- Sen.
Elizabeth
Warren
« Military
Housing
Warren for President
For Immediate Release: Friday, April 26, 2019
Warren Announces New Plan to Improve Military Housing
Charlestown,
MA - Today
Elizabeth Warren announced a new plan to improve our military housing,
protect families from abuse, and hold private developers — and the
Pentagon — accountable for the promises they make to those who serve
our country.
Read more about Warren’s plan in her Medium
post and below:
On base after base around the country, military families were raising
the alarm about their living
conditions
— toxic mold, lead paint, faulty wiring, mice infestation. Ceilings
collapsed. Mold took over entire rooms. Kids were getting sick. And
when families reported their concerns to their command, they were
greeted with a shrug — or worse. Because of the way housing contracts
are written, there was little the local base commander could do.
In the mid-1990s, the Department of Defense concluded that the majority
of the 300,000 houses it owned and operated on base were in
need
of
renovation after
decades of neglect. The only problem was that it couldn’t afford the
bill to modernize its housing stock. To cut costs and speed
renovations, the Pentagon proposed privatization — and it offered
private developers substantial loan guarantees and other incentives to
take over its housing portfolio.
It was a good deal — for the private developers. Over the past 20
years, a small handful of companies have taken over 99% of
domestic
military
family
housing.
Every
month,
the federal government
pays them rent directly out of a service member’s paycheck, along with
various bonuses and incentive fees. The risk is low — and the profits
are
enormous.
But this system has turned out to be a lousy bargain for
military families. With their focus on
short-term payoffs, private
developers
failed to
invest in and maintain the properties with which they were entrusted.
For its part, the Pentagon neglected to conduct any meaningful
oversight, instead repeatedly paying performance bonuses despite
systemic complaints. As a result, our military families have been left
on their own to suffer the consequences.
That stops now. Today
I’m rolling out a plan to improve our military housing, protect
families from abuse, and hold private developers accountable for the
promises they make to those who serve our country.
Accountability for private developers — and the Pentagon
officials that oversee them.
Let’s
start with something simple: if a developer does not live up to the
terms of its agreement to maintain habitable properties for our
military families, we should not reward them with bonuses and other
incentive payments. In fact, I will require the Secretary of Defense to
standardize leases across the military services and review all existing
housing contracts for violations before they can be renewed.
Under
my proposal, every base will have a housing office staffed with
advocates for the service member — not beholden to a private
contractor. That office will have independent authority to inspect
housing on base to ensure that it is safe, clean, and meets all state
and local requirements.
The Pentagon will publish
an annual report with the financial details of its housing management
contracts. And private developers will be required to publish an annual
financial statement, equivalent to a 10-K form, detailing their
financial performance.
And one more thing: under my plan, it
will be illegal for any senior defense official — or any Member of
Congress who oversees them — to benefit from investing in a military
housing development company with business before the Pentagon.
Protecting military tenants from abuse, and taking care of
families who have been harmed.
Under
my proposal, military tenants will get a “bill of rights,” in writing,
when they move in. The first of those rights is that families can
withhold payment for landlords who don’t play by the rules. Second, if
repairs or remediation are needed the work order cannot be closed until
the service member approves. And if relocation is required during
repairs, the landlord pays that too — and in a worst case scenario, a
service member should be able to relocate off base without penalty.
There
should be one standardized resident satisfaction survey across all the
services and it should be conducted independently from the housing
provider, and one consolidated database of resident complaints. The
results of both should be public, so that every military family can
make an informed choice about where to live when they move.
The impacts of substandard housing can linger
for
a
lifetime.
My plan would require DOD to establish a health registry for service
members and families, and to screen and track for medical conditions
acquired as a result of unsafe housing. Where the science tells us that
a medical condition is environmentally-caused as a result of living in
base housing, we should establish the presumption of a
service-connected disability so that service members can receive
ongoing care even after they leave the military. And I believe that we
should proactively provide lifetime medical care for dependents who
suffer from medical conditions as a result of living in substandard
military housing.
All three of my brothers served, so I
know the responsibility we have to our service members, veterans, and
their families. The sacrifices they make — constant moves, repeated
deployments — are enormous. The way I see it, this is not complicated.
It’s not even a close call. No matter where they are stationed, the
very least we owe our military personnel is a safe, affordable place to
live. Failing to provide adequate housing impacts morale and negatively
affects retention and readiness. Most importantly, it’s a breach of
trust owed to those that volunteer to defend our country.
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