Houston Chronicle Sunday

Military families are in a bind on housing as benefits lag

- By R.J. Rico

When Kristin Martin found out her husband was being transferre­d to Naval Base San Diego, securing housing for their family of five quickly took over her life.

On-base housing wasn’t an option — the waitlist for a four-bedroom home in the neighborho­ods they qualified for was 14 to 16 months.

Neither were the military-only hotels near base where new arrivals can pay low rates as they get their bearings — those were full, too.

So Martin cast a wide net across San Diego and started applying for rental homes, all sight unseen.

“I was waking up and the first thing I was doing was looking at properties,” Martin said. “I was looking at it midday, before I went to bed. I had alerts set. It became a full-time job.”

More than 30 rental applicatio­ns later and hundreds of dollars in applicatio­n fees down the drain, the Martins finally found a home.

But there were caveats. They’d have to start paying rent a month before they actually moved. And, at $4,200 per month, their rent was nearly $700 more than the monthly basic allowance for housing, known as the BAH, that her husband, a lieutenant, receives.

“We’ll probably be here two or three years, so that could be $20,000 that we’re paying out of pocket above BAH just for rent,” Martin said after completing her family’s fourth move in 15 years last month.

Housing has long been a major benefit for service members, a subsidy to salaries that trail the private sector. But, amid record-breaking spikes in

rent, the Department of Defense has neglected its commitment to help military families find affordable places to live, service members and housing activists say.

That’s forced many to settle for substandar­d homes, deal with extremely long commutes or pay thousands out of pocket they hadn’t budgeted for.

“We have families coming to us that are on exorbitant­ly lengthy waiting

lists and sitting in homes that they can’t afford, like an Airbnb rental, or they’re at a hotel or camping in tents or living in RVs,” said Kate Needham, a veteran who co-founded Armed Forces Housing Advocates.

Needham’s group supplies microgrant­s to military families in need, some of whom have resorted to food banks because their salaries do not cover such basics.

Reports of the housing squeeze has alarmed members of Congress, who are pushing legislatio­n that would force the Department of Defense to rethink how it handles housing.

A common complaint is that with rents soaring nationwide, the housing allowances, which vary by rank and are recalculat­ed annually, haven’t kept pace with rental markets, even though they’re supposed to cover 95 percent of rental costs.

According to a data analysis by the Associated Press of five of the most populous military bases in the U.S., housing allowances across all ranks have risen an average of 18.7 percent since January 2018. In that span, according to real estate company Zillow, rents have skyrockete­d 43.9 percent in those markets: Carlsbad, Calif.; Colorado Springs, Colo.; El Paso; Killeen; and Tacoma, Wash.

And because of how tough off-base markets are, on-base housing has become a hot commodity, with many bases having long waitlists.

Needham argues that the discrepanc­y between military housing allowances and the current market should alarm officials who are already struggling to recruit the next generation.

“If you can’t afford your job, why the hell would you stay in the job?” Needham said. “People are feeling abused by the military in so many different areas — the sexual assault issues, the lack of attention to medical care, the lack of attention to mental health. This is just another tick in the box that’s like, ‘Why would I join the military?’ And if you don’t have enough numbers, that’s a longterm national security problem.”

 ?? Daniel Barnhorst/U.S. Air Force via AP ?? Record-breaking spikes in rent have outpaced housing allowances for service members.
Daniel Barnhorst/U.S. Air Force via AP Record-breaking spikes in rent have outpaced housing allowances for service members.

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