http://www.armytimes.com/story.php?f=0-ARMYPAPER-1995571.php
Grandma wears Army boots — and boy, is she proud
Basic training ages with grace
Margie Black — mother, grandmother, prison guard — has a new title: Private, U.S. Army.
At 41, she’s more than twice the age of the never-been-away-from-home teenagers who fidget and fret at the L. Mendel Rivers complex, the Army’s front door to the newly enlisted at Fort Jackson, S.C. She’s been here less than a week, and her calm demeanor has earned her a nickname.
“They call me Mom.”
And she’s not alone. Since January, the Army has increased the maximum enlistment age from 35 to 42, and people once deemed too old to fight have signed on the dotted line.
David S.C. Chu, undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness, says the improved health and fitness of middle-aged Americans makes it possible for them to enlist.
“People are living longer and are much healthier and physically fit into older ages than was true in earlier generations,” he said.
So far, only five people 40 and older — and 324 age 35 and older — have enlisted, Army records show. But members of their ranks are proving to be made of some tough stuff.
Pfc. Cindra Smith, 39, known as “Mama” or “Grandma” to some of her C Company platoon members at Redstone Arsenal, Ala., is training to go to Iraq to disarm bombs like the one that seriously injured her daughter.
Smith, of Xenia, Ohio, fractured a hip during basic training at Fort Jackson, S.C. In March, her mother died of cancer. And in June, shortly after her daughter had a child, doctors found a tumor on her daughter’s brain stem, requiring surgery.
But after a 10-day leave to be with her daughter, Smith was back in training, an inspiration to others.
“She leads by setting an example,” said Luisana Valencia, 20, of Visalia, Calif., a private in Smith’s platoon. “We go on runs, people get tired. She pushes herself and doesn’t stop [and says], ‘Hey, I’m older than you, but I’m not giving up.’”
Laurie-Ann Fuca, a 41-year-old mother of four, left for boot camp July 31 — three weeks after her eldest son was sent to Iraq at age 19. She’ll train at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.
Fuca plans to go into a medical specialty and aims to help wounded troops and civilians. A native of Canada who has been a legal U.S. resident for the past decade, Fuca said the desire is probably in her blood. Her father and sister served in the Canadian army and her brother still does.
“My son was like ‘You’re crazy. Moms don’t join the military.’ I told him a lot of soldiers are somebody’s mom, and he said, ‘Yeah, but you’re MY mom!’”
One-stop recruiting
Ever since Margie Black was 19, she wanted to join the Army. Pregnancy with her daughter Ashley prevented that.
When Ashley, now 21, got serious about enlisting in the Army recently, recruiter Staff Sgt. James Alston, dropped Ashley off at home and joked with Black about signing the mom up. A few days later, Alston called Black to tell her the Army had raised its eligibility limit to a day short of 42.
For Alston, it was one-family shopping. “Her daughter joined on Monday; she joined on Friday.”
;Black arrived at hot, humid Fort Jackson on July 20 to begin her four-year enlistment. After she graduates from basic training, she’ll get instruction to be a truck dispatcher. She wanted to be a sniper, because of the stealth required, but it’s closed to women.
The Army has the military’s highest age limit. The Air Force and Marine limits are 27, while the Navy’s is 35.
Physical fitness, not age, should determine who serves, says David Segal, a military sociologist at the University of Maryland.
“We used to use gender as a surrogate to determine if people could do the job,” Segal says. “We found out that, A, we needed women for the Army and, B, they could do the job. It’s the same with age. It really should be physical ability that should screen people out for military jobs.”
The basic training standards of earning 50 points in each category of the Army Physical Fitness Test have not changed for the new older recruits, and remain the same as they have been since 1998. Older male recruits may also join the infantry.
“If a 42-year-old wants to come into the infantry, he can,” said Army spokesman Ray Harp. “But the probability of someone doing that is not high.”
Raising the age limit of new recruits is one of many steps the Army has made to try to increase the recruiting pool: More soldiers are allowed in without high school diplomas, recruits now may have tattoos on their necks and hands, and more soldiers have been allowed in with lower Army aptitude-test scores.
— Staff and wire reports