Official
Says DoD Committed to Meeting Military Childcare Needs
By Terri Lukach
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, May 5, 2005 – The Defense Department is actively
engaged in improving childcare services for military parents,
a top Pentagon official said here today.
John M. Molino, deputy undersecretary of defense for military
community and family policy, said the largely single, barracks-dwelling
military is a thing of the past.
"Today's military is different," Molino said. "A
little more than 50 percent of the force is married, and about
44 percent of the force have children ranging in age from infants
to college students. Each family has individual needs, and different
kinds of needs based on their age group.
"We have to accommodate those needs because we are sending
people around the world where they are away from their families,
from grandparents and from other traditional means of support,"
he continued. "We are also deploying more people than in
the recent past, and when you do that, you create a single-parent
family overnight. More often than not, that single parent has
a job, a job they may need to survive," he said. DoD is trying
both to reinforce programs that have been working successfully
and to come up with creative solutions to help with new or anticipated
needs, Molino said.
Extended deployments for large elements at an installation place
an increased burden on those who have stayed behind, Molino noted.
"Work hours are extended, duty days are extended, and we
need extended childcare hours because these people are simply
at work for a longer day than they were before," he said.
Molino said two military installations, one in Virginia and one
in Hawaii, have child care 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
"It's very innovative, very successful and very popular,"
he said.
Many military parents need childcare for the short term only
- parents who are in training, or who just need a few hours to
shop, to go out with friends, or simply take a break, Molino noted.
"We are providing that in many areas," he said, "as
well as going 'beyond the gate' to see what options are available
in the community, and how existing services may be subsidized
for families who are unable to take advantage of service provided
on the installation."
Molino said all of the childcare initiatives available to active
duty servicemembers also are available to those in the Guard and
Reserve.
"If servicemembers are going to be successful in their careers,
if they are going to stay in the military, they need to know that
the military is an environment friendly to families, friendly
to children, and an environment that will facilitate their career
aspirations. That is key," he said.
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