Last-minute scramble over pay takes a toll on military families during
the shutdown
[October 31, 2025]
By BEN FINLEY
WASHINGTON (AP) — The government shutdown is exacting a heavy mental
toll on the nation's military families, leaving them not knowing from
week to week whether their paychecks will arrive.
Alicia Blevins, whose husband is a Marine, said she's going to see a
therapist in large part because of the grinding uncertainty.
"I don’t feel like I have the tools to deal with this,” said Blevins,
33, who lives at Camp Lejeune, a Marine base near North Carolina's
coast. “I don’t want to dump all this on my husband. He’s got men that
he’s in charge of. He’s got enough to deal with.”
Even though the Trump administration has found ways to pay the troops
twice since the shutdown began on Oct. 1, the process has been fraught
with anxiety for many Americans in uniform and their loved ones. Both
times, they were left hanging until the last minute.
Four days before paychecks were supposed to go out on Oct. 15, President
Donald Trump directed the Pentagon to use “all available funds” to
ensure U.S. troops were paid. With the next payday approaching Friday,
the White House confirmed Wednesday that it had found the money.
The Trump administration plans to move around $5.3 billion from various
accounts, with about $2.5 billion coming from Trump’s big tax and
spending cuts bill that was signed into law this summer.
But the scrounging in Washington for troop pay can only last for so
long.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Sunday on CBS' "Face the Nation”
that the government will soon run out of ways to compensate the military
and that by Nov. 15, the troops "aren’t going to be able to get paid.”

We’re not being thought of at all'
The uncertainty has been fueling resentment among families of the
roughly 2 million active duty service members, National Guard members
and reservists. There’s a common refrain that the troops are being used
as pawns.
But Jennifer Bittner, whose husband is an Army officer, said that gives
Congress too much credit.
“You have to be thought of to be used as a pawn,” said Bittner, 43, of
Austin, Texas. “And we’re not being thought of at all.”
Bittner’s 6-year-old daughter is using three inhalers right now because
she has high-risk asthma, a chronic lung condition and a cold. Each
device requires a $38 copay at the pharmacy. Bittner’s severely autistic
son requires diapers that cost $200 a month, while she sometimes has to
haggle with military insurance to cover the expense.
She worries about those costs as well as the mortgage and groceries for
their family of five.
“It is mentally and sometimes physically exhausting stressing about it,”
Bittner said of her husband possibly missing a paycheck, while noting
that members of Congress are still getting paid.
Many active duty troops live paycheck to paycheck and survive on only
one income. Even when they get paid, the shutdown is deepening the
financial strain that many families face, said Delia Johnson, chief
operating officer for the nonprofit Military Family Advisory Network.

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Jennifer Bittner holds her 6-year-old daughter Amelia's inhaler as
she puts on her vibrating CPT vest at her home on Wednesday, Oct.
29, 2025, in Pflugerville, Texas. Amelia is a carrier for cystic
fibrosis, so the vest helps break up and clear fluid from her lungs
and chest. (AP Photo/Jack Myer)

The Oct. 15 paychecks arrived days after they usually do for many
people with early direct deposit to their bank accounts, disrupting
their ability to pay bills on time and forcing some to pay late fees
or rack up debt, Johnson said. Active duty troops also may be
dealing with the added expense of moving from one base to another,
which she said occurs for roughly 400,000 military households each
year.
And many military spouses lose their jobs because of the move or are
underemployed from frequent relocations, Johnson said.
Reimbursements for moving costs are paused for many during the
shutdown, while not all expenses are being repaid.
Reservists are losing weekend drill pay
Monthly weekend drills for many reservists also have been canceled,
eliminating a chunk of pay that can be several hundred dollars each
month, military advocates said. Besides helping with mortgages and
other bills, the drill money is used by some reservists to cover
premiums for military health insurance, said John Hashem, executive
director of the Reserve Organization of America, an advocacy group.
“People rely on that money,” Hashem said of the drill pay. “The way
that this is stretching out right now, it’s almost like the service
is taken for granted.”
The reserve organization, along with other groups, urged leaders in
Congress in a letter Tuesday to pass a measure to pay National Guard
members and reservists.
The financial strain exacerbated by the shutdown prompted the
Military Family Advisory Network to set up an emergency grocery
support program this month. The nonprofit said 50,000 military
families signed up within 72 hours.

The food boxes were assembled in a Houston warehouse by the grocery
and logistics company Umoja Health, said chief marketing officer
Missy Hunter, and contained everything from noodles and spaghetti
sauce to pancake mix and syrup.
Blevins said she and her husband received a box, which provided some
peace of mind. In the meantime, she said, her husband is still
working, coming home exhausted and with a “long gaze” in his eyes.
The couple moved to North Carolina from Camp Pendleton in California
in September, drawing down their savings. They're still waiting for
roughly $9,000 in reimbursement.
“We're constantly checking the news," Blevins said. "And my Facebook
feed is nothing but, 'It's the Democrats' fault. It's the
Republicans' fault.' And I’m just like, can't we just get off the
blame game and get this taken care of?”
___
AP Congressional Correspondent Lisa Mascaro contributed to this
report.
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