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| OBSERVATION POST |
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BAH Geographic Rate Protection Ends |
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By Tom Philpott
Winter 2005 Print
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Starting in
January 2006, in areas of the United States where rents have
declined, servicemembers of equal rank and marital status living off
base will begin receiving unequal amounts in Basic Allowance for
Housing (BAH). Don't blame a pay error. The allowance disparity will
result from the scheduled end to the BAH program's "geographic rate
protection."
Since 2000, when DoD and Congress began to close a 19-percent gap
between stateside housing allowances and average local rental costs
nationwide, 910,000 servicemembers living off base have enjoyed two
types of BAH rate protection: individual and geographic.
Individual rate protection, which will remain in effect, guarantees
that BAH will not decline after servicemembers move into an
assignment area, even if subsequent housing surveys show local rents
have fallen over time. This protects members who take out mortgages
or sign long-term leases from getting pinched by annual allowance
adjustments.
Geographic rate protection, on the other hand, was intended to be a
temporary tool. It ensured that servicemembers newly arrived in an
assignment area received no less in BAH than members of the same
rank and dependency status already assigned there. DoD officials had
reasoned that it was only fair to stabilize BAH rates in this way
until extra BAH increases could close the gap between allowances and
average rental costs.
The 2005 BAH rates were the final phase of the planned "buy down" in
out-of-pocket housing expenses. With the BAH gap closed, geographic
rate protection is going away.
The effect will be seen only in areas in which rental costs have
declined over the last year, thus lowering BAH for newly assigned
members. Individual rate protection will continue to keep BAH level
in these areas for families who settle in before Jan. 1, 2006.
In most areas where BAH drops for new arrivals occur, it likely will
be felt only for certain types of housing and therefore certain pay
grades, a Pentagon pay official explained. One such area could be
Washington, D.C., where news reports already suggest some softening
of local rental properties traced to an investment bubble in real
estate.
Low interest rates have encouraged many would-be renters to vacate
rental properties and buy their own homes. That trend also increases
the price of homes, which encourages investors - who are still
helped by low interest rates - to buy second homes or rental
properties, thus softening the rental market even further.
Actual 2006 BAH rates won't be announced until December 2005. They
will be based in part on nationwide rental surveys conducted in 2005
from May through July by a DoD contractor that took a look at median
current rental costs, utility costs, and renter's insurance for six
different types of homes: one- and two-bedroom apartments, two- and
three-bedroom townhomes, and three- and four-bedroom single family
homes.
BAH rates are set so that servicemembers moving into an area can
rent appropriate housing for their rank and dependency status. Those
who rent homes above their pay grade standard still will have to pay
costs out of pocket. If rents have declined in an area since 2004,
BAH rates can be reduced, and newly arriving servicemembers will
begin to see the effect next year.
So, for example, it's possible that a married E-6 moving into a
Washington, D.C., assignment next year actually could receive less
in BAH than a married E-6 who already is living there, if the survey
shows a drop in prices.
Housing officials still are projecting that BAH in most areas and
for most pay grades will increase to reflect the continuing
nationwide increase in rents. The increase is likely to be smaller
than in previous years because there no longer is a buy down under
way to fill a gap between allowance and rental costs and because
growth in rents nationwide has slowed.
"You will still get areas where there are significant BAH
increases," according to one official. "But for the first time you
will see some areas where rates are decreasing, at least for some
pay grades."
Tom Philpott is a freelance writer and syndicated news columnist. His column, "Military Update," appears in 48 daily newspapers throughout the United States and overseas.
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