What kind of question is this?
(1) If the servicemember has dependents and has on-post/on-base housing, the spouse and children are entitled to stay at their residence on the installation. Should the servicemember become a fatality, a generous time period is allowed for the dependents to find accomodations in the civilian sector, to free up the housing for others.
(2) If the servicemember elects to not have his dependents live on the installation, they are under no compulsion whatsoever to live anywhere. A common solution is for dependents to move back with extended family, thus enlarging the support group and saving housing costs.
(3) Children of a servicemember are not in the military themselves, and for the purposes of deployments (short or long) they have available to them support of various kinds from the service branches and the military community as a whole. Being forcibly evicted from military housing assigned to the servicemember on deployment (if that is your question) is NOT something that is done, unless the spouse violates the terms of agreement that come with living in military housing.
By the way, spellcheck is your friend. Use it.
2006-09-22 10:47:13
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answer #1
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answered by Nat 5
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Children may NOT stay in barracks. Barracks are for single servicemembers ONLY.
If the servicembers live in military family housing and aree both deployed at the same time, the children may NOT stay in housing alone. family care plan MUST be in effect and 98% of the time, non sponsored people may NOT live in Military Family housing. They would have to be declared as a dependant themselves, something that is very difficult to prove.
2006-09-14 14:52:33
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answer #2
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answered by Mrsjvb 7
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I grew up interior the militia and lived on-base for a great area of that ingredient. On-base there are extra policies and issues that practice than to those civilian sort toddlers yet those are normally in connection with curfews and basically customary sort habit. on an identical time the militia member could be held partly in charge for his or her dependents movements on base. it is probably going certainly one of the justifications why you notice slightly of a distinction. basically think of your dad or mom going to paintings and getting their butts chewed out or probable worse considering the fact which you probably did some thing stupid that some civilian youngsters do. Vandalism is a competent occasion and that i've got considered the place a mum or dad became out pulling base ingredient on Saturdays for a month or 2 because of the fact of their newborn's irrelevant movements. i might additionally upload that many youngsters get their hair cut back on the backside barbershop the place that's extra fee-effective yet regrettably those barbers notably plenty be responsive to in straightforward terms one style of the thank you to cut back hair and that's the militia style.
2016-11-07 08:19:03
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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the parents need a back up plan so that the kids can be taken care of while deployed and yes they can stay on base. if you are a trouble maker and are causing problems on base, then the base commander can terminate your base housing and you have to find other accommidations on the local economy
2006-09-21 17:47:53
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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well i live on a army base and my kids live here aswell. If a parent is deployed they could have thier mom stay in thier house with the kids while they deploy.
2006-09-14 11:33:13
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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that's why many have backup plan in th event of both getting deployed the kids may NOT live alone without one parent supervision many end up back home with relatives
2006-09-22 02:20:33
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answer #6
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answered by aldo 6
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Kids can stay there is no regulation saying they cant. You have a family member or friend come live in your quarters until you return. Whoever told you they couldn't is full of it.
2006-09-14 14:03:20
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answer #7
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answered by Austin C 2
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You don't believe what was told you in your other question, eh? Well, here's an article for you.
http://usmilitary.about.com/cs/genfamily/a/familycare.htm
2006-09-14 11:24:58
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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There are no articles on this subject.
2006-09-14 11:26:27
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answer #9
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answered by Vagabond5879 7
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