Pentagon Plans to Hold Military Paychecks During Shutdown

Mike Flynn at Big Government asks if military paychecks will be held in a possible government shutdown. Flynn fears the answer is yes, based on a draft guidance document from the Pentagon released last month, and he notes that this would differ from what happened under the Clinton administration during the last government shutdown, when military personnel received their paychecks.

This afternoon, the Defense Department released a detailed statement about what will occur in a government shutdown with regard to military operations. Here’s the relevant portion about military pay:

If the government shuts down due to the absence of funding, the DoD will have no funds to pay military members or civilian employees for the days during which the government is shut down.  However, both military and civilian personnel will receive pay for the period worked prior to the shutdown.  Military personnel, and civilians occupying excepted status positions and required to work, are entitled to be paid for work performed during the shutdown, and will be paid retroactively once the department receives additional funding.  Congress would have to provide authority in order for the department to retroactively pay non-excepted employees for the furloughed period.

Defense officials, however, cannot currently answer whether or not deployed active duty military personnel would be able to continue to receive paychecks during a shutdown under the provisions of the Feed and Forage act. That act, ratified by Congress, states in part:

No contract or purchase on behalf of the United States shall be made, unless the same is authorized by law or is under an appropriation adequate to its fulfillment, except in the Department of Defense and in the Department of Homeland Security with respect to the Coast Guard when it is not operating as a service in the Navy, for clothing, subsistence, forage, fuel, quarters, transportation, or medical and hospital supplies, which, however, shall not exceed the necessities of the current year.

Would that include active duty military personnel paychecks? Relatedly, Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison’s legislation ensuring military pay is gaining support.

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