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Commissary reforms advance with shopper safeguards
Sierra Vista Herald ^ | TOM PHILPOT

Posted on 04/23/2016 2:42:54 PM PDT by SandRat

The House armed services subcommittee on military personnel has unanimously endorsed sweeping reforms to how groceries are procured, priced, promoted and sold on U.S. military bases stateside and overseas.

The commissary reform package, largely shaped by Defense officials on advice from the grocery industry, has gained steam on promises to preserve most of current savings for patrons while modernizing commissary operations and lowering subsidies by more than $500 million a year by 2021.

That’s money that the Joint Chiefs of Staff have testified they want diverted into readiness accounts to help ensure troops get the training and equipment they need even as defense budgets continue to get squeezed.

The comprehensive overhaul of commissary operations — to include authorities to test on a large scale variable pricing of store items, new private label brands, conversion of base grocers to nonappropriated fund activities like base exchanges — will be made part of the full armed services committee markup of the fiscal 2017 defense authorization bill next week.

To answer rising criticism that the department would be allowed to sacrifice some shopper savings to ensure a brisk pace of reform, Rep. Joe Heck (R-Nev.), subcommittee chairman, added new language to safeguard the benefit by transparently establishing a baseline for savings, reviewing quarterly how savings are maintained through each reform, and adding taxpayer funding if store revenues from reforms fail to match expectations.

Other key personnel initiatives cleared by the subcommittee include:

• A bigger basic pay raise of 2.1 percent next January to match private sector wage growth. The Obama administration proposed only a 1.6 percent pay hike to save $300 million in personnel costs next year alone. It was no surprise to see House panel refuse to endorse a pay cap. It would be the fourth consecutive cap on the annual military raise. For the last three, the House has allowed senators to take the lead, and the heat, on the issue.

Rep. Susan Davis (D-Calif.) warned colleagues that if the higher raise is enacted, that $300 million would be taken from more pressing readiness needs such as replenishing inventories of spare parts for Marine helicopters.

• More Troops. The subcommittee rejected the administration’s call to cut Army active duty strength by another 15,000. Instead it would add 5000 soldiers, returning Army end-strength of 480,000 by October 2018. And rather than cut the Marine Corps active force by 2000 next year, the House panel calls for boosting its end strength by 1000, to reach 185,000.

Air Force active duty strength would climb by 285, to reach 321,000, rather than fall by another 4000 as the president requested. Only Navy end strength would fall as requested by 6300 to settled at 322,900.

The Joint Chiefs, anticipating that Congress might vote to reverse planned force reductions and not add the billions of dollars needed to ensure the larger force is properly equipped and trained, had roundly criticized in recent testimony precisely what the subcommittee now proposes.

Davis reminded colleagues of that criticism before joining them in a unanimous voice vote to send the larger force targets to full committee.

• UCMJ Reform. Embraced are changes to the Uniform Code of Military Justice to improve system efficiency and transparency while also enhancing victims’ rights. They would expand the statute of limitations for child abuse offenses and fraudulent enlistment; provide public access to court documents and pleadings; allow victims input on case dispositions at the preliminary hearing stage, and add UCMJ offenses for retaliation, improper use of government computers and for credit card or debit card fraud.

Two other substantial personnel initiatives will not be detailed until full committee deliberations on Wednesday, Heck said. One would extend the Special Survivor Indemnity Allowance paid to 62,000 surviving spouses, to restore in part Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) pay they must forfeit to accept Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC) from VA.

Reauthorizing SSIA beyond September 2017 would be so costly, the full committee must be consulted on finding budget offsets to fund it, Heck said. Likewise, Heck wants the full committee to debate the shape of TRICARE reforms to raise retiree fees and co-pays. At least some of the changes sought fall under the jurisdiction of other committees too, Heck explained.

The American Logistics Association (ALA), which says it represents 90 percent of the supply chain of manufacturers and distributors supporting commissaries, warned in an April 12 letter to the committee that a careful plan Congress approved last year to conduct “limited pilot programs” to test controversial commissary reforms seemed to be crumbling under pressure from the Department of Defense to “fast track” cost-saving ideas.

Alluding to draft legislation, ALA President Patrick B. Nixon, wrote that DoD “proposed that the law governing these programs and protecting these benefits be either repealed or waived to allow DoD to immediately proceed with implementation of changes to products, pricing and funding mechanisms that have served the system well over the past 30 years.”

He urged that lawmakers not allow adoption of variable pricing or private label products or conversion of commissaries to nonappropriated fund activities like exchanges “without limitations and a deliberative process” to assess each major change.

Members of Congress, commissary shoppers and other stakeholders like ALA should have a chance to critique test results and make recommendations before changes occur system wide, Nixon wrote.

The fast track plan, he warned, included “altering the manner in which baseline savings are measured.” Accurately measuring patron savings before reforms occur is key to ensuring that Defense officials and Congress keep their promises to retain the value of the commissary benefit.

Only a week later however, after the subcommittee unveiled its reform provisions, ALA sounded well satisfied with new language safeguarding the benefit and allowing timely feedback from shoppers, suppliers and Congress.

They “put in adequate braking and oversight mechanisms to ensure that the commissary and exchange benefit along with commissary employees are protected in the evolving environment,” said Stephen Rossetti, ALA’s director of government affairs. Both the subcommittee and DoD, he said, have “put responsible reforms ahead” of the goal to cut commissary funding.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; US: Alaska
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 04/23/2016 2:42:54 PM PDT by SandRat
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To: SandRat

I’m not close enough to a commissary to use one.

Hillary Clinton “lost” $6,000,000,000 of hard-earned American Taxpayer money and nobody says a thing.

But we have to cut money from the commissaries?

Make the old bat bag groceries at the commissary for the rest of her days and she can use her tips to pay back what she “lost”.


2 posted on 04/23/2016 3:20:15 PM PDT by blueunicorn6 ("A crack shot and a good dancer")
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To: SandRat
I'm within 20 miles of a commissary, PX, and Class VI.

I haven't set foot inside any of them in over 15 years. Even before 9-11 and the resulting security the "savings" were so minuscule they did not warrant the drive.

Overseas is a different story...

3 posted on 04/23/2016 3:42:19 PM PDT by Feckless (The US Gubbmint / This Tagline CENSORED by FR \ IrOnic, ain't it?)
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To: Feckless

i;M WITHIN 10 MILES EACH WAY, SELDOM USE THEM.


4 posted on 04/23/2016 3:46:37 PM PDT by SandRat (Duty - Honor - Country! What else needs said?)
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To: SandRat

I constantly use the commissary, the PX, much less.

And would drive 20 miles to one if it were that close to do weekly shopping. Of course I grew up out in rural farm country where it was a 15 mile trip to the grocery stores (A&P/Kroger) in town for my parents to shop.


5 posted on 04/23/2016 4:22:41 PM PDT by GreyFriar (Spearhead - 3rd Armored Division 75-78 & 83-87)
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To: SandRat
We can't afford national defense, but we can afford to pay never-married women to have babies. I just don't understand it.
6 posted on 04/23/2016 5:04:17 PM PDT by JoeFromSidney (,)
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To: JoeFromSidney
We can't afford national defense, but we can afford to pay never-married women to have babies. I just don't understand it.

It's DACOWITS and LESBIAN & Women's LIB agenda.

7 posted on 04/23/2016 5:20:41 PM PDT by SandRat (Duty - Honor - Country! What else needs said?)
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To: SandRat
All I can say and will say is this:

If I had it to do over again...I would not.

Period.

Lying sons of bitches.

8 posted on 04/23/2016 6:30:45 PM PDT by OldSmaj (I will be unable to find the Republican ballot box this election. They are lost. Not I.)
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To: SandRat

The real name of the commissary is Supply Warehouse #9.


9 posted on 04/23/2016 6:31:05 PM PDT by Domangart
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To: SandRat

Our Commissary except for a few items are about the same as the local Kroger’s, and they don’t give gas points. Same goes for the Exchange, all high end goods those less that LT with a wife working can’t afford. I’ll pay our local sales tax and get gas points any day. Feels good to get a Buck off a gal on a tank of 35 gals of gas that fills both cars. .89 cents is better than $1.89 or the $4.00 we were paying until lately.

They put in electronic price codes last year and they are grey background with black letters you can’t read. Milk is more expensive at the Commissary than at Kroger’s so is bread. So is gas at the gas station.


10 posted on 04/24/2016 7:00:04 AM PDT by GailA (any politician that won't keep his word to Veterans/Military won't keep them to You!)
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To: SandRat

Military families on Food Stamps SNAP http://www.marketplace.org/2015/05/25/wealth-poverty/military-families-turn-food-stamps


11 posted on 04/24/2016 7:02:37 AM PDT by GailA (any politician that won't keep his word to Veterans/Military won't keep them to You!)
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