Springfield News-Sun

Military housing NDAS criticized by senators

Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown joins letter questionin­g practice.

- By Thomas Gnau Staff Writer

A group of senators are protesting what they say is the continued practice of requiring military families to sign non-disclosure agreements to have problems with military housing resolved.

Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown has joined other senators in questionin­g the practice of requiring some military families to sign non-disclosure agreements or “NDAS” with private housing companies in order to get compensate­d for what they call “poor housing conditions.”

“The use of NDAS leaves tenants who were provided with unsafe or unhealthy housing conditions forced to choose between receiving compensati­on for those atrocious conditions and forever remaining silent about their experience­s or telling their story and having to pay out of their own pockets for safe housing conditions,” said the recent letter to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, signed by Brown. “Furthermor­e, it allows the private housing companies to evade responsibi­lity for their failures. These are unacceptab­le outcomes.”

Sens. Elizabeth Warren, D-mass., Richard Blumenthal, D-conn., Mazie Hirono, D-HA. and Tim Kaine, D-VA., also signed the letter to Austin.

NDAS legally require that certain informatio­n be kept confidenti­al or secret.

Congress has opposed requiremen­ts for military families to sign NDAS to live in housing on military installati­ons. The fiscal year 2020 defense budget included a provision requiring companies to notify and get approval from the Department of Defense when a landlord uses an NDA, according to a statement from Brown’s office.

And senators said the law also makes clear that current or prospectiv­e tenants cannot be required to sign NDAS “in connection with entering into, continu

ing, or terminatin­g a lease for the housing unit,” and that, “any such agreement against the interests of the tenant is invalid.”

“These organizati­ons wave a non-disclosure agreement in front of them (military housing occupants) and say, ‘If you sign this agreement, there may be a bonus or payment you’ll be entitled to if you don’t bring up what may be inadequate housing,’ ” North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis, a Republican, said in a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee in 2019.

Senators say the practice continues. Sen. Warren said her office said they obtained copies of NDAS that Balfour Beatty Communitie­s and Liberty Military Housing forced on military families.

One NDA was required by Balfour Beatty Communitie­s (BBC), LLC, a company that pleaded guilty and agreed to pay more than $65 million in fines for defrauding the military.

“Instead of promptly repairing housing for U.S. service members as required, BBC lied about the repairs to pocket millions of dollars in performanc­e bonuses,” the Department of Justice said in December 2021.

The senators are asking Austin to respond to their questions by Jan. 17.

Questions about the senators’ letter were sent to a spokeswoma­n for the Department of the Air Force.

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