No. Once the sgt is granted leave it is all up to him at that point. He will still be on the army payroll.
Soldiers on leave continue to receive their regular pay.
No, the army pays for the soldier...
Pay issues are always directed to the finance office.
To actually go on leave doesn't cost you anything. You are, however, responsible for travel expenses. So if you're taking a plane back home, you pay for that. If you're driving, you pay for your own fuel.
Where are you going on leave from? If you're taking your block leave from a non-combat zone, you pay your own transportation costs. If you're taking leave from a combat zone, the military will get you stateside, although you may have to pay your own costs from your port of entry to your final destination.
Yes. Staff Sergeant is pay grade E6 in both the US Army and US Marine Corps (it's pay grade E5 in the Air Force).
E6 is the pay grade.
The US Army is in Afghanistan primarily to establish stability in the country. In order for the US Army to leave, the US leadership needs to believe that the stability will endure post-withdrawal. As a result, an Afghan Army would need to take the place of the US Army maintaining security. As a result, recruiting said soldiers is a high priority.
The government didn’t pay people to leave Pennsylvania. Plus, there is no “centrailia Pennsylvania.”
NO You do not have to pay You serve your country as a second Lt. in the Army after Graduation and for doing this you do not have to pay.
If varies on the time of service but on average according to the 2010 US Army pay scale an O-6 COL with 14 years on service makes $7,537.80 a month.