From the AFT:
“DoD wants to hear from 110K
military families with special needs”
(Members of an Exceptional Family
Member Program interact with a box turtle during an EFMP aquarium excursion.)
Service members who have family
members with special needs are being encouraged to participate in the first-ever
comprehensive Defense Department-wide survey. Personnel enrolled in the
Exceptional Family Member Program will receive an email invitation to
participate in the 2022 Exceptional Family Member Program survey, which comes
from the Office of People Analytics. There are about 110,000 active-duty
service members currently enrolled in the EFMP, each of whom will be given a
unique ticket number to access the web-based, confidential survey. Once the
documentation is sent to those service members, officials are encouraging
spouses and other family members to help the service member to best provide the
perspective of the entire family.
The Exceptional Family Member
Program is mandatory for active-duty service members who have a family member
with special medical or educational needs. Its goal is to ensure that the needs
of those families are taken into consideration and support services are
available during the process of a PCS move. Each branch of service administers
the EFMP and provides service-specific guidance and resources. “The experience
of our families enrolled in EFMP is important to us and this survey is an
opportunity for each and every one of them to be heard,” said Patricia Montes
Barron, deputy assistant secretary of defense for Military Community and Family
Policy, in a DoD release. “By completing the survey, families can make sure DoD
understands where its policies and programs are helping them and where
improvements can be made. Leadership will take the results from this survey
seriously,” she said.
The survey focuses on
identification and enrollment, assignment coordination during the PCS process,
and family support. Results will be reported to DoD’s Office of Special Needs,
service branch EFMP leadership, and personnel leadership.
For years, a number of military
families with special needs have fought their own battles amid spotty
assistance from the services and DoD to get the health care and educational
services required by law. Earlier this year, the nonprofit Partners in Promise
released survey results from more than 1,000 parents, showing that military
children face significant delays in getting the special education services they
need. Frequent military moves exacerbate these problems. Service members who
are enrolled in EFMP but don’t receive an invitation to the survey can visit
dodsurveys.mil to participate in the survey.
^ The US Military has a long way
to go to provide the Dependents with Special Needs of Soldiers the assistance
they require. This is one small step towards the much larger picture in things
that need to be done. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.