Selasa, 25 Oktober 2016

Obama tells Pentagon to speed up review of California Guard enlistment bonuses - Los Angeles Times

President Obama[1] has told the Defense Department[2] to expedite its review of nearly 10,000 California National Guard soldiers who have been ordered to repay enlistment bonuses improperly given a decade ago, but he is not backing growing calls for Congress[3] to waive the debts, the White House[4] said Tuesday.

The comments by White House spokesman Josh Earnest suggest the administration is running into legal and policy roadblocks as it struggles to handle a public relations headache for the Pentagon, the National Guard and members of Congres s who were caught off guard by the scope of the problem.

Appeals filed by some solders to waive repayment of the bonuses, which frequently exceeded $15,000 per soldier, have "dragged on for too long," Earnest told reporters in Beverly Hills while Obama attended a fundraiser for Senate Democrats[5].

"We're not going to nickel-and-dime them when they get back, and we're not going to hold service members responsible unfairly for unethical conduct or fraud perpetrated by someone else," Earnest said.

But he said the president was not yet backing bipartisan calls in Congress to fully forgive the overpayments of an estimated $70 million total that recruiters awarded to meet their enlistment quotas.

"I don't think he's prepared to go that far at this point," Earnest  said, adding that "it might not be necessary to ensure fairness."

But Guard officials said they were told that the provision was discarded because waiving the debt would have cost the Pentagon money, requiring the estimated costs to be offset with cuts elsewhere in the defense budget.

Denham declined to comment on why the provision was dropped in 2014.

"Our office has assisted every veteran who has called in requesting help," said Jessica McFaul, Denham's spokeswoman. "It is a protracted process, and we have one success story so far of the debt being forgiven, and another story in progress that is going well. The congressman is committed to follow through for every constituent who needs his help."

Denham is locked in a close reelection race, and his Democratic opponent, Michael Eggman, blasted the incumbent Tuesday, saying the failure of Congress to respond to the 2014 warnings was "outrageous."

"Congress needs to halt bonus collection efforts immediately and vote on legislation that will fix this," Eggman said.

House Speaker Paul D. Ryan[10] (R-Wis.) on Tuesday also called for the Pentagon to immediately suspend efforts to recover enlistment bonuses.

"When those Californians answered the call to duty they earned more from us than bureaucratic bungling and false promises," Ryan said, urging the Pentagon to suspend collection efforts until "Congress has time ... to protect service members from lifelong liability for DOD's mistakes."

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar