At the subcommittee hearing, retired Chief Wachtendorf described years of health problems, repeated relocations and failures in privatized military housing and urged passage of the Homefront Act to protect military families and remove procedural obstacles that delay repairs.
Wachtendorf said his family experienced "visible mold, sewage leaks and other hazards" across multiple homes and that base-level dispute processes and industrial-hygiene checks were inadequate. He described nondisclosure agreements that often accompany privatized leases and said those NDAs prevented families from speaking out.
Representative Petronas and other members framed the Homefront Act as a no-cost definitional change that would exempt most military housing from historic-preservation rules that have delayed repairs while protecting truly historic properties. They also highlighted the bill's prohibition on non-disclosure agreements to allow service members to report unsafe conditions.
Members pressed witnesses about oversight failures and remedies; witnesses described systemic problems in remediation, inspection protocols, and access to independent assessments. The hearing produced testimony but no formal committee action.