This week, the Senate began its deliberation of the FY2014 National Defense Authorization Act (S. 1197). The Senate Armed Services Committee approved the bill on June 13; the House passed its version of the bill (H.R. 1960) on June 14 (see The Source, 6/14/13).
According to the committee report, the measure would authorize $625.1 billion in discretionary spending for FY2014. The Department of Defense would receive $526.6 billion and overseas contingency operations would receive $80.7 billion, as was requested by President Obama. Defense-related programs at the Department of Energy would receive $17.8 billion, slightly less than the amount requested by the administration. The legislation also would authorize $33.27 billion for the Defense Health program; $136.807 billion for military personnel; and $9.662 billion for military construction, family housing, and base realignment and closure.
The legislation contains several provisions relating to sexual assault in the military (see pages 107-114 of the report for a complete review of the provisions). S. 1197 would:
The secretary of Defense would be required to report to Congress on the “(1) retention rates and career progression opportunities for female service members; (2) causes of voluntary mid-career separations, especially those related to childbirth, to include disparities in service policies on postpartum leave, deferral from deployment, and service member accommodation for infant nursing; and (3) how the department might better accommodate service members in a manner consistent with military necessity and without degrading unit readiness, to include consideration of wider use of temporary assignments to the reserve components or other career intermission programs as a way to allow service members to pursue personal or family goals while maintaining a commitment to a full military career” (p. 122).
The measure would require a report within 180 days of enactment on DOD’s efforts to comply with the law prohibiting the sale of sexually explicit materials on DOD property (p. 121).
The bill also would authorize $25 million to continue DOD assistance to local education agencies (LEAs) impacted by the enrollment of military-dependent children; $5 million in impact aid would be authorized for children with disabilities (p. 115).
The Senate is expected to continue its consideration of the bill when it returns on December 9.