Higher-waisted pencil skirts, tapered below the thigh, ranked are the most popular in an informal and unscientific survey of more than 1,100 Marine Corps Times readers who were asked for feedback on the service's effort to update women's service and dress uniforms of three options that are under consideration for service and dress uniforms, while some Marines feel the skirt should be eliminated as the Corps pushes unisex uniforms and gender-neutral standards.

The survey, That is the result of an informal poll by Marine Corps Times. The poll, which generated 1,122 votes over two weeks, was conducted online launched on March 28 after Marine Corps headquarters service officials announced its their own survey on March 28. Specifically, oOfficials want to know whether Marines prefer an A-line, straight, or pencil-style skirt. The service's uniform board also is examining weighing whether to relocate the skirts' move the zippers on female Marines' skirts from the back to the side, and whether . Marines are also given the option to move the ID-card pocket for identification cards from the inside the garment to of their skirts to the outside.

Nearly half of those who responded to The Marine Corps Times' reader survey said they prefer pencil skirts. About found that roughly one-in-four Marines wants to keep the A-line skirts female Marines wear now currently worn by female Marines. Fewer than one-in-five likes the straight skirts, while half of respondents prefer the pencil skirt.

A smaller but not insignificant number of respondents — 101, or nine percent — of respondents said skirts should be replaced with trousers. Many called such garments. The skirts were called "outdated," and said to "serves no purpose." And while some respondents voters bemoaned any further another round of uniform changes, most who opposed to updating the a new skirt said that doing so contradicts is contrary to the effort, pushed by Navy Secretary Ray Mabus, to create such attire skirts has have no place in the current drive push for unisex uniforms.

The women of Company H, 2nd Headquarters Battalion, Henderson Hall, model the various work and dress uniforms worn by female Marines during the World War II era.

Photo Credit: DoD image via "Free a Marine to Fight: Women Marines in World War II"

The Marine Corps’ official survey had 498 participants as of April 13, — 304 had completed the dress skirt surveys and 194 completed the service skirt surveys, according to Barb Hamby, a SYSCOM spokeswoman for Marine Corps Systems Command at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Virginia. Of those, 304 had completed the dress skirt survey while 194 had completed the service skirt survey. Officials won't The Corps will not have a response breakdown of how Marines voted until the survey concludes on May 27, Hamby said.

The official survey is online and requires can be completed [https://usmcsurveys.natick.army.mil/] with a common access card to complete. 

Additionally, Marines will see prototype uniforms and can take complete the survey in person — and see uniform prototypes — during a roadshow going on throughout to be held in May. Stops will include:

  • Camp Pendleton, California: May 3
  • Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, California: May 5
  • Marine Corps Base Quantico, Virginia: May 10
  • Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island, South Carolina: May 26
  • Camp Lejeune, North Carolina: May 24

Nine percent of those who responded to Marine Corps Times' survey said skirts should be replaced by trousers, and that the very notion of a women's only garment runs counter to the Navy secretary's push for unisex uniforms.

Photo Credit: Cpl. Steven Fox/Marine Corps

Last summer, Navy Secretary Ray Mabus last summer said his goal is a collection of uniforms that "don’t divide us as male or female, but rather unite us as sailors or Marines."

Female Marines switched to a universal dress blue cover for their dress blue uniforms last year, and the new female dress blue coat was adopted in January on Jan. 8 after more than two years of research and testing and experiments.

Women won’t see those coats for two to three years, officials said. Final tweaks must be made, then contracting and production timelines must be determined factored in.

COMMENTS FROM HISTORIAN TK

As part of Mabus' initiative, the Navy has taken a similar approach to unisex uniforms.

Female recruits on April 4 became the first to be issue "Dixie cups" in place of bucket covers. All other women females have until Oct. 31 get theirs to make the change.

A new women's dress blue uniform female service dress blues, which sailors call "crackerjacks," will be issued at boot camp beginning Oct. 1 and become mandatory by Jan. 1, 2020. Female officers and chief petty officers and officers also saw updates to the Navy's service dress white uniforms that now have the same high collar common to men's the male uniforms, but they lack chest pockets and have smaller buttons that are smaller yet proportional.

Marine Corps Times' skirt survey results

  1. Pencil | 550 votes | 49%
  2. A-line | 271 votes | 24%
  3. Straight | 200 votes | 18% 
  4. Trousers | 101 votes | 9%

Notes: This unscientific survey was conducted online between March 28 and April 13 using free tools provided by Polldaddy.com. It was served to readers who visited Marine Corps Times' initial report on the service's plans to modify women's skits. In all, 1,122 respondents completed the survey. That sample is not a perfect representation of the Marine Corps as no metric was used to identify men from women or active-duty personnel from veterans, retirees or civilians. Statistical margins of error commonly reported in opinion polls that use random sampling can't be calculated for this survey.

Gunnery Sgt. Tawanda Hanible speaks at an event while wearing dress blues. The Marine Corps is asking women whether they'd like to change the style of skirts worn with that uniform.

Photo Credit: Defense Department

Lance M. Bacon is senior reporter for Marine Corps Times. He covers Marine Corps Combat Development Command, Marine Corps Forces Command, personnel / career issues, Marine Corps Logistics Command, II MEF, and Marine Forces North. He can be reached at lbacon@marinecorpstimes.com.

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