Past marijuana use will no longer be a disqualifying factor in applying to the Air Force. Pictured: A man smokes a joint at a party in Seattle on April 20, 2016. (Elaine Thompson, Associated Press file)

Air Force reportedly changes rules around marijuana use for recruits

With more states choosing to legalize marijuana use for medical or recreational purposes, the U.S. Air Force is adapting its own rules so that previous marijuana use will not disqualify potential recruits, according to a report on Military.com.

The changes would not allow marijuana use by active military, and potential recruits diagnosed as having substance abuse disorders would continue to be disqualified from service, according to a statement from the Secretary of the Air Force.

Recruiters asked interviewees about previous marijuana use, but allowable amounts of marijuana consumption varied for different areas of service in a way that didn’t always make sense, an Air Force official told Military.com.

“Standards of pre-accession marijuana use were different for getting into the Air Force Academy vs. Air Force Recruiting Service for enlistment or officer training school vs. AFROTC,” said Air Force spokesman Zachary Anderson.

Added Lt. Gen. Gina Grosso, deputy chief of staff for Air Force manpower, personnel and services: “Some recruiters used if you smoked marijuana less than five times, sometimes it was less than 15 times.”

The service will also no longer consider when a potential recruit used marijuana in relation to their application. However, “any condition that would require prescription of medical marijuana would probably be a disqualifying condition to begin with,” Lt. Gen (Dr.) Mark Ediger, the Air Force’s surgeon general, told Military.com.

To read the full story, go to Military.com.