NEW LONDON, Conn. (AP) 鈥 The grueling basic training for fledgling cadets at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy, known as swab summer, has been revamped this year in light of a sexual abuse scandal that has rocked the prestigious service academy.
Gone is the shock-and-awe on Day 1 of the seven-week boot camp when rising juniors, known as cadre, shout in the faces of the roughly 300 incoming freshmen students when they first arrive at the New London, Connecticut, campus for future U.S. Coast Guard officers. This year, the cadre read forcefully from a prepared script, avoiding improvisation and yelling.
The goal is to drain the adrenaline of the cadre and make the boot camp more about mentorship and respect than browbeating and bullying, hopefully creating a positive ripple effect throughout the Coast Guard.
鈥淲hen you don鈥檛 have a script, you end up just resorting to volume,鈥 said retired Cmdr. John Heller, the deputy commandant of cadets for strategy and leadership, who has worked at the academy in various roles for about 25 years and helped to oversee the latest changes mirrored after the U.S. Military Academy's cadet training. 鈥淲hat ends up happening is, we had been onboarding our cadets for decades, unintentionally perhaps, in a climate of fear and intimidation.鈥
Changing the climate of swab summer is one of seven actions the academy was instructed to take following revelations the Coast Guard kept secret a probe called Operation Fouled Anchor. The investigation found that dozens of sexual assault and harassment cases involving cadets from 1990 to 2006 had been , including the prevention of some perpetrators from being prosecuted.
The revelation, first reported by , sparked calls for major reforms and long-awaited accountability for the offenders and those who protected them. There are multiple government and underway looking into the mishandling of serious misbehavior at the school and beyond.
A damning released Wednesday by the Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations found 鈥渟ystemic failures鈥 that 鈥渃ontinue to this day鈥 at the academy and in the wider Coast Guard. At a field hearing the committee held Thursday in New London, past and present enlisted personnel spoke of abuse and harassment they experienced and how a 鈥渃ulture of coverup鈥 ultimately protected their perpetrators.
Shannon Norenberg, a former sexual assault response coordinator at the academy who resigned in June and turned whistleblower, said 20-year-old cadets training and having power over swabs a couple years younger, with minimal supervision, was an issue she raised during last year's review that the commandant ordered following the revelations of Operation Fouled Anchor.
鈥淪ometimes the cadets just are not mature enough to handle that role of being in charge and they go too far" and get personal, such as making comments about a swab's intelligence or appearance, said Norenberg, who has since rescinded her resignation and is trying to return to her campus position. "Instead of correcting swabs鈥 behavior, they would insult their character or attack their worthiness to be there.鈥
Months later, the swabs have learned that the cadre, whom they still call sir and ma'am, can tell them what to do and get them in trouble.
鈥淵ou can imagine the misuse of power that has been taken advantage of over and over,鈥 said Norenberg, who noted that during her 11 years at the academy, she dealt with more than 150 reported sexual assault cases, including many that involved the abuse of power.
As ordered by the commandant, there鈥檚 more oversight of the cadre this summer. Drill instructors from Training Center Cape May in New Jersey, where enlisted personnel are trained, have been tasked with mentoring the cadre. Outside experts have been invited to campus to talk about issues such as power dynamics.
That's in addition to professional victim advocates who were first hired at the school in 2021 and who have been training the swabs and cadre about sexual harassment, assault and rape.
A new program called shield training was implemented this year to emphasize the Coast Guard's core values of honor, respect and devotion to duty. Every night after tired swabs have showered 鈥 some in individual stalls that were recently built to provide privacy 鈥 they break into groups with a cadre member to go over a lesson and discuss what happened that day with their squad.
Swabs are allowed to note personal issues they might be having in daily diaries that cadre review. They can also make a special hand gesture to signal they need to speak in private with cadre.
Oliva Spada, a swab from Long Island, New York, said she had some trepidation before coming to the academy due the reports of sexual abuse and harassment. But a few weeks into her new life as a cadet, she felt completely safe.
鈥淟ike, never, ever would I feel like anything like that would happen,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 feel completely safe around my cadre, around my shipmates.鈥
But the changes have been met with skepticism by some past and present Coasties, the nickname for Coast Guard members.
鈥淚t鈥檚 theater. They have not internalized any wrongdoing,鈥 said retired Cmdr. Kimberly McLear, a former whistleblower who taught at the academy and later founded the Right the Ship Coalition, which seeks to help those 鈥渨ronged by the culture of cruelty and cover-up" in the Coast Guard.
鈥淭hey are taking calculated measures to shift attention to cadets鈥 performance to distract from the culture of the staff, faculty, and leaders up to the commandant.鈥
Academy staff are well aware of the skepticism about the changes being made and whether they get to the heart of the problem.
鈥淲e鈥檝e got a lot of trust that we鈥檝e got to earn back,鈥 said Cmdr. Krystyn Pecora, who attended the academy 20 years ago. "And so I can appreciate that skepticism.鈥
Pecora said she disagrees with criticism from some old-guard Coasties, who believe the school is now going too easy on the new cadets.
鈥淭here鈥檚 nothing easy about respect,鈥 she said. 鈥淚n fact, it鈥檚 easier for me to just go down there and scream and intimidate. It鈥檚 not more effective. So putting this focus on building respectful leadership, that鈥檚 challenging and it鈥檚 not easier for anyone.鈥
The Coast Guard as a whole has been tasked with taking 33 actions in light of Operation Fouled Anchor, including seven assigned to the academy.
Besides changes to swab summer, the cadets' conduct system is being updated and security in the dormitory is being strengthened, including plans to upgrade locks on cadets鈥 rooms and install more security cameras. There's a new policy that allows cadets who have been assaulted to continue their studies at another service academy.
Cadet 2nd Class Gabriella Kraus-Rivera said Operation Fouled Anchor is common knowledge among the cadets and 鈥渢here鈥檚 no kid here that doesn鈥檛 understand what happened" and that cultural changes are needed.
鈥淚 think that鈥檚 part of having honor, is living with that integrity and being able to be honest about the things that happened at this academy,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he only way you鈥檙e going to change it is if you acknowledge it first.鈥