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Wounded Warrior Web Site Upgraded

The Department of Defense announced today that its National Resource Directory (NRD) Web site for wounded, ill and injured service members, veterans, their families and those who support them, recently received a comprehensive system upgrade to provide users with easier access. 

This Web site is a collaborative effort between the Departments of Defense, Veterans Affairs (VA) and Labor (DOL), and compiles federal, state, local and non-profit resources for wounded warriors, veterans, family members and caregivers in a single, searchable site.

“We worked closely with users of the National Resource Directory to find out how to make the information they need easier to find,” said Noel Koch, deputy under secretary of defense for Wounded Warrior Care and Transition Policy. ”The resulting re-design is easier to navigate and adds useful new features.”

The upgrade makes the latest wounded warrior and veteran issues easier to locate and follow. A new “bookmark and share” application helps visitors alert others to the content they’ve found most helpful through social bookmarking, Facebook, Twitter, and other social networking tools. Visitors can also subscribe to Really Simple Syndication (RSS) or e-mail updates to receive new content, events and features based on their specific interests and needs.

“There are thousands of programs and benefits available to wounded warriors and their families, from healthcare and housing to education and employment assistance,” said Koch. ”Our people must have an easy way to sift through it all to find the resources that are most helpful for their circumstances, especially while they’re dealing with what can be overwhelming challenges. That’s why we’ve partnered with the VA and Department of Labor to offer the National Resource Directory. And with the feedback mechanisms we’ve added in the re-design, we’ll be able to keep improving our service to our wounded warriors and families.”

The faster, enhanced search engine ranks information based on the popularity of the sources among other site users, so the most valuable resources rise to the top of the search results. Visitors can tailor searches for resources in specific states and territories, and apply filters to narrow their searches. 

 The re-designed site also highlights resources to assist homeless veterans. NRD users can also recommend additional resources. All resources are thoroughly vetted prior to inclusion on the National Resource Directory, and as always, content is updated and reviewed daily by a content management team which includes veterans and subject matter experts. 

More information is available at http://www.NationalResourceDirectory.gov .

Soldiers, Families Top Army Priorities, Leaders Say

By Lisa Daniel
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Feb. 23, 2010 – Funding programs to support soldiers and their families is the Army’s top priority in the new fiscal year, the service’s secretary and chief of staff told a Senate panel today.

Army Secretary John M. McHugh, a former Congress member who served on the House Armed Services Committee, returned to Capitol Hill today to give his assessment of where the Army stands and where it needs to go.

“I found an Army clearly fatigued by nearly nine years of combat,” McHugh told the Senate Armed Service Committee. “But through it all, they are more resilient.”

To sustain and improve that resilience, McHugh and Army Chief of Staff Gen. George W. Casey Jr. spoke for the need to improve soldiers’ “dwell time” at home between deployments, as well as Army family support and mental health programs.

“We remain out of balance,” McHugh said. “Our all-volunteer force is a national treasure. If we wish to sustain it, soldiers and their families must be our top priority. For those of us in the Army family, it is the top priority.”

The Defense Department’s fiscal 2011 budget request includes $1.7 billion to fund what McHugh called “vital” family programs such as those to provide respite care and spousal employment, and to open some 50 child-care centers and seven youth centers.

“We sign up the soldier, we re-sign up the family,” McHugh said.

Casey agreed that keeping families happy is critical. “Keeping our families understanding that we really are committed to them over the long haul is essential to holding this force together,” he said.

The most important element for putting the Army “back in balance,” Casey said, is to increase the time soldiers are home between deployments.

“What we continue to see across the force is the cumulative effects of these deployments,” he said. Army studies show two to three years of dwell time is needed to recover from one year of deployment, he added.

The Army has increased dwell time from 12 to 18 months and plans that by the end of next year all soldiers would have two years at home following one year of deployment, Casey said.

“When you’re only home for a year, you barely have time to finish your leave before it’s time to go back,” he said. “We’ve discovered that the difference between 18 months at home and 12 months is significant.”

Casey went on to say a two-year dwell time will be even more significant to help soldiers and families, and also to train units more broadly for various operations.

The proposed budget builds on increases this year in funding for base operations, and the Army is conducting a mid-year review to assess base programs, McHugh said, adding that funding will not be cut for family programs.

“As our installations look for ways to operate more efficiently, our family programs will be sacrosanct – they will not be touched,” he said. “That doesn’t mean we won’t ask questions about whether things are operating efficiently.”

As an example of efforts to improve soldier resilience, Casey introduced Sgt. 1st Class Jeff Lawson, one of four soldiers he introduced to the committee. Lawson is one of 600 soldiers sent to a University of Pennsylvania program to become a “master resiliency trainer.” The training is part of the Comprehensive Soldier Fitness program that began in October and is designed to balance and strengthen soldiers’ physical and mental resilience, Casey said.

Under the program, the Army increased its mental-health specialists-to-soldiers ratio to 1-to-600 — though regulations require only a 1-to-700 ratio — to provide treatment in combat theaters, McHugh said. Still, the Army is 600 mental health providers short of its overall requirement of 4,304, he said.

“The way you get people to understand it’s OK [to get treatment] is by acting like it’s OK by providing that type of care,” McHugh said. “I don’t want to suggest we have this perfect; we don’t. But it’s something we work on every day and are improving every day.”

The proposed budget also completes the realignment of bases ordered by the 2005 Base Closure and Realignment Act, Casey said. The service is halfway through re-stationing that should be complete next year, affecting 300,000 soldiers and their families, but also improving their quality of life, he said.

The budget also restructures the force to prepare for changing operational needs. Those changes include standing down some jobs, including 200 tank companies, and standing up others such as police and Special Forces, Casey said.

“We are converting, retraining and equipping 150,000 soldiers for new jobs,” he said. “This will be the largest organizational transformation of the Army since World War II, and we have done it while fighting two wars.”

The Army has completed 90 percent of its goal that began in 2004 of changing its 300 brigades from Cold War to modular formations, Casey said, adding that the changes follow the Navy and Marine Corps operational models that give sustained land forces to combatant commanders while allowing for unexpected contingencies.

Another priority in the proposed budget is acquisition reform. “We have an Army that is strong in spirit, strong in ability and strong in results,” McHugh said. “We need to recognize, too, that this is an Army that is tired, stressed and burdened by the inefficiencies of bureaucracy.”

To that end, the budget would revamp the acquisitions process to improve how quickly equipment and services can be purchased and put into the hands of warfighters, McHugh said. Among other things, the reforms would add thousands of acquisitions positions to the service.

“The long pole in the tent is in bringing in more contract expertise,” McHugh said, noting that the Army has brought 900 functions back in-house, created 4,000 positions and saved $40 million in the process.

http://www.defense.gov/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=58063

DoD Puts Spouse Career Assistance on Hold

  February 17, 2010

Military.com|by Bryant Jordan

The Pentagon program that picks up some of the tab for military spouse career education has come to a halt, officials say.

Department of Defense spokeswoman Maj. April Cunningham said the Pentagon is “taking a comprehensive top-to-bottom program review” to ensure it is fulfilling the mandate to help spouses land jobs in “portable careers” such as construction, education, financial services, health services, information technology and real estate.

The Military Spouse Career Advancement Accounts, called MyCAA, program halt went into effect Feb. 16 when an announcement was posted on the Web site of MilitaryOneSource, which handles the program for the Defense Department.

“It’s catching us by surprise, too. We didn’t know it was coming,” a MilitaryOneSource official told Military.com today. “The spouses are calling obviously they’re very upset about this,” she said. The official who talked to Military.com asked not to be identified because she was not authorized to speak for MilitaryOneSource.

She said MilitaryOneSource is offering career counseling and helping spouses find other sources of financial aid.

In a statement released today to Military.com, Under Secretary of Defense for Military Community and Family Policy Tommy T. Thomas said the Pentagon recognizes that the military lifestyle “calls for portable careers and that military spouses need access to education and training for careers that are portable and high-growth nationally. This short-term break will allow us to better assess the program to ensure we are achieving that goal.”

 To find more family resources and news visit the Military Spouse Network.

 During the break, Cunningham said in an email to Military.com, no new MyCAA accounts may be created and no new financial assistance applications will be accepted during the pause. But spouses who already have a MyCAA account may continue to use program counseling support at their local installation and through MilitaryOneSource.

Cunningham said DoD has not set a date to reinstitute the program, but that officials hope to resume accepting financial assistance applications “in a few months.”

The MyCAA program provides up to $6,000 of financial assistance for military spouses in education programs leading to licenses, certificates, credentials or degree programs leading to employment in the so-called portable career fields.

Those eligible for financial assistance under MyCAA are spouses of active duty servicemembers and activated members of the National Guard and Reserve components on Title 10 orders.

Since the MyCAA program began, said Cunningham, nearly 133,000 military spouses have applied for the MyCAA program, with 98,000 currently enrolled in courses or approved for tuition assistance.

Official Calls Military Child Care ‘Model for Nation’

By Samantha L. Quigley
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Nov. 18, 2009 – The Military Child Care Act of 1989 has made the military child care system the one to emulate.

Sesame Street Muppets Rosita, right, and Elmo, accompanied Melvin Ming, Sesame Workshop’s chief operating officer, to the Defense Department’s 2009 Child Development Conference in Washington, D.C., Nov. 17, 2009. Elmo and Rosita helped Ming explain the Workshop’s “Talk, Listen, Connect” videos designed to help military kids deal with many of the challenges they face. DoD photo by Samantha L. Quigley
(Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available.

“We have come a long way,” said Tommy T. Thomas, deputy undersecretary of defense for military community and family policy, during the opening remarks of the department’s annual child development conference. “The Department of Defense Child Development System is … a model for this nation.”

Before 1989, care for military children was little more than on-post drop-off and nurseries, Thomas said. What was available often was housed in converted stables, Quonset huts, basement or attics. Many facilities were operated by private organizations or staffed by volunteers, and often care was available only for social events. Retaining trained, qualified caregivers was extremely difficult.

In the 20 years since enactment of the Military Child Care Act, military child care has undergone enormous change. Those changes have led to recognition by a number of organizations, including the National Association of Regulatory Administration and the National Women’s Law Center for the department’s commitment to high-quality, accessible, affordable child care.

Military child care service improved after the act became law, Thomas said in an interview after the opening session of the conference. “My kids experienced a whole new, different type of [care] than the earlier military kids,” he said.

“When my kids were dropped off to the child care center, the first thing my wife would say is, ‘That’s a very clean environment. The people are warm. They welcome you. They open arms to you,’” he said. “And the kids loved their providers. That’s the experience that I have received with three of my children. Every one of them, at some point, has used the child care facility.”

Military child development centers today are staffed with permanent, well-trained employees, and offer care for children 6 weeks to 12 years old that fits most parents’ schedules at more than 300 locations. In fact, Thomas said, 97 percent of the more than 300 military child development centers serving more than 200,000 children are accredited through the National Academy of Early Childhood Programs, a division of the National Association for the Education of Young Children.

Nancy Duff Campbell, co-president of the National Women’s Law Center, lauded the military’s approach to improving its system. The Military Child Care Act was particularly important, she said, because it applied a systemic approach to improving the quality, affordability, and availability of child care for all servicemembers, regardless of rank or income.

“The military child care system has been faithful in adhering to these goals in operations and furthering them in a systemic way,” she said.

By contrast, she said, the private-sector child care industry is a patchwork of legislative initiatives resulting in an incomprehensive approach to addressing the challenges of providing affordable child care to the civilian population.

While the issue of child development for military children centers on the programs offered by on-post facilities, organizations such as Sesame Workshop take it a step further.

“We are television, but like Cookie [Monster] says, cookies are a sometimes food,” said Melvin Ming, Sesame Workshop’s chief operating officer, the conference’s second keynote speaker.

“Television is not designed to be the babysitter all the time,” he said. “[However], we want to harness the power of the media … to encourage children to learn so that they can reach their highest potential. So the opportunity to work with the military … on TLC, the Talk, Listen, Connect project, has just been wonderful.”

Ming didn’t have much chance to talk about the project, a series of DVDs aimed at helping military children cope with the challenges of military life, before his “boss,” Elmo, showed up and stole the show.

Elmo and his best friend, Rosita, explained TLC to the more than 500 laughing conferees, as only the perpetually 3-and-a-half-year-old Muppet can.

“Military kids have so much to deal with,” Elmo said.

“Yeah, but you know what can help a little? Talk, Listen, Connect,” Rosita replied. “Talk, Listen, Connect is the way grownups can help military kids when they’re going through hard times.”

“Right!” Elmo responded. “You talk to the kids, tell them what’s going on.”

“And listen to what they have to say, and what they might be worried about,” Rosita added. “And don’t forget, keep connected.”

The conference, which includes a number of sessions to give military child care providers more tools with which to do their jobs, will continue tomorrow.

Retrieved from http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=56754

Military Spouse Residency Relief Act

Military Spouse Residency Relief Act                                                                       November 10, 2009

Good news on the homefront!  The Military Spouse Residency Relief Act was passed by Congress last week and is awaiting the President’s signature.

Here is the body of the press release:

Washington, DC –Tuesday, November 3, 2009. A comprehensive military family legislation, the Military Spouses Residency Relief Act (S 475 and HR 1182), which will legally recognize military spouses by providing them the option to claim the same state of domicile as their active duty spouse, passed through the House and Senate with strong bipartisan support, and is now being brought before the President to become a law.

 The bill was introduced by Congressman John Carter (R-TX), who represents Fort Hood, the largest military installation in the country. “This is fantastic news for our service families worldwide,” says Carter, who has been pushing the legislation for the last three years.

Senators Richard Burr (R-NC) and Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) introduced the companion bill into the Senate, which passed unanimously in August. The legislation will amend the Servicemember’s Civil Relief Act (SCRA) of 1940 allowing military spouses to share a home state with their spouse, the service member.

Currently, military spouses experience impediments in voting and property ownership as well as deterrents in employment and education. The bill offers fair treatment of the military spouse and improves the quality of life for military families by allowing the stability of a single state of domicile to call home.

Over 8,000 military spouses, friends and family members united to support the Military Spouses Residency Relief Act on Facebook. http://www.facebook.com/pa ges/Military-Spouses-Resid ency-Relief-Act/5145736287 7 They shared their individual stories as they contacted Congressional representatives to ask for support. Initially, Army Spouse, Rebecca Poynter and Navy Spouse, Joanna Williamson, approached Congressman Carter with their request to petition. “It has been a grass roots effort by thousands of spouses across the country, who have campaigned to get this passed, by telling their stories,” explains Poynter.

“The support from Military Officers Association of America (MOAA) and the Veterans Service Organizations who testified in our support is greatly appreciated,” said Williamson, “and together we claim this victory for all military families.”

This is exciting news for military spouses and will undoubtedly save us all time and possibly even money.

Retrieved from http://paycheck-chronicles.military.com/2009/11/military-spouse-residency-relief-act.html

Soldiers to earn the coveted Green Berets during Nov. 13 graduation ceremony

RELEASE NUMBER: 091109-01
DATE POSTED: NOVEMBER 9, 2009

FORT BRAGG, N.C. (USASOC News Service, Nov. 9, 2009) – Newly minted Special Forces Soldiers will join the Special Forces regiment as they graduate from the Special Forces Qualification Course at the Crown Coliseum Nov. 13 in Fayetteville.

Eighty-nine Soldiers from the 248th SFQC have spent the past year or more learning the skills required of apprentice Green Berets, including individual specialty skills, unconventional warfare methods, and language and cultural expertise. The graduates range in age from 20 to 39 years old of which 56 have combat experience including four recipients of the Purple Heart medal.

The guest speaker at the graduation ceremony is scheduled to be Brig. Gen. Michael S. Repass, commanding general of the U.S. Army Special Forces Command.

After graduation, the students will be assigned to the Army’s seven operational Special Forces Groups, including the two Army National Guard Groups, and will deploy in support of U.S. national security interests.

During a 4 p.m. Regimental First Formation Nov. 12 at JFK Memorial Plaza, the graduates will don their Green Berets for the first time; welcomed into the brotherhood of the Special Forces regiment.  During the ceremony, a prominent member of the regiment will be inducted as a Distinguished Member of the Regiment.

Retired Command Sgt. Maj. Ralph G. King began his career as member of the 101st Airborne Division during World War II.  As a member of the Band of Brothers, he participated in Operation Market Garden, the airborne Jump into Holland on Sept. 17, 1944, where he was received the first of two Purple Heart Medals.  King was later wounded again near the town of Foy, Belgium during the Battle of the Bulge. King volunteered for Special Forces in 1952, becoming one of the original Special Forces Soldiers.  King, as a member of the 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne), deployed to Laos form Sept 1961 to March 1962 as part of Operation White Star.

King retired in 1964, but has continued to serve the military community and the Special Forces Regiment. In 1993, he was the walk leader in a walk from North Little Rock, Arkansas, to Washington D.C. for the Vietnam Nurses Memorial Dedication, and again in 1997 when he participated as one of the leaders with a Bank to Bank walk from Pier 18, Los Angeles, Calif., to Wilmington, N.C. The latter walk of 2,640 miles across eight states in 65 days helped raise $130,000 for the John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Museum.

Media interested in covering either event should contact the John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School Public Affairs Office at 910-396-9394.

–usasoc–

Retrieved from http://news.soc.mil/releases/News%20Archive/2009/November/091109-01.html

President Proclaims Military Family Month

American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Nov. 2, 2009 – President Barack Obama pledged his support of military members and their families and said Americans have a “solemn obligation” to preserve their well-being in his proclamation declaring November as Military Family Month.

 The proclamation reads:

“No one pays a higher price for our freedom than members of our Nation’s military and their families. As sons and daughters, husbands and wives, and mothers and fathers are deployed, military families endure with exceptional resilience and courage. They provide our troops with invaluable encouragement and love, and serve our Nation in their own right. During Military Family Month, we honor the families of our Armed Forces and thank them for their dedication to our country.

“Though only a small percentage of our Nation’s population, our troops bear the great responsibility of protecting our people. They, along with their families, serve us every day with courage and dignity. Ensuring that military families receive the respect they deserve and the support they have earned is a top priority for my Administration.

“The strength of our Nation is measured not just by our success on the battlefield, but also by our ability to support those families who have made so many sacrifices for us. Time and again, military families have shown their heart in the face of adversity. We have a solemn obligation to ensure that while our men and women in uniform discharge their duties, we do all we can to promote and preserve the well-being of their families. We must also support the families of our wounded warriors and our fallen heroes who have paid the ultimate price for the freedoms we enjoy.

“This month, we celebrate the tremendous contributions of military families, convey to them our deepest respect and appreciation, and recommit ourselves to their support.

“NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim November 2009 as Military Family Month. I call on all Americans to honor military families through private actions and public service for the tremendous contributions they make in the support of our service members and our Nation.”

Retrieved from: www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=56479 

Eglin welcomes ‘most distinguished’ visitor

First lady Michelle Obama approaches the podium alongside Maj. Gen. Charles R. Davis, commander of the Air Armament Center, before she speaks to the crowd at Eglin Air Force Base on Thursday.

First lady Michelle Obama approaches the podium alongside Maj. Gen. Charles R. Davis, commander of the Air Armament Center, before she speaks to the crowd at Eglin Air Force Base on Thursday.

EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE — Maj. Gen. Charles Davis introduced her as “one of this most distinguished visitors in this base’s 75 year history.”

And when first lady Michelle Obama stepped to the podium and smiled, the cheers rocked Hangar 103 on Eglin Air Force Base.

View a photo gallery from Michelle Obama’s visit »

To view a second gallery from the First Lady’s visit, click here

Obama visited the base Thursday to acknowledge the Air Force’s celebration of 2009 as its “Year of the Family.”

Before speaking to a jam-packed and sweaty crowd of easily 1,000, she met with several families stationed here.

Then she told her mostly military audience she “stood in awe” of their sacrifice to the nation.

“I’m in awe of every single one of you,” she said. “And I’m also in awe of the people here, the people who have your back.”

The first lady pledged the Obama administration’s support for military pay raises and the expansion of the Military Family Leave Act.

“We’re working to make sure your voices are heard in Washington,” she told the crowd.

She vowed to work with the Air Force to provide career enhancement to airmen and promised federal support to military families who have lost their homes during this period of financial crisis.

“It now falls upon us as a grateful nation,” she said. “It is time for us to give back to our military families.”

Obama acknowledged that the communities around Eglin appreciate the military in ways that many areas, particularly those without bases, do not, and she reminded the audience to be mindful of the needs of the military families in those areas.

She urged those in attendance to “reach out and find out if there’s a military person who needs a hand.”

“It could be something as simple as babysitting or helping out with a carpool,” she said.

“At the very least, you can do one simple thing. You can take the time to say thank you,” she said. “Say thank you for the sacrifice you’re making for this nation.”

It was clear following the event Obama has a fan base at Eglin. She spent several minutes shaking hands and saying hello to those she could reach while others further back strained to get cell phone pictures.

“To hear someone of such importance give us a voice, it’s nice, it’s refreshing,” said Staff Sgt. Sarah Beasley, who was able to capture a couple of photos. “This was a good time.”

Jose Barreiro, a staff sergeant in the U.S. Army, and his wife met with Obama prior to her speech. He said she didn’t talk issues and he was grateful for that.

“I’m not a P.R. guy. I’m not a politician. I just care about doing my job,” he said.

He said Obama focused more on his wife than she did on him and that he was “surprised to see how down to earth she was.”

Airman First Class Alyssa Wetzel said she took away from Thursday’s event a greater appreciation for what she does.

“She made me feel like I’m actually making a difference,” said Wetzel, who had just returned from a four-month deployment. “I really appreciate that she took so much time to thank us. It’s nice to hear they appreciate what we do.”

Okaloosa County Commission Chairman Bill Roberts said Obama’s speech was exactly what he’d hoped for.

“I think she really talked about what she came to talk about,” he said. “She talked about what folks do. I think she spoke to the hearts of the men and women who have to deploy.”

After the event, Obama took a long moment to speak to Virgil Brown, a local physician who attended fourth grade with the first lady in Chicago.

Brown said Obama let him know she remembered him and that she’d signed a class picture he had brought.

“She signed the picture and she gave me a big hug,” Brown said. “It was a day to remember.”

Retrieved from http://www.nwfdailynews.com/news/eglin-21629-distinguished-most.html

First Lady reaches out to Eglin, Hurlburt community

October 14, 2009 7:15 AM Tom McLaughlin Daily News

EGLIN AFB — First lady Michelle Obama will speak here Thursday afternoon. She will address members of the military and civil service employees working on Eglin Air Force Base, said Marie Vanover, a spokeswoman for the base. A news release from Obama’s press office termed the visit “part of the first lady’s ongoing outreach to military families.” This year has been designated the U.S. Air Force’s Year of the Air Force Family. Vanover said because the purpose of Obama’s visit is to meet and talk to military personnel and their families, current plans are to limit attendance to those on base. “At this time we want to offer the opportunity to see her to people on base, since this is the year of the Air Force family,” Vanover said.

Obama’s itinerary, according to the White House news release, calls for her to meet first with base leaders and military families. She’ll then speak “to the Eglin Air Force Base and Hurlburt Field communities” in Hangar 103, which Vanover said can accommodate about 1,000 people.

News of Obama’s visit began to generate excitement off the base before the limited attendance announcement was made.

Staunch Democrat Judy Byrne Riley said she was trying to finagle her way onto Eglin. “This is not the friendliest place for a Democratic first lady,” Byrne Riley said, referring to Okaloosa County’s staunch Republican leanings. “I hope there is a good strong contingent of Democrats who will show up and let her know there are Democrats in the area.”

Jerry Mallory, the chairman of Okaloosa County the Democratic Executive Committee, didn’t sound like he would try to get on base for Obama’s speech. But he said her topic and the effort she is putting forward for military families is laudable. “As a retired Air Force chaplain, I know that kind of interest in that issue is important,” he said. “Early on, when she made military families one of her priorities I said ‘this is going to be good.’ ”

Christina May, who served at one time in the Air Force on Eglin, said she’d like to see Obama speak. “Actually, I admire her,” May said. “She seems to me to be a very strong woman. I look at her kids, and she is very family oriented in my mind.” Brian Haugen, a just-retired Army National Guard lieutenant colonel, said he was “thankful” Obama was visiting Eglin. “It’s nice for the first family to show their appreciation for the efforts of our fighting men and women,” he said.

Obama will travel from South Florida to make her appearance. She will attend a luncheon at the National Historic Landmark Freedom Tower at Miami Dade College (MDC). A specific time for her arrival has not been announced.

Retrieved from: http://www.nwfdailynews.com/news/eglin-21551-families-visit.html

Homeowner assistance program begins today

By Karen Jowers – Staff writer Posted : Wednesday Sep 30, 2009 8:12:16 EDT

A program to help military homeowners caught in the downturn of the housing market can start processing applications Wednesday, sources said, with the scheduled publication of the implementing rules in the Federal Register.

About 4,300 homeowners have already applied for assistance under the expanded Homeowners Assistance Program, which was signed into law Feb. 17 with $555 million in funding. Eligible are people on permanent change-of-station orders, wounded warriors, surviving spouses and those affected by base realignment and closure actions.

Wounded warriors and surviving spouses receive priority in the program, although about 98 percent of the applications received so far have been in the PCS category.

The Army Corps of Engineers, which runs the program, has been increasing staff and preparing to start processing applications. Some service members have said that HAP officials have been doing initial reviews of their applications, asking for more information, to further prepare in advance.

But the primary issue that has held up the program for six months still looms: Homeowners who receive benefits under the expanded HAP will have to pay taxes, and the taxes will be withheld upfront. Recently introduced legislation that would fix the problem and make the benefits tax-exempt is still pending.

For now, the tax requirement will limit the number of people who can be helped, because service members who are “upside-down” on their mortgages — those who owe more on their mortgages than the sale price of their homes — would not have enough money to take to the table to close the sale.

Defense officials have been exploring options that could help these service members.

Each individual’s situation will be different, and service members will have to decide what is best for their circumstances.

If they qualify for the program, those who have already sold their homes at a loss can be reimbursed for part of the loss, minus the tax withholding.

The program is retroactive for those who received PCS orders on or after Feb. 1, 2006. Homeowners affected by PCS or base closure actions must have purchased homes before July 1, 2006. Additional eligibility requirements will be included in the final rules.

Although there still will be a 30-day comment period on the implementing regulations in the Federal Register, the Corps of Engineers will be able to process applications starting the day of publication.

The tax issue is out of the Defense Department’s hands, and the Office of Management and Budget and the Internal Revenue Service had tried to come up with a resolution. Assistance under the original HAP, created to help those affected by base closure actions, is not taxed. But that tax exclusion was not written into the provision that expanded the program

Retreived from: http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/09/military_homeowners_help_092909w/