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On the Radar: Pentagon Audits, Military Family Stress & DFAC Overhaul
Teal Yost
February 13, 2026 at 9:28 AM EST
Weekly military news roundup covering Senator Ernst's Pentagon audit bill after eight failed audits, Blue Star Families survey revealing housing costs and PCS stress on military families, Army's transition to campus-style food halls with Freedom Dollars, and a heartwarming World War II veteran reunion story in France.
Here's what's on the radar this week in military life. First, financial accountability at the Pentagon. Senator Joni Ernst, a Republican from Iowa, has introduced a bill calling for a full audit of the Department of Defense. That's after eight consecutive failed audits. Ernst, a combat veteran herself, pointed out on X that the Marine Corps has passed its audit three years in a row, saying taxpayer dollars should support war fighters not be wasted. Now she's challenging the rest of the Pentagon to meet that same standard. Next, a new snapshot of military family life. The 2025 Military Family Survey from Blue Star Families highlights the top stressors right now. Those include spouse employment, housing costs, access to childcare, military pay, and constant PCS disruptions. Half of active duty families report spending more than 30% of their income on housing, and frequent moves continue to derail careers and education for spouses and families. The bottom line, when families aren't stable, readiness isn't either. Army dining is getting a major overhaul. Traditional DFACs are transitioning to campus-style food halls with longer hours, more options, and made-to-order meals. Soldiers will receive about $39 a day in Freedom Dollars instead of meal swipes. That gives them more flexibility in what they eat. Some installations may even test beer and wine sales with those decisions left to local commanders. The goal, better food, more choice, and improved quality of life. And finally, over on Veteran Life, a story just in time for Valentine's Day. Most first loves fade. His did not. At 98 years old, a World War II veteran returned to France and reunited with the woman he never forgot. After more than 70 years apart, they found each other again in Normandy. It's a real-life love story you won't wanna miss. That's your briefing. Be sure to follow my base guide and Veteran Life so you never miss what's on the radar.