| VETS' WIDOWS FIND
STAYING SINGLE CAN COST THEM A BENEFIT
In an absurd quirk of federal laws on
death benefits, military widows and widowers are losing death
benefits unless they take another walk down the aisle after age
57.
NOTE from Larry Scott, VA
Watchdog dot Org ... William R. Levesque writes regular
articles on veterans' issues. For more articles by Levesque,
use our search engine ... here ...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=levesque&op=and
-------------------------
Vets' spouses lose a death
benefit by staying single
By William R. Levesque, Times Staff Writer
http://www.tampabay.com/news/military/v
eterans/article1051849.ece
Nona Chubboy's husband, an
officer in the Navy, paid the premiums on a government insurance
policy for years, expecting it to help his wife if he died.
Her husband, Louis, died of cancer linked to military atomic
testing. But the only way Chubboy can collect the benefit is to do
something she finds disloyal to her spouse's memory.
The Tierra Verde woman would have to remarry.
In a seemingly absurd quirk of federal laws on death benefits, up
to 54,000 military widows and widowers around the nation are
losing up to $13,000 a year in death benefits unless they take
another walk down the aisle after age 57.
A federal appeals court in a recent decision made note of the
unusual condition, saying, "Perhaps Congress intended to encourage
marriage for older surviving spouses."
To Chubboy, 80, whose husband died in 1981 at age 54, Uncle Sam is
punishing her for standing by her man.
"You love your husband and you are a dutiful wife to him," she
said. "Now they're saying to go out and find a new one if you want
this money. But I don't want another man. I found the best of the
litter."
Lawyers who represented the Department of Defense in a case in
which military widows sought lost benefits declined to comment.
And a representative of the Department of Veterans Affairs with
knowledge of the benefit quirk could not be reached.
But in court papers, government lawyers say they are simply
following the law, though they, too, have told an appeals court
that the marriage rule is "an absurd result."
Veterans advocates say the government is treating surviving
spouses who don't remarry unfairly.
"It's pretty bizarre," said Vivianne Wersel, chairwoman of the
governmental relations committee of the Gold Star Wives of America
Inc. "It's unethical and immoral that we're forced to have to
choose another man to receive what our spouses worked so hard
for."
The
history of this odd provision of federal law gets a little
complicated.
The dispute involves monthly payments from two government programs
that pay benefits to the surviving spouses or children of
veterans: the Survivor Benefit Plan and the Dependency and
Indemnity Compensation program.
The DIC is administered by the VA and pays the spouse of a veteran
who dies on active duty or of a service-connected illness or
injury after retirement from the military. The SBP, administered
by the Pentagon, is akin to a life insurance annuity paid to the
spouse or children of active-duty troops or veterans who die for
any reason.
Active-duty troops are automatically covered by SBP. But when they
retire, they must opt to stay in the program and pay premiums.
The government, however, has long barred spouses from collecting
both benefits at the same time, regardless of age or marital
status. So Uncle Sam subtracts whatever a spouse was owed under
the DIC from the payment owed under the SBP — a loss of $1,154 a
month for most spouses.
Here's where it gets even more confusing.
Congress passed a law in 2003 that said the surviving spouses of
veterans could collect both SBP and DIC at the same time. But
there was one condition: Spouses could only do so if they
remarried after age 57.
Congress was trying to fix an unrelated problem: DIC payments
stopped if a spouse remarried.
The bottom line: The only way to get both benefits is to find a
new spouse after your 57th birthday.
If a veteran's children are designated as beneficiaries in the SBP
program, a spouse can get around the provision. Then the monthly
payment would be made to the children via the surviving spouse.
And the spouse could still get DIC money.
But when the kids turn 18, the payments would stop.
Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., has worked for several years to repeal
the ban on the simultaneous receipt of SBP and DIC benefits for
all surviving spouses, regardless of their age or marital status.
"They're two separate benefits," Nelson said in an interview last
week. "Why should they offset one another? You can't make an
argument for that with a straight face."
Nelson, however, said the problem is funding, which is why his
efforts to repeal the offset have been defeated in previous years.
One estimate said the 10-year cost of a complete repeal would be
$7 billion.
"We'll try again next year," he said.
Critics say that veterans would never have signed up for the SBP
insurance program if they had known.
Freda Schroeppel, 73, of Brooksville, said she attended her
husband's benefits briefing before he retired from the Air Force
after 35 years in 1975. She said nobody told them both benefits
could not be collected at the same time.
Her husband died in 2003 of a service-connected illness, and sure
enough, Schroeppel said, the government deducts $1,154 from the
check it sends her every month.
"Nobody should have to get married to collect a benefit they
deserve," she said. "The insurance was bought and paid for."
William R. Levesque can be reached at (813) 226-3432.
-------------------------
TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
SBP, DIC |