The Defense
Department has established a "one stop" place to go whenever
service members or family members need assistance with any kind
of problem.
It's
called "Military One Source," and is available 24 hours a day,
seven days a week, 365 days a year, according to John M. Molino,
deputy undersecretary of defense for military community and
family policy.
"Military
One Source is a revolutionary augmentation to the family
services we currently have on military installations around the
world," Molino explained during an interview with the Pentagon
Channel and American Forces Press Service.
Each
service had its own One Source program, and now DoD is bringing
them together and calling it Military One Source, Molino noted.
He noted
that it's intended to complement assistance offered to military
families by the services. Molino said Military One Source
"leverages technology and enables DoD to provide assistance to
families and service members via the Internet or a toll-free
telephone number."
The
services include everything from common, everyday difficulties
that might face a family to life's most complicated situations,
he noted.
Molino
said Military One Source is available 24 hours a day around the
country and around the world. "It's a remarkable way to step
forward into a new generation of providing services," he said.
"It's a place where no matter when that situation occurs, the
military family member or service member could make a phone call
or go on the Internet and begin to get some help."
The
military services provide a lot of family services on
installations, but Molino pointed out that about two-thirds of
military families live off base. "The people who are off the
installation tend to be the most junior folks," he added.
"They may
not have the financial resources to have two cars, or to get
themselves back and forth to the installations to get those
services," Molino continued. "So what One Source does is provide
the opportunity to make that phone call and let us bring the
services, literally, figuratively and electronically, to your
home."
When
someone calls Military One Source for help, the person answering
the phone has at least a master's degree in social work or some
kind of counseling service, Molino noted. "That person is
trained specifically to deal with military issues -- issues that
complicate military life. So they're very sensitive to what you
ask," he said.
"Some
people think they're the only people who ever experienced
whatever their problem is, and, of course, they're not," Molino
emphasized. "Most everyone goes through different phases and
different cycles."
The voice
on the other end doesn't make judgments about situations, he
noted. "They're there to listen to what you have to say,
evaluate it, and give you the beginnings of an answer or
actually the answer to your question," Molino said.
Military
One Source runs the gamut of situations: from needing a plumber
in the middle of the night to fix a broken pipe, to needing
veterinary service for a sick dog. It also handles things like
helping families new to an area find childcare, or information
about the school system, summer jobs whatever is needed.
"One
Source can get all that information and provide it to you in a
most efficient manner, whether it be electronically or getting
back to you on the telephone," Molino said.
People
shouldn't be afraid or embarrassed to seek help from Military
One Source, he said, but he acknowledged some people may be
reluctant to ask for help. "You try to convince people that the
person at the other end of the phone isn't going to be
judgmental about your situation," he said.
Word of
mouth is the best way to get the word out about Military One
Source within a unit, he noted. For example, Molino said, "If
I'd made a phone call and had a positive experience, I can tell
you about it. I can say, 'You know, I tried One Source one time,
and it worked for me. You ought to give it a shot.' Asking for
help isn't a sign of weakness; it's really a sign of being smart
it's a sign of smartness," Molino said.
What
bothers Molino is when people say they don't need help from
Military One Source because of their unit assignment. "I heard
that in some units they say, 'We're in an Army Ranger unit,'
(or) 'We're in a Navy SEAL unit, and we don't need that kind of
support,'" Molino said. "That's utter nonsense! If the pipe
breaks in the middle of the night in the home of a Navy SEAL,
you need a plumber just as badly as somebody else."
"When you
figure out that this is a great resource that provides help, you
ought take advantage of it," Molino said.
He pointed
out when service members are deployed, they can put their minds
at ease knowing that if their family needs help, it's only a
phone call away.
Putting
himself in that position, Molino said, "I would find it very
comfortable to know that my family back home has that option,
that service available. And they don't have to wait for the
family center to open. They don't have to find a way to get to
the family center. My wife wouldn't have to find a way to have
the children taken care of.
"We can do
things instantly, any time of the day or night," he continued.
"If there's a language problem, One Source is able to provide
services in more than 100 languages, usually in less than a
minute's delay."
Military
One Source also can be helpful to active duty service members.
They don't have to take time off from work or training to solve
a problem. All they have to do is call Military One Source,
Molino noted.
He
emphasized that Military One Source counseling service isn't
mental health counseling, or counseling for an illness that
might be burdening somebody.
"We have a
health care system that provides that service," he noted. "This
is a different kind of counseling. It's for folks that
experience difficulties day to day. Let's say a service member
has been deployed. The family has adjusted to his or her
absence. Somebody is walking the dog, taking out the garbage.
When he comes back, he has to fit back into the family. Others
had performed those roles that he traditionally performed.
Sometimes that creates friction."
All
families have some degree of difficulty, and most of them manage
to work through the problem. But sometimes they need a little
assistance, and one toll- free phone call can get them that kind
of counseling, Molino said.
Military
Once Source also is available to National Guardsmen and
reservists being called to active duty for Operations Enduring
Freedom and Iraqi Freedom.
"We found
that it works as well for guardsmen and reservists, especially
because they tend not to be close to military installations,"
Molino said. "They can get that kind of support through the
armory. The Guard and Reserve components initially went in a
different direction with a different provider. Then they
realized that One Source actually was the gold standard, and
they shifted over after about six months."