Proposal: Give war-zone troops bigger raises - Military Money, Navy Money, navy pay, pay charts - Navy Times

Quick Links

Print Email
Bookmark and Share
http://www.navytimes.com/money/financial_advice/military_combat_payplan_061710w/

Proposal: Give war-zone troops bigger raises


By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Thursday Jun 17, 2010 11:55:18 EDT

The Senate will soon wrestle with the question of whether it is better to provide bigger pay raises to troops in combat or smaller raises to the entire force.

At issue is a proposed $150 pay raise in January for combat troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, versus an across-the-board increase that is slightly bigger than the White House’s proposal, which would boost the pay raise of a young grunt by little more than $8 a month.

The proposal comes from Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., the Vietnam veteran and former Navy secretary who became chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee’s personnel panel earlier this year.

Webb intends to offer an amendment to the Senate version of the 2011 defense authorization bill that would use part of the $370 million difference between the 1.4 percent all-ranks basic pay increase proposed by the Obama administration and the 1.9 percent all-ranks raise approved by the House of Representatives to provide targeted pay increases for troops in the combat zones.

Webb’s exact plans for the $370 million are still murky, but congressional sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said his most likely action would be to take $100 million or more to increase either hostile fire pay or family separation allowance, or possibly both.

What got Webb’s attention is the fact that the difference between a 1.4 percent and 1.9 percent pay raise works out to just $8.10 a month for an E-2, $9.60 a month for an E-3 and between $10.80 and $11.69 for an E-4, depending on time in service.

Pay increases targeted to combat troops would favor the Army and Marine Corps, who have more people in Iraq and Afghanistan. While the exact number affected would depend on combat deployments next year, about 225,000 people would get the bigger raises under Webb’s plan. The military’s remaining 1.2 million active-duty members and 844,500 drilling members of the National Guard and reserves would get a 1.4 percent raise, instead of the 1.9 percent increase.

Videos You May Be Interested In

Leave a Comment





Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., is backing bigger pay raises for troops in combat. Above, soldiers watch their platoon's flank during an air assault and cleaning mission in the Pech Valley of Afghanistan in March.
Rob Curtis / StaffSen. Jim Webb, D-Va., is backing bigger pay raises for troops in combat. Above, soldiers watch their platoon's flank during an air assault and cleaning mission in the Pech Valley of Afghanistan in March.

Contests and Promotions

promo Military Times HEADPHONES Sweepstakes
Win 1 of 5 sets of high-end headphones!


Click Here To Enter.

Free Stickers


promo Click here and we'll send you a FREE AFGHANISTAN, IRAQ, VIETNAM, or DESERT STORM sticker.
some text

Marketplaces

MIl-MALL

Browse and buy some of the awesome products we have at Mil-mall.com

Military Times Gear Shop

Military Discounts


Save on your purchases!
In honor of your military service, you can find regular and name brand products at a special discount.