Bases tend to be out away from major metropolitan areas, leaving few transportation options for troops who don't own a car.
As part of an Army pilot program, ride-sharing drivers on six bases won’t need to get a visitor’s pass for each trip.
Fort Bliss in Texas; Fort Bragg in North Carolina; Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington state; and Schofield Barracks, Fort ...
The Army is testing a program at six bases to grant access to vetted ride-share drivers to improve and standardize ...
Bruce Bowlan, warehouse supervisor at Joint Base Lewis-McChord’s Western Region Training Support Center, has been on ...
The U.S. Army launched a pilot ride-share access program to improve installation access for over 600,000 military members, ...
The latest casualty in the Department of Defense's sweep of all things related to diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) is ...
The Army's second Midrange Capability missile battery is ready for action in the Pacific, the service's 3rd Multidomain Task ...
Victoria De La Cruz found little help after her Air Force husband died by suicide in May 2024. Then she found this national ...
Kimberli Goodner now co-owns \222 Artisan Bakery in Madison County, reflects on her 21-year military career, including being ...
Denzel Washington reenacted the heroics of Sgt. William Carney in the movie "Glory." The Pentagon removed a story about him ...