The Army can turn around IPEB decisions quickly, but you should be aware that they are now scheduling formal hearings for April, May, and June of next year for people who request a formal hearings- this is as of the past three weeks. They have hit a backlog, but it is at the FPEB level. Regular Air Force cases are processing well on the IPEB level, but Guard and Reserve cases are stagnating at that level right now. And, another reason why Air Force cases move faster is that they have eliminated the SAFPC level of appeal, a post-FPEB level of appeal still afforded to Army, Navy, and Coast Guard members. Thus, there are trade-offs. With the Navy PEB, it has been a staffing issue- they had a shortage of medical officers and were the only DOD branch that did not hire civilian adjudicators- retired medical and line officers- to avoid such issues. That is changing now, thanks to John Fitzpatrick, and the first civilian adjudicator has been brought on board. Hopefully, more will follow. Note- members in all DOD branches should also expect delays next spring and summer as PEB members will likely be tasked with collateral duties as Discharge Review Board members to deal with the current Army class settlement as well as the pending Navy class action settlement. The Air Force is starting to get immersed in this litigation too. These decisions will afford an avenue of relief to tens of thousands of veterans who were unjustly given general or OTH discharge. However, you should expect that PEB members will be detailed to many of these cases as the various Discharge Review Boards just do not have the personnel to process the number of appeals that are expected within the next year. It was never a COVID issue with the Navy PEB or its supervisory agency- the CORB- it was a manpower issue. The same was true of the Coast Guard PDES process for many months, but that is being slowly resolved too.