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Amn Dale Preisach
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Perhaps a ratio of Food costs per child/ spouse should be in the mix? Or a way of figuring cost of necessities for the age of the child ; diapers / food/ bottles and formula for the youngest, then scale it on a median for age/ health/... of the child/ spouse,... then go from there.
For clothing, for children, have a circuit share system of gently used/ like new clothing from among the families on base and off.
As well as discounted items at the PX . It is a bit disheartening to go off base into a thrift / second hand clothing store and have to use part of the food money for clothes and such.
Especially when others on base could share the clothes etc for younger kids- under tween aged ,
Have bicycles etc stored away for use by the next child, old enough to ride / learn to ride a bike.
Turn military families into... a community sharing the things they can... like baseball gloves / bikes/ ... within the base's families.
Food and clothing are high costs.
Buffer the gaps in Bicycles and such things by establishing a care and share circuit with in the Base / off base families.
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COL Randall C.
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The article is actually wrong with that headline. Nearly half of those that reported food insecurity were junior enlisted, not "Half of junior enlisted" (see chart). In other words, of the 25% that reported food insecurity, 45% of them were junior enlisted (E1-E4).

However, to your points raise in the second paragraph, I completely agree. The 25% of military spouses that reported food insecurity is more than twice that of the civilian population (10.2%)*.

The new Basic Needs Allowance* should absolutely help with that (that just went into effect this year, so it is not reflected in this study). The BNA brings your pay up to 130% of the federal poverty level (note: the BNA is calculated off of ALL family income, not just the base pay of the Servicemember), so for a family of four, that would be a minimum household income of $3,250 a month.

I think DoD is taking steps in the right direction to rectify issues, but can do more (ESPECIALLY in the data gathering aspect).
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* DoD Study - https://www.defense.gov/News/Releases/Release/Article/3295629/dod-survey-delivers-data-on-well-being-of-military-spouses/
* https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/ag-and-food-statistics-charting-the-essentials/food-security-and-nutrition-assistance/
* Federal Poverty Guidelines - https://aspe.hhs.gov/topics/poverty-economic-mobility/poverty-guidelines
* DFAS guide to BNA - https://www.dfas.mil/MilitaryMembers/payentitlements/bna/
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MSG Chief Executive Officer (Ceo)
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Nice information, sir! I've heard that not many people qualify for the BNA which is not contributing to the food security issue amongst service members and their families.
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COL Randall C.
COL Randall C.
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MSG (Join to see) - Rgr. That "total household income" throws a lot of people because they assume it's the base pay of the Servicemember. It seems that the BNA would help out in a lot fewer situations than we would hope.
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