Military service members and their families sacrifice for the safety of the U.S. and face many challenges during and after their service, including repeated relocations, separation, accessing healthcare, mental health services, quality k-12 schools, unemployment, housing/homelessness, food insecurity, and higher risk of suicide.
Florida, South Carolina, and Virginia ranked the best overall for veterans and their families. Oregon, Washington D.C., and Nevada ranked the worst. In addition, Alaska, Maine, Montana, Virginia, and Wyoming have the most veterans per capita. Districts of Columbia, California, Utah, New York, and New Jersey have the least per capita.
The rankings in the WalletHub report were based on three criteria, economic environment, quality of life, and healthcare, with each having an equal value of 33.33 percent.
The MFLS survey also found that 48 percent of active-duty families were concerned about the military spouse’s employment, 45 percent said they were worried about the time away from family during deployment, 40 percent said military pay, 40 percent said Basic allowance for housing/Off-base housing funds, and 37 percent said relocation issues were of major concern.
North Dakota ranked best for economic environment, which includes job opportunities for veterans, number of veteran-owned businesses, military bases per 100,000 veterans, total Veteran Affair (VA) expenditure per veteran, academic credit for service, state money in DOD contracts, help for returning veterans, private hiring preference, housing costs, cost of living, and amount of tax on military pension.
Carl Castro, Ph.D.–professor of social work and psychology and retired U.S. Army Col.–told WalletHub that there are very few states that exempt military pension from being taxed, and it would be great if more states would extend that benefit.
Maryland ranked first for quality of life, which includes the number of veterans, number of veterans not on government assistance, VA benefits and facilities per veteran, quality universities, entertainment, number of homeless vets, and weather.
Healthcare was another area of concern for military families.
Minnesota ranked first for healthcare, which includes the number of VA facilities per veteran, hospitals per capita, quality hospitals, doctors per capita, mental health counselors per capita, presence of veteran treatment courts, and suicide rate.
Nearly 25 percent of respondents in the MFLS survey wanted more mental health services. Because most veterans live in rural areas, their access to mental health services is limited.
Alex Young, assistant professor of accounting at Hofstra University, told WalletHub that healthcare for military personnel could be improved in the short-term by having the government watchdog group, the Government Accountability Office, assess and make recommendations to the VA about their services.
“In the longer run, sustained VA leadership that is committed to accountability and oversight will help better serve veterans and their families,” said Young.
In a separate report, WalletHub assessed how patriotic each state is.
They found that the most patriotic states, with the highest number of people involved in military and civic activities and causes combined, were Virginia, Montana, and Alaska. The most unpatriotic states are Arkansas, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island, according to another recent WalletHub report.
Alaska, Hawaii, and Virginia were top for military engagement alone, which includes the number of military enlistees, active-duty military personnel, and the number of military reserves, while Massachusetts, New York, and New Jersey had the lowest ranking for military engagement.