Military housing has been called a disgrace--neglected
and wholly inadequate for the needs of today's troops.
Housing conditions are so bad, says the Defense Department,
that they could undermine readiness and retention.
The problem is vast. The services argue that, if they
are required to use standard construction procedures
and conform with existing federal laws, they will never
remedy the situation. Defense officials warn it would
take forty years and $20 billion simply to correct
deficiencies in 387,768 family housing units. Similar
problems afflict bachelor housing. Revitalizing 612,000
dorm spaces will take just as long and cost $9 billion.
With such pressures crowding in on all sides, the
Defense Department and military services have shifted
course and embarked on a new get-well plan, one that
relies heavily on the private sector. The effort stems
from a pilot program that the Pentagon proposed last
year and Congress enacted as the Military Housing Privatization
Initiative in the Fiscal 1996 defense budget.
In the Pentagon's view, the new law paves the way
for not only a surge of privately financed and privately
built houses but also housing built using current construction
standards. If the US sticks with this effort, said
Pentagon officials, it could reverse the decline in
military housing and produce an acceptable situation
in as few as ten years.
Years of Underfunding
The services have built housing over many years under
various programs. Among the better known were the Lanham
Act project of the World War II era and the Wherry
and Capehart Housing Programs during the 1950s and
1960s [see box p. 38]. These houses were built
according to the standards of the day. Even the more
recent housing units--some 11,000 built under 1984
legislation known as Section 801--reflect earlier standards
and legislation, which actually restricted room size.
Moreover, funding for housing upkeep and improvements
has not kept pace with traditional home-maintenance
requirements.
The average age of military family housing is thirty-three
years. About twenty-five percent of those houses are
more than forty years old. The majority were built
before the advent of the All-Volunteer Force in 1973,
when the force was largely unmarried, but times have
changed.
In 1955, only forty-two percent of the force was married.
Today, married military men and women constitute sixty-one
percent of the force. Moreover, out of the nearly 400,000
houses they occupy, the Pentagon considers nearly half
to be unsuitable.
In several Congressional hearings last year, Joshua
Gotbaum, then assistant secretary of defense for Economic
Security, testified that houses "are too small,
their layouts and amenities reflect the standards of
the 1950s instead of the 1990s, and many are just plain
dilapidated and falling down."
Even those that have been renovated, added Mr. Gotbaum,
have not been brought up to today's standards.
A DoD Task Force on Quality of Life recently took
a comprehensive look at the housing problem [see "Task
Force Links Readiness, Quality of Life," December
1995 "Aerospace World," p. 15]. The panel
found that the armed services had failed to ensure
adequate funding for maintenance, repair, and replacement,
turning once-new homes "into poorly maintained,
low-quality housing by the mid-1980s." The task
force also noted that the then-modern housing lacked
both the amenities and the size considered standard
in the private sector today.
Pentagon officials attribute the poor condition of
housing to the existence of higher priorities, which
drained funds into other areas, and to rigid housing
procedures, which made it difficult to get the most
out of what money was available. DoD officials note
that the problem did not appear overnight.
"When faced with trade-offs between force levels,
modernization, and readiness [and] housing investment,
[family and bachelor] housing has frequently come in
second," stated Mr. Gotbaum. He stressed that
housing's "rigid management practices" and "inflexible
specifications and standards" have contributed
to higher costs and an unwillingness of industry to
work with government.
"Best" Is Far From Good
The DoD task force credited the Air Force with having
the "best housing," despite USAF's listing
of more than half its family housing as "unsuitable" and
some as "substandard." In the view of USAF's
top civil engineer, Maj. Gen. Eugene A. Lupia, the
Air Force traditionally has placed a "great deal
of emphasis on family housing" and even more so
in the last ten years. While praising this progress,
he also warned, "We have a long way to go."
Within USAF, the "unsuitable" label can
be applied to 60,000 family-housing dwellings, or fifty-four
percent of its inventory of 114,000 single-family and
townhouse-style homes. These are units that do not
measure up to contemporary standards and that need
major renovation.
General Lupia described the term "major renovation" as
replacement of a kitchen, a house's entire electrical
system, and heating and ventilation mechanical systems--fixes
that would cost about $100,000 per house. The service
has tried to cover these major overhauls and new construction
over the last ten years with annual investments of
about $250 million. At that rate, said the General,
it would take twenty-four years to complete the process.
Congress raised the funding for housing in Fiscal
1995 to about $300 million, which, if maintained for
the long term, would reduce the renovation cycle to
twenty years. The Air Force and the other services
are looking for a way to cut the cycle more dramatically.
Each service emphasized to Congress the impact that
housing has on military members.
"The living environments we provide our people
contribute major dividends to the Air Force through
increased productivity and retention of highly trained
personnel who feel the Air Force cares enough about
them to provide them good facilities for their homes," Rodney
A. Coleman, assistant secretary of the Air Force for
Manpower, Reserve Affairs, Installations, and Environment
told Congress last year. He added that the Air Force's
housing improvement program has been "extremely
successful"--improving more than 18,000 homes
since 1988. (The number is now about 23,000, according
to USAF housing officials.)
Currently, the Air Force is renovating or replacing
about 10,000 houses, using traditional military construction
funding from Fiscal 1992-95 appropriations. Apart from
these major renovation and construction projects, the
service expects to spend about $3,800 per house in
Fiscal 1996--up from $3,600 in Fiscal 1995--for annual
maintenance. That equates to about $435 million over
the entire stock of 114,000 houses.
"That's probably . . . in the ballpark of what
most homeowners spend on their house over the year," said
General Lupia.
However, a continuing problem is that the service
has a backlog of maintenance work estimated to cost
more than $900 million. The increase of $200 per house
will slow the rate of escalation in the buildup of
the backlog, but it will not eliminate it.
Some USAF housing is worse than merely "unsuitable." About
800 houses in the inventory are deemed "substandard." Air
Force officials maintain that the dwellings are safe
for habitation; however, they are in such poor condition
that the families who live in them retain some of their
housing allowance in compensation.
The Air Force is making headway on this problem. Compared
with today's figure of 800 problem units, the figure
twenty years ago was 6,700. General Lupia said that
the 800 will be replaced by 1997.
Why the Waiting List?
The young, single, enlisted troop has no choice in
housing. If a dormitory space is available, he or she
must take it. However, many married troops place their
names on long waiting lists--39,000 for USAF--for the
few on-base houses available, regardless of condition.
Given the dilapidated state of much military housing
stock, why do so many military families want to live
there?
One of the primary reasons is that the housing allowance
provided by Congress has not kept pace with the off-base
cost of housing. On average, about twenty-two percent
of a service member's housing expenses comes out of
pocket. When Congress changed the Basic Allowance for
Quarters in 1985 and introduced the Variable Housing
Allowance, it established a baseline of fifteen percent
for that out-of-pocket expense. However, even with
a 5.2 percent increase in the housing allowance approved
in the Fiscal 1996 budget, the out-of-pocket expense
will drop only to about nineteen percent, according
to General Lupia. In view of the goal of fifteen percent,
he noted that the "out-of-pocket costs are still
pretty high." Some lawmakers are working on legislation
to further increase the housing allowance.
Cost is not the only factor attracting the troops
to base housing. Last year's big USAF Quality-Of-Life
survey showed that Air Force members considered security
a big factor in deciding whether to live on or off
base. With more frequent deployments, troops want to
know that their family members are safe. Living in
a community where neighbors are also military, as well
as having a nearby hospital and commissary, are assets
that rate especially high for young families with a
single automobile. Indeed, General Lupia said that
a much higher percentage of the family housing--roughly
thirty percent more--goes to the enlisted force than
to officers.
"We're far more concerned about [the financial
impact on] our young enlisted people than [on] our
officers," said the General. "We expect [officers]
to take that money out of their pocket and go live
downtown rather than [expect] a young enlisted person
to do that."
Each year, every Air Force base reviews its housing
situation, determining who is on the waiting list,
how long they have waited, and the current distribution
of houses by grade. Then, base authorities redistribute
houses to different grades as needed. The larger portion
goes to lower grades for both enlisted and officer
families.
Mr. Coleman also emphasized the higher priority for
young enlisted members. He said that eighty-four percent
of the Fiscal 1996 budget request for capital improvements
replaces or improves homes for enlisted families.
Though it is DoD policy to rely on local communities
for family housing--providing government housing only
when the local area cannot meet the demand--private-sector
housing may not be the best solution in many cases.
According to Mr. Gotbaum, one family in eight lives
in unsuitable off-base housing.
"Hardships occur when rents are excessive or
a family can only afford to live in isolated, sometimes
unsafe neighborhoods," Mr. Gotbaum testified. "Problems
are made worse when the family only has one car or
perhaps none."
Mr. Gotbaum also said that some duty locations lack "good,
safe, affordable housing" within a reasonable
distance, a factor that has forced some families to
be "involuntarily separated," meaning that
the military member transfers to the duty location
but his or her family members do not.
Changing the Rules
Defense Secretary William J. Perry decided that taking
thirty or forty years to fix the housing problem was "entirely
inadequate." He asked for a solution that would
produce results in ten years or less.
Defense Department officials concluded that the answer
lay in attracting private capital. While the use of
private financing is not new, a DoD Housing Finance "Tiger
Team" came up with a pilot program it hoped would
introduce a new flexibility to broaden and combine
previous legislation. The panel's members also proposed
using commercial building practices and standards.
"In real estate, one size does not fit all," Mr.
Gotbaum told a Congressional committee, adding that
solutions that work in one location can fail dismally
at another. The Pentagon wanted to provide the services
the ability to tailor an approach to best suit a particular
location.
Financial practices have changed since the construction
of the Wherry and Capehart housing. Even the Section
801 legislation that produced some 11,000 houses is
no longer an option since the Office of Management
and Budget introduced "budget scoring" in
the 1990 Budget Enforcement Act.
Under the scoring rule, DoD would have to fund an
entire twenty-year lease in one year for any new houses
built under Section 801. According to Mr. Gotbaum,
the new approach would not eliminate OMB's scoring
rule but would develop mortgage or loan guarantees
that could be scored at less than 100 percent.
A key selling point in the Pentagon's push for the
pilot housing program was the need to use commercial
building processes to produce houses faster and cheaper.
Statutory limitations on square footage have forced
the services to build smaller houses that cost more
and take longer to construct than comparable private-sector
houses.
The average DoD house with three bedrooms has a net
living area of about 1,200 square feet, compared with
a similar private-sector house's area of about 2,100
square feet, yet costs more to build. General Lupia
explained that, in some cases, a builder will have
to spend more to build a nonstandard small house than
to build a larger one using off-the-shelf materials
precut at the factory, standard practice for private
home builders.
The Air Force has already met with representatives
from private-sector banks and architectural, engineering,
and construction firms, as well as officials from the
National Association of Home Builders and various government
lending agencies. General Lupia also created a facilities
privatization office and met with housing personnel
from every major command.
The General contended that a great deal of interest
has been shown by entrepreneurs, especially now that
DoD demonstrates a willingness to eliminate costly
regulations and specifications. "We have a great
deal of confidence that the privatization thing is
going to work," he said.
DoD also created a special joint office, the Housing
Revitalization Support Office, last year. The HRSO
and the services are evaluating potential sites for
private-sector housing proposals.
"Our target is to have about eight to ten projects
with up to 2,000 family housing units awarded within
the next year," Deputy Assistant Secretary of
Defense Robert E. Bayer stated before a House National
Security subcommittee March 7. He said they would serve
as prototype sites to test the new legislative authorities.
Mr. Bayer added that DoD estimates it will take twenty-one
months from site identification until families can
move into the new or renovated housing. He called this
a "vast improvement" over the standard military
construction process, which normally takes about thirty-six
to forty-eight months.
The Single Life
The good news for single enlisted members is that
DoD has approved the so-called "one plus one" housing
standard, beginning in Fiscal 1996 [see "One
Plus One Approved," February 1996 "Aerospace
World," p. 15]. This means that a single enlisted
person eventually will have a private sleeping room
and share a bath and kitchenette with one other person.
This stands in contrast to the previous "two plus
two" standard, which placed two persons in each
room with four sharing a bath. The bad news is that
it will take a long time to provide such privacy for
dormitory residents.
Senior military leaders evidently have recognized
that the lack of privacy in personal housing arrangements
is a major irritant for the new breed of soldier, sailor,
airman, and Marine. It was a reality that first became
readily apparent in the Air Force's 1995 Quality-of-Life
survey.
General Lupia said, "When eighty-eight percent
of your people are telling you . . . 'If you want me
to reenlist, I'd like a little privacy,' you ought
to be listening."
DoD-wide surveys produced similar results, showing
that today's single enlisted member wants more than
just a bunk and a common, or "gang," latrine.
Taken together, the services require some 450,000 junior
enlisted members to live in barracks, and at least
one-fourth of those still live in facilities with gang
latrines that are deemed substandard, based on the
two plus two standard adopted in 1983.
One of those substandard dormitories houses the US
Air Force Honor Guard at Bolling AFB, D.C. Mr. Coleman
described it as "a hovel" and reported that
it is being replaced. He told Congress that the Bolling
facility "looks bad, is bad, smells bad; the water's
bad, the heat's bad, everything is bad." And there
are other facilities in similar condition, he said.
Some of the worst Air Force housing units are the
152 gang-latrine facilities still home to 7,000 permanent-party
airmen. In all, the service has 875 dormitory buildings
providing shelter for approximately 70,000 enlisted
members.
Since 1983, USAF has managed to move eighty percent
of its permanent-party dormitory residents into facilities
meeting the two plus two standard or better. The service
expected to have every airman living in that configuration
by 2000. Now, according to General Lupia, the goal
is still to eliminate the gang latrine by the turn
of the century but at the same time begin to implement
the new, one plus one standard.
"Let's say, nominally, by about 2010 the Air
Force [will be] at the eighty to ninety percent conversion
to one plus one," he said.
However, officials must decide whether it is practical--structurally
or financially--to renovate buildings that have already
been reconfigured multiple times. General Lupia explained
that the service doesn't plan to take every two plus
two dormitory and convert it to one plus one. It's
not that easy.
He said the average dormitory has a nominal useful
service life of twenty years. The facilities "take
a pretty good beating" from their eighteen-, nineteen-,
and twenty-year-old occupants. Some of the buildings
converted to the two plus two configuration will be
at the twenty-year point within four years.
Nonetheless, the Air Force is stepping out with the
new housing standard. The Fiscal 1996 budget request
included about $132 million for twenty-four dormitory
projects that would apply the new private sleeping
room standard.
On top of what service officials called the largest
dormitory funding request since 1989, Congress added
$46 million for construction and $100 million for maintenance
and repair of existing dormitories.
The Air Force doesn't plan to stop there. Having launched
its changeover to the one plus one standard, the service
now wants to pursue "Vision 2020." This latest
goal, which surfaced about two years ago, according
to General Lupia, calls for the Air Force to provide
each permanent-party airman a private sleeping room,
kitchenette, and bath by 2020.