Audit: Millions spent on unjustified movesBy Michelle Tan - Staff writer
Posted : Sunday Aug 1, 2010 11:56:14 EDT
The Air Force needs to get more airmen to extend their overseas tours and make sure all airmen assigned to the U.S. stay at a base for at least four years, according to an internal audit that found the service spent $14 million in one year on “unjustified” permanent change-of-station moves.
The high price tag of the moves triggered the audit.
In fiscal 2008, for example, the Air Force paid slightly more than $1 billion to relocate about 145,500 active-duty airmen and their families, $14 million more than it would have if it had implemented initiatives establishing a 48-month minimum time on station, requiring airmen overseas to complete their tours and encouraging them to stay even longer as long as it wouldn’t hurt their careers. Gen. T. Michael Moseley, then the Air Force Chief of Staff, called for the initiatives explicitly to reduce PCS expenses.
Auditors found Air Force personnel “did not consistently comply” with the initiatives. Nearly a quarter of airmen moved before completing their 48-month minimum time on station or overseas tour requirement “without adequate justification,” according to the report.
The Air Force wants to hold down PCS expenses but does not consider the moves “unjustified,” a personnel official told Air Force Times.
“All the people who PCS do so to fill valid mission needs,” said Lt. Col. Edwin Caro, chief of assignments, joint officer management and classification policy at Air Force A1. “If they didn’t go, there would have been another person who’d have to go.”