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Commissioned officers don't receiver an NCOER - the NCO portion of that should be sufficient explanation that it pertains to noncommissioned officers, and not commissioned officers.
span of control
2010 will continue to be the year of the NCO. Noncommissioned officers are the backbone of Western militaries.
Yes, Warrant Officers exist in several military forces. In British and Commonwealth forces (as well as some European forces, particularly those liberated by British forces during the Second World War), a Warrant Officer is the equivalent of what's known as a Senior Noncommissioned Officer (E7 and higher) in the US. In the US military, Warrant Officers are a type of technical specialist neither in the enlist or noncommissioned officer ranks.
Noncommissioned officers are the backbone of the military. But they are sort of codependent - the Lieutenant can't do their job if the Sergeants aren't doing theirs.
NCO Creed stands for non- commissioned officers creed. It is a tool to remind and educate enlisted leaders of their responsibilities and authority, in other words it's a Code of conduct.
There's a few different positions for a Sergeant Major. A Command Sergeant Major will be the senior noncommissioned officer of a Battalion or larger sized element, while a Sergeant Major will typically be in a staff position, and may serve as the senior NCO of that staff. They are primarily responsible for the noncomissioned officers under them.
IGO
In the USIn nearly all states parole officers must go through some kind of training. Certification varies from state to state. Some are full peace officers with arrest authority over anyone. Others are limited to just those they supervise and some do not have any law enforcement responsibilities at all.
Is conveyed by officers receiving a commision.
The same authority that enables them to carry firearms.
There is none. Officers and Noncommissioned Officers are entirely different classes of personnel. Lieutenant Colonel is usually the rank of a Battalion Commander, and the Battalion Command Sergeant Major could be considered his enlisted counterpart, but the ranks are in no way equivalent.