Hamilton Journal News

Lawmakers asked to address pay, housing

Military leaders testify to House committee’s quality-of-life panel.

- By Svetlana Shkolnikov­a Stars and Stripes

‘Nobody should be on food stamps, nobody should have to go to a food bank, period, while serving in our military. Nobody should live in decrepit barracks or dorms. No one.’

The military’s top enlisted leaders called on lawmakers Wednesday to focus on improving pay and housing for service members, describing them as the most pressing quality-of-life concerns for troops.

Troops have received blanket pay raises for the last several years but Congress has not approved targeted raises for specific ranks since 2007. Poor housing conditions, particular­ly in barracks for the youngest service members, were the subject of a scathing government watchdog report last year.

“A couple of these problems are so big that if we don’t start taking immediate action on them now, we’re going to miss the curve in the future,” said Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy James Honea. “We must start today.”

Honea and the other leaders offered their testimony to the House Armed Services Committee’s special quality-of-life panel as it finalizes efforts to provide service members with better pay and compensati­on, housing, child care, spouse support programs and access to health care.

The legislativ­e proposals will be part of the drafting of the 2025 National Defense Authorizat­ion Act, an annual bill that sets policies for the Pentagon.

Military compensati­on and housing emerged as top issues across the service branches as the panel met with military families, military officials and advocates during the past year.

Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb.

Senior enlisted leaders acknowledg­ed Wednesday that they damage troop morale and could hurt recruitmen­t.

Lawmakers have indicated they will seek pay increases next year, specifical­ly for junior enlisted personnel and troops with specialize­d skills. House Republican­s advanced legislatio­n last year that would have set a $31,000 minimum salary for the lowest-ranking service members, but it was scrapped amid a review of military compensati­on.

“Adequacy of pay and benefits for our most junior service members continues to be in question,” said Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., the panel’s chairman. “It is crucial these men and women are fairly compensate­d for their dedication, sacrifice and service they provide to our nation.”

Housing is also under congressio­nal scrutiny following a Government Accountabi­lity Office investigat­ion that found junior enlisted troops living in barracks with mold, missing kitchenett­es, sewage overflow, water-quality issues, rodent infestatio­ns, broken air conditioni­ng and other unsafe conditions.

Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., said she hears complaints about housing at the Marine Corps Air Station in Beaufort, S.C., almost every week. Of the 1,140 units available to the 12,000-member military community, about 960 units are occupied and the rest are “in disrepair or completely unlivable,” she said.

“We have housing that soldiers can’t even live in,” she said. “We have to do better.”

Senior enlisted leaders said room for improvemen­t is limited due to aging, chronicall­y underfunde­d housing. Most infrastruc­ture was built in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s and is “like antiques,” said Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force Joanne Bass.

“We have various pockets where our barracks — they’re old and we need to knock them down . ... ,” said Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps Carlos Ruiz.

Bacon said the quality-of-life panel will work with congressio­nal appropriat­ors to come up with a strategy to tackle each issue. Progress might take years, he warned, but lawmakers will continue to chip away at it “to get this right.”

“Nobody should be on food stamps, nobody should have to go to a food bank, period, while serving in our military. Nobody should live in decrepit barracks or dorms,” he said. “No one.”

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