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PolitiFact Florida: Will too many tattoos keep you out of military? Jeb Bush says yes

 
Published Dec. 8, 2014

Failing test scores aren't the only problem that has caused the military to reject applicants, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush says. Another problem is, well, more colorful: tattoos.

While talking about his push to improve public education at a Wall Street Journal CEO Council event last week, Bush pointed to problems the military has in finding qualified applicants.

Bush mentioned a video in which a military official talked about the challenge:

"In the video beforehand, Gen. (Martin) Dempsey talked about a 25 percent pass rate. Now that's not just because of the test, that's also because of obesity, and too many tattoos, to be honest with you, on visible body parts for people that are trying to get into the military. But the pass rate for a high school-level test to join the military is about 35 percent, I think, or 40 percent at best. These are abysmal numbers."

PolitiFact has fact-checked claims about whether obesity and physical fitness have kept applicants out of the military (both true). But we hadn't explored the role of tattoos in filling the military ranks. We couldn't resist taking a look.

Each branch of the service sets its own rules about tattoos, but it was the Army's policy that has drawn the most ink recently from the media.

In March, the Army overhauled its appearance policy, which includes more than two pages of detailed rules about "tattoo, branding and body mutilation."

This led to a rush to get tatted so soldiers could be grandfathered in under the new rules. The Army has a detailed procedure for grandfathering that directs unit commanders to document each tattoo in an official memorandum.

The Army's policy states that tattoos, regardless of subject matter, are prohibited on certain areas of the body, including the wrists, hands and fingers, as well as the head, face and neck, defined as "anything above the T-shirt neck line to include on/inside the eyelids, mouth, and ears."

"Soldiers may have no more than four visible tattoos below the elbow (to the wrist bone) or below the knee," the policy says.

So far under the new policy, 2,919 applicants could not proceed because of tattoos, Army recruiting spokesman Brian Lepley said. "Those 2,919 are the ones whose tattoos were so egregious it was highly unlikely a waiver could get through, or the applicant chose not to try a waiver," he said.

In the Army, 193 tattoo waivers for applicants have been granted, while one was rejected and four are pending.

Lepley told us that tattoos are not the No. 1 disqualifier. Medical conditions, drug use, misconduct or some combination of those issues disqualify more applicants.

News reports around the country, though, indicate the tattoo policy is limiting applicants.

"Right now, with the new tattoo policy in effect, we currently turn away one in every five applicants that come through our door," Army Capt. Joshua Jacquez told CNN in a report from El Paso, Texas.

Maj. Gen. Allen W. Batschelet, head of Army recruiting at Fort Knox in Kentucky, told the Kansas City Star in August that the policy is, "rather arbitrary, in some sense." However, he said that "you have to draw the line somewhere" for the Army to present a professional image.

As for waivers, Batschelet said, "To be blunt, the higher quality of applicant you are, the more tolerance we'd probably have for seeking a waiver. If you came in to sign up today and were a neurosurgeon, I got to tell you I'd go a long way toward trying to get an exception if all you had was a disqualifying tattoo."

The Air Force, Marines and Navy also have their own tattoo policies. All of them generally ban tattoos that are obscene, advocate discrimination or express offensive views.

The Air Force policy has a seven-step measurement guide that contains math formulas in an attempt to prevent tattoos from covering more than 25 percent of an exposed body part. (Partial inches should be rounded up to the nearest inch, it says.)

The Marines policy states that applicants with more than four tattoos must be administratively reviewed.

The Navy's policy is the least detailed — only 277 words — though like the other services, it bans head tattoos.

We rate Bush's claim True.

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