From Military.com:
“New Law Says Troops Get Up to $4,000 for Pet PCS Costs --
But DoD Hasn't Implemented It”
Military households moving to a new duty station this summer
may not get to claim a new pet transportation entitlement that was created by
Congress in December. The proposed rules allowing the reimbursement of pet
travel are still sitting on a desk at the Pentagon. The Defense Department
confirmed in an emailed statement Friday that the draft regulation authorizing
the military services to pay the reimbursement awaits the approval of the chair
of the Pentagon's Per Diem Travel and Transportation Allowance Committee. The
deputy secretary of defense for military personnel policy chairs that
committee, according to a DoD website. Stephanie Miller currently holds the
job. Congress created the new entitlement as part of the fiscal 2023 National
Defense Authorization Act, or NDAA, which was passed into law on Dec. 23. Officials
didn't immediately confirm whether Miller's approval is all that's needed nor
clarify details about the effective date of the new discretionary authority being
given to the services to reimburse for pet travel.
The Defense Department has traditionally covered dependents'
travel expenses, but troops have had to pay out of pocket to move their pets. The
2023 NDAA says service secretaries may reimburse up to $550 per move within the
continental U.S., and up to $4,000 per move to or from a foreign duty station. But
the DoD's Joint Travel Regulations still cover only the mandatory quarantining
of household pets -- specifically cats and dogs -- reimbursing up to $550 per
PCS move. The department also reimburses both transportation and quarantine
fees in the event of evacuating from a foreign location.
The new regulation still being finalized "implements Sec
624 of FY 2023 NDAA which ... authorizes a discretionary authority to reimburse
the costs related to the relocation of a pet that arise during a permanent
change of station (PCS)," according to the DoD statement. "The item
is pending Per Diem Travel and Transportation Allowance Committee Chair approval."
To get out in front of questions from families, the Marine Corps published an
administrative message dated June 9 letting its service officials know that it
likely won't reimburse PCSing Marines for pet travel undertaken during this
summer's moving season, and that reimbursements won't be retroactive to the
president's signing of the fiscal 2023 NDAA. Citing "significant
unbudgeted costs," the Marine Corps said it expects the new entitlement
will not be effective until Jan. 1. The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic made
transporting pets more expensive for families that couldn't drive from one duty
station to another after commercial airlines largely stopped transporting pets.
The situation left families who were moving overseas, in particular, with few
options, such as pet shipping services that could wind up costing thousands of
dollars.
^ This is ridiculous. The Military (the DOD) needs to get
their act together and start following the law. I moved overseas with my Dogs
twice and didn’t get any help from anyone, but of course there was no law as
there is now. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.