U.S. senators call for banning, prosecuting ‘slumlords’ of military
housing
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[December 04, 2019]
By M.B. Pell
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. senators on
Tuesday demanded the Defense Department crack down on private landlords
who provide substandard housing at military bases with criminal
prosecutions or contract cancellations, citing Reuters reports of
slum-like living conditions and falsified accounting.
The top civilian and military leaders of the Army, Navy and Air Force
appeared before the Senate Armed Services Committee, in the latest
hearing addressing substandard military housing.
On Tuesday, senators were presented with a new report from the
Government Accountability Office, a Congressional watchdog conducting a
review of the housing program that was launched following the Reuters
reports. Among the GAO’s core findings: Housing reports sent to Congress
are often misleading, painting a falsely positive picture of housing
conditions. The program also suffers from inaccurate landlord
maintenance reports and lax military oversight, the GAO reported.
To read the GAO report, click: https://bit.ly/35UzZbC
Some senators asked whether the military’s two-decade-old program of
having private landlords provide housing on U.S. military bases has
failed.
“Are any of them not acting like slumlords at this point? Are any of
them doing a good job?” asked Senator Martha McSally, an Arizona
Republican and former U.S. Air Force combat pilot. “This pisses me off.”
For more than a year, Reuters has exposed lead, asbestos, mold and
vermin contaminating homes where private landlords house thousands of
military families on behalf of the Pentagon. More recently, the news
agency disclosed how one major landlord doctored maintenance records at
some of its bases to help it collect bonus incentive fees.
To read the coverage, click: https://reut.rs/2r1Bkim
Top Defense Department officials have long touted high occupancy rates
and satisfaction scores on military family surveys as evidence the
effort is generally successful, despite occasional hiccups. But
Elizabeth A. Field, the GAO’s director of defense capabilities and
management, told senators: “There’s clearly a problem here.”
Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy defended the privatization effort, saying
it allowed the military to tap private borrowing that would otherwise be
unavailable.
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A home with a crack is seen in the Medina Annex at Joint Base San
Antonio - Lackland in San Antonio, Texas U.S. November 16, 2019.
REUTERS/Callaghan O'Hare
“That doesn’t mean it’s worked out great,” added Acting Navy
Secretary Thomas B. Modly. Some privatized housing is “fantastic,”
he said, but other housing is not.
The secretaries cited reform steps already taken, including
far-reaching inspections of military housing and a planned tenant
bill of rights to empower military families.
Senators pressed the secretaries to do more to hold accountable
military leaders and landlords.
Oklahoma Republican Jim Inhofe, chair of the Senate Armed Services
Committee, asked Air Force Secretary Barbara M. Barrett why she
couldn’t “pull the plug” on Balfour Beatty Communities, one of the
military’s largest landlords.
This year, Reuters quoted five former Balfour Beatty employees who
said they filed false maintenance records at Air Force bases to help
the company collect millions in bonus payments. Balfour Beatty, a
unit of British infrastructure giant Balfour Beatty PLC <BALF.L>,
has said that it is committed to improving its maintenance, and that
it has tapped outside counsel and auditors to investigate.
Air Force Secretary Barrett said the Air Force has lost confidence
in the company, but stopped short of committing to removing it from
the program.
A company spokesman said Balfour Beatty plans this month to finish a
“performance improvement plan” requested by the Air Force.
Democratic senators Richard Blumenthal, from Connecticut, and Mazie
Hirono, from Hawaii, urged the military to refer instances of fraud
for criminal prosecution.
“We probably need to make an example out of a couple of them,” said
Senator Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican.
(Reporting by M.B. Pell in New York. Additional reporting by Joshua
Schneyer. Editing by Ronnie Greene)
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