From AFT:
“Military issues new details
on reimbursing pet travel costs”
Planning to move to a new base?
The U.S. military has started rolling out new details about what troops need to
be reimbursed for the cost of bringing pets along for the ride. Service members
can be reimbursed up to $2,000 for one dog or cat for each permanent change of
station move to or from the continental United States, or $550 if moving within
the lower 48 states. PCS orders must be effective on or after Jan. 1, 2024.
Transporting pets during PCS
moves has become increasingly difficult and expensive for military families
over the past few years. Lawmakers sought to help alleviate that burden by
authorizing reimbursements in the fiscal year 2023 National Defense Authorization
Act. Now, troops can seek reimbursement for costs related to mandatory
microchipping, quarantines, boarding, hotel service charges, virus immunity
testing and pet licenses at the new duty station. The Pentagon can also
reimburse the cost of shipping a pet via air, if the service member flies
rather than drives, or if the pet is shipped separately from its owner. The
Defense Department’s Joint Travel Regulations lay out the general rules for
reimbursement of “reasonable and substantiated costs” during a permanent move.
Troops must provide the required receipts to get their money back, but the
services may require additional documentation, according to the Defense Travel
Management Office’s website.
Troops will use the form DD
1351-2 to claim pet expenses, and they’ll be paid when the travel claim is
settled. Service members must be on PCS orders; the benefit is not retroactive.
When transoceanic travel is involved, according to the Joint Travel
Regulations, service members must use government-run or federally contracted
transportation to ship their pet, if it’s available. If that’s not an option,
defense travel officials added, service members must get what is called a
“non-availability letter” in order to be reimbursed for travel they book
separately. Those letters state that a government ride for a pet wasn’t
available, and are issued by the office processing the transportation request.
Service members should contact their transportation office for more details,
according to defense travel officials.
The Department of the Air
Force on Jan. 4 became the first of the military branches to announce more
specifics about what troops need to recoup pet shipping costs:
All receipts related to pet
travel must be provided and itemized, and indicate which pet they are for. They
should include the name of the pet, if possible, especially for specialized
care such as pre-travel vaccinations. All receipts must be provided, including
those for expenses under the typical reporting threshold of $75. If the pet is
flying cargo because it exceeds the weight limit for traveling by
government-run or contracted transportation, the receipt must include the pet’s
weight. All documentation used to get a non-availability letter, proving a lack
of government transportation, must be included when the service member files
for reimbursement. According to Air Mobility Command, travelers using AMC
Patriot Express government-contracted flights will get a receipt for their pet
travel fees when checking in for a flight.
The Navy and Marine Corps
don’t require any additional documentation outside of the Joint Travel
Regulations, service officials told Military Times.
The Army expects to soon
publish their own guidance explaining the claims and documentation process for
reimbursing soldiers, said Army spokeswoman Lt. Col. Ruth Castro. Until that
guidance is published, soldiers should “refer any questions to their chain of
command,” she said.
Defense travel officials stress
that costs can only be reimbursed for one pet. If service members pay to ship
more than one household pet, they can choose which pet costs to claim for
reimbursement. However, if a dual-military couple is traveling on separate PCS
orders, each may seek reimbursement for one household pet — meaning two pets
could be covered in total. Although the law allows DOD to reimburse up to
$4,000 in relocation-related costs per pet, per PCS move to or from overseas,
defense officials capped the maximum repayable amount at $2,000 and delayed the
policy’s implementation until Jan. 1, 2024. The Marine Corps said in a June 9
memo that “significant unbudgeted costs” had prompted the Defense Department to
delay the benefit after it became law in December 2022. Realizing the financial
hardship military families face to transport their pets around the world, the
military relief societies have stepped up to help service members with the
cost. Army Emergency Relief and the Navy-Marine Corps Relief Society have spent
about $3,000 per client, on average, to assist with pet travel.
For more information, service
members can contact:
Air Force and Space Force: Local
finance office
Navy: Human Resources Service
Center at 833-330-6622, or askmncc@navy.mil
Marine Corps:
usmcpassengertravel@usmc.mil
Army: For now, the local chain of
command
^ This is just so chaotic and crazy
and needs to be fixed and fixed now. ^
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