Military families need more child care. Can Pentagon deliver?

At a time when recruiting and retaining troops is becoming an urgent challenge for the Pentagon, better access to childcare is increasingly seen as a must for military families. Defense officials, in turn, have pledged that this is a priority.

The Department of Defense is building more child care centers and increasing incentives for child care workers to fill chronic staff shortages and help parents get rid of long waiting lists.

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New child care efforts aim to empower military families, especially at a time of recruiting challenges. But the Pentagon is not living up to previous promises for health care aid.

There are other initiatives. The National Guard launched a pilot program this year to make child care free during weekend exercises, and the Pentagon has announced a pilot plan to fly in trusted people like grandparents to care for children when the wait list at a base facility is longer than a month.

Defense officials realize they have over-promised and under-delivered in the past, advocates for military families say. The challenge for the future, they add, is to ensure that the Pentagon delivers the services it advertises.

About 40% of active duty service members have children. The largest percentage of those children are 5 years or younger.

“So you can imagine how important it is to have access to affordable, quality care,” said Patty Barron, the Pentagon liaison who oversees military child care policy.

At a time when recruiting and retaining troops is becoming an urgent challenge for the Pentagon, better access to childcare is increasingly seen as a must for military families. Defense officials, in turn, have pledged that this is a priority.

The question is whether they can make that happen. Kayla Corbitt hopes so, but her experience with the system has not been without frustration. This came as a surprise. When she married her military husband after meeting him in graduate school, her overall impression was that they were “great,” although she was a bit vague about the range of services available to military families.

The couple’s initial messages belied that belief. When she became pregnant, Ms. Corbitt quit her job at the base in Italy because of “such limited access” to child care. However, she worked hard to learn the ins and outs of applying for childcare spots within the military system, and thought she would navigate it like a champ when her family was deployed to the Washington, DC area in 2019.

Why we wrote this

A story focused on

New child care efforts aim to empower military families, especially at a time of recruiting challenges. But the Pentagon is not living up to previous promises for health care aid.

She didn’t. Childcare resources for military families in the region were not enough “to meet even half of the demand,” Ms. Corbitt said. She spent $7,000 in out-of-pocket expenses for waitlist fees and deposits that were never refunded. Due to lack of care, Mrs. Corbitt quit her new job. It took her a year to get another one lined up with a spot for her child.

The Pentagon has been busy building more child care centers and increasing incentives for child care workers to fill chronic staff shortages and help parents get rid of long waiting lists. There are also other initiatives. The National Guard launched a pilot program this year to make child care free during weekend exercises, and the Pentagon has announced a pilot plan to fly in grandparents to care for children if the wait list at a base facility is longer than a month.

Defense officials realize they have over-promised and under-delivered in the past, advocates for military families say. The challenge for the future, they add, is to ensure that the Pentagon delivers the services it advertises.