Usually not. You generally will need PCS orders in order for military to ship household goods for you. There are exceptions with certain types of deployments. The MTT deployments (officers) were great in that they would pay for the spouse to move wherever she wanted while the soldier was deployed.
You can only play the sims that are in your household. If you spouse in the household for the pc you will see his picture on the side of the screen. Click on it and you are now playing that sim. If he or she is not in your household then you would not be able to play as them.
Yes.
No, not the whole household's income, just the ex-spouse's income. If he/she is remarried the new spouse's income does not count. Only the biological parents pay for their child.
One can find information for military spouse education when one goes to the website of militaryonesource. On this site, one can get information about military spouse education and career opportunities available.
No a spouse who is on parole can not live on a military base with their active duty spouse.
In the U.S. and Canada, a divorce normally disqualifies the spouse from military medical benefits.
Only under very special circumstances. You must meet all of the regular qualifications for Head of Household and, in addition, your spouse must not have lived in your home at any time during the last six months of the year. Temporary absences such as illness, business, or military service count as living in your home unless the spouse cannot be reasonably expected to return.
Military spouses can have medical marijuana in California, but they are not allowed to take it into any military facility or you and your spouse can get into trouble.
If someone is a military spouse then two major disadvantages are that the family might have to move frequently depending upon duties which can be very disruptive. They also will not have their spouse with them for months at a time if he or she is serving abroad.
no
When you are applying for a job you can use your spouse preference. It is kind of like a Veteran's preference. It is just giving you a preference over someone who is non-military affiliated.
No, unless the retiree took out the Survior Benefit option on retirement, then the spouse would get 1/2 of the military retirees monthly benefit.