|
Home
Some defense budget relief voted; commissary cuts likely
March 7, 2013
Tom Philpott
The Joint Chiefs are breathing a bit
easier after the House voted Wednesday to fund the government through
September, and included a 2013 defense appropriations bill that would
give the armed services more money and budget flexibility to ease the
threat of a wartime readiness crisis.
House passage the bill, HR 933, also
drove home a bracing reality: that even the most conservative defense
hawks are set to allow arbitrary "sequestration"cuts to clobber
portions of the defense budget, including civilian personnel paychecks
and key military family support programs.
Unaltered by the House bill, for
example, is a $130 million bite from commissary operations this year,
which will force base grocery stores, at least in the continental United
States, to close Wednesdays , their lightest sales day, from late April
through September. This will coincide with day-a-week furloughs
–or 20 percent pay cuts –planned for
up to 800,000 civilian employees of the Department of
Defense.
Civilian staff will be cut at military
hospitals and clinics, at Defense-run dependent schools and at base day
care centers. T he Marine Corps already has announced that tuition
assistance has been closed to new entrants. These are just a sampling of
cuts occurring across the military because of a March 1 sequestration
order to cut federal spending across-the-board to save $85 billion this
fiscal year, half of that from the Department of Defense.
Since January, Defense civilian and
military leaders have warned that that their 2013 budgets are in a vice,
created by a continuing budget resolution that froze spending below
fiscal 2012 levels, and by the "mindless"cuts of
sequestration, which kicked in this month after lawmakers stopped even
trying to negotiate a "grand bargain"$1.2 trillion
debt-reduction deal.
President Obama and Democrats insist
that any deal be "balanced"with a combination
of spending cuts and new revenue, to include either tax increases or
closing of tax loopholes on the wealthy and on special
interests.
Republican leaders insist they will not
raise more revenue, even by closing loopholes they’ve criticized
before, given that they did agree on Jan. 1 to allow a several
percentage point bump in income taxes for individuals earning more than
$400,000 and families earning more than $450,000.
Neither side budged as the sequester
took hold, despite increasingly dire warnings from the Joint Chiefs that
readiness would deteriorate quickly and troop morale was falling amid
the budget chaos.
Against this backdrop, Reps. Bill Young
(R-Fla.), chairman of the House appropriations subcommittee on defense,
and Hal Rogers (R-Ky.), the full committee chairman, drafted HR 933 to
accomplish some short-term goals, if the Senate will agree to it. One is
to avoid a government shutdown March 27 when the current continuing
resolution is to expire.
A second goal is to give some budget
relief and flexibility to the military, first by passing a 2013 defense
appropriations bill that had been negotiated last year with the Senate.
Also, HR 933 would allow a shift of $10.4 billion from less critical
accounts into operations and maintenance accounts so the services,
despite sequestration, can conduct vital training and resume critical
construction projects and weapon buys.
The day before the House voted, 267 to
151, to pass HR 933, Rep. John Culberson (R-Texas), chairman of the
appropriations subcommittee on military construction and veterans
affairs, held a hearing where he pressed the service chiefs to attest
publicly to the importance of HR 933.
Gen. Raymond T. Odierno, Army chief of
staff, said the Army had begun to cancel combat training center
rotations for deploying brigade combat teams, except those bound for
Afghanistan. It would be forced to cut flying time for helicopter pilots
by at least 37,000 hours in 2013, impacting readiness of 750 pilots. He
said HR 933 was "absolutely critical" and would
address "at least a third" of the
Army’s budget problems.
Adm. Jonathan W. Greenert, chief of
naval operations, was more effusive, saying HR 933 would make
"almost a night and day" difference. The
appropriations bill alone would close Navy’s current
$8.6 billion funding gap for operations and maintenance by $4.6
billion.
If the full Congress passes it, he
said, Navy would be able to put another carrier strike group and
amphibious ready group forward and "get back to the
covenant that we have with the combatant commanders…We’d get some
carrier overhauls, we’d get carrier
new construction, we’d get
submarine new construction, we’d get all the
military construction back."
Marine Corps commandant Gen. James F.
Amos warned that unless operating dollars are restored, by mid-2014 more
than 55 percent of non-deployed Marine ground units and 50 percent of
non-deployed aviation units would see readiness ratings fall to C-3 or
below, which means unable to carry out some core missions. Non-deployed
pilots would get 10 flight hours a month versus 15 to 17 hours needed to
stay proficient. Maintenance on F/A-18 fighter aircraft would fall so
far behind schedule, Amos said, that "we may very well
never catch up" to get the aging fleet "back up to flying
status."
Gen. Mark A. Welsh III, Air Force chief
of staff, said HR 933 would make a "huge" difference to his service, allowing reprogramming of
budget dollars to mitigate sequestration’s
impact.
"In a big way," Welsh said,
"it
allows us to look at our civilian work force and figure out a way around
this idea of furloughing…180,000 great
civilian airmen. We want no part of that."
But HR 933 would leave sequestration in
place and also deny federal civilians a pay raise for 2013. Military
strength, pay raises and benefits are exempt but not many support
programs including commissaries. The Defense Commissary System (DeCA)
announced plans in late February to close by late April most stateside
stores every Wednesday.
Patrick B. Nixon, president of American
Logistics Association, a trade group of manufacturers and vendors
servicing military stores, said ALA is working with DeCA to ease any
loss of shopper discounts, perhaps through special promotions or by
creating "Saturday Sequestration" sales.
"Whatever we can do to help DeCA make facilities
accessible and products available, at savings patrons have learned to
expect, we are going to do,"
said Nixon, a former DeCA director.
"But
it’s tough times."
To comment, write Military Update,
P.O. Box 231111, Centreville, VA, or email milupdate@aol.com or twitter: Tom Philpott
@Military_Update
| Tom Philpott, Military Update, defense, budget, relief, voted, commissary, cuts, likely, FRA |
|