Pentagon seeks $21B for barracks as repair backlog doubles

Pentagon seeks $21B for barracks as repair backlog doubles

Spread the love

The Pentagon is asking Congress for more than $21 billion for military barracks in its fiscal year 2027 budget request, the largest such investment in recent years, but the government’s top watchdog says the deferred maintenance backlog has more than doubled since 2020 and important recommendations from its last barracks review remain unfinished.

The $1.5 trillion military budget request includes $8.8 billion for repairs such as HVAC fixes, mold remediation and electrical and plumbing updates; $10.2 billion for new barracks construction; and $2.5 billion for preventive maintenance. It is part of a broader $57.2 billion request for facility sustainment, restoration and modernization across the Department of War.

“The investments in this budget will fix all substandard barracks and eliminate barracks that have been deemed poor or failing,” Lt. Gen. Steven Whitney said at a Pentagon budget briefing.

The request comes after a scathing September 2023 report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office detailed sewage backups, rodent infestations, mold, inoperable fire systems and broken heating and air conditioning systems at barracks where troops are required to live. The report found those conditions undermined military readiness and quality of life. It also found the Department of Defense had not fully funded its facilities program for years, resulting in a backlog of at least $137 billion in deferred maintenance costs as of fiscal year 2020.

That backlog has since grown to an estimated $280 billion for all Defense Department facilities as of fiscal year 2025, Rashmi Agarwal, a director with GAO’s Defense Capabilities and Management team, told The Center Square. The GAO plans to issue a report this summer on infrastructure maintenance across all military bases.

Conditions were so bad in some places that service members sometimes took “drastic action, such as getting married, just to leave the barracks,” according to the GAO report.

Undersecretary of Defense Comptroller Jules “Jay” Hurst III said that condition scores were used to determine how much money was needed to fix those barracks.

“We have a list of barracks that are in poor or failing condition and we created a building condition index,” he said at the April 21 budget briefing. “And I think if you’re below 80 on that index, you’re considered poor or failing. So, we went through and calculated how much money we’d have to invest to remediate every single barracks that’s in that condition. We’re going to remediate all the barracks that are poor or substandard.”

However, in a statement to The Center Square, a senior defense official said the Barracks Task Force wall-to-wall assessments were not traditional condition assessments – they were an urgent triage operation to identify and correct acute health and safety issues – and did not produce a total count of poor or failing buildings. It was not immediately clear whether Hurst was referring to a separate, pre-existing list or the BTF assessments.

That distinction matters because one of the central problems identified in the 2023 GAO report was that condition scores for buildings were inaccurate. The report noted that military services calculate a condition score from 0 to 100, but those scores didn’t always match actual conditions. One barracks had been closed as uninhabitable due to long-standing plumbing and electrical issues while carrying a condition score above 90.

The Pentagon said it has since overhauled its approach. In April 2025, the department published Unaccompanied Housing Habitability Standards, which established pass-fail criteria for living spaces – including zero visible mold and functional HVAC systems – designed to flag uninhabitable rooms regardless of a building’s overall condition score. The department also said it is replacing collateral-duty service members with permanent civilian barracks managers at each installation to ensure more consistent oversight, and mandating in-person inspections of all permanent party barracks every two years.

“The Department does not need to choose between ‘find and fix’ and systemic changes; it is aggressively doing both,” the senior defense official told The Center Square. “We actively carried out the Secretary’s directive to immediately find and fix acute issues. The BTF has impacted thousands of warriors, with over $800 million obligated to rapidly improve living conditions across the force.”

Agarwal said important recommendations from the 2023 report remain open.

“While DOD has taken steps to address many recommendations, important recommendations remain open and we will continue to track the actions the department is taking,” she said.

A separate GAO report issued in February 2026 on the Pentagon’s 12 joint bases found the department still needs to assess the risks to missions posed by not meeting its funding goals for infrastructure maintenance.

The problems were not new. The GAO raised nearly identical concerns in a June 2002 report on recruit training barracks, documenting inadequate heating and air conditioning, mold and plumbing failures across all 10 basic training locations. That report found the same root cause: Army officials told investigators that maintenance funding shortfalls were driven by “the migration of funding from maintenance accounts to support other priorities.” The condition scoring problem was present then too – GAO inspectors found that Parris Island barracks rated near the top of the condition scale were actually among the worst they observed.

During a 2023 Congressional hearing on the more recent report, Elizabeth Field, then-director of Defense Capabilities and Management for the GAO, told lawmakers the pattern had persisted across decades. Ten years before that hearing, she said, the Pentagon had praised its progress modernizing barracks with increased funding and promised to maintain them.

“Obviously, that didn’t happen,” Field testified. “It will take years to reverse the chronic neglect and underfunding we uncovered.”

She said the problem was not a lack of Congressional funding, but how the Pentagon chose to spend it.

“The department tends to only fund about 80% of sustainment needs and the facilities that most often lose out are things like barracks,” she said.

U.S> Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., a retired Air Force brigadier general who chaired the House Armed Services Committee’s Military Quality-of-Life Panel in the 118th Congress, said the pattern of neglect has a clear cause.

“The barracks budget has been looted for many years for other priorities,” he told The Center Square.

Since the 2023 report, the Pentagon has made a series of pledges to improve conditions. The fiscal year 2025 budget included $1.1 billion for barracks construction. The fiscal year 2026 budget requested $7.2 billion for barracks, including $1.2 billion for new construction and $6 billion for facility sustainment. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth announced a $1.2 billion barracks task force investment in December 2025, with $400 million for immediate repairs and $800 million for critical renovations. The Pentagon said Wednesday that more than $800 million of that has been obligated so far.

“The Department is actioning a comprehensive, data-driven plan to permanently address barracks quality, with the FY27 budget providing the resources required to restore existing barracks and construct new buildings where necessary,” the defense official said. “Ultimately, this combination of rapid remediation and systematic oversight ensures our Warriors can focus entirely on their mission, not real estate management.”

The GAO said Congress has continued to place significant focus on improving barracks conditions through legislation and hearings, and that it will continue to support that oversight work. A new GAO report on infrastructure maintenance across all military bases is expected this summer.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

WATCH: Critics say political protests interfere with education

WATCH: Critics say political protests interfere with education

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square As student walkouts and protests tied to immigration enforcement increase nationwide, education experts are raising concerns about declining civics proficiency among K-12 students and the...
Congressional candidates discuss agriculture, healthcare

Congressional candidates discuss agriculture, healthcare

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Editor's note: This is the part of a series of stories that are appearing this week on the June 2 primary in California. The stories...
Trump admin still releasing minors into U.S., well below Biden era

Trump admin still releasing minors into U.S., well below Biden era

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square The Trump administration is still releasing unaccompanied alien children (UAC)s into the U.S., although the numbers are dramatically lower than the unprecedented numbers released by...
TrumpRx expanding, offering generic prescription drugs

TrumpRx expanding, offering generic prescription drugs

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square TrumpRx is expanding to about seven times its current size, adding more than 600 generic prescription drugs to the months-old direct-to-consumer government website, the president...
Trump pauses planned military strikes against Iran, cites further negotiations

Trump pauses planned military strikes against Iran, cites further negotiations

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Renewed military strikes against Iran have been postponed once again, President Donald Trump said Monday. In a Truth Social post, the president says a military...
Tennessee AG leads 23-state letter over climate chapter in federal judges’ manual

Tennessee AG leads 23-state letter over climate chapter in federal judges’ manual

By Tom JoyceThe Center Square Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti is leading a 23-state letter demanding answers from the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts over a climate science chapter...
Consumer advocates say Nicor’s rate hike is unreasonable, profit-driven

Consumer advocates say Nicor’s rate hike is unreasonable, profit-driven

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Consumer advocates have signaled heavy opposition to a proposed $221 million rate hike by Nicor Gas, arguing...
Dominion, NextEra plan merger

Dominion, NextEra plan merger

By Shirleen GuerraThe Center Square Dominion Energy announced Monday it plans to combine with Florida-based NextEra Energy in a deal the companies say would create the world’s largest regulated electric...
China to buy $17B in US ag products, 200 Boeing jets

China to buy $17B in US ag products, 200 Boeing jets

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square China agreed to buy at least $17 billion annually in U.S. agricultural products through 2028 as part of a broader package of trade agreements announced...
Johnson’s office counters Pritzker claim Chicago mayor 'has no plan' to keep Bears

Johnson’s office counters Pritzker claim Chicago mayor ‘has no plan’ to keep Bears

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker says Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson has no plan to keep the Bears in the...
Minnesota prosecutor charges second ICE agent wake of Operation Metro Surge

Minnesota prosecutor charges second ICE agent wake of Operation Metro Surge

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square A Minnesota prosecutor announced Monday criminal charges against an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer in connection with the non-fatal January shooting of a Minneapolis man....
Pritzker: Trump war to blame for high gas prices

Pritzker: Trump war to blame for high gas prices

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker says everyone is paying more for gas because of President Donald Trump’s military action...
Proposed law would require women’s restroom on construction sites

Proposed law would require women’s restroom on construction sites

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Construction companies across Illinois may be required by law to provide female employees with separate bathroom facilities...
Republicans scramble to preserve White House ballroom security funding

Republicans scramble to preserve White House ballroom security funding

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Congressional Republicans are scrambling to rewrite portions of their $72 billion budget reconciliation bill after the Senate parliamentarian ruled that a Trump administration wish list...
CBP seizes more than 100 million lethal doses of fentanyl at SW border in six months

CBP seizes more than 100 million lethal doses of fentanyl at SW border in six months

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square A record more than 100 million lethal doses of fentanyl have been seized at the southwest border in the past six months. The seizures were...