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Army redirecting millions collected from soldier BAS pay meant for food services elsewhere: report
News

Army redirecting millions collected from soldier BAS pay meant for food services elsewhere: report

Jimmie Dempsey
Last updated: February 15, 2025 9:49 pm
Jimmie Dempsey Published February 15, 2025
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The U.S. Army is redirecting millions of dollars it has collected from the Basic Allowance for Subsistence (BAS) pay for soldiers living in barracks away from food services, according to a report. 

The money is supposed to help soldiers with food costs, but a Military.com investigation found that of the $225 million collected from enlisted soldiers’ BAS pay last year at 11 of the Army’s largest bases, $151 million was directed elsewhere. 

Enlisted soldiers receive around $465 dollars in BAS each month, according to the U.S. Army’s website, and the deduction, essentially a tax on troops, is taken from that, the outlet reported. 

“It’s just returned to the big pool of Army funds, and it’s used someplace else,” an official told the outlet of the redirected BAS pay in an interview that was scheduled by the Army public affairs office. 

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The official, who asked to remain anonymous, had direct knowledge of the situation. 

The outlet’s investigation found that all but two of the bases they looked into – Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Alaska and Fort Bliss in Texas – had redirected more than 50% of the money away from feeding soldiers. 

It’s not clear what the redirected money is being spent on. 

Rep. Jill Tokuda, D-Hawaii, said the data should be investigated. 

“Stealing food money from our soldiers is not how we achieve military readiness,” Tokuda told Military.com. “The fact that at least $151 million was collected from soldiers and not spent on food as required demands not just an immediate investigation, but swift accountability.”

In 2020, Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio raised the issue with then-Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy at a budget hearing, saying, the Army is either “wasting half the food, or the money is not being spent on the soldiers’ food and it’s being spent on something it’s not appropriated for.” 

US soldiers getting food

The question, which came just before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, wasn’t followed up on. 

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Food service worker salaries and dining hall infrastructure funds come from separate source, the outlet noted. 

The Army has struggled to provide meals for soldiers in recent years, the outlet reported, noting that its most extensive base, Fort Cavazos in Texas, only had two of its 10 dining halls open in the summer of 2023 and last November, Fort Carson in Colorado was forced to serve soldiers meals of just lima beans and toast. 

Soldiers eating in the field

Some bases have also started serving prepackaged meals from kiosks – that the outlet found were generally high in sugar and low in protein – a cheaper alternative to cooked dining hall meals.  

Spokesperson Maj. Andrea Kelly told the outlet that the number of meals was calculated “based on previous head counts” at base dining halls.

Officials in the past have pointed to lower interest in dining hall meals as soldiers frequently report undercooked meat, a lack of fresh ingredients, and unseasoned meals being served there. 

Fox News Digital has reached out to the Army for comment. 

Read the full article here

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