Posted on Apr 3, 2016
SGT David Emme
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Came upon a discussion on Facebook with another vet.

Conversation started out about the raising of minimum wage vs. what those who work in the military make.

The subject worked its way around to those on active duty having extra benefits besides their pay vs. civilian workers working just for pay.
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Responses: 96
LTC Kevin B.
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Edited 8 y ago
Yes. Having free room and board eliminates the cash outflows that you'd otherwise have to pay. So, they do have an economic value, and they are part of your overall compensation and benefits package. Plus, if you do not live in the barracks and do not eat in the dining facility, you get a housing allowance and subsistence to offset those new cash outflows. You can quibble about the dollar value of those benefits, but they are a benefit.

Additionally, if people are trying to make comparisons with private sector pay, make sure to point out the extra hours you work without additional compensation, the threats of deployment, the loss of freedoms, the potential loss of life in service to your country, etc. It's definitely an apples-to-oranges comparison.
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LTC Joseph Gross
LTC Joseph Gross
8 y
SGT Norman Cillo - SGT Norman, if you think officers run anything in the Army, then you missed a lesson at PLDC or WLC. NCOs should always push the limits of those parameters you mention. That's what good NCOs do. And they don't dismiss a problem because that is "officer business". Taking care of Soldiers is Always NCO business and wouldn't you agree that good chow is the number two way you take care of Soldiers? Number one being good, hard, realistic training.

Having spent years as an NCO and having served as an officer dedicated to the well being of the Army, it is my right and responsibility to "slam on NOCs" when I see the need. When was the last time you talked to the 1SG or CSM about the DFAC? That's your job!

To your final point. BAS is a benefit just as free food is. And both must be included when comparing our pay to civilian pay.

SSG Joseph Gross
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Sgt Edward Allen
Sgt Edward Allen
8 y
PO2 Joan Feledy - In 1981 and 1984 for Marines, the not having to clean up after was not true. If you ever spent 30 day on mess duty, you would know what cleaning up is. Having to be at formation at 0330, working until they said you could go home, typically around 2100, with 1 day off each week. In 84, I then had to drive 20 miles home and back as I had just gotten married. I did not have the choice of just walking across the street to the barracks. If I ate at the chow hall I also had to pay for it.
I understand that this has changed, and in many locations, they now have civilians performing mess duty.
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PO2 Joan Feledy
PO2 Joan Feledy
8 y
Sgt Edward Allen when not serving in the mess for 90 days, clean up after chow was fairly simple for the average sailor. Just take your tray up. I cleaned in the mess hall for 90 days and had grueling hours as well and then went back to engineering where our hours were just as bad, but loved it all. Not sure why you chose that part of my statement to reply to, but not having to make the meals and clean up after every meal was more of the point. When TAD to the mess decks, which almost all of us had to do at one time or another (in the Navy) yes you had to do those things, but if you were not a CS or MS you only did that for a short time.
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PFC Charles Sanders
PFC Charles Sanders
5 y
I think the LTC hit the nail square on the head. Good job, Sir.
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Maj John Bell
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I'm not aware of anyone in the military getting overtime. The list goes on and on. You cannot equate civilian employment to the military. Most civilians know that the military makes sacrifices, but their understanding of those sacrifices are superficial. It is a discussion I choose to not have with civilians.
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SPC Craig Hill
SPC Craig Hill
8 y
While in Korea, more often then not we didn't get off till 1900 or later not including all the time in the field. One of the guys I served with (AA in business math) did a estimate based off 3 months then 6 months while there and came to the conclusion that we made about $2-3 an hour with the over time and all other benefits including basic cost of medical, housing and food
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SSG William Hubbard
SSG William Hubbard
8 y
work mans comp can be denied.....ie not following saftey proticals or following company polocies
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MAJ L. Nicholas Smith
MAJ L. Nicholas Smith
8 y
We have some of the best health care and practitioners in the world. That being said,, if you suffer malpractice as a civilian at a local hospital, you have the ability to seek legal recourse whereas as a soldier in a medical center, you are lucky if you can get an apology.
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MSgt Marvin Kinderknecht
MSgt Marvin Kinderknecht
8 y
SPC Craig Hill - I agree. I had to do back-to-back 2 week tours in Nam because the other engineer was sick. $105 a month for flight pay came out to about 25CTS per hour. As an NCO we were on COLA and could not eat in the mess hall. At 0400 I went to the club. They had NOTHING. I had a double rum and coke and went out and flew 88 hours. All I heard was "THIS IS A COMBAT ZONE" suck it up.
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Edited 8 y ago
I tell people all the time....there are many things you give up or sacrifice to be active duty.....but a PAY CHECK is not one of them......I was never so well paid in my life, and probably will never be again, as when I was on active duty...you have to look at total package...Base Pay, BAH, BAS, Not paying School Taxes (unless you own), Clothing Allowance, Flight Pay, Haz Duty Pay, Dental (I dropped $1500 first year out on a crown), Separation Pay, Tax Free Duty Status, annual cost of living adjustments, Commissary Access, BX/PX access, tax free car purchases, and the list goes on and on.....bottom line we are not underpaid, under appreciated maybe, but under paid....No. If anything i wish it was all taxable while I was in so that it would have been included in my retirement calculations....because if it was included i'd actually be retired....lol
LTC Joseph Gross
LTC Joseph Gross
8 y
PO1 Cliff Heath - In every branch, enlisted Servicemembers receive an annual clothing allowance for clothing maintenance. Probably about $400 now.
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Sgt Edward Allen
Sgt Edward Allen
8 y
LTC Joseph Gross - Very true LTC Gross. When I got out of the Marines in 1989, I was offered a computer programming position stating at 72,000. As a Sgt with over 8 years, I was getting 1244 + 350 BAQ + 110 ComRats (no COLA). each month. or 20,044 a year, as a computer programmer. I was also the NCOIC of the shop. Worked a minimum of 10 hours a day. And when in the field, I would due 18.
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PO1 Martin Walker
PO1 Martin Walker
5 y
The last five years of my career I was home eight (8) months because BAH did NOT pay for housing in the Los Angeles area and the housing office told me it would be up to two years to get housing. I therefore moved my family to where my wife would have family support.
As commented elsewhere military works more than 40 hour weeks without overtime. On ship in port you will have duty every 3-6 days. This adds at least 8 working hours a week. At sea watch adds as much as 8 hours a day, with underway replenishment adding 6-8 hours a week.
If there is a fire in port I have seen the time the liberty party fought the fire on another ship for about 3 hours. As I remember we used some 500-800 of our OBA canisters.
This doesn’t begin to touch little goodies such as the need to make decisions that may kill your friends (I have been on both the giving and the receiving.)
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SSG Julian Nicholson
SSG Julian Nicholson
5 y
I’m not sure when you shopped at the Commissary last, but I can say without hesitation that the Commissary now costs more than going to Walmart. Obama forced Commissaries to raise their prices since he wasn’t able to close them under his watch as President. He k ew by raising prices to the point it is cheaper to shop off military installations that it is only a matter of time before they are forced to close due to lack of participation by service members. He back doored us if you will. As for the Exchange it hasn’t been a real benefit for non deployed troops in decades.
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