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Life - Finance
House
Panel Backs 3.9% Pay Raise
Stars
and Stripes | Leo Shane III |
May 2008
WASHINGTON
-- A House panel Wednesday
backed a 3.9 percent pay raise
for all military personnel next
year, mirroring Senate plans to
give troops a bigger boost than
Pentagon officials had
requested.
Members
of the House Armed Services
military personnel subcommittee
included the money in their
draft of the new defense
authorization bill, which sets
spending and policy priorities
for the military in fiscal 2009.
Chairwoman
Susan Davis, D-Calif., said the
larger pay raise is needed to
help shrink the gap between
military wages and private
sector paychecks.
If
passed, the pay raise would be
the highest for troops since
2004 and the 10th consecutive
year military pay has outpaced
the employment cost index.
Defense
officials had requested a 3.4
percent increase, equal to the
index's inflation estimate. But
earlier this month Senate
lawmakers backed the 3.9 percent
figure, indicating that both
chambers will likely adopt the
higher raise when they negotiate
compromise legislation later
this year.
For
an E-4 with four years' military
service, the Senate plan would
mean an increase of $79.86 a
month, about $10 more than the
Pentagon plan. For an O-4 with
four years, it would be $189.25
a month, about $24 more than the
Pentagon plan.
The
House panel also announced plans
to eliminate co-pays for
preventive care procedures such
as cancer screenings and
cholesterol tests in an effort
to encourage more Tricare
patients to seek medical advice
before serious problems occur.
Davis
said the plan covers all
beneficiaries except those
enrolled in Tricare for Life.
She said lawmakers were unable
to find enough money to extend
the same coverage to that group
along with other Tricare
members.
It
also includes a pilot program
for military spouses to receive
job training in
"portable" careers as
they move from base to base, and
another to allow servicemembers
a temporary gap in service to
pursue family or education goals
before completing their tours of
duty.
But
the draft excludes nearly $1.2
billion in pharmacy and doctors'
fees backed by defense officials
to cover the rising cost of
health care. Lawmakers have
rebuffed those efforts in recent
years, saying military retirees
shouldn't bear the brunt of
those expenses.
The
authorization bill does not set
pay raises for civilian defense
employees, but Congress often
uses the military paycheck
boosts as the basis for the
civilian raises in later budget
bills.
If
passed, the raise would go into
effect Jan. 1.
About
Stars and Stripes
This
article is provided courtesy of
Stars & Stripes, which got
its start as a newspaper for
Union troops during the Civil
War, and has been published
continuously since 1942 in
Europe and 1945 in the Pacific.
Stripes reporters have been in
the field with American
soldiers, sailors and airmen in
World War II, Korea, the Cold
War, Vietnam, the Gulf War,
Bosnia and Kosovo, and are now
on assignment in the Middle
East.
Stars and Stripes has one of the
widest distribution ranges of
any newspaper in the world.
Between the Pacific and European
editions, Stars & Stripes
services over 50 countries where
there are bases, posts, service
members, ships, or embassies.
Stars
& Stripes Website
On April 29, 2005, the
Under Secretary of Defense
Comptroller and the Under
Secretary of Defense for
Personnel and Readiness
signed the new Policy for
Electronic Wage and Tax
Statements and Leave and
Earning Statements. Click
here for the Electronic
Policy Memo. |
Effective July 1, 2005,
all military members and
Department of Defense
(DoD) non bargaining unit
civilian employees with a
customized PIN, who access
myPay are consenting to
receive only an electronic
W-2 and Leave and Earning
Statement (LES). Click
here for more information
on Electronic W2s and LES. |
1099R
Information
Effective September 1,
2004, all current myPay
military retired users who
request or already have a
myPay Personal
Identification Number
(PIN) and access myPay are
consenting to receive only
an electronic 1099R. They
may, however, elect to
receive a hardcopy 1099R. Click
here for more information
on 1099Rs. |
DOD's High 3 Retirement
Plan
Members of the military
who entered the service
after July 31, 1986, must
choose between DoD's
High-3 retirement plan or
the REDUX plan. Which
choice is best for an
individual's needs? Make
an informed choice. Click
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options. |
Financial
Readiness Equals Mission
Readiness, Official Says
By
Sgt. Sara Wood, USA
American Forces Press Service
|
WASHINGTON,
Oct. 2006 –
Servicemembers and their
families need to learn the
importance of financial
management and smart saving
practices, so the Defense
Department is focusing its
efforts to make sure troops are
prepared for the future, a
senior DoD official said here
yesterday.
“One
of the most important aspects of
our responsibility at DoD is to
help military families with
their quality of life and with
the programs and activities that
will help them have a full and
successful life that we think
the military offers,” said
Leslye Arsht, deputy
undersecretary of defense for
military community and family
policy. “We’ve worked hard
to put together a comprehensive
program of financial assistance
and guidance to help military
families move toward a culture
of saving and planning for the
future.”
One of the initiatives DoD is
pursuing is a program called
Military Saves. This program is
under America Saves, a
nationwide campaign in which a
broad coalition of nonprofit,
corporate and government groups
helps individuals and families
save and build wealth.
The idea behind Military Saves
is to encourage military
families, particularly young
families, to start saving early
for retirement and to build a
financial safety cushion to use
in case of emergencies, Arsht
said. Having this cushion will
prevent families from seeking
short-term loans, which often
come with high interest rates,
she said.
“The military pay system makes
it really easy for you to do
these allocations in your
paycheck,” she said. “These
small amounts of money – 10,
20 dollars a month – actually
adds up to quite a bit when you
do it on a regular basis.”
Another program DoD recently
launched is Moneywise in the
Military, a traveling conference
done in partnership with the PBS
television network that
addresses topic such as staying
out of debt, bankruptcy, home
ownership, saving and insurance.
The first of these conferences
was held Sept. 30 at Walter Reed
Army Medical Center and was
hosted by Kelvin Boston, host of
the PBS television series,
“Moneywise.”
Moneywise in the Military proved
to be popular in its first
conference, drawing 200 people
on a Saturday afternoon, Arsht
said. Boston is a popular
television personality who
directs his regular programming
to middle- and low-income
Americans, but has adapted it
for military families, she said.
“We see these as very popular
activities for every age group,
but we think especially
important for our young members
and their families,” she said.
Moneywise in the Military will
travel to five installations
around the country, and possibly
to more locations as DoD
develops its relationship with
PBS, Arsht said.
DoD has developed partnerships
with nonprofit financial
planners and organizations that
work through family centers,
providing counseling and to help
military members in financial
trouble, Arsht said. DoD leaders
also encourage servicemembers to
use financial institutions on
military bases, which offer
short-term loans with low
interest rates, she said.
“Financial readiness is
equivalent to mission
readiness,” she said. “We
have records and history that
show if you are worried about
your finances, you’re not
going to be as ready or as
focused on the mission. So we
want to help families address
these issues before they become
a crisis and to really encourage
them to make these sounder
financial choices.”
Most military families get into
trouble when small emergencies
come along and they’re already
stretched thin financially,
Arsht said. DoD’s financial
readiness campaign aims to teach
servicemembers how to save and
plan for these emergencies, so
they’re prepared and ready to
do their job, she said.
“Because we see financial
stability and financial
readiness as equating with
mission readiness, it’s really
important to DoD to be able to
help our families make good
choices, and to start this
culture of saving that will keep
them from getting into the cycle
of debt,” she said.
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Biographies:
Leslye
Arsht
Related Articles:
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Financial Seminar Matches Dollars With
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Related Sites:
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Saves
|
Free
Turbo Tax Proves Popular Among DoD Filers
By Donna
Miles
American Forces Press Service
|
WASHINGTON,
Feb. 2006
–
A partnership that enables military members
and their families to file their tax returns
electronically without charge is proving
tremendously popular, with 103,000 returns
already filed as of Feb. 7, a Military
OneSource official told the American Forces
Press Service.
"That's a big response!" the
official said. More than 97,000 people filed
their returns electronically within the first
20 days after being offered free access to
Turbo Tax software, she noted. Military
OneSource and Intuit, a financial services
company, are partnering to offer the Turbo Tax
basic product for both federal and state
returns at no cost.
In addition to active-duty members and
their families, National Guard and Reserve
members and their family members also have
access the program, regardless of their
activation status. Deployed DoD civilians and
their families also qualify.
Users can access the software through the
Military OneSource Web site. A simple, secure,
step-by-step system allows them to save, print
and send completed tax forms electronically to
the Internal Revenue Service, officials said.
While the Defense Department has a long
history of offering tax help to military
members, this is the first time DoD has
offered the opportunity for them to self-file
electronically.
Another free service enables military
members and families to make toll-free calls
to tax experts from any deployment location in
the world, Jan Burke, deputy undersecretary of
defense for military community and family
policy, said in announcing the program in
January. The toll-free number is (800)
342-9647. More phone numbers for people living
overseas, non-English speakers and people with
disabilities are posted on the Military
OneSource Web site.
That service could come in particularly
handy this year, due to deployments and other
circumstances that affect taxable income, Army
Lt. Col. Janet Fenton, executive director of
the Armed Forces Tax Council, noted recently.
For example, Iraq, Afghanistan, Bosnia and
Kosovo all qualify as combat zones where
military income is tax exempt. In addition, a
recent change in the tax code provides
provisions for victims of hurricanes Katrina,
Rita and Wilma.
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Related Site:
Military
OneSource
Related Articles:
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Offered for Tax Season
Corporate
Partners Offer Free Tax Filing Service to Military Members
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Regulations
Defense
Finance & Acct Service
American
Bankruptcy Institute
American
Debt Mgm Services
Debt Management
Debt HQ
Military
Finances:
Salary
Issues:
Military
Pay
Pay
Regulations
Military
Retirement Benefits
COLA
Cost
of Living Adjustments
CONUS
COLA
Overseas
Housing Allowance
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