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Thank you so much!
I don’t know how it is in the US but in Canada everything the Parish needs is covered by the military: vestments, hosts, wine, linens, etc. You would use any money from the collection plate for special projects, to support charities, etc. Chaplain gets military pay that’s about 3 times what parish priests get paid in my diocese.This got more posts then I was expecting! Thank all of you! One last question, how does the pay work? Do they get paid by the parish and the military? Or just one? I never gave any of this Amy thought until I read a completely unrelated post and it popped in my head
Uh, not in the US. Not even close for a captain/O3 (an O3 in our Navy is a Lieutenant) with no years’ experience or prior service in our parlance. I posted our pay scale farther up. That’s a bit higher than base plus average BAH (you can put “average” housing allowance at about $1500 a month for an O3 without dependents.)I haven’t known a chaplain that was of a lower rank than Captain (Air Force, not Navy). Basic Capt’n pay is about $6600/mo.
There’s one of the differences between the Canadian and the US military. We don’t get housing allowance.Uh, not in the US. Not even close for a captain/O3 (an O3 in our Navy is a Lieutenant) with no years’ experience or prior service in our parlance. I posted our pay scale farther up. That’s a bit higher than base plus average BAH (you can put “average” housing allowance at about $1500 a month for an O3 without dependents.)
Yes. That’s one of the requirements.Ya have to attend chaplain school.
They receive military pay, the exact same as any other officer of the same pay-grade.This got more posts then I was expecting! Thank all of you! One last question, how does the pay work? Do they get paid by the parish and the military? Or just one? I never gave any of this Amy thought until I read a completely unrelated post and it popped in my head
Once we add the allowances to the U.S. salary and do the currency conversion (I assume Phemie is posting Canadian pay in Canadian dollars), it comes out about the same. No?Phemie:![]()
Uh, not in the US. Not even close for a captain/O3 (an O3 in our Navy is a Lieutenant) with no years’ experience or prior service in our parlance. I posted our pay scale farther up. That’s a bit higher than base plus average BAH (you can put “average” housing allowance at about $1500 a month for an O3 without dependents.)I haven’t known a chaplain that was of a lower rank than Captain (Air Force, not Navy). Basic Capt’n pay is about $6600/mo.
Must admit that we always managed to live in MQs, except for our very 1st posting after our marriage and the first 6 months of our 4th posting.Yeah, that’s true - and a lot closer than i thought. Base pay for a new O3 without prior service is $4712. That’s about $6k Canadian.
And they still don’t get housing. Holy smokes.
Wanted to add for the general public that they shouldn’t take officer pay as a opportunity to say enlisteds are well paid. They are not.
In Canada the housing in the “Officers Patch” is generally nice. We are not supposed to be charged more than 25% of take home pay for it. That’s why we opted never to buy until hubby was released, a year into a 3 year isolated posting where we had a beautiful 3 br, 1 1/2 bath duplex with eat-in kitchen and separate dining room. Former USAF officer housing.Military housing Stateside is expensive for what it is and generally not available for officers. We have to surrender our entire housing allowance, and there are times you do much better with what it will buy/rent by going off base.
Eh…yes and no. Name me another job that an 18 year old with no skills can walk into where he/she gets the pay and benefits of the military. Yeah, an E3 isn’t rich, but almost all of the income they do have is disposable. Also one of the last places in America where you can get an actual pension, or the Post 9/11 if he/she decides not to do 20.Wanted to add for the general public that they shouldn’t take officer pay as a opportunity to say enlisteds are well paid. They are not.
Most E4s in the modern military are older than that. Who and what they’re supporting is, to a point, none of your business.Most E4s are like 22-23. 22-23 year olds should not be supporting two kids.
I get real bored with stereotypes, myself. I think I know one enlisted in the last nine years who pulled that stunt. Literally.I get real sick of hearing service members complain about being underpaid when half the time it’s their own financial mismanagement that got them there. If you’re struggling because you got married to a stripper with three kids at 20 so you could move out of the barracks and get BAH (seen it happen and I’m sure you have too), that falls under into the “no duh” pile.
Only anecdotal and in talking to the education office at three different installations.Any data to support the idea that most enlisted have massive student loans?
I don’t know when you retired, but it’s a different service now. Given that the average enlisted - regardless of age - has more job skills than the average 18 year old and has been asked to take a bullet in the name of the DOD (and agreed to same - I truly do not care if “they knew that”), I actually find it no less than disgusting that said DOD farms out the disparity in income to the individual states.I know I sound unfeeling, but I just can’t get behind the idea that the average junior enlisted person with a spouse and multiple kids isn’t more or less the author of their own financial woes.
The Air Force might be it’s own animal, with the greater proportional of technical jobs, so one might argue that they’re underpaid relative to the Army E3 who doesn’t have any particular skills besides the ability to load shells in 100 degree heat. But, then, the AF is almost always a much cushier existence. We’ve seen Air Force bases. We know what amenities you guys are hiding. Besides, you can enlist in the Air Force as a freaking recreational specialist and pass out basketballs at the gym. I mean, c’mon.Let me qualify that. Most E4s in the modern AIR FORCE are older now.
I think your data set is skewed. Obviously, the people who go to the education office are more likely to be dealing with loans, but is that really representative of the average junior enlisted guy/gal?Only anecdotal and in talking to the education office at three different installations.