- Worf had already gotten permission to wear his alteration years ago on file. Ro didn’t have permission yet.
- Deanna works with civilians, who may not be as open with her if she is wearing a uniform. Again, nothing a little off screen paperwork would clear up
- Riker takes a risk to assert his authority with an easy to find infraction to bust her with to let her know he means business.
And Ensigns don’t get the privilege of dress code exemptions.
This and a couple other comments in this thread point to an aspect of Star Trek’s world building that hasn’t sat right with me for a long time. It’s supposed to be an utopianistic, egalitarian future. There’s no scarcity or need on Earth so everyone is supposed to be here because they want to be, out of a love of exploration and scientific advancement. So why is there such a disparity in treatment based on rank? Why does an ensign get stuck with a bunk in a hallway while Captain Picard gets a cushy executive suite? O’Brien at least had real quarters to raise his family in, but they were a comparative closet next to the bachelor Captain’s. Doesn’t seem right to me.
All to say that, in my mind, if an ensign needs to stick to a manner of dress, so should an officer of rank. They’re all part of the same fleet and deserving of the same respect.
Why does an ensign get stuck with a bunk in a hallway
Because space is the final frontier, there just isn’t enough on a ship.
But actually I found the bunk in a hallway stuff weird. The ship at any given time is full of civilians, children, people preparing to colonize new worlds, etc. It seemed clear to me that everyone/every family had a nice little apartment they lived in.
I know this was different in the Lower Decks animated show, but was this true in live action?
I also think we see Ro Laren’s quarters at some point and she has standard quarters.
I always thought the hallway bunks were for on-call positions to get rest in between work, not meant as personal bunks.
The interior space inside a Galaxy class is immense. A standard US aircraft carrier has a crew of some 3000 sailors. It is utterly dwarfed by the Enterprise-D. Forget the official crew manifest. The real world designers thought too small. 642m in length, 463m wide, 195 height, and 42 decks total. That saucer section alone could house 10k people easy, and probably 50k in an emergency. With only 3k aboard, they all ought to have a respectable living quarters to themselves.
I only recall seeing the hallway bunks in Lower Decks, and I think that was intended as a joke.
Another reason Jellico was a great captain. Made Deanna put on a real uniform (which looked great on her btw).
Yeah, way sexier than the weird, awkward, cleavage onesie.
In the US Army Sikh soldiers can wear their turbans, beards, and kirpan due to those things being part of their religious beliefs. The soldier does have to get permission and a uniform waiver first but that’s never an issue.
I would bet Laren’s earring is the same type of thing. She’s a contrarian so she probably just never put in the paperwork to get a uniform chit allowing her to wear her earring and the others did.
I half remember Worf getting permission on screen. What episode was that?
Let’s get Captain Ronnie Cox on board, he’ll straighten Deanna out





