Duckworth, Ryan Lead Bipartisan, Bicameral Effort to Ensure National Guard and Reserve Incentive Pay Parity
[WASHINGTON, D.C.] – U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth (D-IL), combat Veteran and member of the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, and Congressman Tim Ryan (D-OH-13), Vice Chair of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense, are leading a bipartisan, bicameral letter to Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin calling for the Department of Defense (DoD) to implement a Duckworth-authored provision from last year’s National Defense Authorization Act that was signed into law to help make sure each service is paying its Guard and Reserve members the same monthly incentive pay for maintaining critical skills and taking on hazardous duty as those in the active component. The law requires DoD to submit to Congress a report on its plan for implementation of Duckworth’s provision as well as a certification that it will not negatively affect military force structure no later than September 30, 2022; however, DoD has failed to meet this deadline.
In part, the Members of Congress wrote: “Providing incentive pays in the amount equal to active duty servicemembers could increase retention of pilots and other crucial skills in the reserve components at a cost that is much lower than training new members. Additionally, the payments provide an added incentive for attracting new members to fill existing vacancies in an intensely challenging recruiting environment.”
They continued: “Our reserve-component servicemembers are vital members of our total force. In addition to providing strategic depth to our Armed Forces, they also serve as an operational reserve that routinely deploys in support of combatant commanders abroad. Crucially, they have proven vital for responding to domestic missions here at home. […] Failure to provide this will only exacerbate the military’s manning crisis as current reserve component servicemembers weigh whether to continue dedicating their time to maintaining their critical military skills despite this pay disparity or look to focus instead on opportunities in the civilian labor market of which they are already members.”
Along with Duckworth and Ryan, the letter was signed by U.S. Senators Susan Collins (R-ME) and Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) as well as Representatives Trent Kelly (R-MS-01) and Andy Kim (D-NJ-03).
A full text of the letter is available here and below:
Dear Secretary Austin:
We write to ask that the Department of Defense (DoD) expeditiously issue its report and certification to Congress required by the Fiscal Year (FY) 2022 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) regarding equal payment of incentive pays to members of the reserve components when compared to those issued to active duty servicemembers. Under the law, DoD was required to issue this report and certification to Congress by September 30, 2022, and its delay is preventing the payment of incentive pays that reserve component servicemembers have earned for their critical skills, harming retention and hampering recruiting.
To attract talent and retain critical skills, Congress authorizes DoD to provide servicemembers with a variety of incentive pays. Currently, DoD uses 18 incentive pays to influence recruiting and retention of individuals with specific skill sets and qualifications. Many of these incentive pays require specialized training or involve duties with increased risk to our servicemembers. To receive incentive pays, servicemembers must meet training and duty requirements. These requirements are the same for active duty servicemembers and servicemembers in the reserve components. However, current DoD policy caps the amount of pay National Guard and Reserve servicemembers receive to a fraction of what those in the active component receive, despite performing the same duties and meeting the same skill requirements.
To rectify this discrepancy, Congress included Section 602 in the FY 2022 NDAA that stipulates DoD must provide incentive pays to reserve component servicemembers in the same amount it gives active duty servicemembers. Before implementing this section, the law also requires DoD to submit to Congress a report on its plan for providing equal incentive pays as well as a certification that such a change will not negatively affect the force structure of any military component. DoD’s delay in providing this report and certification on time prevents the payment of these incentive pays that are crucial for retention of critical skills.
Incentive pays are vital for retaining qualified talent and are less expensive than training brand new servicemembers to replace those that would otherwise decide to leave. For example, a 2019 RAND report concluded that increased aviation incentive pays would improve pilot retention and reduce overall costs to DoD. The study estimated that the training cost for a basic qualified fighter pilot ranges from $5.6 million for an F-16 pilot to $10.9 million for an F-22 pilot, both of which are airframes that exist in our reserve components for the Air Force. Providing incentive pays in the amount equal to active duty servicemembers could increase retention of pilots and other crucial skills in the reserve components at a cost that is much lower than training new members. Additionally, the payments provide an added incentive for attracting new members to fill existing vacancies in an intensely challenging recruiting environment.
Our reserve-component servicemembers are vital members of our total force. In addition to providing strategic depth to our Armed Forces, they also serve as an operational reserve that routinely deploys in support of combatant commanders abroad. Crucially, they have proven vital for responding to domestic missions here at home. As both the foreign and domestic operations tempo remains high for reserve component servicemembers, we must provide them with the benefits they have earned. Given that reserve component servicemembers who receive incentive pay are already maintaining the same skills as their counterparts in the active component, they deserve to receive the same amount of incentive pay. Failure to provide this will only exacerbate the military’s manning crisis as current reserve component servicemembers weigh whether to continue dedicating their time to maintaining their critical military skills despite this pay disparity or look to focus instead on opportunities in the civilian labor market of which they are already members. We ask that you do right by our reserve component servicemembers and move expeditiously to provide them with the full incentive pays they have earned.
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