From Military.com:
“Military Families Can See
Moving Company Red Flags on New Website”
The military rolled out a new
website service this week for military families on permanent change of station,
or PCS, orders that shows whether moving companies are regularly on time or
have been suspended at some point. Troops and their families can use the site's
public data on the moving company performance, as well as new statistics on the
website showing the average number of moves for any given time of year to
better plan PCS moves, according to U.S. Transportation Command, which created
and is hosting the service. "That allows customers to understand what
they're getting into based on the time of year that they plan on moving, and
they can work with their local units to adjust that accordingly to what best
fits them," Col. Joel Safranek, director of the command's Defense Personal
Property Program, said in an interview.
The service is part of an effort
by Transportation Command to modernize its approach to dealing with troops,
treating them as customers. The goal is to ease the military moving headaches
exacerbated by the ongoing pandemic, which has caused a shortage of workers,
backed-up ports, and delays. "If you want to go to dinner and you go to
Google Reviews or something, right, you will be able to see reviews on that
restaurant, to include things like, 'Hey, Friday night at 6 o'clock is probably
busy,'" said Safranek. The new "customer-facing dashboard" is
aimed at providing a similar service to families. "They can also click a
transportation service provider, a TSP, and they can start to see data on each
and every TSP," Safranek said. That data includes on-time rates and any
letters of warning or suspension.
However, families who find
they’ve been assigned moving companies with red flags in their history may face
new hurdles to doing anything about it. Transportation Command said Thursday
there is a process for troops to request a specific moving company through
their local transportation office when household goods shipments are being
arranged, but the change could require shifting the dates of their PCS move set
by issued orders. Troops can also choose a personally procured move, meaning
they would arrange and organize their own move and seek reimbursement through
the military. But those moves are only available inside the U.S. and
reimbursement is capped, meaning troops may be stuck paying some out-of-pocket
expenses. The Senate confirmed a new head of Transportation Command this month,
Gen. Jacqueline Van Ovost, who said improving the quality of PCS moves is a
priority. The command is also on the cusp of signing a $19 billion contract
with a private company to manage its global system of household goods shipments
-- a move it says will ease years of troop discontent over the quality of
moves. That contract is expected to be signed in early November, but will not
be in full effect until 2023 at the earliest. In the meantime, the data on PCS
volume could help families steer clear of particularly busy times of the year,
though the bulk of moves have always occurred during the summer months when
children are out of school. "You can clearly see that you are doing
8,000-9,000 moves a week in June and July, and you're doing maybe 4,000-6,000
moves during the non-peak season," Safranek said.
^ It’s all well and good to be
able to see the reviews of your moving company, but it means nothing if you
aren’t allowed to do anything about it – as is the case with PCSings. Here is
the website: https://www.ustranscom.mil/dp3/index.cfm?tsp=17243B5C915F42C1A8C22F06CAE7DE0E#overview ^
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