Thursday

Big cuts coming; lower pay raises start in 2015

Big cuts coming; lower pay raises among some cuts start in 2015

 Army Times
By Andrew Tilghman and Rick Maze - Staff writers
Posted : Thursday Jan 26, 2012 14:00:23 EST


Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Martin E. Dempsey outline the main areas of proposed spending cuts during a Pentagon news conference Jan. 26.


Service members can expect standard pay raises for the next two years — most likely 1.7 percent for 2013 — but that will change starting in 2015, according to a new budget plan unveiled at the Pentagon on Thursday.
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta released details of the 2013 budget, the first since Congress ordered the Pentagon to slash more than $450 billion in planned spending over the next decade, with a few glimpses of what may be in store beyond 2013.
Under the plan, military pay will continue to rise in tandem with the average annual increase in private-sector wages, but starting in 2015, raises may be capped a level slightly below annual growth in civilian pay.
“I want to make it clear that cuts in spending will not fall on the shoulders of our troops. There are no proposed freezes or reductions in pay. There is no change to the high quality of health care our active duty members and medically retired Wounded Warriors receive,” Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in a written statement Thursday. “But we cannot ignore some hard realities. … Pay will need to grow more slowly in the future.”
Congress will have to approve any reduction in military pay raises because the current law requires annual increases to match the official Employment Cost Index, which would result in an increase of 1.7 percent on Jan. 1, 2013.
The Pentagon also will renew its push to raise health care costs for military retirees under age 65. That includes a proposed increase in retirees’ enrollment fees, co-pays and deductibles. Nevertheless, Panetta added, “the cost borne by military retirees will remain below levels in most comparable private-sector plans.”
Specifically, defense officials will seek fee hikes on par with medical inflation, which runs 7 percent a year or higher, rather than pegging increases to the annual cost-of-living adjustments in military retired pay, which average about 3 percent over time, according to congressional aides briefed on the Pentagon’s plans. The most recent retiree COLA increase was 3.6 percent.
To address calls to scale back military retirement benefits, President Obama will urge Congress to “establish a commission with authority to conduct a comprehensive review of military retirement,” with an assumption that any resulting changes would affect only future recruits. Read more

The president’s 2012 budget request includes a proposal for a 1.6% military pay raise for 2012. While larger than last year’s military pay increase, the 2012 proposed military pay increase is the second smallest since 1962 and given the current budget environment many suspect that congress is considering a freeze.
As reported here, a recent Congressional Budget Office report says that military pay is higher than most federal employees, and Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-MD) has signaled a desire to freeze military salaries at the 2011 rate.
Check out the 2012 proposed military pay charts to see what a 1.6% raise would mean to your military paycheck.

More budget news:



Tuesday

Indiana Patriot Guard saves family from burning vehicle

Patriot Guard and Troopers save 6 from burning Jeep
Updated: Saturday, 14 Jan 2012, 10:34 PM EST
Published : Saturday, 14 Jan 2012, 5:49 PM EST
WishTV.com Indiana


WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP, Ind. (WISH) - As the Patriot Guard was escorting Spc. Robert Tauteris Jr.’s body back to his hometown of North Judson, there was a two-vehicle crash right in front of the convoy. Patriot Guard Riders stopped to pull four people from South Bend out of the fiery wreckage, WSBT reports.
This happened around 10 a.m. Saturday on westbound U.S. 30 just east of County Road 325 E. in Washington Twp. Police say a pickup rear-ended a Jeep Cherokee, causing the Jeep to catch fire from the impact and cross partially into the eastbound lanes, where the Patriot Guard was escorting the soldier’s body from the Porter County Airport.
Police say Sgt. Matt Edwards, who was leading the procession, saw the crash in his rearview mirror and immediately went to it along with the Patriot Guard members. They pulled four people out of the burning Jeep, including 6-year-old twins.
The Jeeps driver, 35-year-old Ana Pina of South Bend, suffered numerous injuries and burns from the crash. She, along with her 6-year-old daughter in the back seat, were taken to Porter Valparaiso Hospital where they were flown to Chicago Area Hospitals in unknown condition.
Pina’s mother, who was in the front seat, and her 6-year-old son, who was in the back seat with his twin sister, were transported to Hobart St. Mary’s Hospital with minor injuries.
The pickup’s driver, 76-year-old John Buibish from Grovertown, got a bloody nose when the airbag deployed.
Sgt. Edwards was treated and released for smoke inhalation. Cpl. Dan Becker, an Indiana State Police officer and Patriot Guard member, suffered smoke inhalation and burns. He’s being kept in the hospital overnight for observation.
Several other Patriot Guard Riders were treated at the hospital for minor burns, injuries and smoke inhalation from the rescue efforts.
Spc. Robert Tauteris Jr.
Tauteris, a member of the Indiana National Guard, died Jan. 6 in Afghanistan when the vehicle in which he was traveling struck a roadside bomb.
The blast killed four other members of the 713th Engineering Company, out of Valparaiso, as well, and critically injured a fifth.
Visitation for Tauteris is set for 10 a.m. Sunday at Braman & Bailey Funeral Home, 6020 S. Oakwood Ave., North Judson, followed by funeral services at 1 p.m.