise description of the significant duties
assigned to the MRO.
2. Section C (Billet Accomplishment) statements describe
performance accomplishments directly related to the duties and
responsibilities of the MRO and conform to the following structure and
content standards:
a. Ensure the entries describe the results of what the
MRO did; not how well he or she did it.
b. Ensure the entries are free of superlatives which
amplify a Marine’s accomplishments and distort section C, changing it from an
objective account of results to a subjective assessment of performance.
c. Ensure the RS excludes words and/or phrases that
divert attention from a precise description of the duties assigned to the
MRO.
d. Scrutinize entries for objectivity and accuracy. ROs
must return reports to the RS that contain section C entries not in line with
the guidance provided for completion of that section.
(c) Sections D through H. Review all justifications for marks of
"A," "F," or "G" to ensure each meets the requirement of paragraph 6e of this
chapter, and clearly supports either sustained exemplary performance rarely
matched by others or substandard/adverse performance.
(d) Section I. Ensure the RS’s comments meet the standards
described in paragraph 12 of this chapter. Confirm that all directed
comments match the remarks or markings in the appropriate sections of the
fitness report.
(e) Section J. Ensure the proper signatures are entered. If the
MRO signed item 2 indicating the attachment of a statement, confirm its
presence and conduct adjudication as outlined in chapter 5.
(2) Procedures for Adjudicating Understated or Inflated Reports.
Given the RO’s responsibility for ensuring fitness reports adhere to the
policy set forth in this Order, the RO must:
(a) Return to the RS any fitness report with administrative
errors which require correction.
(b) Notify the RS when, in the RO’s opinion, the fitness report
contains understated or inflated markings, insufficient justification for
high marks, or comments failing to meet the standards or spirit of this
Order.
1. In such situations, the RO should give the RS the reasons
for returning the report and provide guidance to raise to the accepted
standard.
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2. The RO does not have the authority to order the RS to
change any marks, statements, or comments unless the errors are
administrative or factual in nature.
3. If after discussion, the RO’s concerns are not resolved,
mark an "X" in the appropriate block indicating non-concurrence with the
report.
4. Provide comments in section K item 4 amplifying the mark
in the non-concur block, indicating his or her rationale for non-concurrence
with the report, the specific item(s) of concern, and the recommended change
to the evaluation. The RO must highlight the fact that his or her efforts to
remedy the situation with the RS were unsuccessful. For example:
a. During the review process, the RO may judge that an
"F" mark in an evaluated area is neither supported by the RO’s personal
observation of the MRO nor the RS’s written justification. The RO discusses
the mark and its justification with the RS, but the RS insists that both the
mark and the justification are valid.
b. If the RS will not change the mark and cannot
strengthen the justification to the RO’s satisfaction, the RO will indicate
non-concurrence and provide amplifying comments similar to the following:
"Do not concur with the RS’s mark of "F" in section D-2; justification lacks
specificity and overstates the MRO’s proficiency; more accurate mark is D."
16. Instructions for Completing Section L (Addendum Page)
a. General. The addendum page is normally the only attachment to the
fitness report. The exception is as noted in chapter 6, paragraph 8d, when
the MRO is a student or special trainee assigned to a non-Marine command or
institution.
b. Purpose. The addendum page provides a standardized format to the MRO
and all reporting officials for use in the following situations:
(1) Continuation of the RS’s:
(a) Narrative on an adverse report (see chapter 5, paragraph 2a).
(b) Justifications when more than one attribute in a section
requires justification for an “A”, “F”, or “G” marking (see paragraph 6e of
this chapter).
(c) Section I comments when the combined length of mandatory and
directed comments exceeds the space in section I (see paragraph 13c of this
chapter).
(2) Rebuttal statements from the MRO (see chapter 5, paragraph 3d).
Note: The MRO cannot submit a rebuttal to a fitness report that is not
adverse.
(3) The RO’s and 3OS’s comments associated with an adverse report
(see chapter 5, paragraphs 4 and 5).
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(4) The RS’s recommendation for an MRO’s accelerated promotion (see
paragraph 4g(4)(e) of this chapter).
(5) Administrative reviews by the senior Marine representative (see
chapter 6, paragraph 8b).
(6) Submission of supplemental comments (see chapter 8, paragraph
10c).
(7) Quality control documentation for HQMC (see paragraph 16f of this
chapter).
c. Administrative Instructions
(1) If more than one addendum page is necessary for any particular
purpose, the user must identically complete items 1 through 3 on all pages.
(2) For reports completed inside of A-PES, the system will
automatically number the addendum pages in the order created.
(3) For reports completed outside of A-PES, all addendum pages must
reflect the appropriate page number (e.g., 1 of 2, 2 of 2,) of that Marine’s
submission. For example: If an MRO’s rebuttal statement is three pages in
length, and the RO’s statement requires two addendum pages, the following
applies:
(a) In the appropriate spaces on the MRO’s statement, mark the
sequential pages 1 of 3, 2 of 3, and 3 of 3.
(b) Mark the RO’s statement 1 of 2 and 2 of 2.
(4) Each addendum page must be signed by the Marine who created the
page.
(5) For adverse reports, each addendum page also requires the
certifying signature of the 3OS. Additionally, the 3OS billet must be
annotated.
d. Completion Instructions
(1) Section L. Mark an "X" in the block as appropriate to indicate
addendum pages are attached.
(2) Addendum Page. Complete as follows:
(a) Section A (Purpose)
1. Item 1, (Marine Reported On). Type the information
required in blocks a, b, c, d, and e exactly as it appears in section A, item
1 of the fitness report.
2. Item 2, (Occasion and Period Covered). Type the
information required in blocks a and b exactly as it appears in section A,
item 3 of the fitness report.
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3. Item 3, (Purpose). Type an "X" in the appropriate box
listed under item 3 indicating the purpose of the addendum page. Mark only
one box.
(b) Section B (Text). Complete per the administrative
instructions in paragraph 16b of this chapter.
(c) Section C (Submitted By)
1. Type the information required in items 1 through 4.
2. Sign in the space provided and record the date signed in
the appropriate blocks using the eight-digit (YYYYMMDD) format.
(d) Section D (General/Senior Officer Adverse Report Sighting)
1. Type the information required in items 1 through 5.
2. Sign in the space provided and record the date signed in
the appropriate blocks using the eight-digit (YYYYMMDD) format.
e. Special Instructions for Adverse Fitness Reports. Due to the
sensitive nature of adverse fitness reports, reporting officials must
complete additional administrative steps when using the addendum page in
conjunction with these reports. See chapter 5 for specific details.
f. Headquarters Marine Corps (HQMC) Use. HQMC will use block 3f (HQMC
Use) of item 3, for internal quality control in conjunction with those
reports administratively reviewed at HQMC, or for appropriate clarification
of the record when necessary.
17. Instructions for Completing Reports on Marines with Classified Duties
a. Fitness reports shall not contain classified information.
b. Fitness reports for Marines performing classified duties shall be
completed so as not to release classified information. In addressing the
MRO’s billet description (section B), billet accomplishments (section C),
justification block in sections D through H (when applicable) and sections I
and K comments, avoid any reference to specific operational or mission
details to eliminate the requirement for classification. If any entry would
result in the release of classified information, use the word “classified” in
place of that entry.
18. Directed Comments
a. Both the RS and the RO have a responsibility to ensure that the
appropriate directed comments are included in section I, section k item 4,
and any addendum pages. See below for a list of required directed comments.
See chapter 5 for adverse item specific directed comments.
b. Directed Comments. The following items require directed comments in
section I:
(1) Section A, Item 3, Occasion and Period Covered:
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(a) Occasion:
1. “DC”: Comment must indicate the reason for submission.
2. “FD”:
a. RS must justify the reason for a N/O FD report.
b. RS must comment on early termination of temporary
duty.
3. “RT”: RS must justify the reason for a N/O RT report.
(b) From – To:
1. RS must indicate and explain the submission of an
observed report for a reporting period covering 89 days or less as an
exception per the provisions of chapter 3, paragraph 5c.
2. RS must comment on periods of non-availability.
(c) Type:
1. “C” or “B”: Code "C" for combat or code "B" for both
joint and combat. The requirement to comment on the nature of the combat
operation and the MRO's actions related to the operation is clarified in
chapter 6, paragraph 3e.
2. Code “J”. Summarize extent of efforts and
accomplishments pertaining to joint matters, training planned and executed,
and exercise participation.
Note: These observations are not limited solely to those serving in a joint-
duty assignment list (JDAL) billet. If the joint experience is gained
outside of a JDAL billet, it must still be qualified by the guidance given in
reference (t).
(2) Section A, Item 4, Duty Assignment: If the MRO holds multiple
regular duty assignments, the RS must begin section I comments with
“Simultaneous report”.
(3) Section A, Item 5, Special Case:
(a) Adverse: See chapter 5.
(b) Not Observed: RS must comment if the reporting period
exceeds 90 days, but this block is marked. RS must comment on periods of non-
availability including terminal leave.
(4) Section A, Item 6, Marine Subject Of:
(a) Commendatory Material: Defined in chapter 4, paragraph
4f(1). The RS must describe the commendatory material.
(b) Derogatory Material and Disciplinary Action: This marking
renders the report adverse. The RS is required to comment on the nature of
the marking. See chapter 5.
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(5) Section A, Item 7, Recommendation for Promotion:
(a) “No”: This mark renders the report adverse. See chapter 5.
If the RS marks no, enter one of the following statements:
1. "I recommend that the MRO not be considered for promotion
with contemporaries."
2. "I recommend that the MRO not be considered for promotion
at any time."
(b) No markings: If the RS recommends the MRO for accelerated
promotion, comment as follows: "I recommend that the MRO be considered for
promotion ahead of contemporaries." The RO must provide explicit
concurrence/non-concurrence with this recommendation.
(6) Section A, Item 8:
(a) Qualification: “U” or “X”: A directed comment is required
for codes “U” or “X”. The RS must explain if they believe that the MRO was,
or was not, complicit or negligent in their failure to qualify/requalify, or
failed to exercise due diligence. This negligence may render the report
adverse. See chapter 5 for adverse report instructions
(b) Physical Fitness Test/Combat Fitness Test (PFT/CFT) Score:
1. “FXXX”: If the MRO achieves a passing overall score, but
failed to achieve the minimum score on a single event, the RS must state
which event the MRO failed. This renders the report adverse. See chapter 5.
2. “C150”: The RS must include remedial PFT/CFT scores in
section I if the MRO failed, but then passed a PFT/CFT. This renders the
report adverse. See chapter 5.
3. “RDNT”: The RS must provide a directed comment in
section I when using this code if the RS deems the MRO was complicit or
negligent. This may render the report adverse. See chapter 5.
4. “PART”: The RS must specify the event(s) completed and
the MRO’s score for the event(s) completed. The RS shall not include comments
that detail the reason(s) why the MRO completed a partial PFT/CFT. The RS may
indicate that the MRO was on light/limited duty, but must not state the
reason why the MRO was on light/limited duty.
(c) Weight/Body Fat: When the MRO’s body fat exceeds the maximum
allowable standard for their height, or when the MRO’s body fat percentage is
within acceptable standards for that Marine’s age group but has failed to
conform to military appearance standards, comment as follows:
1. “The MRO is not within body composition standards.”
2. “MRO has an approved BCP waiver effective DD MMM YY.”
3. “MRO is exempt from body fat limits due to his/her PFT
and CFT scores”
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4. “MRO is within body fat limits due to the one percent
allowance given for his/her PFT and CFT scores.”
5. “The MRO has been assigned to the Body Composition
Program.”
6. “The MRO has been assigned to the Military Appearance
Program.”
(d) Reserve Component: For SMCR reports, the following require
explanation in section I:
1. Significant failure to meet required drill attendance.
2. Omission of an RT report and the RS includes the period
in an annual (AR) report.
(e) Status: "F" or "M". Recommend what grade the MRO is best
qualified to fill.
Note: Disagreement between the MRO and RS does not make the report adverse;
the RS makes an independent observation. No comment is required for N/O
reports, extended reports, or reports where the RS does not recommend the MRO
for promotion (section A, item 7b).
(7) Section A, Item 10/11, RS/RO Information:
(a) If the MRO is the same grade as the RS, the RO must include a
directed comment indicating that the RS is serving in a billet senior to the
MRO.
(b) If the RS is the same grade as the RO, the RO must include a
directed comment indicating that the RO is serving in a billet senior to the
RS.
(c) The RO (acting as the RS) must include a directed comment
that they have assumed RS authority for any of the reasons described in
chapter 2, paragraphs 10e and 10f.
(d) ) The RO must include a directed comment if a commanding
general approved a modification to the reporting chain. The RO must state
which commanding general authorized the modification.
(8) Section J, Item 2, MRO Acknowledgement of Adverse Report:
(a) The MRO refuses to sign item 2 of section J (Certification by
the MRO when the report is adverse). The RS must indicate when the MRO was
notified of the report, that they were counseled on their refusal to sign,
and that the MRO still elected not to make a statement or sign the report.
(b) The RS must comment if the MRO indicates that they attached a
statement, but no statement is included.
(9) Section K:
(a) Item 1, Observation: The RO must include a comment if they
do not have sufficient observation to evaluate the MRO.
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(b) Item 2, Evaluation: “Do Not Concur”: If the RO marks the
non-concur block, provide amplifying comments in item 4. The RO must comment
on the specific item(s) that they do not agree with (i.e. specific attribute
marking or comment) and indicate if they believe the mark to be understated
or inflated. Example: "Do not concur with the RS’s mark of "F" in section D-
2; justification lacks specificity and overstates the MRO’s proficiency; more
accurate mark is D." See paragraph 15c(2) of this chapter for required
action by the RO before non-concurring with a report.
(c) Item 6, MRO Acknowledgement of Adverse Report: The MRO
refuses to sign item 6 of section K (Certification by the MRO when the report
is adverse). The RO must indicate when the MRO was notified of the report,
that they were counseled on their refusal to sign, and that the MRO still
elected not to make a statement or sign the report.
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Chapter 5
Adverse Report Procedures
1. Adverse Reports
a. Reporting officials must accurately document substandard performance
or adjudicated misconduct via adverse fitness reports to ensure that future
selection boards only select the most qualified Marines. Reporting officials
must demonstrate courage, resolve, and attention to detail in order to timely
and accurately complete adverse reports. Most reporting officials write very
few adverse fitness reports. It is crucial that all reporting officials, but
especially those who have little or no experience writing adverse fitness
reports, review this chapter in its entirety to ensure the accurate
completion of adverse reports. Prior to preparing an adverse report, the RS,
RO and 3OS should review this chapter to ensure that they understand the
definitions, responsibilities, and process contained herein.
b. Do not report minor flaws or mistakes unless they are significant
enough to affect the MRO’s initiative and leadership potential, or hinder
mission accomplishment.
c. If the MRO does not improve after counseling, then the RS should
document the MRO’s actions as a pattern of unsatisfactory performance and
professionalism.
d. Officials must never damn with faint praise nor hide behind policy
definitions to avoid the responsibility and unpleasantness of reporting
unsatisfactory performance, lack of potential, or unacceptable professional
character.
e. The RS must provide the factual basis for adversity, be specific, and
avoid vague and ambiguous language that only serves to confuse the reader.
Note: The factual basis is the MRO’s action(s) that are deemed adverse, not
the result of the MRO’s adverse action(s)(i.e. adjudicated results).
f. The perception that a particular fitness report may reduce the MRO’s
competitiveness for promotion, selection, or assignment is irrelevant in
determining whether a report is adverse or not. The adversity is in the
recorded performance, not in perceived future competitiveness.
2. Governing Regulations
a. The importance of fitness reports to the Marine Corps demands the
reporting chain ensure the accuracy of each report.
b. Reporting officials must notify the MRO when the report is routed to
them and give the MRO an opportunity to comment on all adverse material.
c. Reporting officials must, per Article 1122 of reference (a), refer
all adverse reports to the MRO for completion of items J-2 and/or K-6.
d. A 3OS must sight all adverse fitness reports (see paragraph 8 of this
chapter).
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3. Definitions
a. Adversity. For the purposes of this Order, the term “adversity”
shall mean any substantiated finding, adjudicated punitive process, pattern
of substandard performance, demonstrated substandard conduct, or evaluative
comment that reveals a fundamental or persistent inconsistency with Marine
Corps standards and values.
(1) While not an all-inclusive list, CMC (MMRP-30) shall consider a
report adverse if it contains:
(a) Derogatory material;
(b) A report of disciplinary action;
(c) A recommendation that the MRO should not be promoted;
(d) A recommendation that the MRO should not be retained;
(e) A failing score on the PFT or CFT;
(f) A failure to maintain USMC body composition or military
appearance standards;
(g) A marking of “A” for any evaluated attribute;
(2) While not an all-inclusive list, CMC (MMRP-30) shall not consider
a report adverse because:
(a) The report average falls below the RS average within the RS’s
fitness report profile or the report average deviates from a preceding
evaluation(s) processed by the same reporting official(s);
(b) The RO’s comparative assessment of the MRO falls below the
arithmetic mean or average of the RO’s comparative assessment profile for
Marines of that grade;
(c) Comments in the report or evaluative markings capture a
decline in performance;
(d) Comments in the report include recommendations for specific
billets or opportunities to gain additional experience or proficiency within
the MRO’s MOS; or
(e) The MRO perceives the attribute markings do not “match”
comments in the report or the RO’s comparative assessment of the MRO.
b. Performance-Based Adversity
(1) Performance-based adversity reflects shortcomings identified with
MRO’s performance. Generally, performance based adversity refers to the
MRO’s repeated inability to meet the RS’s expectations and accomplish the
requirements of their assigned billet, or when the MRO fails to demonstrate
the professional abilities commensurate with their grade and experience.
(2) The RS should specifically describe the MRO’s shortcomings and
highlight why the MRO was unable to succeed in the assigned billet. The RS
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5-3 Enclosure (2)
should highlight efforts to identify and address the MRO’s shortcomings and
efforts to teach, coach, and mentor the MRO in an attempt to improve
performance.
(3) To the extent possible, the RS should document with mandatory
comments the counseling (both formal and informal(i.e. verbal)) provided to
the MRO, especially regarding sub-standard performance. Documented
counseling provides the MRO the necessary guidance to improve performance
prior to the end of the reporting period and also supports the adversity if
the MRO fails to improve. The RS should follow the guidelines for counseling
in reference (g).
c. Conduct-Based Adversity
(1) Conduct-based adversity occurs when the MRO is subject to an
adjudicated punitive process as described by paragraph 3e of this chapter or
receives derogatory administrative material as described by paragraph 3d of
this chapter.
(2) The RS must describe the MRO’s actions and any administrative or
punitive measures taken against the MRO. The RS may use available documents
when preparing the performance evaluation, but may not attach the documents
to the report. Appropriate disciplinary and derogatory material should be
forwarded for inclusion in the MRO’s OMPF as described in reference (m) or
(y).
(3) As described in chapter 4, paragraph 13d, the RS must not report
pending matters. Conduct-based adversity is reported only after the matter
is fully adjudicated. This applies even when the Marine is reassigned to a
different command prior to the final adjudication of the matter (i.e., A
Marine in a TAD status is arrested and subsequently returned to the parent
command while awaiting trial). For the purpose of recording misconduct on a
fitness report, a matter is considered fully adjudicated when the initial
disposition authority as outlined in references (h) and (y) has completed
disposition actions. For the purpose of this order, misconduct may be
considered fully adjudicated while still pending administrative separation
proceedings. This should not preclude reporting officials from reporting the
conduct and adjudication on a fitness report.
(4) Officer misconduct: As outlined in references (h) and (y), the
authority to substantiate and adjudicate officer and enlisted misconduct is
different. The authority to substantiate and adjudicate officer misconduct is
held at a higher level than enlisted misconduct. Reference (y), specifically
volume 15, establishes that the General Court Martial Convening Authority
(GCMCA) must determine if an officer did/did not commit misconduct, and that
the GCMCA must take appropriate action to dispose of the case under R.C.M.
306. References (h) and (y) are the authoritative source for authorities and
disposition options available for misconduct; this order only describes how
to document the disposition of the misconduct. Reporting officials should
consult with the command staff judge advocate to determine the appropriate
disposition authority and to determine when actions in accordance with
reference (h) and (y) are complete (i.e. fully adjudicated). As described
above, a matter may be considered fully adjudicated while still pending
administrative separation proceedings.
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d. Derogatory Material
(1) Examples of derogatory material include, but are not limited to:
(a) Receipt of an administrative letter of censure from the
Secretary of the Navy.
(b) Reports of convictions by civilian courts not addressed in
paragraph 3e of this chapter, excluding minor traffic violations.
Note: Reckless driving convictions, where the ingestion of alcohol was a
factor, and other lesser charges of driving under the influence are not
considered minor offenses.
(c) The MRO's commander lawfully disposes of substantiated
criminal allegations through means other than NJP, court-martial, or
administrative separation.
1. R.C.M 306, found in Part II of reference (h), allows a
commander to take administrative action in the form of counseling,
admonition, reprimand, exhortation, disapproval, criticism, censure,
reproach, rebuke, extra military instruction, or the administrative
withholding of privileges, or any combination of the above.
2. If the RS is convinced that the MRO committed an offense
(i.e., the incident has a strong, credible, factual basis), and the commander
disposed of the incident through one of the administrative actions described
above, then the RS may record the misconduct in section I, provided:
(a) The fitness report system is not being used in lieu
of disciplinary action to make a factually weak or difficult case stick;
(b) The MRO has an opportunity to respond; and
(c) The misconduct is relevant to MRO’s overall
performance.
(d) Notification of revocation of the MRO's driving privileges if
the revocation was due to a pattern of vehicular infractions and/or contempt
for authority and reflects adversely on the Marine and the Marine Corps.
(e) Letters from the commanding officers at other installations
banning the MRO from on-base facilities.
(f) Letters of substantiated indebtedness, especially in cases in
which the MRO fails to repay the debt.
(g) The Marine is found to be incompetent, either technically or
professionally, at a Competency Review Board (CRB), whether the reduction in
rank is suspended or not. This does not include reduction in grade as a
result of failure to complete a commissioning program per reference (o).
(h) Aircrew subject to a FSSB in which the DC AVN decides to
revoke the MRO’s right to wear aviation insignia, revoke the MRO’s flight
status, or place the MRO in a probationary flight status per reference (i).
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5-5 Enclosure (2)
This specific type of derogatory material shall be immediately reported via a
DC report per the provisions of chapter 3, paragraph 4b(5)(e) and reference
(i).
(2) Report derogatory material on the next reporting occasion. Mark
the block with an "X" if the MRO was the subject of derogatory material or
incident reports received by the RS from outside the reporting chain, or from
within the reporting chain above the RS- level during the reporting period.
(3) RSs must exercise fair and prudent care to ensure that the
derogatory material is supported by a preponderance of the evidence, or is a
matter acknowledged by the MRO, and the report is not being used in lieu of
appropriate disciplinary action under reference (h).
(4) Receipt of a page 11 formal counseling (pursuant to paragraph
6105 of reference (ab)) does not automatically constitute derogatory material
on the next fitness report. The reporting officials must consider the
substance of the entry to determine if, in their judgment, the entry is
sufficiently derogatory in nature to render the fitness report adverse.
Ensure the entry is in the MRO’s OMPF prior to submission of the fitness
report.
Note: All Page 11 or 6105 counselings should be submitted to the Marine’s
OMPF in accordance with reference (m) and (y), regardless of content.
(5) The RS must provide a directed comment on the nature of the
derogatory material or incident in section I, to include the type of
derogatory material that was completed.
(6) Do not attach the derogatory material to the fitness report.
Forward derogatory material authorized for filing per reference (m) under
separate cover letter to the CMC (MMRP-20) for inclusion in the appropriate
portion of the Marine's OMPF.
(7) Substantiated officer misconduct or substandard performance of
duty that results in derogatory material may be reported during the reporting
period in which the derogatory material was signed by the initial disposition
authority. In accordance with reference (y), the matter is considered fully
adjudicated when the GCMCA completes actions outlined in reference (y) and
submits the appropriate reports to the CMC Military Personnel Law
Branch(JPL). References (h) and (y) are the authoritative source for
authorities and disposition options available. Reporting officials should
consult with the command staff judge advocate to determine the appropriate
disposition authority and to determine when actions in accordance with
reference (h) and (y) are complete (i.e. fully adjudicated). As described
above, a matter may be considered fully adjudicated while still pending
administrative separation proceedings.
e. Disciplinary Action
(1) Disciplinary action is defined as NJP, courts-martial conviction,
or civil criminal conviction.
(2) If charges are dismissed before imposition of punishment or there
is an acquittal, do not reference the matter in the fitness report.
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(3) "Civil criminal conviction" includes:
(a) Any conviction of an intoxicated driving offense.
Note: Reckless driving convictions, where the ingestion of alcohol was a
factor, and other lesser charges negotiated during a plea agreement are not
considered minor offenses.
(b) Any conviction of another offense if:
1. A punitive discharge would be authorized for the same or
closely related offense under reference (h); or
2. The maximum imposable sentence could include confinement
for six months or more.
(c) A court finding consistent with a plea of "no contest" for
offenses described in paragraph 3e(3)(b) of this chapter (listed above).
(d) Report civilian convictions resulting in a finding of guilt
during the reporting period in which the announcement of the findings of the
court occurs.
(e) It is immaterial whether as a result thereof, probation is
imposed; a sentence is executed; execution of a sentence is deferred,
delayed, or suspended; or, by local law, custom, or procedure, charges are
dismissed or expunged from civil courts’ records after payment of fine,
completion of a term in jail or penitentiary, or completion of a period of
probation. These actions do not change the character of the initial
misconduct.
(4) Report all disciplinary action via a GC or DC report per the
provisions of chapter 3, paragraph 4b and this chapter. Mark the block with
an "X" when the MRO is the subject of disciplinary action during the
reporting period, or when the appellate process from a previous reporting
period completes adjudication, and the results are reportable as discussed
below. This mark will render the report adverse.
(5) Report summary, special, or general courts-martial resulting in a
finding of guilt upon completion of the CA’s action, or when automatic
reduction provisions set forth in reference (h) are effected, and during the
reporting period in which the announcement of the findings of the court
occurs.
(a) Do not delay submitting the GC or DC report while awaiting an
appeal by the MRO. If the appeals process overturns or dismisses the
conviction, refer to Chapter 10 for guidance to correct the fitness report
record.
(b) If a CH, TR or TD report comes due prior to completion of the
CA action, the RS must submit the CH, TR, or TD report without reference to
the court-martial.
Note: Reporting officials and commanders must ensure continuity of reporting
by informing the MRO’s new RS by official correspondence of the results of
the CA’s action.
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5 Jun 2023
5-7 Enclosure (2)
(c) If any other reporting occasion comes due prior to completion
of the CA’s action, the RS should forego submission of that report and
reference the occasion in section I of the DC report once the disciplinary
action is complete.
(6) Report NJP upon a finding of guilt unless the MRO appeals the
findings. If the MRO appeals the NJP findings, the RS must delay submitting
the DC report until resolution of the appeal. If the NJP is upheld, the end
date of the report is the date the MRO was found guilty.
(a) If a CH, TR or TD report comes due prior to resolution of the
appeal, the RS should submit the CH, TR or TD report without reference to the
NJP.
Note: Reporting officials and commanders must ensure continuity of reporting
by informing the MRO’s new RS of the disposition of any pending appeal.
(b) If any other reporting occasion comes due prior to resolution
of the appeal, the RS should forego submission of that report and reference
the occasion in section I of the DC report once the NJP appeal is complete.
(7) The RS must provide the factual basis for the adversity (i.e. the
actions deemed adverse) of the disciplinary action in section I, not merely
list the articles for which the MRO was found guilty.
(8) The reporting officials shall ensure the Unit Punishment Book
(UPB) entry, and the appropriate MCTFS entry to document the disciplinary
action, is in the MRO’s OMPF prior to submitting the fitness report.
(9) Do not attach materials relating to the disciplinary action to
the fitness report. Forward materials relating to the disciplinary action
under separate cover letter to the CMC (JPL) for officers; MMRP-20 for
enlisted, for approval and inclusion in the Marine’s OMPF.
(10) Do not reference a Non-Punitive Letter Of Caution (NPLOC)
(admonition or reprimand) in any part of the fitness report; however, the
MRO’s actions that led to the receipt of a NPLOC may be addressed in the
report.
(11) Delay reporting the results of pending civil and/or criminal
action for Reserve members transferred to the IRR until resolution of the
pending action. If the MRO is found guilty in whole or in part, report the
results as supplemental information in accordance with Chapter 5 and chapter
8, paragraph 10.
(12) Substantiated officer misconduct that results in disciplinary
action must be documented in accordance with paragraph 3e of this chapter.
in accordance with reference (y), the matter is considered fully adjudicated
when the GCMCA completes actions outlined in reference (y) and submits the
appropriate reports to the CMC (JPL). References (h) and (y) are the
authoritative source for authorities and disposition options available.
Reporting officials should consult with the command staff judge advocate to
determine the appropriate disposition authority and to determine when actions
in accordance with reference (h) and (y) are complete (i.e. fully
adjudicated). As described above, a matter may be considered fully
adjudicated while still pending administrative separation proceedings.
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5 Jun 2023
5-8 Enclosure (2)
4. Adverse Report Process
a. Overview:
(1) The process begins when the reporting officials identify and
establish the basis for adversity. See paragraph 3 of this chapter.
(2) The RS/RO will appropriately document the performance or conduct-
based adversity by correctly completing sections A through K, and addendum
pages as appropriate. The RS/RO must reference the definitions and examples
in this chapter to determine the correct way to complete these items. The
RS/RO should pay special attention to the difference in reporting of
derogatory material and disciplinary action, how to report substandard
performance, the correct occasion code, and correct reporting period.
(3) The RS/RO will route the report to the MRO as appropriate and in
accordance with instructions listed in this chapter. The RS/RO will notify
the MRO when the report is ready for review and signature. The MRO will have
an opportunity to make a statement at each level as appropriate and in
accordance with instructions listed in this chapter.
(4) The RO/3OS will review the report in its entirety and ensure that
the adversity is accurately documented and the instructions contained within
this chapter are met. The RO/3OS will adjudicate factual differences and
disagreements between the MRO and RS, and MRO and RO, as appropriate and in
accordance with instructions listed in this chapter.
(5) The report is ready for submission to MMRP when:
(a) The RS/RO have accurately completed section A through K and
addendum pages to document the adversity. All associated directed comments
are listed in sections I, K and/or addendum pages.
(b) All appropriate signatures are resident in sections J and K,
or appropriate directed comments are made explaining absence of the MRO’s
signature.
(c) RO and 3OS have adjudicated factual differences and
disagreements.
(d) All derogatory material or appropriate disciplinary action
documents are resident in the MRO’s OMPF. (*Officer reports: Actions are
completed by the initial disposition authority in accordance with reference
(y))
5. Timing of Reporting Adversity
a. Marine subject of derogatory material: Derogatory material is
reported on the next natural reporting occasion, unless otherwise specified
by this order. See paragraph 3d of this chapter for more detail.
b. Marine subject to disciplinary action: The end date of the report is
the date that the disciplinary action occurred or MRO is found guilty
(example: the date the NJP occurred) unless otherwise specified by this
order. The report should reflect a GC or DC occasion for disciplinary action.
See paragraph 3e of this chapter for more detail.
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5 Jun 2023
5-9 Enclosure (2)
c. Marine Relieved For Cause (RFC)
(1) While not a requirement, a relief for cause should be documented
via a page 11 formal counseling (pursuant to paragraph 6105 of reference
(ab)) stating the reason(s) for the relief and included in the MRO’s OMPF per
the provisions of reference (m).
(2) Performance based relief. For a performance-based relief, the RS
must provide the factual basis for their assessment (i.e. what the MRO did,
or failed to do) in the justification block of the appropriate adverse
attribute(s) and state that the MRO was relieved for cause in section I. The
end date of the report is the date the MRO was relieved (i.e. moved) from
their billet. Generally, the report should reflect a CD/TR/TD/FD occasion.
See paragraph 3b of this chapter.
(3) Conduct-based relief. For a conduct-based relief, the RS must
explain in section I what fully adjudicated punitive process the MRO was
subject to and what, if any, punitive measures were taken against the Marine;
or what derogatory administrative material the MRO received. In either
instance, the factual basis for the adversity that supports the relief cannot
be under investigation or pending further adjudication. The MRO may receive
a non-adverse CD/TD/TR report removing them from their billet while the
appropriate actions occur which enable the initial disposition authority to
substantiate and adjudicate the misconduct. Derogatory material received from
above the reporting chain of command is subject to the same requirement;
therefore, a relief for cause given from a higher level of command may not be
referenced as derogatory material if the MRO’s action(s) that resulted in the
relief are under investigation or pending further adjudication. See paragraph
3c of this chapter.
(4) Officer relief for cause. Reference (y) establishes the initial
disposition authority who can substantiate and adjudicate officer misconduct
or substandard performance of duty, and the disposition options available.
(a) Misconduct. If an officer is relieved for cause due to
misconduct, the adversity will only be documented after actions are complete
in accordance with reference (y) and described above. If the relief results
in derogatory material, see paragraph 3d above. If the relief results in
disciplinary action, see paragraph 3e above.
(b) Performance. If an officer is relieved for cause due to
substandard performance of duty which ultimately forms the basis for
separation proceedings, the adversity will only be documented after actions
are complete in accordance with reference (y) and described above. This does
not preclude reporting officials from relieving a Marine officer for
substandard performance, and documenting it on a fitness report. All
performance based reliefs for cause do not warrant processing for separation
or trigger actions outlined in reference (y). Commanders retain the authority
to relieve for cause and document substandard performance on a fitness report
so long as the substandard performance does not form the basis for separation
proceedings.
(c) The elevated authority established in reference (y) to
substantiate and adjudicate officer misconduct or substandard performance of
duty (if it forms the basis for separation proceedings) may cause a lag in
reporting adversity. Likely, the officer will receive a non-adverse CD/TD/TR
report removing them from their billet while the appropriate actions occur
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
5-10 Enclosure (2)
which enable the initial disposition authority to substantiate and adjudicate
the misconduct or substandard performance of duty. The adversity will be
documented in accordance with the instructions listed in this chapter after
the matter is fully adjudicated. Review paragraph 3 of this chapter.
d. Marines on Special Duty Assignments (SDAs)
(1) Generally, relieving a Marine for cause from a Special Duty
Assignment takes longer than adjudicating the misconduct. In many cases, the
MRO is held accountable via NJP prior to the approval of their SDA RFC. The
MRO should not receive multiple adverse reports to mark both the adjudication
of an offense and the official relief from the SDA.
(2) If the reporting officials move the MRO prior to adjudication
(generally while an investigation is ongoing), the MRO will receive a
TR/TD/CD etc. This report must not be adverse or mention the conduct that is
under investigation.
(3) If the MRO is subject to disciplinary action, the reporting
officials must submit a GC or DC report to document the disciplinary action
prior to the approval of the RFC. The RFC will not be referenced on the MRO’s
following report; the report that marks their departure from the SDA. Their
conduct would have already been adjudicated and recorded in the MRO’s record.
(4) If the MRO receives derogatory material, the derogatory material
and the approved RFC package should be mentioned in the final report that
marks their departure from the SDA.
(5) The above list is not exhaustive and only serves to provide
guidance and intent for reporting officials.
e. Administrative Separation Proceedings
(1) Administrative separation proceedings are separate from
disciplinary proceedings. These proceedings determine the retention of the
MRO and do not necessarily serve to adjudicate misconduct or substandard
performance. Reporting officials should not wait until the completion of
administrative separation proceedings to submit adverse reports if the
conduct has already been adjudicated via appropriate means.
(2) When a Marine is administratively separated under adverse
conditions (e.g., drug offense, BCP failure, pattern of misconduct, etc.),
unless the factual basis used as justification for the administrative
separation has previously been captured in a fitness report, reporting
officials should use the GC or DC occasion as appropriate in lieu of an EN
report.
(3) If the basis for administrative separation has previously been
captured in a fitness report, do not use the DC or GC occasion. Use the EN
occasion and document the administrative separation as derogatory material in
section A of the fitness report.
(4) If there are multiple bases for administrative separation, and at
least one of them has not been previously captured in a fitness report, use
the DC or GC occasion.
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5 Jun 2023
5-11 Enclosure (2)
(5) If the MRO was subject to administrative separation proceedings,
to include a board of inquiry, but the MRO was retained, the administrative
proceedings cannot be mentioned in a fitness report. However, the MRO’s
actions that led to the administrative separation proceedings, if not
previously captured in a fitness report, may be included if the command deems
it appropriate.
f. Drug and Alcohol Reporting Requirements
(1) Drug Offense. Drug-related offenses occur when the MRO
wrongfully uses, possesses, manufactures, distributes, imports, exports, or
introduces a controlled substance or other substances banned by the Marine
Corps, including synthetic drugs, in violation of Article 112a of reference
(h). Drug-related offenses include the intentional ingestion or inhalation
of a chemical compound with the intent to induce intoxication or stupefaction
of the central nervous system. A chemical compound is any chemical substance
that modifies human physiological behavior or functions. Report drug-related
offenses as follows:
(a) If the MRO is convicted of a drug-related offense at court-
martial, NJP, or by a civilian jurisdiction, report the offense per the
provisions of paragraph 3e of this chapter via a GC or DC report.
(b) If the Convening Authority substantiates the drug-related
offense during the administrative separation process, and no charges are
preferred against the MRO, report the incident as follows:
1. If the MRO is administratively separated, report the
drug-related offense per the provisions of paragraph 3d of this chapter via a
GC or DC report.
2. If the MRO is retained, report the drug-related offense
as derogatory material per the provisions of paragraph 3d of this chapter on
the next reporting occasion.
(c) If the Convening Authority does not substantiate the drug-
related offense and the MRO is not convicted during a judicial process, the
offense will not be reported via a fitness report.
Note: A positive urinalysis sample alone does not substantiate a drug-
related offense. The offense must be adjudicated or substantiated as
described above prior to reporting the incident on a fitness report.
(2) Issues Related to Alcohol
(a) Alcohol-Related Incidents. A reportable alcohol-related
incident occurs when the commander confirms, by a preponderance of the
evidence, that the willful ingestion of alcohol contributed to an incident in
which the MRO committed a violation of the UCMJ or a comparable civilian
offense.
1. If the alcohol-related incident results in a conviction
under the UCMJ or in a civilian jurisdiction, report the incident and
subsequent disciplinary action per the provisions of paragraph 3e of this
chapter via a GC or DC report.
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5 Jun 2023
5-12 Enclosure (2)
2. If the MRO's commander lawfully disposes (see paragraph
3d of this chapter for lawful disposal) of the substantiated criminal
allegations resulting from an alcohol-related incident, through means other
than NJP, court-martial, or administrative separation, and it is:
a. The MRO's first alcohol-related incident, report the
incident as derogatory material per the provisions of paragraph 3d of this
chapter when the MRO's next reporting occasion comes due.
b. A second or subsequent alcohol-related incident for
the MRO, occurring within a three-year span from a previous alcohol-related
incident or occurrence of reportable alcohol misuse, report the incident as
derogatory material via a DC report for the date the derogatory material was
signed.
c. A second or subsequent alcohol-related incident for
the MRO, occurring more than three years after a previous alcohol-related
incident or occurrence of reportable alcohol misuse, report the incident as
derogatory material per the provisions of paragraph 3d of this chapter when
the MRO’s next reporting occasion comes due.
d. The RS must articulate in section I how the command
determined that the incident was an alcohol-related incident, or which
civilian/UCMJ offense the MRO violated; additionally, the RS must provide the
circumstances surrounding the offense. Only offenses, whether UCMJ or
civilian, that have been fully adjudicated may be mentioned in the fitness
report. Civilian offenses that have not been adjudicated cannot be
indirectly introduced into the fitness report by capturing the allegation on
a page 11 or 6105 entry and then included as derogatory material.
(b) Alcohol Misuse. Alcohol misuse is the use of alcohol to an
extent that it has an adverse effect on performance, conduct, discipline, or
mission effectiveness, and/or the user’s health, behavior, family, community,
or Department of the Navy, or leads to unacceptable behavior as evidenced by
one or more acts of alcohol-related misconduct.
(1) RSs should only report or comment on occurrences of
alcohol misuse that affect performance or military duties or impugn the MRO’s
character and reputation.
(2) Report all first time reportable occurrences of alcohol
misuse when the MRO’s next reporting occasion comes due per the requirements
of this chapter.
(3) Report all second and subsequent occurrences of
reportable alcohol misuse occurring within a three year span from a previous
occurrence of reportable alcohol misuse or alcohol-related incident via a DC
report. The RS must include a directed comment stating as such.
(4) Report all second and subsequent occurrences of
reportable alcohol misuse occurring more than three years after a previous
occurrence of reportable alcohol misuse or alcohol-related incident when the
MRO’s next reporting occasion comes due. The RS must include a directed
comment stating as such.
(c) Alcohol Counseling and Treatment Services. Unless the MRO’s
alcohol misuse or substance use disorder has affected his or her performance,
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
5-13 Enclosure (2)
the RS should not comment on a Marine’s dependence on alcohol or voluntary
participation in counseling and treatment services.
(d) Alcohol Rehabilitation Failure/MRO Deemed Unable to Benefit
From Counseling. RS must report voluntary or involuntary treatment failures.
(1) Report the instance as derogatory material per the
provisions of paragraph 3d of this chapter when the MRO’s next reporting
occasion comes due.
(2) Report instances that result in disciplinary action per
the provisions of paragraph 3e of this chapter via a GC or DC report.
g. Domestic Violence and Child Abuse
(1) A substantiated incident of domestic violence or child abuse may
result in either disciplinary action or administrative action. Generally,
the same incident should not be mentioned in two separate reports. Report
incidents of domestic violence in accordance with the paragraphs below.
(2) If the domestic violence or child abuse results in disciplinary
action under the UCMJ or civilian jurisdiction, report the incident as
disciplinary action per the provisions of paragraph 3e of this chapter via a
GC or DC report.
(3) If the commander disposes of the incident through administrative
means, report the incident as derogatory material under the provisions of
paragraph 3d of this chapter on the next reporting occasion.
(4) If the commander determines that the incident is baseless, or
takes no action, the incident will not be reported via a fitness report.
(5) An Incident Determination Committee’s (IDC) positive
determination does not constitute derogatory material, nor does it warrant
an adverse fitness report. While the command can use the evidence taken into
consideration by the IDC, it is not relieved of its responsibility of
substantiating the domestic violence incident separate from the IDC.
(6) Refer to reference (k) for additional information.
h. Incidents in a Prior Reporting Period
(1) Adverse incidents which occurred in a prior reporting period, but
which were unknown to the reporting officials at that time or are finally
resolved in a succeeding period, will be reported in the reporting period
during which the information was made known and/or resolved.
(a) This is normally the case when pending military or civilian
judicial actions result in convictions, or pending review boards or
investigations are completed and findings approved in the succeeding periods.
Such pending actions requiring resolution are not reportable until finally
resolved per chapter 4, paragraph 13d.
(b) This also occurs when the reporting officials are not made
aware of adverse action that occurred outside of the reporting chain (i.e.,
the MRO is convicted of an offense in civilian court).
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5 Jun 2023
5-14 Enclosure (2)
(2) Conversely, incidents known in a prior reporting period that were
finalized and resolved in that period, but went unrecorded, need to be
documented on an addendum page for the applicable period by the RS and RO of
record for that period. In the event the RS or RO of record are not
available, or do not respond to requests to document the incidents, then the
current reporting officials will follow the procedures in paragraph 9a of
this chapter by reporting the incident in the next report due on the MRO.
The new adverse material must be referred to the MRO, any rebuttal reviewed
and adjudicated, and the new information sighted by a 3OS.
6. Reporting Senior (RS) Responsibilities and Instructions
a. The RS must first determine the basis for adversity as described in
paragraph 3 of this chapter.
b. The RS must determine the appropriate occasion and reporting period.
The RS must pay particular attention to the timeline of events; date of
adverse or substandard action(s), date of adjudication (if applicable),
date(s) listed on derogatory material, etc.
c. The RS must complete section A. The RS must ensure that section A
accurately reflects the basis for the adversity, reporting occasion, and
reporting period. Markings outlined below render the fitness report adverse.
(1) Item 3a. If the MRO is subject to disciplinary action, the
report occasion should reflect GC or DC as appropriate. This requires a
directed comment.
(3) Item 6b. An “X” mark indicating the MRO was the subject of
derogatory material as defined by paragraph 3d of this chapter. The RS may
only reference derogatory material issued during the reporting period.
(4) Item 6c. An “X” mark indicating the MRO was the subject of
disciplinary action, as defined by paragraph 3e of this chapter, during the
reporting period. The end date of the report will be the date of the
conviction or non-judicial punishment. If the MRO is subject to disciplinary
action, the report occasion will be a GC or DC. This requires a directed
comment.
(5) Item 7b. An “X” mark indicating the MRO is not recommended for
promotion. The RS must specifically state one of the two directed comments
listed in chapter 4, paragraph 18.
(6) Item 8a. Codes "U" or "X". These marks only render an adverse
report if the RS determines that the MRO was negligent in failing to
qualify/requalify. (refer to chapter 4, paragraph 4h(1)). This requires a
directed comment.
(7) Items 8b and 8c. Codes "FXXX", “C150” or "RDNT". If the MRO
fails, fails then passes, or does not take the PFT/CFT due to their own
negligence, the report is adverse. (refer to chapter 4, paragraph 4h(2) and
(3)). This requires a directed comment.
(8) Item 8f. The body fat percentage reported is greater than the
maximum allowed for the MRO’s gender and age and the MRO does not meet one of
the exceptions listed in chapter 4, paragraph 4h(6)(c) or if the MRO was
assigned to, or extended on, BCP. BCP assignment and exceeding height,
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
5-15 Enclosure (2)
weight, and body fat standards, can each individually render a report
adverse. This requires a directed comment. Examples below:
(a) MRO exceeds HT/WT/BF standards in section A, but has not been
formally assigned to BCP. Report would still be adverse due to the MRO
exceeding HT/WT/BF standards.
(b) MRO (sergeant) is assigned to BCP in October. The MRO returns
to standards in November. 31 December the MRO receives their annual fitness
report. The annual report would be adverse to capture the MRO’s assignment
to BCP. In March, the MRO receives another fitness report (TD, TR, CH, etc.).
The section A data indicates that the MRO is within standards, but the MRO is
still on their initial 6 month BCP assignment. The TD, TR, CH etc. fitness
report would not be adverse because the MRO had returned to standards,
despite being on their initial BCP assignment.
d. Section C. Comments indicating the MRO accomplished below average or
unsatisfactory results are inappropriate and must be avoided in section C,
but can be included in sections D through I. See chapter 4, paragraphs 6a(4)
and 6c(1)(c).
e. Sections D through H. Any mark of "A" is adverse.
Note: The RS must justify the mark in the corresponding justification block.
If the RS marks an attribute with an “A”, the RS must use the justification
block below to specifically describe the MRO’s action or inaction that is
deemed adverse. If the RS marks more than one attribute marking adverse in
the same section, the RS must separately identify and justify each attribute
(“F1”, “F3”). See chapter 4, paragraph 7e.
f. Section I. The RS must specifically describe the reason(s) why the
report is adverse. The RS should use addendum pages as necessary to document
the factual basis for the adversity. The factual basis for the adversity is
the adverse actions themselves (i.e. what the MRO did/failed to do), not the
result of the MRO’s actions (6105, NJP, etc.). It is important that the RS
provide future selection boards details of the adverse conduct or
performance. While not all inclusive, the list below provides guidelines and
examples of adverse comments.
(1) Comments that indicate the MRO was formally assigned to (initial
or follow-on assignment) to, or extended on, the BCP as directed by reference
(r). If the MRO’s BCP assignment spans multiple reporting periods, only the
reporting period in which the MRO was formally assigned/extended to the BCP
will be made adverse unless the MRO still exceeds standards as recorded in
section A, items 8d-f.
(2) Comments that indicate the MRO was formally assigned (initial or
follow-on assignment) to, or extended on, the MAP) as directed by reference
(r). If the MRO’s MAP assignment spans multiple reporting periods, only the
reporting period in which the MRO was formally assigned to the MAP will be
made adverse.
(3) Comments identifying a failure by the MRO to qualify or requalify
during an annual qualification/requalification training period at any time
within the reporting period when the RS deems the MRO’s failure resulted from
a lack of effort or negligence on the part of the Marine.
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5-16 Enclosure (2)
Note: This also applies to an MRO who fails swim qualification or MBST
testing due to negligence or indifference.
(4) Comments indicating the MRO was required to, but did not fire,
during an annual qualification/requalification training period at any time
within the reporting period when the RS deems the MRO’s failure to fire was
the result of a lack of due diligence on the part of the Marine.
(5) Comments identifying the MRO’s failure of a scheduled PFT or CFT
during the reporting period that is not currently reflected in the MCTFS or
in item 8 (Special Information), block b (PFT) or block c (CFT). Refer to
chapter 4, paragraphs 4h(2)(b) and (c), and paragraph 4h(3)(b) and (c) for
information on which score to note in section A.
Note: Remedial PFTs or CFTs that result in a passing score for the MRO do
not count for reporting purposes. The RS may, however, highlight the passing
score in section I as an additional comment.
(6) Comments pertaining to the MRO’s drop from, or failure at, a
school because of the MRO’s unwillingness to try, cavalier attitude, or
unprofessional conduct.
(a) Reporting officials must not, however, penalize a Marine for
lacking the MOS prerequisites for the school or for lacking formal education
or natural abilities or aptitudes to complete the school. If the MRO is
dropped from a school due to lacking the natural abilities or aptitude to
complete the course, and not because of those items listed in sub-paragraph
(f) above, the RS shall comment as follows in section I, “MRO was disenrolled
from the school because he/she did not meet the required prerequisites.” The
RS will complete the report as a regular, non-adverse, fitness report.
(b) Examples that are not adverse: Dropped from flight school or
any entry-level technically oriented school because the MRO did not possess
the ability or aptitude; not accepted for Drill Instructor or Recruiter
School or duty because of not meeting the ideal psychological profile.
Note: Reporting officials should not base recommendations for promotion in
these examples purely on academic achievement, grade point average, aptitude,
or ability to assimilate instruction; the “whole Marine” concept still
applies.
(7) Comments identifying academic failure in an MOS career
progression school, or an academic or leadership failure at a PME course of
instruction.
(8) Comments identifying the MRO’s disenrollment for lack of effort
from, or refusal to enroll in, a required nonresident PME program. These
situations indicate an indifference towards professional growth on the part
of the MRO.
(9) Comments identifying alcohol-related incidents or reportable
occurrences of alcohol misuse, including driving under the influence or
driving while impaired (paragraph 5f(2) of this chapter).
(10) Comments identifying the MRO’s failure of alcohol rehabilitation
treatment or their inability to benefit from counseling services (paragraph
5f(2)(d) of this chapter).
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(11) Comments in addition to those made in section I or justification
blocks for sections D through H, describing the moral or professional
character, performance, or potential of the MRO that reflect:
(a) A failure to accomplish job assignments or meet established
standards.
(b) A judgment of the MRO’s inability to cope with increasing MOS
and professional responsibilities and assignments.
(c) An inability to set conditions personally to support military
service.
(d) Poor character.
(e) Dereliction of duty.
(f) Lack of restraint.
(g) Substantial indebtedness.
(h) Disreputable morals; to include hazing.
(i) Substantiated violations of the Prohibited Activities and
Conduct Order (reference (x)).
(j) Conduct unbecoming a Marine leader.
(12) Comments concerning the MRO’s personal or family problems that
affect performance or diminish effectiveness to lead.
Note: Per the provisions of chapter 4, paragraph 5h(1)(d)2, regarding
Marines prohibited from requalifying due to the Lautenberg Amendment to the
Gun Control Act of 1968, no qualifying section I comment is warranted unless
the incident of spousal or family abuse that created this situation is
current adverse material for the reporting period.
(13) Comments pertaining to medical issues (physical and/or
psychological) that affect the MRO's performance of duties or diminish his or
her effectiveness as a leader and reflect a lack of due diligence within the
limits of the MRO's duty status.
Note: The RS should succinctly address the facts, not attempt to medically
diagnose or offer a prognosis.
(14) Comments identifying periods of UA or declaration as a deserter.
(15) To further state the MRO has or is correcting any of the
problems identified in (a) through (j) above does not erase the adversity.
(16) Negative Words, Phrases, and Qualifying Adverbs
(a) Most adverse reports contain negative words, phrases, or
qualifying adverbs that send up a red flag, such as:
1. But, however, nevertheless...
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5 Jun 2023
5-18 Enclosure (2)
2. Does not display...
3. Minimal, below average...
4. Failed to...
5. Unqualified to/for...
6. Lacks the...
7. Needs development, supervision, improvement in...
8. Usually, sometimes, normally, generally...
9. Recommended for promotion with reservation/hesitation...
(b) Reporting officials shall examine the definition of adversity
contained in paragraph 3 of this chapter and determine whether the MRO’s
performance throughout the reporting period was unsatisfactory and merits an
adverse report. Accordingly, reporting officials shall avoid negative
phrases and their implications unless documenting performance or conduct-
based adversity. See paragraphs 1 and 3 of this chapter.
(c) The list above is meant to be used as a guide and is not an
exhaustive list. CMC (MMRP-30) is the final authority on whether a word or
phrase has adverse implications.
g. Section J
(1) The RS must review the report in its entirety to ensure that all
adversity is appropriately recorded in sections A through I. The RS should
verify that all required directed comments are appropriately recorded. The RS
should verify that all derogatory material and disciplinary action
documentation (as applicable) are resident in the MRO’s OMPF.
(2) After the RS completes a review of sections A through I, the RS
must certify and sign the report (section J, item 1). The RS must then route
the report to the MRO and notify the MRO when the report is ready for the MRO
to review, sign and make a statement. The MRO then has five days to respond
and sign the report. Transfer of either the RS or the MRO is not a valid
reason for failing to inform the MRO of the report.
(3) Once the MRO has reviewed the report, the RS must:
(a) Ensure the MRO completes section J, item 2 by:
1. Signing and dating the report.
2. Marking the appropriate block indicating his or her
desire to make a statement.
(b) Ensure compliance with the provisions of paragraph 9 of this
chapter.
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5 Jun 2023
5-19 Enclosure (2)
(4) If the MRO indicates in section J, item 2 that he or she has
attached a statement, but subsequently fails to do so within the prescribed
time frame, the RS must:
(a) Provide a directed comment to confirm the absence of the
statement.
(b) Forward the report to the RO and inform him or her of the
MRO's failure to attach a statement.
(5) If the MRO refuses to sign section J, item 2 the RS must counsel
the MRO on the ramifications of his or her decision and ensure they
understand the below listed items.
(a) Acknowledging the report and making a statement is the MRO’s
opportunity to communicate with the CMC and rebut the report.
(b) When the MRO refuses to sign and acknowledge the report, it
is assumed the MRO has no statement to make and that the report is accurate
as written.
(c) In accordance with paragraph 9 of this chapter, the MRO
cannot submit a statement after the fact.
(d) Refusal to sign the report constitutes a violation of a
written order and potentially subjects the Marine to punishment under Article
92 of reference (h).
(6) If the Marine-Reported-On (MRO) still refuses to sign, the RS
must provide a directed comment that clarifies three things:
(a) The MRO was notified that the report was routed to them for
review and signature (include date and method of communication).
(b) The MRO was counseled on the purpose of the statement and the
ramifications of not signing the report.
(c) The MRO still refused to sign after communication and
counseling.
(7) Following completion of section J, item 2 and the MRO's
statement, if so indicated, the RS will deliver the report to the RO for
review, adjudication, and forwarding to a 3OS for sighting.
(8) The RS will not attach additional comments for the record
concerning the MRO's statement; however, the RS may provide informal comments
to the RO to assist in clarifying issues.
Note: Do not forward these comments to the CMC (MMRP-32).
7. Reviewing Officer (RO) Responsibilities and Instructions
a. The RO must certify the correctness of the report and ensure that the
adversity is appropriately recorded throughout the report and that all
appropriate required directed comments, signatures, and statements are
included.
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5 Jun 2023
5-20 Enclosure (2)
b. The RO must document their own observations of the MRO if they mark
section K, item 1 “sufficient”.
c. In the event the MRO attaches a statement that disagrees with the RS
as to matters of fact, the RO must provide clarity to the circumstances by
adjudicating any factual differences or disagreements between the MRO and the
RS. This is done in section K, item 4 and addendum pages. The RO must:
(1) Take action to resolve inconsistencies and disagreements.
(2) Solicit input from the RS, appropriate staff officers,
commanders, and SEAs when their comments help to clarify factual differences
between the report and the MRO’s rebuttal.
Note: While in certain situations separation by time and distance may
prevent the RO from having firsthand observation of the MRO and RS
relationship, the RO shall employ every reasonable effort to adjudicate the
report.
(3) Indicate in section K, item 4 or on an addendum page, if
necessary, the actions taken and findings of fact (investigation initiated,
findings, etc.).
(4) Return the fitness report to the RS for corrections if the report
is not administratively and procedurally correct.
d. When the MRO’s statement adds new information that the RS did not
previously address in his or her comments, the RO must determine the validity
of the new information, and indicate findings and actions taken.
e. The RO must not attach additional documentation in the form of third-
party statements in support of either the RS or MRO positions to the report.
(1) This does not preclude the RO from researching and obtaining such
statements and commenting on the findings in resolving the issues of the
case.
(2) When it is not possible to resolve differences, the RO must state
this fact and explain why in his or her comments.
f. If the RO marks the K-2 “concur” box, and/or the K-3 “unsatisfactory”
block, adjudicates factual differences between the RS and the MRO, and/or
makes adverse comments in K-4 that have not been addressed by the RS, the RO
must route the report back to the MRO and inform the MRO when the report is
signed and ready for review.
(1) Transfer of either the MRO or the RO is not a valid reason for
failing to inform the MRO of the report. If necessary, the RO should mail a
copy of the report to the MRO for acknowledgment and return.
(2) Once the MRO has reviewed the report, the RO must:
(a) Ensure the MRO completes section K, item 6 of section K by:
1. Signing and dating the report. If the MRO refuses to
sign, the RO must ensure the provisions of paragraph 6g(5) of this chapter
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
5-21 Enclosure (2)
are applied and met. If the MRO still refuses to sign, the RO must provide a
directed comment in compliance with paragraph 6g(6) listed above.
2. Marking the appropriate block indicating his or her
desire to make a statement.
(b) Ensure compliance with the provisions of paragraph 8 of this
chapter.
(3) Following completion of section K, item 6 and the MRO’s
statement, the RO will deliver the report to the 3OS for sighting.
(4) The RO will not attach additional comments for the record
concerning the MRO’s statement; however, the RO may provide informal comments
to the 3OS to assist in clarifying issues.
Note: Do not forward these comments to the CMC (MMRP-32).
g. In situations when the MRO indicates in section J, item 2 that he or
she has attached a statement but subsequently fails to do so within the
prescribed time frame, the RO should do the following:
(1) Confirm the absence of the statement.
(2) Comment in section K, item 4 (Reviewing Officer Comments) on the
fact the MRO indicated in section J, item 2 that he or she has attached a
statement but has failed to do so.
Note: To document the MRO’s change of mind since signing section J-2, have
the MRO mark and sign section K-6 accordingly.
h. The RO must complete the review action, to include forwarding for 3OS
action, in sufficient time to ensure the report arrives at HQMC within 60
days after the end of the reporting period.
(1) If the MRO, RS, or RO is transferring while the report is still
processing, reporting officials should make a concerted effort to resolve
differences while the principals are still present.
(2) Reporting officials should strive to ensure the RO of record at
the time the report ended is the RO who attempts to resolve any differences
and arbitrates the report.
i. Procedures for adjudicating unsupported or unreported adversity.
Given the RO’s responsibility for ensuring fitness reports adhere to the
policy set forth in this Order, the RO must:
(1) Return any fitness report to the RS with administrative or
procedural errors which require correction.
(2) In the case where the RS renders a report adverse and the RO does
not agree with the adversity, the RO will not process the report.
(a) In such situations, the RO shall provide the RS the reason
why the adversity is deemed unsupported and provide the RS an opportunity to
further support the adversity.
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5 Jun 2023
5-22 Enclosure (2)
(b) If after discussion, the RS refuses to remove the adverse
mark(s) and/or comment(s), and cannot convince the RO that the report should
be adverse, the RO will modify the reporting chain according to chapter 2,
paragraph 10f(4) and assume reporting responsibility as the new RS.
(3) In the case where the RO believes the report should be adverse,
but the RS forwards a non-adverse report, the RO can mark the “Adverse by RO”
button in A-PES. The report must be processed according to the instructions
listed in this chapter. The RO shall explain the adversity in Section K.
8. Third Officer Sighter (3OS) Responsibilities and Instructions. A third
officer must sight all adverse fitness reports per the following guidance.
a. Adverse Officer Reports. A general or flag officer (or the SES
equivalent) within the chain of command will sight all adverse officer
reports. If the next level above the RO is the CMC, reporting officials
should either follow guidance listed in chapter 3 to modify the reporting
chain, or contact the CMC staff for guidance.
b. Adverse Enlisted Reports. The next officer in the reporting chain
senior to the RO, normally the RO’s reporting senior, will sight all adverse
enlisted reports. The 3OS sighting the report shall be the commanding
officer or executive officer at the battalion or squadron level. mIn
instances of higher headquarters staffs (above the battalion/squadron level,
i.e. Division, MEF, etc.), the 3OS may be the RO’s reporting senior so long
as they are a field-grade officer or civilian equivalent.
c. Responsibility
(1) The 3OS Must:
(a) Take action to resolve inconsistencies and disagreements when
the MRO’s attached statement disagrees with the RO as to matters of fact.
(b) Take action to determine the validity of the new information,
when the MRO’s statement adds new information that the RO did not previously
address in his or her comments.
(c) Indicate the actions taken or findings of fact on an addendum
page per the provisions of chapter 4, paragraph 16.
(d) Return the fitness report to the RO for corrections if the
report is not administratively and procedurally correct.
(2) Since the 3OS is in many cases removed from firsthand knowledge
of what is being reported, input from the RO and appropriate staff officers,
commanders, and SEAs is important when their comments are applicable.
(3) If the 3OS’ remarks add new adverse material, refer the remarks
to the MRO for acknowledgment and the opportunity to make a statement.
Note: Should the MRO provide a rebuttal, the 3OS may make closing comments,
if deemed appropriate.
(4) The 3OS should forward the completed report to the CMC (MMRP-32)
within 60 days after the end of the reporting period.
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5 Jun 2023
5-23 Enclosure (2)
d. Procedures for adjudicating unsupported adversity. When the 3OS does
not agree with adversity within the report, he/she will not complete the
report.
(1) In such situations, the 3OS shall provide the RO the reason why
the adversity is deemed unsupported and provide the RO an opportunity to
further support the adversity.
(2) If after discussion, the reporting officials refuse to remove the
adverse mark(s) and/or comment(s), and cannot convince the 3OS that the
report should be adverse, the 3OS will modify the reporting chain according
to chapter 2, paragraph 10f(4) of this Order, and assume reporting
responsibility as the new RS.
(a) After the reporting chain has been modified, the new RO must
make a comment in section K stating, “The reporting chain for this report has
been modified due to an unresolved conflict.”
(b) If the 3OS is a flag officer or equivalent, then he/she may
serve as both the RS and RO according to chapter 2, paragraph 10f(5) of this
Order.
(c) The fitness report may be completed as a N/O report if the
new RS does not have sufficient observation to complete an observed fitness
report. The directed comment for the N/O nature of the report shall state,
“This report is N/O due to insufficient observation following modification of
the reporting chain.”
e. General Officer Reviewing Officers (ROs). When the RO is a general
or flag officer (or the civilian equivalent), 3OS action as described above
is not required. If the MRO provides a rebuttal to the general officer’s
section K, item 4 comments, the general should comment on that rebuttal for
clarification as appropriate.
9. Marine-Reported-On (MRO) Responsibilities and Instructions
a. The MRO is provided no less than five working days to review and sign
the report.
b. By close of business of the fifth working day following the day the
MRO is provided a copy of the report, the MRO must:
(1) Sign and date section J, item 2 of the report.
(2) Indicate in the appropriate block of section J item 2 a desire to
make or not to make a statement.
c. When the MRO indicates there is "no statement to make", the report is
assumed accurate as written.
d. When the MRO desires to make a statement, the following guidance
applies:
(1) Complete the statement using an addendum page per the
instructions in chapter 4, paragraph 16.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
5-24 Enclosure (2)
(2) The MRO's statement must conform to Article 1122 of reference (a)
regarding temperate language, limitation to facts, and performance of duty
during the period of the report.
(3) The fitness report is not the forum for surfacing issues more
timely and appropriately handled at request mast or through an Article 138,
UCMJ Complaints of Wrongs petition per the provisions of reference (h).
(4) The MRO has five working days after referral of the report to
return the completed statement to the RS. If the MRO requires additional
time, he or she should request additional time in writing to the RS. The RS
should normally grant any such reasonable request, but approval for the
request is not automatically granted.
e. If the MRO refuses to sign the report, see paragraph 6g(5) of this
chapter.
f. If the RO forwards the report to the MRO per the provisions of
paragraph 7f of this chapter, by the close of business on the fifth working
day following the day the MRO is provided a copy of the report, the MRO must:
(1) Sign and date section K, item 6.
(2) Indicate in the appropriate block of section K, item 6 a desire
to make or not make a statement.
(3) When the MRO indicates there is no statement to make, the report
is assumed accurate as written.
(4) When the MRO desires to make a statement, the same guidance as
noted in paragraph 8d of this chapter applies, with the exception that the
MRO must return the completed statement to the RO vice the RS.
g. Appeals to Previously Submitted Reports
(1) The MRO may appeal any report that he or she believes is
incorrect, inaccurate, or in violation of the policies and instructions in
this Order once the report is a matter of official record. The MRO must
submit an appeal per the provisions of Chapter 10.
(2) The appeal process is not a substitution for an attempt at proper
resolution of an adverse report during its preparation and review. Reporting
officials must endeavor to thoroughly adjudicate the report or resolve any
perceived injustice before submitting the report to HQMC.
h. Statements After the Fact
(1) The purpose of the MRO’s statement is to allow presentation of
both sides of the issue in an attempt to resolve any misunderstanding or
misinformation during preparation of the report. This action should occur
prior to submission of the report with all the principals at hand.
(2) When the MRO indicates in item 2 of section J or item 6 of
section K: "I have no statement to make," it should be absolutely clear to
the Marine that the expressed desire not to submit a statement presumes no
basis for one.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
5-25 Enclosure (2)
(3) The CMC will not make any further provisions to accept a
statement after the fact.
10. Directed Comments
a. In addition to the directed comments listed in chapter 4, paragraph
18, the following provides amplification of adverse specific directed
comments. The RS, RO, and 3OS have a responsibility to ensure that the
appropriate required directed comments are included in section I, section K
item 4, and any addendum pages. See below for a list of required directed
comments.
b. It is good practice, when appropriate, to combine “like” adverse
items into a single directed comment. Examples:
(1) “Directed Comment, Section A, Items 3a, 5a, 6c: Adverse, DC
report. MRO was found guilty at NJP for a violation of article 92 of the UCMJ
for violating the battalion barracks order in that the MRO had an
unregistered guest after hours in their barracks room.”
(2) “Directed Comment, Section A, Items 5a, 7b, 8d/e/f: Adverse
report; MRO is not within body composition standards. I recommend that the
MRO not be considered for promotion with contemporaries.”
c. Directed Comments. The following items require directed comments in
section I:
(1) Section A, Item 3, Occasion and Period Covered:
(a) Occasion:
1. “DC”: Comment must indicate the reason for submission.
(3) Section A, Item 5, Special Case:
(a) Adverse: The RS is required to state the adverse actions,
not the result of the MRO’s actions. Meaning, the RS cannot simply state “MRO
was found guilty of violating article 92 of the UCMJ.” Instead, the RS must
state what the MRO actually did/failed to do; “MRO was found guilty of
violating article 92 of the UCMJ in that the MRO violated the III MEF liberty
order by executing liberty without a liberty buddy.” The NJP was the result
of the MRO’s actions, but executing liberty without a buddy was the adverse
action.
(4) Section A, Item 6, Marine Subject Of:
(a) Derogatory Material and Disciplinary Action: Reporting
officials must verify that the marking meets the appropriate definition
listed in this chapter. The RS must state the type of derogatory material
(6105, page 11, 3005, etc.), or the type of disciplinary action (NJP, court
martial, civilian conviction, etc.). Reminder: The RS must state the adverse
actions themselves, not the result of the actions. Generally this verbiage is
listed on the derogatory material, or within the UPB or disciplinary action
documents.
(5) Section A, Item 7, Recommendation for Promotion:
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5 Jun 2023
5-26 Enclosure (2)
(a) “No”: This mark renders the report adverse. If the RS marks
no, enter one of the following statements:
1. "I recommend that the MRO not be considered for promotion
with contemporaries."
2. "I recommend that the MRO not be considered for promotion
at any time."
(6) Section A, Item 8:
(a) Qualification: “U” or “X”: A directed comment is required
for codes “U” or “X”. If the RS determines that the MRO was complicit or
negligent, they must provide details that lead them to that conclusion.
Example: “MRO was required, but did not fire during the reporting period. MRO
was scheduled for two separate rifle qualifications during the reporting
period. MRO failed to attend required grass week training and was dropped
during the first attempt. MRO overslept and failed to muster at the
appropriate time during firing week and was subsequently dropped on their
second attempt.”
(b) Physical Fitness Test/Combat Fitness Test (PFT/CFT) Score:
1. “FXXX”: If the MRO achieves a passing overall score, but
failed to achieve the minimum score on a single event, the RS must state
which event the MRO failed.
2. “C150”: The RS must include remedial PFT/CFT scores in
section I if the MRO failed, but then passed a PFT/CFT.
3. “RDNT”: The RS must provide a directed comment in
section I when using this code if the RS deems the MRO was complicit or
negligent. Example: “Directed Comment, Section A, Items 5a, 8b: The MRO was
required, but did not take the PFT during the reporting period. During the
reporting period, the unit had three scheduled PFTs which the MRO knew about
well in advance. The MRO failed to attend any of the scheduled PFTs, produced
no valid excuse on why they could not attend, and did not take the
appropriate steps to independently schedule or attend another PFT.”
(c) Weight/Body Fat: Exceeding acceptable standards and
assignment to BCP/MAP each independently render a fitness report adverse.
When the MRO’s body fat exceeds the maximum allowable standard for the MRO’s
height, or when the MRO’s body fat percentage is within acceptable standards
for that Marine’s age group but has failed to conform to military appearance
standards, comment as follows:
1. “The MRO is not within body composition standards.”
2. “The MRO has been assigned to the Body Composition
Program.”
3. “The MRO has been assigned to the Military Appearance
Program.”
(7) Section A, Item 10/11, RS/RO Information:
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5 Jun 2023
5-27 Enclosure (2)
(a) The RO (acting as the RS) must include a directed comment
that they have assumed RS authority for any of the reasons described in
chapter 2, paragraphs 10e and 10f. Generally this is the case if the previous
RS has been relieved, or the RO does not feel that the RS can objectively
evaluate the Marine.
(b) The RO must include a directed comment if a commanding
general approved a modification to the reporting chain. The RO must state
which commanding general authorized the modification.
(8) Section J, Item 2, Marine-Reported-On (MRO) Acknowledgement of
Adverse Report:
(a) The MRO refuses to sign item 2 of section J (Certification by
the MRO when the report is adverse). If the MRO still refuses to sign, the RS
must provide a directed comment that clarifies three things:
1. The MRO was notified that the report was routed to them
for review and signature (include date and method of communication).
2. The MRO was counseled on the purpose of the statement and
the ramifications of not signing the report.
3. The MRO still refused to sign after communication and
counseling.
(b) The RS must comment if the MRO indicates that they attached a
statement, but no statement is included.
(9) Section K:
(a) Item 6, Marine-Reported-On (MRO) Acknowledgement of Adverse
Report: The MRO refuses to sign item 6 of section K (Certification by the
MRO when the report is adverse). If the MRO still refuses to sign, the RO
must provide a directed comment that clarifies three things:
1. The MRO was notified that the report was routed to them
for review and signature (include date and method of communication).
2. The MRO was counseled on the purpose of the statement and
the ramifications of not signing the report.
3. The MRO still refused to sign after communication and
counseling.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
6-1 Enclosure (2)
Chapter 6
Special Instructions
1. General Information. Considering the diversity of units, missions, and
operational circumstances inherent to the Marine Corps, it is impossible to
adapt all of the instructions contained in the preceding chapters to all
Marines. Consequently, this chapter identifies known exceptions and gives
special guidance. Contact CMC (MMRP-30) for further guidance.
2. Waivers of Policy
a. All waivers for special situations previously approved are cancelled
upon the date of this order. Commanders should submit requests for new
waivers or modification to existing waivers within three months of the date
on this order.
b. It is incumbent upon all reporting officials and commanders to apply
the policies contained herein.
(1) Commanders and reporting officials must identify those situations
that are unique and require modifications to accomplish the objectives
outlined in Chapter 1.
(2) After a thorough examination of this Order, commanders and
reporting officials who, based on their particular situation, identify the
need for a waiver of any section of this Order should:
(a) Request the waiver from the CMC (MMRP-30) via their chain of
command.
(b) Adhere to the policies in this Order until they receive
approval of the waiver request.
c. Certain cases of geographically isolated units and Marines, where the
standard reporting chain cannot be reasonably established, may require a
waiver for RO authority. Applicable Marine Corps Orders that standardize
situationally unique reporting chains( e.g., reference (z), and the like)
provide specific authority for the reporting chain.
3. Unique or Unusual Situations. The provisions for submitting fitness
reports by reporting chains involved in unusual or unique situations, such as
combat, unique operational deployment situations, or when the MRO, RS, or RO
are separated or retired, are as follows:
a. Reporting Chain. Commanding generals may modify reporting chains as
necessary when situations dictate.
b. Submission Deadline. If the situation dictates, waivers to the
submission deadline for fitness reports (30 days after the end of the
reporting period) may be granted per chapter 7, paragraph 3.
c. Fitness Report Preparation. Reporting officials may submit
handwritten reports under extremely unusual circumstances. CMC (MMRP-30) is
the final authority to accept handwritten reports.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
6-2 Enclosure (2)
(1) When all required section A administrative data is not available,
the RS may submit partially completed reports.
(2) Upon receipt at HQMC, the Performance Evaluation Section (MMRP-
30) will take necessary action to ensure the completion of the reports for
processing.
(3) For such reports, it is critical that at least the names and DoD
ID numbers of the MRO, RS, and RO are accurate.
d. Missing or Prisoner of War Status
(1) RSs must submit DC reports upon placement of the MRO in a missing
status as a result of being:
(a) Missing in action.
(b) Captured by a hostile force.
(c) Interned or detained by a foreign country against his or her
will.
(2) The "to" date for the report is the declaration date of the MRO's
specific status.
e. Combat Report Criteria
(1) To be considered for a combat fitness report, the MRO must be
serving in a project/crisis code area as designated by the Chairman, Joint
Chiefs of Staff, and announced by message from Joint Headquarters or this
Headquarters as applicable.
(2) Assignment in the theater of operation, receiving imminent danger
pay, qualifying for a campaign or expeditionary ribbon does not meet the
criteria for a combat report. The MRO must be subjected to hostile fire in
combat operations against an enemy or in direct support of those engaged in
hostile fire with an enemy. Per chapter 4, paragraph 18b(1)(c), the report
must comment on the nature of the combat operation and the MRO’s actions
relative to the operation.
(3) It is the responsibility of the commanders on the scene to
determine when combat fitness reports are justified and monitor submission of
the reports. RSs should document, as applicable, the MRO’s combat actions in
section C (Billet Accomplishments), in justification comments when “F” or “G”
attribute grades are supportable, or in section I comments. To assist in
determining if a combat report is appropriate, at least one of the following
criteria must be met:
(a) The MRO was under fire;
(b) The MRO returned fire;
(c) The MRO directly supported those under fire with supporting
arms; (*Note: Advances in technology now allow Marines to operate within a
project/crisis code area while not being physically located within the
project/crisis code area and therefore are eligible to meet this criteria.
Example: MQ-9 pilot located outside of the project/crisis code area who
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
6-3 Enclosure (2)
employs ordnance against enemy forces in direct support of those under fire
within the project/crisis code area. Reporting officials must still adhere to
all other facets of paragraph 3.e(3) when determining if a combat report is
appropriate. CMC (MMRP-31) is the final authority to determine if a report
meets this criteria. When in doubt, reporting officials should consult with
CMC (MMRP-31) prior to the submission of the report.)
(d) The MRO was in direct service support within the immediate
combat area; or
(e) The MRO was in a leadership or staff support role directly
coordinating actions in the immediate combat area.
(4) Actions meeting the eligibility for the Combat Action Ribbon or
Strike/Flight Air Medal make a combat report a certainty.
4. Academic and Training Duty
a. Report academic and training duty as a student like regular duty.
Reporting officials must observe and report all aspects of a Marine's
performance, potential, and professional character, as appropriate.
Note: Academic reports will not be recorded on the RS or RO profiles and
will not generate a relative value or comparative assessment mark on the
Master Brief Sheet.
b. All MROs in a training status at an MOS-producing school, other
formal course of instruction (e.g., refresher training at Fleet Replacement
Squadrons (FRS)), or degree-producing course of instruction (e.g. MECEP) will
receive an academic-type report, regardless of billets or duties assigned in
addition to academic requirements.
c. Submit fitness reports for Marines attending school or formal courses
of instruction as a result of PCS/TEMINS orders per the submission
requirements outlined in Chapter 3.
d. When a Marine is attending a formal course of instruction in a TAD
status for 31 or more days, the following guidance applies:
(1) Per chapter 3, paragraph 4f, the RS at the parent command must
submit a "to temporary duty" (TD) report when the MRO departs for
instruction.
(2) Per chapter 3, paragraph 4g, the RS at the formal course of
instruction must submit a "from temporary duty" (FD) report upon completion
of the MRO's instruction.
Note: Back-to-back TD reports may occur when an MRO finishes one formal
course and reports to another school before returning to the parent command.
(a) The RS may submit a N/O report if observation is not
feasible.
Note: This is an exception to the provisions of chapter 3, paragraph 5a and
chapter 6, paragraph 4a.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
6-4 Enclosure (2)
(b) While a Marine is in a temporary duty status (lasting 31 days
or longer) the RS must capture all required reporting occasions outlined in
the beginning of chapter 3. For annual occasions (Active and Reserve
Components), only submit reports when the occasion occurs during a period of
temporary duty lasting six months or longer. If the annual occasion occurs
during a period of temporary duty of less than six months, defer the report
and capture the MRO’s performance in the FD report.
(c) If the MRO is dropped or disenrolled from a formal course or
school in less than 90 days, the RS must complete an FD report and explain
the reason in section I.
1. Disenrollment for cause is adverse and shall be processed
per the provisions of Chapter 5.
2. If the MRO is disenrolled for conduct, violating an honor
code at the school, or other similar reason, and the matter is not
adjudicated as described by chapter 5, paragraph 3, the adverse conduct
cannot be mentioned on the fitness report per the provisions of chapter 5.
e. When a Marine is attending a formal course of instruction in a TAD
status for 30 or less days, the following guidance applies:
(1) No fitness report is required.
(2) The RS at the MRO's parent command should address the MRO's
attendance at the formal course of instruction in section C and/or section I
of the MRO's next report.
f. Per chapter 4, paragraph 4c(3), the RS must enter the one-letter code
“A” in section A, item 3c (Type Duty) for all Marines performing academic or
training duty as students.
g. Submit an RT report per chapter 3, paragraph 4m for SMCR or IRR
members attending school or a formal course of instruction lasting 30 days or
less.
h. Submit observed reports to the extent possible.
(1) Section B must reflect the nature of the program of instruction.
(2) Section C must include course completion, class standings, etc.
(3) RS should evaluate the MRO in as many of the attributes in
section D through G as possible.
(4) RS must complete section I, making directed and additional
comments as appropriate.
(5) ROs should complete section K, commenting as appropriate.
(6) For aviation students attending the FRS, academic, observed
reports may be written when duties associated with squadron billets are
performed in addition to their academic syllabus, or when superb or
meritorious actions merit. This is an exception to chapter 3, paragraph
6b(4).
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
6-5 Enclosure (2)
i. When the MRO is at a non-Marine command or formal course of
instruction, paragraph 8d of this chapter may apply.
5. Fitness Reports for Defense Counsel or Military Judges
a. Defense Counsel. Reference (y) defines the reporting chain and
policies for judge advocates assigned duties as defense counsel. The MRO may
receive a simultaneous report (see chapter 2, paragraph 10c) from the local
command, only for performance of non-defense counsel responsibilities,
provided the MRO performs additional significant duties and responsibilities
for that command.
b. Military Judges. Applicable military judiciary instructions define
the reporting chain for a Marine Corps judge advocate assigned to perform
duties as a military judge. Fitness reports shall conform to the general
policies described in this Order and in instructions of the Judge Advocate
General of the Navy, the Chief Judge of the Navy-Marine Corps Trial
Judiciary, or the Chief Judge of the U.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal
Appeals.
c. Officers Assigned to the Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals.
Reporting officials must evaluate the performance of a judge advocate
assigned to a judicial billet as an appellate judge with a view toward
assessing that officer's performance and conduct during the reporting period,
while at the same time fully supporting the fundamental principle of
decisional independence.
(1) Reporting officials must not base their evaluation on a judge's
judicial opinions, rulings, or the results thereof.
(2) Evaluation of an appellate judge may include the officer's
knowledge of criminal law and procedure, judicial demeanor, industry,
adherence to rules of procedure and ethics, clarity and quality of written
opinions without regard to the decision ultimately reached, management
ability (when applicable), collegiality, and significant non-judicial
contributions to the service or local community.
6. Remedial Promotion. When a Marine is remedially promoted, the RS must
complete a fitness report with either a GC or DC occasion and include a
directed comment in section I stating the MRO's promotion date (the date the
actual ceremony took place) and date of rank.
a. GC Occasion Example: A sergeant is promoted to staff sergeant on 2
June 2009 and given a DOR of 1 October 2008. The section I directed comment
should state, "Remedially Promoted 20090602, DOR 20081001". The “To” date on
the fitness report will reflect the date the MRO was physically promoted, not
the MRO’s DOR for pay and lineal purposes. No fitness report is due for the
elapsed time between the MRO’s administrative DOR and physical promotion.
b. DC Occasion Example: A corporal is promoted to sergeant on 2 June
2009 and given a DOR of 1 October 2008. The “From” date on the fitness report
will reflect the MRO’s DOR and the “To” date on the fitness report will
reflect the date the MRO was physically promoted. The section I directed
comment should state, “Remedially Promoted 20090602, DOR 20081001”.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
6-6 Enclosure (2)
7. Set Aside/Disapproved Grade Reductions
a. If a grade reduction is remitted, the RS who submitted the GC report
must resubmit the report as a DC report to CMC (MMRP-32) that excludes any
reference to the reduction. The revised fitness report must be submitted on
NAVMC 10835, which can be acquired from the MMRP-30 web page. An explanation
of the appellate action and the MRO’s reinstated date of rank must be
provided along with the revised report.
(1) If any findings of guilt or punishment remain in effect, the RS
must reference them in section I of the DC report.
(2) If the report includes reference to any findings of guilt and
punishment remaining in effect, or other prior reported adversity pertaining
to character or performance, the RS must:
(a) Ensure the MRO signs section J, item 2 (Certification by the
MRO when the Report is Adverse).
(b) Ensure compliance with the provisions of Chapter 5 of this
Order.
b. If NJP was set aside, the RS of the corresponding DC fitness report
must submit a revised report to CMC (MMRP-32) without any mention of the
findings of guilt or punishment that was set aside. The same process applies
if the entire NJP was set aside. The revised fitness report must be
submitted on NAVMC 10835, which can be acquired from the MMRP-30 web page.
An explanation of the appellate action and the MRO’s reinstated date of rank
must be provided along with the revised report.
c. The MRO must submit a request to CMC (MMRP-13), per the provisions of
chapter 10, to have the old fitness report removed from his/her OMPF. A copy
of the signed set aside letter must accompany the request. The MRO need not
wait for the RS to complete the revised fitness report before submitting the
request to have the old report removed from his/her OMPF.
8. Non-Marine Reporting Chains
a. Reporting Officials. Reporting officials for Marines serving
external to the Marine Corps must adhere to the provisions of this Order and,
to the extent possible, understand and consider Marine Corps values when
completing a fitness report.
(1) Either the Reporting Senior (RS) or Reviewing Officer (RO) is a
Marine. If a Marine normally functions as either the RS or RO according to
the standard reporting chain defined in chapter 2, paragraph 2, process the
report per the guidance of this Order. The RO must forward the completed
report to the CMC (MMRP-32) per the provisions of chapter 7.
(2) Neither the Reporting Senior (RS) nor Reviewing Officer (RO) is a
Marine. Organizations should strive to include a Marine in the reporting
chain. In those cases, however, when neither the RS nor the RO is a Marine
officer, the following guidance applies:
(a) Reporting officials should seek the assistance, if available,
of the SMR in the command or agency in preparing the report.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
6-7 Enclosure (2)
(b) Following preparation and review, the RO shall forward the
report to the SMR, if one is available.
(c) The SMR shall review the report for administrative and
procedural correctness and forward the report to the CMC (MMRP-32) per the
provisions of chapter 4, paragraph 1c.
(d) For reports on the SMR in the command, staff, or agency, the
RO must forward the completed report to the Marine Corps unit that sponsors
the billet.
1. The sponsoring unit will administratively review the
report and forward it to the CMC (MMRP-32).
2. Ensure reports arrive at the HQMC unit in sufficient time
to allow forwarding of the report to the CMC (MMRP-32) no later than 30 days
after the end of the reporting period.
(e) If the RO (as defined in chapter 2, paragraph 4) is not in
the general proximity of the MRO, or because of organizational structure
would be unfamiliar with the MRO, the RS, with the approval of the RO of
record will:
1. Request the SMR, if available, to function as the RO of
record (provided he or she is the same grade or senior to the RS).
2. If a SMR is not available, forward the report for formal
review to the Marine Corps unit that sponsors the billet.
3. Forward the report with an addendum page that states that
review is not feasible and requests that the sponsoring unit review the
report.
4. Following review, the sponsoring unit will forward the
report to the CMC (MMRP-32).
(3) Marine Corps units sponsoring billets external to the Marine
Corps must provide the Marines in these billets with the necessary guidance
and support to assist their reporting officials when necessary.
b. Senior Marine Representative (SMR)
(1) The role of the SMR in the timely and accurate completion of
reports cannot be understated. The SMR is the critical link to non-Marine
reporting officials and compliance with this order. The lack of
communicative continuity to non-Marine reporting officials makes it
incredibly challenging to correct reports that MMRP-30 returns due to non-
compliance with this order. The SMR of the command, staff, or agency must
assist reporting officials by:
(a) Providing non-Marine RSs or ROs guidance and education on the
policies of this Order.
(b) Reviewing reports for administrative and procedural
correctness.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
6-8 Enclosure (2)
(2) After reviewing the report, the SMR must attach an addendum page
to the report per chapter 4, paragraph 15, marking item 3d indicating he or
she administratively reviewed the report.
(3) If significant professional contact allows for meaningful
assessment of the MRO, the SMR may comment on his or her observations
pertinent to MRO’s billet assignment and mission accomplishment. The senior
Marine may also address MRO’s embodiment of the “whole Marine” concept and
how Marine Corps standards, values, and professional growth are exhibited.
Note: If the SMR’s comments add adverse material they must be referred to
the MRO for acknowledgment and the MRO given the opportunity to make a
statement per chapter 5.
(4) The SMR must function as the RO of record when requested to do so
by the RS per paragraph 8a(2)(e)1 of this chapter, if the RO (as defined in
chapter 2, paragraph 4) is not in the general proximity of, or because of
organizational structure, would be unfamiliar with the MRO. Seniority
requirements per chapter 2, paragraph 10d apply.
c. Marine-Reported-On (MRO)
(1) Provide the RS with a completed section A and billet
accomplishments as appropriate.
(2) Assist the RS or RO in obtaining a copy of, and interpreting
policy in, this Order.
d. Marines Permanently Assigned to Non-Marine Commands. Reporting
officials for Marines assigned to other service commands, agencies or
institutions as permanent personnel; e.g., instructors, liaison duty, staff
members, and the like, must evaluate the MRO using the NAVMC 10835 per the
provisions of this Order.
e. Marines Temporarily Assigned to Non-Marine Commands. The following
procedures apply to Marines assigned as students or special trainees at other
service commands, agencies, or institutions, or to an exchange program with
another country that complete performance evaluations using their own
standard form and values:
(1) When a fitness report is due, the MRO’s administrative support
unit will prepare section A of the USMC Fitness Report. The unit will:
(a) Mark item 5 (Special Case) of section A "not observed".
(b) Complete section B of the report per chapter 4, paragraph 5.
(c) Comment in section I as follows: "Attachment is the unique
performance evaluation form required by this (command/institution)."
(2) The MRO will deliver the USMC fitness report to his or her RS,
requesting that the service or agency unique performance evaluation (in
whatever form) be attached to the fitness report.
(a) When accomplished, the MRO must have the RS sign section J,
item 1 and have RO sign section K, item 5. The RO should not complete items
1 through 4 of section K.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
6-9 Enclosure (2)
(b) Mail the fitness report with the attached service/agency
unique form to the CMC (MMRP-32) per chapter 7.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
7-1 Enclosure (2)
Chapter 7
Handling and Submission of Completed Reports
1. General Information
a. Per chapter 4, paragraph 1b reporting officials must safeguard the
sensitivity and privacy of fitness report information.
(1) Each command and reporting official must establish and enforce
procedures to ensure the treatment of completed fitness reports as privileged
information.
(2) Limit access of completed reports to persons requiring knowledge
of such reports.
b. Timely submission of fitness reports is critical. Reporting
officials must ensure the CMC (MMRP-32) receives completed reports within 30
days of the end of the reporting period for normal reports and 60 days for
adverse reports.
c. Reporting officials should maintain a personal copy or sufficient
personal notes for at least five years to ensure that, if required by
circumstance, an accurate reconstruction of the report is possible. This
information must not be provided to others, left behind upon detachment (to
include computer hard drives), or maintained as a system of organizational
files.
2. Attachments to Reports
a. The only attachment allowed to a fitness report is the addendum page.
Note: The only exception is for other service or agency-unique evaluation
forms per chapter 6, paragraph 8e.
b. Submit all other material (commendatory, derogatory, or
administrative) appropriate for inclusion in the Marine's OMPF via separate
cover letter to the CMC (MMRP-20), per reference (m) and this Order.
3. Modifications to Submission Deadlines for Unique or Unusual Circumstances
a. When unique or unusual circumstances (i.e. combat or other unique
operational deployment situations, separation or retirement of the MRO, RS,
or RO) preclude the timely submission of fitness reports to HQMC, commanding
generals may grant extensions up to 60 days to reporting officials.
Note: The extension is for the preparation and submission period, not the
ending date of the report.
(1) These extensions are for specific situations only and do not
constitute a continuing authorization.
(2) When granted an extension, the RO must note the approval of the
extension in section K indicating the commanding general's waiver approval
for the submission deadline and indicate, by billet, the commander general
who authorized this extension.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
7-2 Enclosure (2)
b. When combat or other unique operational deployment situations
preclude the timely submission of fitness reports to HQMC within 30 days of
the end of a reporting occasion, and the anticipated delay from end of
reporting period exceeds 90 days, waiver approval must come from the CMC
(MMRP-30).
(1) Reporting officials must proactively request the waiver from the
CMC (MMRP-30) via their chain of command.
(2) When granted an extension, the RO must note the approval of the
extension in section K indicating the CMC's (MMRP-30) waiver approval for the
submission deadline.
c. Failure to indicate either CG or CMC waiver authority would result in
the report being processed and recorded as a late report.
4. Submission of Completed Reports. Submit completed reports as follows:
a. Fitness reports completed through A-PES are automatically submitted
to the fitness report processing section for action.
b. Fitness reports completed outside of A-PES will be submitted as
described in chapter 4, paragraph 1c(2).
c. Submit reports for Marines serving external to the Marine Corps per
the special instructions contained in chapter 6, paragraph 8.
5. Access to Completed Reports. Paragraph 2800 of reference (b) provides
authorization for individual Marines to access and review their fitness
report records on file at HQMC. The primary means to access their records is
through the “My OMPF” tab on the Marine Online (MOL) website.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
8-1 Enclosure (2)
Chapter 8
Headquarters Marine Corps (HQMC) Functions
1. General Information
a. The Performance Evaluation Section (MMRP-30) of the Records and
Performance Branch (MMRP) implements policy and procedures, and collects,
maintains, and provides essential data to support the CMC’s personnel
management responsibilities (assignment, retention, and promotion of
Marines). The Section provides guidance and assistance to Marines in the
application and administration of the PES.
b. The Career Counseling Section (MMRP-50) provides, upon request,
counseling to Marines concerning competitiveness for upcoming promotion and
selection boards and guidance concerning future assignments, lateral moves,
and special assignments. The section also provides counseling to Marines in
the grades of sergeant through colonel who fail selection on a board.
c. The Career Management Team (CMT) within the Reserve Affairs Division,
provides, upon request, counseling to all Ready Reserve Marines (i.e.
Selected Marine Corps Reserve, Individual Mobilization Augmentee, Individual
Ready Reserve and the Active Reserve) concerning competitiveness for upcoming
promotion and selection boards. The CMT also provides guidance regarding
future billet assignments, career progression advice, and lateral moves.
2. Performance Evaluation Section (MMRP-30) Responsibilities. MMRP-30
ensures the PES remains focused on values and standards of the Marine Corps,
that the system functions effectively, and provides guidance and
interpretation to the field and HQMC, as applicable. The section is
organized by functional area and includes two primary sub-sections associated
with fitness reports.
a. Policy and Compliance Section (MMRP-31). The MMRP-31 is responsible
for fitness report policy, research, correction, and accountability for all
active-duty and reserve personnel. Additionally, the unit provides liaison
support for promotion and selection boards. Commanders who have inquiries or
who are assisting their Marines with performance record problems should
direct their correspondence to the CMC (MMRP-31). Specific tasks include:
(1) Supervise adherence to PES policy, to include identification of
those reporting officials who are noncompliant with the requirements of this
Order.
(2) Supervise the PES education program for the Marine Corps.
(a) Provide briefs for Title 10 promotion boards and non-Title 10
selection boards.
(b) Provide briefs and classes at resident PME schools.
(3) Receive, review, staff, and recommend disposition of necessary
corrections to fitness report records per the provisions of paragraph 10 of
this chapter.
(4) Supervise policies regarding accountability of required fitness
reports and audits of fitness report records.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
8-2 Enclosure (2)
(5) Prepare advisory opinions on petitions to the Performance
Evaluation Review Board (PERB) and Board for Correction of Naval Records
(BCNR) regarding PES policy.
(6) Respond to requests for waivers of established PES policy.
(7) Conduct research, evaluate performance evaluation trends, and
recommend policy changes as appropriate.
(8) Provide liaison with other branches of the military regarding
performance evaluation matters.
(9) Provide personnel to act as inspectors addressing PES matters for
the Inspector General of the Marine Corps.
b. Fitness Report Processing Section (MMRP-32). MMRP-32 is responsible
for initial screening and processing of all fitness reports into the
automated system, returning incorrect fitness reports to reporting officials
for correction, and forwarding correct reports to the CMC (MMRP-20) for
inclusion in the OMPF. Specific tasks include:
(1) Ensure reports are administratively correct when submitted;
return incorrect reports to the appropriate reporting official.
(2) Audit fitness reports for adherence to policy.
(3) Enter fitness reports into the database and ensure their
accuracy.
(4) Reconstruct those reports which are missing from the OMPF.
(5) Prepare the correspondence necessary for follow-up action to
correct erroneous reports.
3. Career Counseling Section (MMRP-50)
a. Upon request, the MMRP-50 provides counseling and guidance to Marines
in the grades of sergeant through colonel. Specific tasks include:
(1) Provide career counseling, planning, and educational guidance to
Marines.
(a) Focus on operational experience, MOS credibility, command and
staff leadership experience, relative competitiveness, and potential for key
billet and command selection.
(b) Provide guidance regarding timing of resident PME and special
programs.
(c) Marines are required to conduct a self-audit as described in
Appendix H prior to their counseling session.
(d) Recommended that Marines contact the career counselors a year
prior to any board on which their record will be considered.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
8-3 Enclosure (2)
(e) Marines can schedule a career counseling appointment via
phone, email, or the MMRP-50 website.
(f) Counseling sessions are conducted via phone, online via
digital meeting platforms, or in person.
(2) Provide advisory opinions to the PERB and BCNR, and when a Marine
is considered for a special selection board.
(3) Provide responses to general officer inquiries and other staff
actions which require review of the OMPF.
(4) Provide career counseling briefs for resident PME schools.
(5) Provide briefs for Title 10 promotion boards and non-Title 10
selection boards.
b. The counseling section is typically staffed with a mix of ground,
aviation, and combat service support MOSs to better counsel Marines from all
elements of the Marine Air Ground Task Force. However, each counselor is
qualified to counsel Marines of any MOS.
4. Education. The key to preserving and improving the quality of
performance evaluations is knowledge and understanding of PES policy and
Marine Corps values. This is achieved through the education of all reporting
officials. Effective training considers the audience, timing of the training
in relation to the evaluation or promotion board cycles, and the appropriate
topic. The CMC accomplishes this goal as follows:
a. Performance Evaluation System (PES) Policy. Commanders shall ensure
that RSs, ROs, and SEAs have access to, and understand, all current PES
directives.
b. Formal Schools. All officer and enlisted PME courses of instruction,
taught through the Marine Corps Training and Education Command, shall contain
instruction devoted to the PES.
c. Unit Training. Commanders shall ensure that all MROs and reporting
officials are knowledgeable of applicable provisions of the PES and will
conduct appropriate training annually. Commanders shall consider the
audience, timing, topic relationship. Examples:
(1) December: MROW training for E-5s. PARS/Marking Philosophy
discussion and E-6 promotion board debrief with E-5 RSs.
(2) April: MBS audit with O1/2s. Review adverse report procedures
for height/weight/body fat and PFT failures with all reporting officials.
(3) October: MBS audit with all E-6s and E-7s. E-7 and E-8
promotion board debrief. PARS/Marking Philosophy discussion and E-7 promotion
board debrief with E-6 RSs.
d. Briefs. MMRP-30 and MMRP-50 personnel provide briefs at formal
schools, to promotion and selection boards, during the MMOA/EA roadshow, and
in other venues upon request.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
8-4 Enclosure (2)
5. Master Brief Sheet (MBS). The MBS is a ready reference document used in
the personnel management process. The MBS provides key personal data and a
summary of a Marine’s performance evaluation record. The MBS has two
sections:
a. Header Data. Provides service information extracted directly from
the MCTFS (see Appendix C).
b. Fitness Report Listing. Provides a synopsis of all reports recorded
in the system, and reflects data taken from sections A, D, E, F, G, H, and
item 2 of section K of the fitness report (see Appendix D).
6. Reporting Senior (RS) Profile. The Reporting Senior Profile outlines the
grading history of an RS by showing the fitness report average, in descending
order, of every report written by the RS. It is a key tool for use in
accomplishing the objectives of the PES.
a. Intent of the Reporting Senior (RS) Profile:
(1) The RS should write each report covering the performance and
actions of an individual Marine during the discrete reporting period. The RS
should pay particular attention to Chapters 3, 4, and 5 (if adverse).
(2) After the report is complete, the RS should go back through each
attribute and compare the assigned attribute marks to the attributes marks
assigned to the other fitness reports within the RS’s profile. The RS should
make minor adjustments to the attribute marks, as necessary, to ensure that
the assigned attribute marks are kept in context of the RS’s true marking
philosophy. The purpose of going back through a report to compare attributes
is to check one’s work. For example, if an RS gave a Marine an attribute
mark of “D” for performance, but for other Marines within the same profile
with comparable performance the RS gave attribute marks of “C,” then the RS
would be able to identify the inflated mark and re-mark it to more
appropriately align it with the his/her historical standard. Attribute
comparison IS NOT a process to enable a RS to write to a profile.
(3) Individual RS profiles aid in maintaining the integrity of the
PES by providing the RS with a means to accurately report on each MRO while
freeing the RS from concern about how other RSs are evaluating Marines of
similar grades.
b. Reporting Senior (RS) Profile Dynamics
(1) The RS profile is a dynamic tool which develops over time.
(2) The profile reflects all reports written by the RS for each grade
excluding academic, EN, and N/O reports.
(3) Because the RS profile is a snapshot of the RS’s marking
philosophy, RSs must understand the significance of maintaining a consistent
marking philosophy throughout their careers.
(4) RSs must accurately and fairly assess the performance of their
subordinates; RSs who fail to do so will unwittingly and unfairly
discriminate against either previously submitted reports or subsequent
reports.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
8-5 Enclosure (2)
(a) RSs who consistently mark all of their Marines the same do a
disservice to their Marines and to promotion/selection/retention boards,
because the reports will, for the most part, lack relative value in relation
to all other reports written by the RS for Marines of the same grade.
(b) RSs who attempt to change their marking philosophy will
either positively or negatively affect the relative value of reports for MROs
they have previously rated.
1. If the RS begins systematically assigning higher than
normal attribute marks, he or she diminishes the value of all the preceding
reports within their profile that have lower fitness report averages.
2. If the RS begins systematically assigning lower than
normal attribute marks, he or she inflates the value of all the preceding
reports within their profile that have higher fitness report averages.
(5) The profile reflects the number of reports submitted late by the
RS.
(6) No mechanism exists to “reset” RS profiles. Reporting seniors
may view their profiles on the “My OMPF” tab on MOL.
c. Calculating Profile Data
(1) Fitness Report Average for an Individual Report
(a) Each block in the marking gradient for each attribute has an
assigned numeric value as follows: A=1, B=2, C=3, D=4, E=5, F=6, G=7, and
H=0.
Note: Block H (N/O) has no value and does not factor into the calculation of
the average.
(b) Each observed attribute numeric value is added to find the
total, which is divided by the number of observed attributes to calculate the
average, rounded to the nearest hundredth.
(2) Reporting Senior's Average of All Fitness Reports Written on
Marines of Similar Grade. This average reflects the mean of the numeric
value for all fitness reports written by the RS on Marines of the same grade.
(3) Reporting Senior's Highest Fitness Report Average of Any Report
Written on Marines of Similar Grade. This value reflects the highest fitness
report average of any report written by the RS on Marines of the same grade.
(4) Reporting Senior's Lowest Fitness Report Average of Any Report
Written on Marines of Similar Grade. This value reflects the lowest fitness
report average of any report written by the RS on Marines of the same grade.
(5) The Number of Reports Submitted by the RS Received at HQMC 60 or
More Days After the End of the Reporting Period. This number reflects the
number of reports submitted by the RS that HQMC received 60 or more days
after the end of the reporting period.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
8-6 Enclosure (2)
7. Relative Value
a. Relative value is a boardroom metric and is not relevant to the
fitness report writing process. The only purpose of relative value, by
design, is to give individuals making personnel management decisions the
ability to weigh the merit of a single fitness report in relation to the RS’s
rating history or "profile." The relative value of a report reflects how the
fitness report average of an individual report compares to:
(1) The RS's average of all fitness reports written by the RS on
Marines of the same grade.
(2) The highest fitness report average of any report written by the
RS on a Marine of the same grade as the MRO.
b. The MBS displays the following information relevant to the Relative
Value:
(1) The Relative Value at the Time of Processing. This numeric value
reflects the relative value of the MRO's fitness report at the time of
processing based on the RS's rating history for Marines of the same grade as
of the time the MRO's report was processed. This number is a constant and
once calculated, will not change.
(2) The Cumulative Relative Value. This numeric value reflects the
cumulative relative value of the MRO's fitness report based on the RS's
rating history for Marines of the same grade as the MRO. This number is a
variable and will change as the RS writes additional reports on Marines of
the same grade as the MRO.
(3) The Fitness Report Average. The average of the observed
attributes on the report (see paragraph 6c(1) of this chapter).
(4) The Reporting Senior (RS) Average. The cumulative average of all
report averages written by the RS on Marines of the same grade (see paragraph
6c(2) of this chapter). The RS average is equivalent to a relative value of
90.
(5) The Reporting Senior (RS) High. The highest fitness report
average of any report written by the RS on a Marine of that grade. The RS
high is equivalent to a relative value of 100.
c. The relative value will appear on the MRO's MBS in numeric fashion on
an 80 to 100 scale.
(1) A relative value between 93.34 and 100.00 indicates the report is
in the upper third of the RS profile.
(2) A relative value between 86.67 and 93.33 indicates the report is
in the middle third of the RS profile.
(3) A relative value between 80.00 and 86.66 indicates the report is
in the bottom third of the RS profile.
(4) It is possible to have a report with a relative value of less
than 80.00; however, it will be depicted as having a relative value of 80.00
on the MBS.
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5 Jun 2023
8-7 Enclosure (2)
8. Reviewing Officer (RO) Profile. The RO Profile outlines the grading
history of an RO by showing the comparative assessment mark, in descending
order, of every report written by the RO. It is a key tool for use in
accomplishing the objectives of the PES.
a. The comparative assessment mark for all fitness reports of Marines of
the same grade will be included on the MBS.
(1) The top line shows the comparative assessment marks by the RO on
all fitness reports of Marines of the same grade prior to the subject fitness
report.
(2) The second line shows the cumulative comparative assessment
marks, including the subject report, by the RO on all fitness reports of
Marines of the same grade, with a frame highlighting the assessment mark of
the subject fitness report.
b. When a fitness report is processed to the OMPF, the RO profile will
be overlaid to the left of the pyramid in section K on page 5 of the report.
c. The RO may view their profiles on the “My OMPF” tab on MOL.
9. Official Military Personnel File (OMPF). The OMPF contains a Marine’s
complete military history from the day of entry into the Marine Corps through
present. The Individual Records Administration Manual, reference (m),
contains a list of material appropriate for insertion in the OMPF. The
Records Management Section (MMRP-20) maintains the OMPF. The OMPF consists
of the following distinct informational areas:
a. S-Folder (Service Information). Contains service computation and
other pertinent administrative information.
(1) Service Computation Information. Consists of enlistment,
reenlistment, and extension of enlistment documents, appointment and
acceptance records, orders to active duty, separation orders and documents,
and other documents which support or validate periods of active or inactive
duty in computing service time for benefits, programs, or retirement.
(2) Other Pertinent Information. Consists of other pertinent and
essential information for the management of a Marine’s career such as
dependency applications, Servicemen’s Group Life Insurance (SGLI) selections,
security disclosures, and other type forms.
b. C-Folder (Commendatory/Derogatory Information). Contains
commendatory and derogatory information and documents such as meritorious
masts, medals and awards, courts-martial/NJP, and other material reflecting
favorably or adversely on a Marine.
c. P-Folder (Performance Data). Contains all fitness reports and
addendum pages written on a Marine.
d. X-Folder (Digital Photo). Contains the most current official
photograph submitted by the Marine.
e. F-Folder (Field Record Data). Contains documents and standard pages
maintained in the field record (OQR/SRB) at the time of reenlistment,
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5 Jun 2023
8-8 Enclosure (2)
appointment to officer grade, discharge, retirement, or death. Field record
(OQR/SRB) data for periods of service prior to the last continuous period of
active service may be resident in other portions of the OMPF.
10. Correction of Fitness Report Records. The CMC has the authority under
the provisions of paragraph 2800.8 of reference (b) to correct fitness report
records when the errors are limited solely to factual matters and when
documentary evidence indicates that the record contains erroneous
information. Reporting officials should forward requests for corrections
concerning the completeness, accuracy, and credibility of material previously
submitted for incorporation into official records in the following manner:
a. Administrative Corrections. The CMC (MMRP-30) has the authority to
correct section A information excluding the mark in item 8h “Status,” and
statements of fact in sections B, C, I, and K that are devoid of opinion and
interpretive comment.
(1) The CMC (MMRP-30) will not correct:
(a) Gaps or overlaps in the reporting period (section A, item 3b)
covering 30 days or less.
(b) Section A, item 9a (Duty Preference (Code)) and item 9b (Duty
Preference). The MRO can make corrections via unit diary at the reporting
unit level.
(c) Section A, item 8c (Special Information: "Status").
(2) Submit requests for administrative corrections as follows:
(a) The MRO must submit the request via one of the reporting
officials identified on the original report (preferably the RS).
(b) The RS or RO must endorse the request, giving rationale for
those changes which are valid, and provide documentation, as applicable.
Note: If the RS endorses the request, endorsement by the RO is not necessary
when the requested change does not apply to section K.
(c) Forward the endorsed correspondence to the CMC (MMRP-31)
email account at smb.manpower.mmrp-[email protected]
. Alternatively, original
documentation may be mailed to the following address:
Commandant of the Marine Corps
(Code MMRP-31)
2008 Elliot Road
Quantico, VA 22134-5030
(3) Anticipate up to 30 days from the time of receipt at HQMC for
completion of the requested corrections. Personnel must be proactive to
ensure timely corrections for individuals pending selection board or other
personnel actions/decisions.
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8-9 Enclosure (2)
b. Substantive Corrections
(1) All corrections other than those listed in paragraph 10a of this
chapter are inherently judgmental, including supposed errors in attribute
markings and comparative assessment markings.
(2) The CMC, acting through the PERB, and the Secretary of the Navy,
acting through the BCNR, can approve a revised assessment of a Marine's
conduct or performance based entirely on facts about the Marine that were
unknown when the original report was prepared.
(3) See Chapter 10 for further information.
c. Supplemental Comments. Situations may occur after submission of a
fitness report in which the RS or RO is subsequently made aware of new facts
that reflect upon the performance of the MRO during a specific reporting
period. Consequently, reporting officials may forward a request for
inclusion of supplemental comments into official records. Additionally, this
Headquarters may solicit reporting officials for inclusion of supplemental
comments when in receipt of documentation which verifies pertinent facts are
absent from the report.
(1) To make such a request, the RS or RO must:
(a) Submit the comments on an addendum page; include a cover
letter that identifies the new information and provides justification for its
inclusion to the report.
(b) Limit requests solely to factual matters, with the
documentary evidence as appropriate, indicating the previously missing
information.
(2) Send requests to the CMC (MMRP-31) as appropriate, for decision
on the merits of each case.
(3) Requests from the RS must have the endorsement of the RO of
record. The CMC (MMRP-31) will return all requests without endorsements.
(4) If the supplemental comments are by necessity derogatory because
the new facts surface a previously unknown adversity, the reporting official
making the request must first refer the comments to the MRO for
acknowledgment per the provisions of Chapter 5. If the MRO's location is not
known (e.g., the MRO transferred) request assistance from this Headquarters.
(5) Supplemental comments will not serve to change evaluative
markings in sections D through H or the RO's comparative assessment (item 3)
in section K.
11. Missing Fitness Reports. Ensuring each sergeant and above has a
complete fitness report record on file at HQMC is a shared responsibility.
a. Commanding officers, SEAs, and reporting officials must assist
Marines in correcting incomplete fitness report records.
b. Individual Marines also have a responsibility to periodically audit
their records especially in advance of eligibility before a particular
selection board and prior to reenlistment time.
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5 Jun 2023
8-10 Enclosure (2)
c. Date gaps or overlaps of 30 days or less are not significant and do
not require correction.
12. Late Fitness Reports. Fitness reports are due to the CMC (MMRP-32) 30
days after the end of the reporting period for normal reports and 60 days for
adverse reports. Although late submission is unacceptable, it does not
render a fitness report invalid.
a. Chapter 7, paragraph 4 addresses exceptions to the submission
deadline policy.
b. The CMC (MMRP-30) will track specific reporting official
responsibility for late submission of a report based on the ending date of
the report and when received at HQMC.
c. The CMC (MMRP-30) will periodically provide written notification to
commanding generals identifying reporting officials who are habitually late
in submitting fitness reports to HQMC.
13. Policy Compliance Measures
a. Inflated, inaccurate, and gamed fitness reports violate the integrity
of the PES and do a disservice to the MRO and the Marine Corps. Commanders,
reporting officials, and SEAs at all levels must ensure adherence to the
tenets of the PES. To maintain the integrity of the PES objectives,
reporting officials must adhere to policies established in this order. The
intent of the compliance measures are to:
(1) Ensure adherence to PES policy.
(2) Ensure early identification of, and initiation of corrective
action for, reporting officials displaying undesirable reporting trends.
b. Policy Compliance Objectives. Policy compliance measures provide the
CMC (MMRP-30) with the tools to objectively:
(1) Monitor how well reporting officials are performing their duties.
(2) Proactively identify, notify, and educate reporting officials
displaying undesirable reporting trends indicating:
(a) Gaming. Unjustifiably marking (high or low) an MRO or
otherwise subverting PES policy in ways that cloud the relative value of a
particular report in relation to other reports written by an RS for Marines
of the same grade.
(b) Inflation. Developing a pattern of marking reports
artificially higher than prescribed by this Order.
(c) Untimely submission of reports. Habitual submission of late
reports.
(d) Inaccurate reporting. Inaccurate or incomplete reporting of
information. Examples include but are not limited to:
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5 Jun 2023
8-11 Enclosure (2)
1. Not reporting any known derogatory material, disciplinary
action, or failure to meet prescribed Marine Corps standards.
2. Not reporting any known commendatory material.
3. Administrative errors resulting in inaccurate
information.
(e) Procedural errors. Failure to complete or process reports as
prescribed by this Order. Examples include but are not limited to:
1. Unauthorized modifications to the reporting chain.
2. Including unacceptable comments on a report.
3. Failure to refer adverse RS/RO comments to the MRO for
rebuttal.
c. Compliance Notification Process. The CMC (MMRP-30) will follow a
defined process when a non-compliant reporting official is identified.
(1) Notify Reporting Official. Upon identification of a reporting
official showing an undesirable trend, the CMC (MMRP-30) will correspond
directly to the reporting official.
(a) The correspondence will:
1. Notify the reporting official that the monitoring process
identified him or her as showing a noncompliance trend.
2. Reinforce the objectives of the PES.
(b) This correspondence is personal in nature and:
1. Highlights the specific area of concern.
2. Encourages improvement.
3. Reemphasizes reporting responsibilities.
(2) Notify Reporting Chain. If the reporting official’s non-
compliance trend continues, the CMC (MMRP-30) will correspond with the
reporting official’s reporting chain.
(a) This correspondence notifies the Marine’s reporting chain of
continued noncompliance.
(b) This correspondence solicits support from the Marine’s
reporting chain and:
1. Highlights the specific area of concern.
2. Encourages improvement.
3. Reemphasizes reporting responsibilities.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
8-12 Enclosure (2)
4. Provides input to the Marine’s RS for use as deemed
appropriate by the RS when completing section H of the Marine’s next fitness
report.
(3) If the measures defined above fail to counter the reporting
official’s noncompliance, the CMC (MM) will correspond with the reporting
official’s chain of command, initiating action deemed applicable and
appropriate.
d. Compliance Measures for Non-Marine Reporting Officials
(1) The policy compliance measures for civilian reporting officials
within a Marine Corps organization are the same as defined for Marines
officials.
(2) The policy compliance measures for non-Marine reporting
officials, both military and civilian, on Marines serving outside the Marine
Corps are the same as for Marine reporting officials. In corresponding with
non-Marine reporting officials and their reporting chain/chain of command
every attempt will be made to encourage compliance with the spirit and intent
of the PES Order to foster performance evaluation accuracy and credibility.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
9-1 Enclosure (1)
Chapter 9
Fitness Report Audit Program (FRAP)
1. General Information
a. Accurate and complete fitness report records are essential for the
personnel management decisions made at HQMC. The FRAP provides a process for
ensuring the accuracy and completeness of the performance records (MBS and
OMPF) identified in Chapter 8.
b. The pillars of the Fitness Report Audit Program (FRAP) are:
(1) Proactive requests for correction prior to the MRO’s eligibility
for a promotion or selection board and prior to reenlistment.
(2) Identifying date gaps and overlaps.
(3) Periodic audits of the MRO’s performance and military records.
(4) Providing information to the MRO concerning the action required
for correcting records or recovering missing reports.
(5) MROs, RSs, ROs, and 3OSs who are knowledgeable and apply the
provisions of this order appropriately and accurately.
c. The appeals process addressed in Chapter 10 is not a substitute for
initiating corrections addressed in this Chapter.
2. Audit and Correction
a. The MRO, supported by his or her reporting officials and/or command
as applicable, initiates the process. Refer to Appendix H for a detailed
OMPF self-audit checklist.
b. The MRO’s reporting unit administrative section will assist in making
corrections or updates via the MCTFS for MBS header data as appropriate.
c. The CMC (MMRP-30) will make corrections to the MBS fitness report
listing and OMPF as required.
d. The keys to an effective program are proactive and timely action.
Actions initiated on a timely basis are more easily effected and produce more
accurate results than those delayed until the eleventh hour or after
personnel management decisions are ongoing or already made. Delays hamper
corrective actions by causing short reaction times for administration and
processing, thus magnifying the difficulty of locating and contacting
reporting officials, and increasing the potential for inaccurate recall of
past performance.
e. Refer to Chapter 3 for fitness report submission requirements. Refer
to chapter 8, paragraph 10a for information concerning administrative
corrections and Chapter 10 for information concerning substantive
corrections.
f. Reference (m) provides information on the contents of the OMPF
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
9-2 Enclosure (1)
maintained for every Marine by HQMC. Commanders should forward only
authorized documents, submitted under a command prepared letter of
transmittal, for inclusion in the OMPF, and ensure all documents contain the
Marine’s DOD ID. Additionally, reference (m) contains procedures for:
(1) Sending authorized documents, other than fitness reports, to the
CMC (MMRP-20) for inclusion in the OMPF.
(2) Auditing and initiating corrections to the OMPF.
g. Auditing the Master Brief Sheet (MBS). Marines may view the contents
of their record through the “My OMPF” tab on MOL including all submitted
fitness reports and their MBS.
(1) Auditing the Header Data. As with the Basic Individual Record
(BIR) and the Basic Training Record (BTR), an audit of the MBS header data
consists of comparing the information listed in each block against that of
its source document. Appendix C gives a description of each item.
(2) Auditing the Fitness Report Listing. With Appendix D as a guide,
audit the MBS for continuity by scanning the fitness report “Begin Date/End
Date” listing for the written notation, “POSSIBLE DATE GAP.” Use the “Date
Gap Query” and “Check Your Fitness Report Status” tools on the MMRP-30
website before initiating procedures to cover a recent missing fitness report
to ensure the report was not processed after the MBS was printed. The
following rules apply to date gaps:
(a) A date gap or overlap must be 31 days or longer to warrant
correction.
(b) Date gaps will not be calculated following an End of Service
(EN) or Change in Status (CS) report.
(c) Reserve Training (RT) reports will not be counted when
calculating date gaps because they normally overlap other reporting periods
and should not be greater than 30 days.
(d) A missing last report date gap notice will be displayed if
the last report on record is not an EN or CS report, and it has been 14
months or more since the “to date” of the last report on record.
(e) A gap caused by remedial promotion from corporal to sergeant
that includes a backdated DOR will be corrected per chapter 6, paragraph 6.
h. Correcting the Master Brief Sheet (MBS)
(1) Correcting Master Brief Sheet (MBS) Header Data. This section is
composed of information from several sources and sponsoring agencies. The
Performance Evaluation Section (MMRP-30) is not a sponsor of any field in
this section and therefore cannot correct any header data information. Refer
to Appendix C for a list of authorities and references for correcting this
section of the MBS.
(2) Correcting Date Gaps and Overlaps on the Master Brief Sheet
(MBS). To correct date gaps resulting from missing fitness reports, take the
following action:
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5 Jun 2023
9-3 Enclosure (1)
(a) If the location of the RS is known, make contact and request
he or she complete the report. If the RS fails to respond within 30 days,
forward a copy of the correspondence originally sent to the RS soliciting the
fitness report to the CMC (MMRP-31) for assistance.
1. Complete and forward an MROW to the RS through A-PES.
2. If the RS cannot access A-PES, complete section A of the
.pdf fitness report form as directed by chapter 4, paragraph 3 of this Order
with the exception of items 5 through 8. The RS will complete these items.
Forward the .pdf form to the RS, requesting that he or she complete the
fitness report.
3. The RS must forward the completed report to the CMC
(MMRP-32) and provide a copy to the MRO. The following guidance applies:
a. If the report is adverse, it must be completed per
the provisions of Chapter 5.
b. Copies of original reports are acceptable only if
they are over one year old and all pages are certified true by one of the
reporting officials shown in items 10 or 11 of section A of the report.
c. Reports that are less than one year old must be an
original report and reflect both reporting officials’ actions as having been
completed and contains signatures in both sections J and K.
(b) If the location of the RS is unknown, exhaust all means of
locating the RS, including:
1. To obtain a mailing address, work through the HQMC
Worldwide Locator Unit (MMRP-11A) DSN 278-0514, commercial (703)432-0514 or
toll free at 1-800-268-3710.
2. Contacting the MRO’s previous command for the RS’s
address.
3. Contacting other Marines serving with the RS during the
reporting period.
4. If you cannot locate the RS, contact the CMC (MMRP-30)
for assistance.
(c) The CMC (MMRP-30) will accomplish RO action for reports that
are more than a year old and not adverse. The RS must document efforts to
contact the RO in section I.
(3) Correcting Date Gaps and Overlaps Not Caused by Missing Fitness
Reports. The majority of these date gaps are errors in the "period covered"
dates of fitness reports that follow transfer reports. To correct date gaps
of 31 days or longer, take one of the following actions:
(a) To correct date gaps or overlaps that include periods of
proceed, delay and travel, contact the CMC (MMRP-31). Briefly explain the
circumstances contributing to the error and request a correction to the
performance record.
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5 Jun 2023
9-4 Enclosure (1)
(b) To correct other date gaps or overlaps, forward a letter
endorsed by either the RS or RO to the CMC (MMRP-31), explaining the
circumstances and requesting the reporting period be changed per chapter 8,
paragraph 7. If the RS or RO cannot be located, forward a letter explaining
the circumstances to the CMC (MMRP-31). Include any documentation to support
the requested correction and information that will assist in locating the RS
or RO.
(c) Members of the IRR and Standby Reserve have periods of non-
affiliation not covered by a fitness report and, therefore, the date gap will
not be filled. Use the CS occasion when a reserve Marine transfers from
active duty status or from the IMA/SMCR to the IRR to prevent the appearance
of a date gap.
(d) Members of the Active Component may request an administrative
filler from the CMC (MMRP-31) for date gaps caused by release from active
duty or discharge.
(e) If a fitness report appears in the P-Folder (Performance
Data) of the OMPF but not the MBS, forward a written request to the CMC
(MMRP-31) requesting the report be placed on the MBS.
Note: Ensure the letter identifies the period and occasion of the report.
(4) Inaccurate Report Data on Master Brief Sheet (MBS). When the MBS
does not accurately reflect the information from a particular report (as it
appears in the OMPF) send a request for correction to the CMC (MMRP-31)
explaining the error.
3. Records Availability
a. If access to OMPF on-line is not available, and the request is urgent
due to a pending promotion or selection board, the CMC (MMRP-10) will provide
performance records to the individual Marine via the MMRP customer service
window (MRO must present military ID) or as personal mail in a sealed
envelope, per U.S. Postal Service Regulations.
Note: Accurate and up-to-date information in the MCTFS is essential to
ensure receipt of the MBS.
b. Marines should review their OMPFs at least once every year for
accuracy.
c. Furthermore, if the MRO anticipates being considered for promotion or
plans on applying for such programs as Enlisted to Warrant Officer, Marine
Corps Enlisted Commissioning Education Program (MECEP), Active Reserve, and
the like, the Marine should audit his or her OMPF and MBS at least 12 months
in advance of the board convening date or the program submission deadline.
4. Requirements of the Privacy Act of 1974
a. All personnel involved in the PES process will strictly follow the
requirements of the Privacy Act of 1974.
b. Individual performance records are not available to others except as
authorized under the provisions of the Privacy Act of 1974. All other
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
9-5 Enclosure (1)
requests for performance records require written authorization from the
Marine concerned.
5. Action
a. The FRAP addresses the process of auditing records, correcting
fitness reports, and obtaining missing reports for the Marine Corps as a
whole, with the exception of those individuals currently assigned to the
Inactive Status List of the Standby Reserve. For purposes of the FRAP:
(1) The parent command for Active Component and SMCR Marines will
assist these individuals in auditing and correcting their performance
records.
(2) MARFORRES will assist IRR members in auditing and correcting
their performance records.
(3) The operational sponsors for members of IMAs are responsible for
assisting these Marines.
(4) Should those efforts fail, the CMC (MMRP) will intervene when
requested.
b. Marines-Reported-On (MROs)
(1) Audit their BIR and BTR data during all join and annual audits.
(2) View and audit their OMPF on-line per the guidance in Appendix H.
(3) Direct requests for assistance to commanding officers and their
SEAs as appropriate.
(4) The appeals process addressed in Chapter 10 is not a substitute
for initiating corrections addressed in this Chapter.
c. Reporting Officials
(1) Respond within 30 days to command requests for missing reports.
(2) Endorse, as appropriate, requests for administrative corrections
and forward them to the CMC (MMRP-31).
d. Commanding Officers (COs)
(1) Annually educate individual Marines and reporting officials on
the contents of this Order, and reinforce the concept that every Marine has a
duty and a responsibility to periodically review their MBS and OMPF.
(2) Assist the MRO’s efforts to locate his or her reporting officials
to seek missing fitness reports and for administrative corrections. Request
assistance from the CMC (MMRP-31) if reporting officials do not respond
within 30 days.
(3) Correct header data on the MBS as required. See Appendix C for
correcting authority and applicable references.
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5 Jun 2023
9-6 Enclosure (1)
(4) Review the MMRP website for fitness reports processed and
received at HQMC as part of all MROs' join and annual audits.
(5) Request assistance from the HQMC World Wide Locator (MMRP-11A) to
locate by name Marine reporting officials, phone number DSN 278-0514,
commercial (703) 432-0514, or toll free 1-800-268-3710.
(6) Ensure requests for administrative corrections to a fitness
report have an endorsement from one of the reporting officials on the
original report per chapter 8, paragraph 10a.
(7) Notify non-complaint subordinate reporting officials of their
delinquency and enforce compliance with this order. Notification in and of
itself does not absolve the commander of the responsibility to ensure that
non-complaint reporting officials gain compliance. Commanders shall take
action to reduce the number of delinquent fitness reports and record
discrepancies of Marines within their command.
e. Headquarters Marine Corps (HQMC). This Headquarters will:
(1) Assist in retrieving missing fitness reports when RSs do not
respond to command correspondence and the command requests assistance.
(2) Insert explanatory documentation, as applicable, in the MRO's and
reporting official's performance records if measures to retrieve a missing
fitness report fail.
f. Website Tools Available. The CMC (MMRP-30) provides tools to assist
leaders in the preparation of fitness reports. All website tools, with the
exception of the Commander’s Timeliness Report (CTR), can be accessed in APES
under the, “MMRP”, tab.
(1) Commander’s Timeliness Report (CTR). This report provides
commanders with specific information on the status of all fitness reports
within their unit, sorted by reporting official.
Note: If the MRO forwards a completed MROW to the RS, the fitness report
will not display on this report until the RS starts the fitness report.
Commands shall request the CTR at least quarterly, and shall maintain the
reports on file for a minimum of 12 months. The CTR can be requested from
the CMC (MMRP-31) by email at smb.manpower.mmrp-[email protected].
(2) Fitness Report Inventory (Check Your Fitness Report Status).
This report displays all fitness reports received by an individual Marine and
highlights any date gaps and overlapping reporting periods. Commands shall
pull the individual fitness report inventory for every E-5 through O-5 during
the PCS/PCA check-in process. Commands must maintain a record log annotating
which Marine the report was pulled for, and the date it was pulled.
Additionally, the record log shall be maintained for a minimum of 12 months.
In lieu of a separate tracking database, commands may use check-in sheets as
the record log, provided that the check-in sheet has a designated spot for,
“Fitness Report Inventory.”
(3) Missing Last Annual. This report displays all Marines who have
not received a fitness report more than 89 days before an annual fitness is
due for their grade. This report is generated either for an entire RUC or
for an individual Marine. Commands shall pull the Missing Last Annual report
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
9-7 Enclosure (1)
at least quarterly, and shall maintain the reports on file for a minimum of
12 months.
(4) Date Gap Query. This report shows any Marine within a given RUC
who has a date gap of more than 30 days. Commands shall pull the Date Gap
Query report at least quarterly, and shall maintain the reports on file for a
minimum of 12 months.
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10-1 Enclosure (1)
Chapter 10
Substantive Corrections Process
1. Purpose
a. The potential exists for fitness reports submitted per the procedures
of this Order to contain policy or procedural errors, and inaccurate or
unjust comments and/or marks. The duty of this Headquarters is both to
protect the integrity of the PES and to ensure fairness to the individual
Marine.
b. The CMC, acting through the PERB, and the Secretary of the Navy,
acting through the BCNR, may approve a revised assessment of a Marine's
conduct or performance based entirely on facts about the Marine that were
unknown when the original report was prepared.
c. The perceived competitiveness of a report’s relative value or
comparative assessment mark is not a basis for removing or modifying the
report.
2. Substantive Correction Defined. A substantive correction is any
correction to a submitted fitness report exceeding the administrative
corrections discussed in chapter 8, paragraph 10a, or any correction to items
other than a fitness report filed in an individual Marine’s OMPF (e.g., a UPB
entry, a 6105 counseling, reenlistment code assigned, etc.).
3. Petition Process
a. Request Procedures
(1) Only the individual and his or her appointed counsel may petition
to change the Marine’s official record. Appeals will not be accepted from
any other third party, to include reporting officials.
(2) The Marine must submit a DD 149, Application for Correction of
Military Record Under the Provisions of Title 10, U.S. Code, Section 1552
form, to the CMC (MMRP-13) for all substantive correction requests. The
Marine is encouraged to include a written statement detailing the basis for
the request and should provide any supporting evidence available. Initial
appeals will not be submitted directly to the BCNR as this will delay the
process.
(3) Submit the request by:
(a) Email documents and images in .pdf format to:
smb.manpower.mmrp-[email protected].
(b) Mail documents and images to:
Commandant of the Marine Corps
Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps
(Code: MMRP-13)
2008 Elliot Road
Quantico, VA 22134-5030
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
10-2 Enclosure (1)
(4) The CMC (MMRP-13) will screen the request for completeness and
accuracy before beginning the PERB process. Missing information on the DD
149 (e.g., phone number or address), unsigned documents, and other
administrative errors will prolong the screening process. Incomplete
petitions will not be accepted.
(5) All simultaneous appeals associated with the fitness report such
as page 11 entries, NJP set-aside requests, etc., should be submitted to the
BCNR.
b. Supporting Evidence and Burden of Proof
(1) A fitness report that is accepted by the CMC (MMRP-30) for
inclusion in the official record of a Marine is presumed to be
administratively correct, procedurally complete, and valid.
(2) A Marine may appeal any report they believe is not written in
accordance with this Order, or is inaccurate or unjust; however, the burden
of proof rests with the petitioner. To justify deletion, amendment, or
replacement of a report, the petitioner must produce evidence of probable
material error, substantive inaccuracy, or injustice. Any supporting
evidence must be written and/or visual in nature and must be provided with
the original petition. Examples of acceptable supporting documentation may
include: travel or PCS orders, extracts of Unit Diaries, hospital admission
sheets, leave records, copies of investigations or request masts, or other
documents with bearing on the points in question.
(3) The board is not bound by rules of evidence for trials by courts-
martial and shall consider all reasonably pertinent evidence provided by the
petitioner.
(4) The board will not usually solicit documentation on behalf of the
petitioner, the responsibility for obtaining any and all supporting evidence
rests with the petitioner. In the event that an organization or individual
will not release information, the petitioner can request that the PERB obtain
the documentation. The petitioner must provide documentation of their
unsuccessful attempts to obtain the information, as well as all necessary
contact information.
(5) A report is not considered unjust solely because the relative
value and/or comparative assessment mark are rated lower than other reports.
(6) A personality conflict between the applicant and a reporting
official does not automatically constitute grounds for relief. Statements
attacking the motives, integrity, and competence of the reporting officials
are subject to referral to those individuals for their comments.
c. Timeliness
(1) Due to the decision support nature of the documents in the
Marine’s official record, erroneous fitness reports and documentation should
be corrected as soon as possible.
(2) Per the provisions of reference (c), appeals should be filed
within three years of the discovery date of the purportedly inaccurate or
unjust document. Normally, appeals will not be considered if more than three
years have passed since the document was entered on the record; the
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
10-3 Enclosure (1)
petitioner must explain to the board why, in the interest of justice, a
request that does not meet this standard should be considered.
(3) Once a complete petition is received, MMRP-13 will seek advisory
opinion(s) and begin the PERB process.
(4) Typically, appeals are processed in the order in which they are
received; however, when possible, priority will be afforded to those requests
that require the most urgent action (e.g., mandatory separation pending,
promotion consideration imminent, etc.)
(a) The Marine should clearly indicate on the DD 149 any urgency
associated with their request.
(b) Petitioners are encouraged to submit their request early
since priority consideration is not a given and may not significantly reduce
the time requirements of the PERB process. Additionally, priority
consideration granted by the CMC (MMRP-13) has no impact on the timeliness of
the BCNR process.
d. Advisory Opinions
(1) Every request for substantive correction shall receive an
advisory opinion from one or more of the following organizations:
(a) The PES section (MMRP-30).
(b) The Military Personnel Law Branch (JPL).
(c) The Career Counseling section (MMRP-50).
(2) Advisory opinions shall at a minimum:
(a) State whether the report is administratively and procedurally
correct and whether the report is valid as filed.
(b) Discuss the merits of the petitioner’s arguments based on
applicable orders and regulations.
(c) Provide a recommended course of action for the board.
e. Resubmission of a Denied Petition
(1) The petitioner may resubmit a denied petition only if he or she
submits substantial, relevant, and verifiable new evidence that was not
previously provided to the board for consideration.
(2) The petitioner must clearly state that the case was previously
considered and must specify what new information is submitted for
consideration.
(3) Forward all requests for reconsideration directly to the BCNR at:
Board for Correction of Naval Records
701 S. Courthouse Road
Building 12, Suite BE140
Arlington, VA 22204-2490
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
10-4 Enclosure (1)
4. Performance Evaluation Review Board (PERB)
a. The PERB is the first agency responsible for substantive corrections
to an individual Marine’s record. The PERB is authorized to make substantial
corrections to fitness reports only, and will forward requests for other
corrections to the BCNR.
b. Board Membership
(1) PERB members are assigned from within HQMC. PERB members will be
field grade officers; chief warrant officers in the grades CWO4 and CWO5;
staff non-commissioned officers in the grade of E-9; and/or senior civilians.
(2) No member shall vote on cases in which they were personally
involved, and members shall be senior to the petitioner.
c. Performance Evaluation Review Board (PERB) Action
(1) Board proceedings are administrative and non-adversarial.
(2) Neither the petitioner, their appointed counsel, nor other
witnesses are permitted to address the board in person. All communication
shall be in writing and included with the original petition.
(3) Board members shall vote openly and the board’s recommendations
are based on a simple majority. Board decisions shall not violate PES
policy, or other applicable policies, instructions, or orders.
(4) The PERB is remedial in nature and is a means for correcting an
error or injustice in an individual’s official record. Therefore, the
board’s decision shall not render an evaluation less favorable than the
original.
d. Action Following the Board Decision
(1) Should the PERB grant the Marine’s request, the record is changed
by CMC (MMRP-13) as directed by the PERB and the request is closed.
(2) Should the PERB disapprove, in whole or in part the Marine’s
request, the petition is forwarded to the BCNR for final determination. An
official Marine Corps position statement with regard to denied and partially
denied appeals shall be provided to the BCNR and the petitioner.
(3) The CMC (MMRP-13) will inform the Marine of the board’s decision
via correspondence to the address provided on the DD 149.
(4) The findings, conclusions, and recommendation of the PERB shall
be documented and maintained on temporary file.
5. Board for Correction of Naval Records (BCNR)
a. All substantive corrections are under the purview of the BCNR per the
provisions of reference (c).
b. All requests for substantive correction to Marine Corps fitness
reports are first considered by the PERB. Should the PERB disapprove, in
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
10-5 Enclosure (1)
whole or in part, the Marine’s request, the petition is forwarded to the BCNR
for final determination.
c. All requests for substantive correction to records other than fitness
reports are considered solely by the BCNR.
d. All requests for substantive correction shall be submitted through
the CMC (MMRP-13) per the provisions of paragraph 3 of this chapter.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
A-1
APPENDIX A:
ANNUAL FITNESS REPORT SCHEDULE (AN AND AR REPORTS)
ACTIVE COMPONENT RESERVE COMPONENT ACTIVE RESERVE
REPORTING PERIOD ENDS REPORTING PERIOD ENDS REPORTING PERIOD ENDS
RANK LAST DAY OF LAST DAY OF LAST DAY OF
SGT DEC MAR MAR
SSGT SEP MAR MAR
GYSGT JUN MAR MAR
1STSGT/MSGT JUN MAR MAR
SGTMAJ/MGYSGT SEP MAY JUN
WO/CWO APR OCT OCT
2NDLT JAN/JUL APR N/A
1STLT OCT/APR OCT OCT
CAPT MAY SEP JUN
MAJ MAY APR APR
LTCOL APR APR APR
COL APR APR APR
BGEN APR APR N/A
1. All reports are expected to arrive at HQMC no later than 30 days after
the reporting period ends to ensure proper processing into official records
and to facilitate selection board and personnel management decisions.
2. Reports on Active Component 2nd and 1st lieutenants are submitted on a
semiannual basis vice annually.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
B-1
APPENDIX B:
AUTOMATED PERFORMANCE EVALUATION SYSTEM (A-PES)
1. Background. The A-PES is the primary conduit in the preparation of the
MROW and the preparation and submission of fitness reports. For those
reporting officials who do not have access to A-PES, a writable .pdf version
of the NAVMC 10835 is available on the MMRP-30 website.
2. Access. The A-PES system can be accessed through the MOL website under
the performance and resources tab. A-PES is available to active, reserve and
retired Marines, civilians, and other service members who have an MOL account
and have been added to the MCTFS. To receive help in creating an MOL
account, contact the MOL help number that is listed under the “Frequently
Asked Questions” portion of the MOL website.
3. Action
a. Before using A-PES, ensure all individuals in the reporting chain
have an MOL account and can access the A-PES link. The MOL website may be
accessed through a link on the USMC or M&RA website.
b. Completed reports are available within the A-PES system after they
are processed by MMRP-32. Reporting officials are encouraged to print or
download a copy of the report for their records and, if necessary, to print a
copy for the MRO.
4. Notification
a. Communication is essential to submitting reports on time. After
routing a report, it is the reporting official’s responsibility to notify the
next person in the reporting chain that the report is ready to be worked
through A-PES.
b. Reporting officials may also communicate other issues to each other
concerning a report by using the “Notes” functionality within A-PES. This
function can be found inside the “In Progress” tab or, if you have the report
for action, the “Notes” button when you open the report.
c. Academic Reports have a batch processing capability that allows up to
100 reports with the same reporting officials to be created at once.
d. The A-PES system also allows reporting officials to delegate a
trusted assistant. A trusted assistant can help the reporting official
prepare his or her portion of the report for verification and electronic
signature.
5. Information
a. Common A-PES questions are listed on the A-PES website under
Frequently Asked Questions, which may be accessed from the A-PES main page or
the help button.
b. The Automated Performance Evaluation System (A-PES) User Manuals,
including 1) Main Manual 2) Batch Processing and 3) Trusted Assistant, are
also available in A-PES under the help button.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
C-1
APPENDIX C:
MASTER BRIEF SHEET (MBS) - EXPLANATION
MBS LISTING
BIR/BTR LISTING
CORRECTING AUTHORITY
REFERENCE
1. NAME
NAME
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
2. DOD ID
DOD ID
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
3. GRADE
GRADE
ENLISTED: UNIT DIARY
OFFICER: CMC (MMPR)
MCTFS PRIUM
4. RANK: Description Automatic
N/A
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
5. LINEAL NO: Lineal control number
OFFD, QCRE
CMC (MMPR)
MCTFS PRIUM
6. DOR: Date of Rank, the date from
which present rank is effective
DOR
ENLISTED: UNIT DIARY
OFFICER: CMC (MMPR)
MCTFS PRIUM
7. TIG: Time In Grade
N/A
N/A
MCTFS PRIUM
8. CURRENT DUTY ASSIGNMENT
N/A
N/A
MCTFS PRIUM
9. BILLET DESCRIPTION
N/A
N/A
MCTFS PRIUM
10. DCTB: Date current tour began.
DCTB
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
11. KEY DATE SUMMARY
DEAF: Date of original entry into
the Armed Forces.
DEAF
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
TIS: Time in service
N/A
N/A
MCTFS PRIUM
PEBD: Pay entry base date.
PAY ENTRY BASE
DATE
ENLISTED: UNIT DIARY
OFFICERS: CMC (MMRP)
MCTFS PRIUM
AFADBD: Armed Forces Active Duty
Base Date;
the date from which
active duty time is computed
. Is
adjustable for lost time or break in
service.
AFADBD
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
OSCD: Overseas control date.
DAUS DEPN RESTR
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
C-2
MBS LISTING
BIR/BTR LISTING
CORRECTING AUTHORITY
REFERENCE
MBS LISTING
BIR/BTR LISTING
CORRECTING AUTHORITY
MBS LISTING
BIR/BTR LISTING
CORR
MBS LISTING
ACC COMM: Date accepted first Marine
Corps commission (initial
appointment only).
N/A
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
MBS LISTING
BIR/BTR LISTING
CORRECTING AUTHORITY
REFERENCE
DOR COMM: The date of rank of first
commission as a CWO.
N/A
ACTIVE: MCRC
RESERVE: UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
DOR LDO: The date of rank of first
commission as a LDO.
N/A
CMC (MMPR)
NAVMC 763
DSG PILOT: The date on which the
Marine was designated a military
pilot, naval aviator, or NFO.
N/A
CMC (MMOA)
MCTFS PRIUM
DCADB: The date current active duty
began. Immediate reenlistment does
not change this date.
N/A
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
EAS: Expiration of active service.
EAS
ENLISTED: UNIT DIARY
ACTIVE OFFICER:
CMC (MMOA)
RESERVE OFFICER:
CMC (RAM)
MCTFS PRIUM
MSR: Mandatory separation retirement
date. Assigned when the Marine’s
time in service approaches the
maximum time allowed by law.
RT01
CMC (MMSR)
SEPS MANUAL
MRD: Mandatory retirement date. For
reserve officers only, assigned in
the same manner as the MSR, above.
RT01
CMC (MMSR)
SEPS MANUAL
12. AWARDS: Personal decorations
awarded in order of precedence and
the number of like awards (fi
eld
represents latest 12 personal awards
awarded).
N/A
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
SECNAVINST 1650.1H
13. MILITARY OCCUPATIONAL
SPECIALTIES
PMOS: Primary MOS
MOS
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
AMOS1: First Additional MOS
MOS
ENLISTED: UNIT DIARY
ACTIVE OFFICER:
CMC (MMOA)
RESERVE OFFICER:
CMC (RAM)
MCTFS PRIUM
AMOS2: Second Additional MOS
MOS
SAME AS AMOS1
MCTFS PRIUM
AMOS3: Third Additional MOS
MOS
SAME AS AMOS1
MCTFS PRIUM
AMOS4: Fourth Additional MOS
MOS
SAME AS AMOS1
MCTFS PRIUM
AMOS5: Fifth Additional MOS
MOS
SAME AS AMOS1
MCTFS PRIUM
JOINT: JOINT MOS (Officer only)
MOS
CMC (MMOA)
MCTFS PRIUM
BMOS: BILLET MOS
MOS
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
C-3
MBS LISTING
BIR/BTR LISTING
CORRECTING AUTHORITY
REFERENCE
MBS LISTING
BIR/BTR LISTING
CORRECTING AUTHORITY
MBS LISTING
BIR/BTR LISTING
CORRE
MBS LISTING
14. TRAINING SUMMARY
RIFLE: Qualification Status
BTR
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
PISTOL: Qualification status
BTR
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
PFT: Class/Score or status
BTR
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
CFT: Class/Score or status
BTR
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
MCMAP: Martial Arts qualification
BTR
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
15. LANGUAGES: Name of language in
which the Marine is proficient. Up
to four languages may be listed.
FORGN-LANG CODES
1/2/3/4
CMC (MA)
MCTFS PRIUM
16. CIVILIAN EDUCATION: Civilian
schools attended listed by year
completed, degree attained, and
major subject. Should
list
secondary and post
-secondary
schools.
CIV ED LEVEL
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
17. MILITARY EDUCATION: Service
schools (including certain MCI
courses) listed by course title and
year in which completed.
If the
Marine has nine or fewer PME
courses, up to 27 military courses
can be displayed. If the Marine has
ten or more PME courses, the 18 most
recent mil
itary courses will be
displayed.
EDU, BTR
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
18. PROFESSIONAL MILITARY
EDUCATION
: Service schools and
career progression courses which
indicate continuing military
education. Used by promotion boards
to determine if a
Marine is “PME
Complete” for their grade.
EDU, BTR
UNIT DIARY
MCTFS PRIUM
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
D-1
APPENDIX D:
MASTER BRIEF SHEET (MBS) - FITNESS REPORT LISTING
ADMINISTRATIVE SUMMARY REPORTING SENIOR MARKINGS REVIEWING OFFICER MARKINGS
0/1 0/2 1/3 3/4 2/5 1/6 0/7 0/8
Grade
BMOS
Type
OCC
From
To
Months
Co
Billet Description
Adv
RV at ProcRS HighRS AvgRpt AvgReports
PerReporting Senior
Promote
EvalJudDecPMECoEnsSetDevLeaIniEffCouPro
Cum RV
Reviewing Officer
Obser Concur
Rpt at High
RO marks - same grade at processing
RO marks - same grade cumulative
Capt
0302 N
GC
19980801
19990503
9 Company Commander
100.004.573.524.5713 of 16
F
LtCol B
Yes
C
EE
CD
D
EE
E
DE
D
F
100.00
Col T
Suff Yes1
Maj
0302 N
AN
19990504
19990801
3 Operations Officer
96.114.504.134.364 of 7
ELtCol B
Yes
DDECEDEDDEECE
96.11
Col R
Suff Yes1
Maj
0302 N
CH
19990801
20000119
6 Operations Officer
100.004.504.134.507 of 7
ELtCol B
Yes
DEECEDEDDEEDE
100.00
Col A
Suff Yes2
Maj
0302 N
TR
20000119
20000414
3
BN Executive Officer
100.004.934.464.936 of 14
FLtCol S
Yes
EDDDDDFEFGDDF
100.00
Col A
Suff Yes1
0/1 0/2 9/3 12/4 23/5 11/6 3/7 0/8
0/1 0/2 1/3 3/4 2/5 2/6 0/7 0/8
1/1 0/2 2/3 4/4 17/5 12/6 7/7 1/8
0/1 0/2 1/3 3/4 2/5 1/6 0/7 0/8
1/1 0/2 2/3 4/4 17/5 12/6 7/7 1/8
0/1 0/2 1/3 2/4 2/5 2/6 0/7 0/8
0/1 1/2 2/3 7/4 7/5 5/6 0/7 0/8
Command
1st Battalion 2d Marines
1st Battalion 2d Marines
1st Battalion 2d Marines
1st Battalion 2d Marines
1. Administrative Summary
a. Grade. This information reflects the MRO’s grade per section A, item
1e (Grade), of the fitness report.
b. Billet Military Occupational Specialty (BMOS). This information
reflects the billet MOS of the duty to which the MRO was assigned per section
A, item h (BILMOS) of the fitness report.
c. Occasion (OCC). This information reflects the occasion for
submitting the report per section A, item 3a (OCC) of the fitness report.
d. Type Duty. This information reflects the type of the MRO’s duty per
section A, item 3c (Type), of the fitness report.
e. From Date/To Date
(1) From Date. This information reflects the beginning date of the
reporting period per section A, item 3b (From) of the fitness report.
(2) To Date. This information reflects the ending date of the
reporting period per section A, item 3b (To) of the fitness report.
f. Months. Number of months covered by the specific fitness report.
g. Com. An “X” appearing under this column indicates that the MRO was
subject to commendatory material during the reporting period per section A,
item 6a (Marine Subject of Commendatory Material) of the fitness report.
h. Adv. An “X” appearing under this column indicates the report is
adverse. per section A, item 5a (Special Case: Adverse) or item 6b
(Derogatory Material) or item 6c (Disciplinary Action) of the fitness report.
i. Billet Description. This information reflects the primary duty to
which the MRO was assigned per section A, item 4 (Duty Assignment
(descriptive title)), of the fitness report.
j. Command. This information reflects the specific command or unit to
which the MRO was assigned for duty per section A, item 2b, (RUC), of the
fitness report.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
D-2
2. Reporting Senior (RS) Markings
a. Reporting Senior (RS). This information reflects the name of the
MRO’s RS per section A, item 10 (Reporting Senior) of the fitness report.
b. Mission/Character/Leadership/Intellect/Eval Resp. This information
reflects the markings from the Performance Anchored Rating Scales per section
D (Mission Accomplishment), E (Individual Character), F (Leadership), G
(Intellect And Wisdom), and H* (Fulfillment Of Evaluation Responsibilities)
of the fitness report. Abbreviations for the individual attributes as
reflected on the MBS are:
Per-Performance ` Lea-Leading Subordinates PME-Professional
Pro-Proficiency Dev-Develop Subordinates Military Education
Cou-Courage Set-Setting the Example Dec-Decision Making
Eff-Effectiveness Ens-Ensuring Well-Being Ability
Under Stress of Subordinates Jud-Judgment
Ini-Initiative Co-Communication Skills EVAL*-Evaluation
Responsibilities
* Applies only to MRO’s with fitness reporting official responsibilities.
c. Promote. This information reflects the RS’s promotion recommendation
for the MRO per section A, item 7 (Recommended for Promotion). A “NO”
indicates not recommended for promotion. An “NA” indicates not applicable.
An “ACC” indicates a recommendation for accelerated promotion.
d. Reports. This number is not a ranking of any kind. The number
before “of” indicates the numerical total of reports processed for this RS on
Marines of this grade. The number after “of” is the total number of
cumulative reports to date on Marines of this grade. Therefore, “13 of 16”
shows that this report was the thirteenth report processed, and the RS has
submitted three reports after this report.
e. RPT Avg. This information reflects the report’s average of the
observed attributes.
Note: It is not uncommon for RSs to have more than one Marine in their
profile share the same fitness report average.
f. Reporting Senior (RS) Avg. This information reflects the cumulative
average of all reports written by the RS on a Marine of that grade.
g. Reporting Senior (RS) High. This information reflects the highest
fitness report average of any report written by the RS on a Marine of that
grade.
h. RPT at High. This information reflects the number of reports the RS
submitted which have a relative value of 100.
i. Relative Value (RV) at Proc. This column reflects the relative value
of the MRO’s fitness report based on the RS’s rating history for Marines of
the same grade as the MRO as of the time of processing of the MRO’s report
(see Appendix G).
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
D-3
j. Cum Relative Value (RV). This column reflects the cumulative
relative value of all fitness reports written by the RS on Marines of this
grade at the time the MBS is produced.
Note: This percentage is a variable and will change as the RS writes
additional reports on Marines of the same grade as the MRO’s grade on the
report in question.
3. Reviewing Officer (RO) Markings
a. Reviewing Officer (RO). This information reflects the name of the
MRO’s RO per section A, item 11 (Reviewing Officer) of the fitness report.
b. Reviewing Officer (RO) Remarks – Same Grade At Processing. This
information will show the RO’s comparative assessment marks of section K,
block 3 for all fitness reports of Marines of the same grade evaluated by the
RO at the time the report was processed.
c. Obser. This reflects the degree of observation the RO had of the MRO
as indicated in section K, item 1.
d. Concur. This information reflects whether the RO concurs or does not
concur with the RS’s evaluation of the MRO per section K, item 2 (Evaluation)
of the fitness report. A “Yes” appearing in this column indicates the RO
concurs with the report. A “No” appearing in the column indicates the RO
does not concur with the report.
e. Reviewing Officer (RO) Marks – Same Grade Cumulative. This
information shows the cumulative comparative assessment (pyramid) marks of
section K, block 3 of all reports ever reviewed by the RO on all Marines of
the same grade as the MRO with the assessment of this fitness report
highlighted by a square frame.
Note: This number is dynamic and will change as the RO writes additional
reports on Marines of the same grade as the MRO’s grade on this report.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
E-1
APPENDIX E:
REPORTING SENIOR (RS)/REVIEWING OFFICER (RO) SUMMARY
1. The RS/RO summary tables break down the relative values and RO
comparative assessment marks of the Marine for each rank and provides a
career total at the bottom of each box.
2. The top table displays the RS numbers and the bottom table displays the
RO numbers.
3. The left sides of both tables show the Marine’s numbers at processing,
and the right sides of both tables show the Marine’s cumulative numbers.
4. Reporting Senior (RS) Table
a. The RS table breaks the reports down into the percentage of reports
that have a relative value in the upper third, middle third, and bottom
third.
b. The numbers that are displayed in the “N/A” columns represent the
number of reports that did not have a relative value (N/O reports, academic
reports, reports with an EN occasion, and reports where the RS did not have a
profile).
5. Reviewing Officer (RO) Table
a. The RO table displays the percentage of reports that the ROs marked
higher, marked the same, and marked lower on the comparative assessment
relative to the MRO.
b. The numbers displayed in the “Insuf” column are the number of reports
that were marked “Insufficient” observation by the RO.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
F-1
APPENDIX F:
REPORTING SENIOR (RS) CHECKLIST
1. Verify That All Section A Data is Accurate
• Item 1e: Grade should reflect rank during the reporting
period.(chapter 4, paragraph 4.a.(5))
• Item 3a: Verify the appropriate reporting occasion. Provide a
directed comment to appropriately justify if required (DC/GC, not-
observed FD or AN/AR). (chapter 3, paragraph 3.c)
• Item 3b/c: Verify the dates are accurate and prevent date gaps.
Provide a directed comment to appropriately justify periods of non-
availability. (chapter 3, paragraph 3.c.(2))
• Item 3c: Provide a directed comment to appropriately justify “J”,
“C”, or “B” marking. (chapter 3, paragraph 3.c. (3))
• Item 5a: Provide a directed comment to appropriately justify adverse
marking. (chapter 5)
• Item 5b: Verify that the report meets not-observed criteria. If the
report is an AN/AR report, verify if the report meets omission
criteria. (chapter 3, paragraph 4.j.(2), chapter 4 paragraphs 6 and 7)
• Item 6a: Provide a directed comment to appropriately justify
“commendatory material”. (chapter 4, paragraph 4.f.(1))
• Item 6b/6c: Verify if the marking of “derogatory material” or
“disciplinary action” meet the definition established in chapter 5;
Provide a directed comment to appropriately justify in section I.
(chapter 5, paragraphs 3.e. and 3.d)
• Item 7b or accelerated: Provide a directed comment to appropriately
justify mark of “no” or attach an RS addendum page for “accelerated”
promotion recommendation. (chapter 4, paragraph 4.g.(4), chapter 4,
paragraph 18, and chapter 5, paragraph 6.c.(5))
• Item 8a: Verify that the Rifle/Pistol qualification occurred during
the reporting period. For “X” or “U” see chapter 4, paragraph 4.h.(1).
• Item 8b/c: Verify that the score was achieved during the reporting
period; if no, input “NREQ”. Provide a directed comment for “PART” or
“C150” or “FXXX”. (chapter 4, paragraph 4.h.(2) and (3))
• Item 8d/e/f: Verify the ht/wt/bf marked is current and matches the
information contained in the MRO’s BTR. Provide a directed comment to
appropriately justify if the MRO exceeds standards. (chapter 4,
paragraph 4.h. (4),(5),(6) and chapter 5, paragraph 6.c.(8))
• Item 8h: Provide directed comment for “status” for all GySgts.
(chapter 4, paragraph 4.h.(8))
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
F-2
• Items 10/11: Provide directed comment if the MRO/RS, or RS/RO are the
same rank. (chapter 2, paragraph 10.d and chapter 4, paragraph 18)
2. Verify Section B, Billet Description (chapter 4, paragraph 5)
• Highlight MRO’s significant responsibilities as they relate to the
unit’s mission during the reporting period.
• Prepare in proper format (see chapter 4, paragraph 5.c). Bulletize
appropriately. Normal capitalization rules apply. Do not use
UPPERCASE, underlining, "quotation marks," boldface, italics, or
punctuation (#!&%?...) in exclamation.
3. Verify Section C, Billet Accomplishments (chapter 4, paragraph 6)
• Highlight the MRO’s most significant accomplishments during the
reporting period. Be objective vice qualitative. Focus on what the
Marine accomplished rather than personal qualities or potential impact
of the MRO’s contributions.
• Prepare in proper format (see chapter 4, paragraph 5c). Bulletize
appropriately. Normal capitalization rules apply. Do not use
UPPERCASE, underlining, "quotation marks," boldface, italics, or
punctuation (#!&%?...) in exclamation.
4. Complete Sections D Through H, Attribute Markings (chapter 4,
paragraph 7)
• Ensure markings reflect MRO’s demonstrated performance during the
reporting period.
• Justify all marks of "A", "F", or "G" with concrete examples of what
was done or failed to be done and ensure justifications are
verifiable, substantive, and where possible, quantifiable. (chapter 4,
paragraph 7.e.)
• If multiple attributes in a single section require justification,
independently justify each mark. (chapter 4, paragraph 7.e.)
• Mark section H as N/O for all Marines who do not have reporting senior
responsibilities. (chapter 4, paragraph 12.a.(4))
5. Complete Section I, Directed And Additional Comments
• Ensure all directed comments are included (see chapter 4, paragraph 18
and/or chapter 5 paragraph 10)
• Prepare in proper format (see chapter 4, paragraph 13).
6. Complete Section J, Certification
• Prior to certifying, ensure the accuracy and completeness of sections
A through I per the provisions of this Order. Sign, date, and inform
the MRO that the RS portion of the report is complete. (chapter 4,
paragraph 14)
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
F-3
• If adverse, refer report to the MRO for acknowledgment, signature, and
the opportunity to submit a rebuttal statement. Inform the MRO when
the report is submitted to them in APES for review. Provide
appropriate directed comments if the MRO is unable/unwilling to sign.
(chapter 5, paragraph 6.g)
• Forward report to the RO in a timely manner. (Report is due to HQMC
within 30 days after the ending date of the report.)
• Send to command reviewer prior to routing to the RO.
7. Adverse Reports. When the MRO’s performance or conduct warrants an
adverse report, prepare and submit the report in accordance with the
provisions of Chapter 5.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
G-1
APPENDIX G:
SAMPLE ADMINISTRATIVE CORRECTION REQUEST LETTER
(HEADING)
1610
Initials
DD Mmm YY
From: Rank First MI. Last EDIPI/MOS USMC
To: Commandant of the Marine Corps (MMRP-31)
Via: Reporting Senior/Reviewing Officer
Subj: REQUEST FOR ADMINISTRATIVE CORRECTION TO PROCESSED FITNESS REPORT
Ref: (a) MCO 1610.7B
Encl: (1) Supporting Documentation as Applicable (i.e. Award Certificates,
Page 3 from SNM's SRB/OQR, Enlistment Contract, DD 214, etc.)
1. I request that the following change(s) be made to my fitness report file
in OMPF and/or fitness report listing on Master Brief Sheet (MBS).
a. Report to be modified: Occasion:____ From date: ______ To date: _____
Section: ______ Item(s): ________________________
b. Correct data/ information: __________________________________________
2. The reason and justification for this request is as follows: (required)
3. Any questions concerning this matter, contact me at (123) 456-7890 or
F. M. LAST NAME
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
MEMORANDUM ENDORSEMENT
From: Reporting Senior/Reviewing Officer
To: Commandant of the Marine Corps (MMRP-31)
1. I concur with the MRO and request correction(s) be made to his/her
fitness report/MBS. I offer the following explanation:
2. Any questions concerning this matter, contact me at (123) 456-7890 or
F. M. LAST NAME (RS/RO)
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
H-1
APPENDIX H:
OFFICIAL MILITARY PERSONNEL FILE (OMPF) AND MASTER BRIEF SHEET (MBS) SELF-
AUDIT PROCEDURES
1. Overview
a. Maintaining accurate and current official records is the
responsibility of the individual Marine.
b. The self-audit procedure outlined below is the recommended method to
ensure all documentation is properly reflected in the OMPF and on the MBS.
An updated version of the below procedures is available from the MMRP-50
website.
c. The Records Management Section (MMRP-20) and the Policy and
Compliance Section (MMRP-31) will assist with reconciliation and correction
of Marines’ records, but will not audit individual records.
d. The self-audit is conducted in two phases; phase I is the actual
audit of the MBS and OMPF, phase II is the correction of any errors
discovered.
2. Phase I: Self-Audit Procedures
a. Log in to MOL, select the My OMPF tab, select the MBS tab, and then
print the PES MBS.
b. Administrative Information. Ensure the top line information on the
MBS is correct. The local administration section must change MCTFS if the
following information is incorrect: Name, DOD ID, date of rank, current duty
assignment, or billet description.
c. Awards
(1) The MBS will display all personal awards (NAMs and higher) and
CARs along with the number of each type received. No unit awards will
display on the MBS.
(2) The OMPF should contain the personal award recommendation form
(OPNAV 1650, HQMC APS 1650, or NAVMC 11533), summary of action, citation,
and certificate for each personal award.
(3) Correct inaccurate information by contacting the MMMA. Per
reference (aa), MMMA is the only authorized unit to run Unit Diary entries on
personal awards in order to affect a MBS entry.
(4) Personal Awards awarded by Marine Corps commands must be approved
in iAPS in order for awards to be entered in MCTFS and appear on the MBS.
(5) Joint awards should be submitted to MMMA for entering into MCTFS
and onto the MBS; MMMA will provide a copy of this award to MMRP for
inclusion in the OMPF.
(6) Other service awards must be submitted to MMMA along with a copy
of orders for USMC concurrence. If applicable, MMMA will provide a copy of
these awards to MMRP for inclusion into the OMPF.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
H-2
(7) Awards since 12 February 2018. Personal awards are processed via
iAPS. Awards processed after 12 February 2018 should have a completed NAVMC
11533 (Personal Award Recommendation, SOA, Citation) as well as the signed
certificate. Lack of a NAVMC 11533 and/or signed certificate constitutes an
incomplete record WRT awards.
(8) Awards from 1 March 2008 to 12 February 2018. Personal awards
are processed via iAPS. Awards processed after 1 Mar 08 should have a
completed NAVMC 11533 (Personal Award Recommendation, SOA, Citation) in the
OMPF. Lack of a NAVMC 11533 constitutes an incomplete record WRT awards.
The signed certificate is beneficial, but not a requirement to be considered
OMPF complete for a particular award.
(9) Awards from 1 October 2000 to 1 March 2008. Personal awards were
processed via APS. No guarantee that the HQMC APS 1650 (Personal Award
Recommendation) was automatically included in OMPF. Marine should make every
effort to provide a copy of the HQMC APS 1650 to the OMPF. If a Marine is
missing the HQMC APS 1650 from an award during this time period, there is a
possibility that it is located in the iAPS archive.
(10) Awards prior to 1 October 2000. Personal awards were processed
via OPNAV 1650 (Personal Award Recommendation). The Marine seldom received
an award with the signed OPNAV 1650. As a result, a signed certificate is
often considered OMPF complete, although a signed OPNAV 1650 would be ideal.
d. Military Occupational Specialties (MOS)
(1) The MBS will display all MOSs earned by completion of a formal
school and/or on-the-job training. Ensure all MOSs are accurately annotated
as PMOS, AMOS, and Billet MOS. Contact MMOA/MMEA to add an MOS to the MBS.
(2) The OMPF should contain completion certificates for each MOS.
Appointment and designation letters do not belong in the OMPF.
e. Training Summary
(1) The MBS will display the Rifle, Pistol, PFT, CFT, and MCMAP
information currently contained within MCTFS. Contact local administration
to update MCTFS if any information is incorrect.
(2) The OMPF should contain all MCMAP certificates issued.
f. Languages
(1) The MBS will display language abilities contained within MCTFS
based on either the Defense Language Aptitude Battery or self-profession via
MOL. Contact local administration to correct MCTFS entries.
(2) The OMPF should contain certificates and/or institutional
validation such as high school or college transcripts for each language
listed.
g. Education Summary
(1) Civilian Education
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
H-3
(a) The MBS should display the type of degree achieved, a brief
description, and the date attained. This includes civilian-equivalent
degrees attained while attending resident PME.
(b) The OMPF should contain both the diploma certificate and a
transcript for each degree attained.
(2) Military Education
(a) The MBS should display all formal military courses completed
(not including PME) and the date.
(b) The OMPF should contain the completion certificate from each
course attended.
(3) Professional Military Education (PME). Reference (z) contains
the PME requirements by grade.
(a) The MBS should display all PME courses completed and the
date.
(b) The OMPF should contain both the completion certificate and a
transcript from each course attended.
h. Official Photo. The photo should be taken every twelve months.
Official photos are no longer used in promotion or selection boards.
i. Fitness Reports
(1) Ensure that all information is displayed correctly on the MBS for
each fitness report.
(2) Ensure there are no date gaps or overlaps of 31 days or greater
on the MBS; contact MMRP-31 for any required corrections.
3. Phase II: Reconciliation And Correction
a. Up to date contact information for all Manpower and Reserve Affairs
branches is found on the website at: www.manpower.usmc.mil.
b. Forward all missing documents to the CMC (MMRP-20) for inclusion in
the OMPF; contact MMRP-20 if unsure whether a document belongs in the OMPF or
if unsure what action is required prior to inclusion of a document.
c. Contact local administration or the appropriate Manpower and Reserve
Affairs branch for correction of MCTFS information.
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
I-1
APPENDIX I:
NORMAL AND ADVERSE FITNESS REPORT ROUTING CHAIN
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
J-1
APPENDIX J:
GLOSSARY OF ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS
ADL
Active Duty List
ADOS
Active Duty Operational Support
AFNG
Airforce National Guard
ARI
Alcohol Related Incident
AN
Annual (Active Component)
AR
Annual (Reserve Component)
ANG
Army National Guard
A-PES
Automated Performance Evaluation System
BIR
Basic Individual Record
BTR
Basic Training Record
BMOS
Billet Military Occupational Specialty
BCNR
Board for Correction of Naval Records
BCP
Body Composition Program
CMT
Career Management Team
CS
Change in Status
CD
Change of Duty
CH
Change of Reporting Senior
DC
CMC Directed
CDET
College of Distance Education and Training
CFT
Combat Fitness Test
CMC
Commandant Marine Corps
CTR
Commander’s Timeliness Report
CRB
Competency Review Board
CA
Convening Authority
DOR
Date of Rank
DOD
Department of Defense
DON/AA
Department of the Navy/Assistant for Administration
DC M&RA
Deputy Commandant, Manpower and Reserve Affairs
DRMD
Directives and Records Management Division
EN
End of Service
FFPB
Field Flight Performance Board
FRAP
Fitness Report Audit Program
FMCR
Fleet Marine Corps Reserve
FRS
Fleet Replacement Squadrons
FSSB
Flight Status Selection Board
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
J-2
FMS
Foreign Military Service
FD
From Temporary Duty
GCMCA
General Courts Martial Convening Authority
GC
Grade Change
HQMC
Headquarters Marine Corps
HT
Height
iAPS
Improved Awards Processing System
IRR
Inactive Ready Reserve
IDC
Incident Determination Committee
IMA
Individual Mobilization Augmentee
JAD
Judge Advocate Division
JPL
Judge Advocate Division, Personnel Law Branch
MMEA
Manpower Management Enlisted Assignments
MMMA
Manpower Management Military Awards
MMOA
Manpower Management Officer Assignments
MMPR
Manpower Management Promotions
MMSL
Manpower Management Senior Leaders
MMRP
Manpower Management Records and Performance
MCO
Marine Corps Order
MCPEL
Marine Corps Publications Electronic Library
MCTFS
Marine Corps Total Force Management System
MARFORRES
Marine Forces Reserve
MOL
Marine Online
MRO
Marine Reported On
MROW
Marine Reported on Worksheet
MBS
Master Brief Sheet
MAP
Military Appearance Program
MOS
Military Occupational Specialty
MCC
Monitored Command Code
NAVMC
Navy/Marine Corps
NCO
Noncommissioned Officer
NJP
Non-Judicial Punishment
NPLOC
Non-Punitive Letter of Caution
NMED
Not Medically Qualified
NREQ
Not required
N/O
Not Observed
OCC
Occasion
OPNAV
Office of the Chief of Naval Operations
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
J-3
OIC
Officer in Charge
OQR
Officer Qualification Record
OMPF
Official Military Personnel File
ORM
Operational Risk Management
PART
Partial PFT/CFT
PARS
Performance Anchored Rating Scale
PERB
Performance Evaluation Review Board
PES
Performance Evaluation System
PCS
Permanent Change of Station
PTAD
Permissive Temporary Additional Duty
PII
Personally Identifiable Information
PFT
Physical Fitness Test
PMOS
Primary Military Occupational Specialty
PME
Professional Military Education
RSS
Recruiting Substation
RV
Relative Value
RFC
Relief for Cause
RS
Reporting Senior
RUC
Reporting Unit Code
RDNT
Required Did Not Take
RCT
Reserve Counterpart Training
RT
Reserve Training
RO
Reviewing Officer
SMCR
Selected Marine Corps Reserve
SA
Semiannual (Lieutenants only)
SEA
Senior Enlisted Advisor
SMR
Senior Marine Representative
SRB
Service Record Book
SDA
Special Duty Assignment
SNCO
Staff Noncommissioned Officer
TEMINS
Temporary Duty Under Instruction
3OS
Third Officer Sighter
TD
To Temporary Duty
TR
Transfer
UA
Unauthorized Absence
UPB
Unit Punishment Book
USAF
United States Air Force
USA
United States Army
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
J-4
USCG
United States Coast Guard
USMC
United States Marine Corps
USN
United States Navy
USSF
United States Space Force
WTI
Weapons and Tactics Instructor
WT
Weight
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
IND-1
INDEX
A
Academic duty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-3
Accelerated promotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-9
Access to completed reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-2
Addendum Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-48
Administrative instructions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-49
Completion instructions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-49
Purpose . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-48
Adjudicating administrative errors and inflated reports . . . 4-47
Administrative corrections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-8
Administrative review process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-46
Adverse reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chap 5
Addendum page (section L) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-48
Appeals to previously submitted reports . . . . . . . . . 5-24
Adversity defined . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-2
Commendatory material (item 6a) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-7
Derogatory material (item 6b) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-4
Disciplinary action (item 6c) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-5
Enlisted reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-22
General Officer Reviewing Officers (RO) . . . . . . . . . 5-23
Incidents in prior reporting periods . . . . . . . . . . 5-13
Marine refuses to sign . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-19
Marine Reported On (MRO) action . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-23
Officer reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-22
Reporting Senior (RS) action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-14
Reviewing Officer (RO) action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-19
Statements after the fact . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-24
Third Officer action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-22
Alcohol Related Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-11
Alcohol misuse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-12
Alcohol rehabilitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-12
Alcohol rehabilitation failure . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-13
Alcohol related incidents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-11
Appeals to previously submitted reports . . . . . . . . . . . 5-24
Attached pages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-2
Attachments of unique evaluations to fitness reports
. . . . 6-8, 7-1
Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-20
Section D
Performance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-24
Proficiency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-25
Section E
Courage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-27
Effectiveness Under Stress . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-28
Initiative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-29
Section F
Communication Skills . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-34
Developing Subordinates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-31
Ensuring Well-Being Of Subordinates . . . . . . . . . 4-33
Leading Subordinates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-31
Setting the Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-32
Section G
Decision Making Ability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-36
Judgment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-37
Professional Military Education . . . . . . . . . . . 4-35
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
IND-2
Section H
Fulfillment of Evaluation Responsibilities . . . . . 4-38
Audit and correction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-1
Audit Program (FRAP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chap 9
Authority . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-5
Awards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-7
B
Billet Accomplishments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-18
Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-19
Purpose . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-18
Structure and Content . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-19
Billet Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-16
Modifications of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-18
Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-17
Purpose . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-16
Structure and Content . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-17
Body Fat Percentage reporting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-13
4-52
C
Career counseling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-2
Civil criminal conviction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-6
Classified Duties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-50
Combat and operational deployment situations . . . . . . . . 6-2
Combat report criteria . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-2
MIA and POW Status . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-2
Modifications to submission deadlines . . . . . . . . . . 7-1
Report preparation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-1
Reporting chain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-1
Submission deadlines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-1
Combat fitness test reporting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-12
Commendatory material (item 6a) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-7
Completed fitness reports:
Access to . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-2
Submission of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-2
Corrections to fitness reports:
Administrative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-8
Substantive . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chap 10
Audit Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chap 9
Counseling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-3, 2-2
Conviction, reporting of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-5
Court-martial member . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-10
D
Date gaps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-10, 9-2
Defense counsel reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-5
Derogatory material . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-4
Deserter status . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-10
Disciplinary action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-5
Domestic Violence and Child Abuse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-13
Drug offense reporting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-11
E
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
IND-3
Extended reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-10
Evaluation cycle:
Develop billet description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-4
HQMC action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-5
Reporting Senior action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-4
Reviewing Officer (RO) action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-4
Summary of accomplishments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-4
F
Fitness Reports
Academic and training duty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-3
Access to completed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-2
Addendum Page (section L) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-49
Adverse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chap 5
Attaching pages to . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-2
Audit Program (FRAP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chap 9
Automated preparation of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-1
Classified Duties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-50
Colonel, CWO5, and E9 reports; instruction for . . . . . . . 4-2
Combat and operational deployments . . . . . . . . . . . 6-2
Corrections to . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-8
Chap 10
Defense counsel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-5
Drug and alcohol misuse reporting . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-11
Extended . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-10
General Officer reports, instructions for . . . . . . . . 4-2
Inflated/inaccurate/procedurally incorrect/gamed . . . . 8-10
Military judges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-5
Minimum observation of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-7
Missing or Prisoner of War status . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-2
Not observed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-9
Objectives of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-1
Occasions for . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-1
Preparation of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chap 4
Privacy of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-1
Purpose of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-1
Reporting occasions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-1
Reviewing Officer Certification of . . . . . . . . . . 4-46
Section A of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-5
Section B of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-16
Section C of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-18
Sections D, E, F, G, and H . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-20
Section I of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-39
Section J of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-43
Section K of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-43
Section L of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-48
Significance of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-2
Submission of completed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-2
Submission schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Apdx A
Types of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-6
Unauthorized absence/deserter status . . . . . . . . . . 3-10
When not allowed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-10
G
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
IND-4
Gamed reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-10
General Officer Reviewing Officers (RO) . . . . . . . . . . . 5-19
General responsibilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-5
All leaders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-5
Commanders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-5
HQMC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-5
Marine Reported On (MRO). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-5
Reporting officials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-5
H
Handling of reports; general information . . . . . . . . . . 7-1
Headquarters Marine Corps Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chap 8
Career Counseling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-2
Corrections to filed reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-8
Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-3
General information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-1
Late reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-10
Missing reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-9
Policy and compliance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-1
Processing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-2
Reporting Senior profile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-4
Reviewing Officer (RO) profile. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-7
Height/Weight/Body Fat recording . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-13, 4-52
I
Inaccurate reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-10
Inflated reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-10
Inflation, prevention of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-2
J
Joint duty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-6, 4-51
K
Key concepts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-3
L
Late fitness reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-10
M
Marine Reported On (MRO):
Action on adverse report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-23
Definition/General responsibilities . . . . . . . . . . . 1-4, 1-5
Role in evaluation cycle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-4, 1-5
Worksheet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-5
Master Brief Sheet (MBS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-4
Audit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-1
Fitness report listing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Apdx D
Header data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Apdx C
RS/RO Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Apdx E
Sample correction request format . . . . . . . . . . . . Apdx G
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
IND-5
Military judges’ reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-5
Minimum observation period . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-7
Missing fitness reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-9
Missing or Prisoner of War status . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-2
Modifications to the report chain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-5
Multiple/simultaneous regular duty assignments . . . . . . . 2-4
N
Non-judicial punishment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-5
Non-Marine reporting officials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-4, 6-6
Non-punitive measures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-4
Not observed reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-9
Not recommended for promotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-8
O
Objectives of the system . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-1
Observation by the Reviewing Officer (RO).. . . . . . . . . . 4-44
Occasions for General Officers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-1
Occasions for grades Sergeant through Colonel . . . . . . . . 3-1
Official Military Personnel File (OMPF) . . . . . . . . . . . 8-7
Audit and correction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-1
Apdx G
C-Folder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-7
F-Folder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-7
H-Folder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-7
P-Folder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-7
Privacy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-4
S-Folder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-7
X-Folder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-7
P
Pending trials and investigations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-6
Performance Anchored Rating Scales (PARS) . . . . . . . . . . 4-20
Marking philosophy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-21
Marking procedures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-23
Performance Evaluation Section, HQMC:
Fitness Report Processing Section . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-2
General Responsibilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-1
Organization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-1
Policy and Compliance Section . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-1
Performance Evaluation System:
Counseling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-4
Integrity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-3
Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-3
Key Concepts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-3
Objectives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-1
Purpose . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-1
Scope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-1
Physical fitness test reporting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-11
Privacy Act; requirements of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-4
Privacy of fitness report information . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-1
Procedurally incorrect reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-11
R
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
IND-6
Recommendation for promotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-8
Records availability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-4
Remedial promotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-5
Reporting chain and responsibilities
CMC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-4
Defense counsel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-5
General description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-1
Military judges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-5
Modifications to the standard reporting chain . . . . . . 2-5
Purpose . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-1
Reporting Senior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-1
Reporting Senior death, incapacitation, or relief . . . . 2-5
Reviewing Officer (RO). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-2
Third Officer Sighter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3, 5-22
Waivers of policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-1
Reporting occasions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-1
General Officer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-1
Sergeant through Colonel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-1
Details for:
Annual Active Duty (AN) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-5
Annual Reserve Duty (AR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-6
Change of Status (CS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-5
Change of Duty (CD) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-4
Change of Reporting Senior (CH) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-4
Directed by CMC (DC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-2
End of Service (EN) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-5
From Temporary Duty (FD) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-4
Grade Change (GC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-2
Reserve Training (RT) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-7
Semiannual (SA) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-6
Simultaneous reporting occasions . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-4
To Temporary Duty (TD) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-4
Transfer (TR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-4
Reporting Officials:
Civilian Reporting Senior (RS). . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-1, 6-6
Civilian Reviewing Officer (RO) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-2, 6-6
Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-1
Non-Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-4, 6-6
Reporting Senior (RS).. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-1, 5-14
Reviewing Officer (RO) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-2, 5-19
Third Officer Sighting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3, 5-22
Reporting Senior (RS):
Action on adverse reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-14
Action on extended reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-10
Action on non-observed reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-9
Attribute marks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-23
Certification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-43
Checklist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Apdx F
Death, incapacitation, or relief . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-5
Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-1
Directed and Additional Comments (section I) . . . . . . 4-39
Profile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-4
Responsibilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-2
Role . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-1
Seniority . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-5
Reviewing Officer (RO):
MCO 1610.7B
5 Jun 2023
IND-7
Action on adverse reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-19
Action on extended reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-10
Action on non-observed reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-9
Action upon death, incapacitation, or relief of RS . . . 2-3, 2-5
Adjudicating inflated reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-47
Adjudicating unsupported or unreported adversity . . . . 5-21
Adjudicating adverse reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-19
Administrative review . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-46
Certification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-46
Comments (section K) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-45
Comparative assessment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-44
Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-2
Observation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-44
Profile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-7
Responsibilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3
Role . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3
Seniority . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-5
Rifle/Pistol Qualification reporting . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-9
S
Senior Marine Officer Representative . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-7, 2-4
Senior Enlisted Advisor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-4
Seniority issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-5
Set Aside/Disapproved grade reductions . . . . . . . . . . . 6-6
Simultaneous reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-4
Statements after the fact . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-24
Submission schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Apdx A
Supplemental comments for filed reports . . . . . . . . . . . 8-9
T
Third Officer Sighting
Enlisted reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-22
General Officer Reviewing Officers (RO) . . . . . . . . . 5-22
Officer reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-22
Responsibility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-22
Training duty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-3
U
Unauthorized absence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-10
Unacceptable comments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-41
W
Waivers of policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-1
Weight control and military appearance; comments on . . . . . 4-13
Recording of Height/Weight/Body fat . . . . . . . . . . . 4-13