no
if the member and their spouses are getting a divorce the military will not pay to move the spouse wherever he/she may want to move to. if the member seperates the member is the only one they will move
Spouses of service members on active duty in pay grades E-1 to E-5, W-1 to W-2, and O-1 to O-2 who can start and complete their coursework while their military sponsor is on Title 10 military orders, including spouses married to members of the National Guard and Reserve Components in these same pay grades. Those who are not eligible include: Spouses married to service members in pay grades: E-6 and above; W-3 and above; and O-3 and above Spouses who are a member of the armed forces themselves currently on Title 10 orders Spouses who are married but legally separated (or under court order or statute of any state or US territory) from a member of the armed forces on Title 10 orders Spouses whose National Guard/Reserve Component military sponsor is in a Warning Orders/Alert, Post Deployment/Demobilization or Transition Status Spouses married to a member of the Coast Guard Spouses who are unable to start and complete their course(s) while their military sponsor is on Title 10 orders
The US Army MOS (Military Occupational Specialty) 13F is Fire Support Specialist. A 13F is a member of a Fire Support Team. Given the military penchant for making acronyms into words, F+S+T = FiST; ergo, a member of a Fire Support Team is a "FiSTer."
U.S. military members are entitled to a pension when they retire. If a military member gets divorced long before he reaches retirement age, the divorce court must consider the pension he is likely to get years later and how to divide it. Most states consider military pensions to be assets subject to division just like other marital property.Uniformed Services Former Spouses Protection ActThe Uniformed Services Former Spouses Protection Act, or USFSPA, is the law governing the division of military pensions following a divorce. This law gives states the power to divide military pensions between spouses in the event of divorce. Only a divorce court in the state the spouses reside in may have the power to make this type of decision, unless the spouses consent to the division. For example, if a service member lives in New York but is stationed in Colorado, he has to give consent for a Colorado divorce court to divide his military pension. Otherwise, this part of the divorce would have to be handled through a New York court. However, consent doesn't have to be explicit or in writing. If the service member participates in divorce proceedings in Colorado, the court will often presume consent to handling the division of pension in that state.10-year RuleThe USFSPA covers all military spouses, regardless of the length of the marriage. The marriage doesn't have to last for 10 years for divorce courts to divide the pension plan. However, if the marriage lasted 10 years or more, and one or both spouses served in the military for at least 10 years of the marriage, the U.S. Defense Financing and Accounting Service pays the ex-spouse her portion of the pension. Otherwise, the spouse who receives the pension must pay his former spouse her share when ordered to do so by the court.Timetable of PaymentsThe divorce court can determine when a former spouse is entitled to pension payments. In some cases, the court may order that the ex-spouse receive her expected payment immediately in one lump sum. In other cases, the court may require that the ex-spouse begin receiving payments upon her former spouse's retirement.
Yes, effective February 11, 2013. This benefit was specifically enumerated among those that are available immediately to same-sex spouses of US military personnel in a memo from Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta. This represents a change in policy as of this date.
Child support that all military members pay is called Aid to Dependent Children. Military Pay Command has schedules for this. It is extremely difficult to collect more than is already scheduled by military pay alowances. Actually, it is nearly impossible.
no he s NT a member of military......
I believe that's possible, since BAH is offered to every military member with a family, and I doubt that they discriminate against the people where both spouses are in the military. But if it doesn't work out for you, you can always take out one of those awesome loans at a ridiculously low rate from websites like militaryloans.com or some company along those lines. Both spouses can only collect BAH if they are living on separate bases, and they were both approved to live out of the barracks, in most cases tho if one spouse has it the other is requested to stay on base because most won't authorise 2 BAH's
Main weakness of the League of Nations was lack of military support. United States were not a member, Russia was not allowed to be a member, Germany also was not a memeber, and most important member (France and Great Britain) were recovering from war injuries.
NATO
Only 11% are home schooled that have a military member.
He is the Commander in Chief of the military.