RETIREES DUE BACK PAY -- 100,000 disabled
retirees due retroactive pay.
Story here...
http://www.military.com/features/0,15240,105439,00.html
Story below:
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Retirees Due Back Pay
Tom Philpott
100,000 Disabled Retirees Due Retroactive Pay
Retired Army SSgt. Daniel F. Purinton, 71, has argued for almost two years
that the Department of Veterans Affairs owes him an additional $8044.
Purinton said the underpayment occurred as DoD and VA officials implemented
a complex series of laws, starting in 2003, to end for many retirees the ban
on "concurrent receipt" of both military retirement and VA disability
compensation.
Purinton is right, but he also is far from alone. Back pay is owed to
roughly 20,000 recipients of Combat-Related Special Compensation (CRSC) and
78,000 recipients of Concurrent Retirement and Disability Pay (CRDP). Total
back pay owed is said to be in the hundreds of millions of dollars.
Within the next two weeks, Defense officials hope to resolve final details
with the VA on how their underpayments will be calculated, how processing
costs will be shared between departments, how retirees will be notified and
when most of these retirees can expect to be paid.
Most of the payments have to be calculated manually, rather than by
computer, so it could take six months for retirees to be fully compensated,
officials explained in draft press release recently shared with Purinton.
Those eligible for back pay have combat-related injuries and illnesses, or
service-connected disabilities that the VA rates as at least 50 percent
disabling. All of them also had military careers of lasting 20 years or
longer.
The delay in fully compensating these retirees can be blamed in part on the
twisted path Congress choose for bringing some disabled military retirees
relief from the century-old ban on current receipt.
The ban requires that retirees who receive tax-free VA disability
compensation accept a matching reduction in taxable retired pay. The
dollar-for-dollar offset remains in effect today for retirees with
non-combat disabilities of 40 percent or less. Also left out of recent law
changes are veterans forced by their disabilities to retire short of 20-year
careers.
A total of 222,000 military retirees, however, have seen their incomes climb
as a result of CRSC, CRDP or both. Almost half of them, whether they know it
or not, are owed more, in some cases thousands of dollars.
CRSC took effect June 1, 2003. Early payments were limited to active duty
retirees who applied and were found to have combat-related disabilities of
at least 60 percent, or disabilities of at least 10 percent for which they
received the Purple Heart. Eligibility was expanded on Jan. 1, 2004, to
retirees having any combat-related disability including reserve retirees.
CRDP, which took effect Jan. 1, 2004, is payable to 20-year retirees with
disabilities rated at least 50 percent but not tied to combat. CRDP payments
are being phased in and will end the retired pay offset for seriously
disabled by retirees by 2014. The size of the reduction varies by level of
disability. Changes for 2005 and 2006 will end the retired pay offset faster
for the most seriously disabled retirees.
Dealing with the complexity of CRSC, CRDP, military retirement and VA
compensation has stressed the VA and the Defense Finance and Accounting
Service (DFAS) and frustrated some retirees. The experience of Purinton,
from Flushing, N.Y., might be typical.
In July 2003, after Congress enacted CRSC, Purinton applied to the VA for a
service-connect disability for his prostate cancer. He had served a year in
Vietnam. His illness was presumed to be related to wartime exposure to the
defoliant Agent Orange. In November 2003, Purinton was found 100-percent
disabled and awarded disability compensation retroactive to July.
The VA, however, withheld some of the retroactive payment, enough to equal
military retired pay Purinton had received since July. That made sense,
Purinton said, because the ban on concurrent receipt still applied.
All that Purinton needed to do at that point was to declare on his 2003 tax
return that retired pay received since July should be treated as tax exempt,
like the VA compensation previously withheld.
But in December 2003, Purinton used his VA disability rating to apply for
CRSC. Payment was approved in February 2004. CRSC, in effect, replaced
monthly retired pay lost to the ban on concurrent receipt. But CRSC is tax
exempt. In addition, Purinton continued to draw tax-free VA compensation.
All of that was fine. But CRSC eligibility was retroactive to July 2003.
That means the VA owes Purinton the money it withheld from that retroactive
payment of disability compensation. The ban on concurrent receipt applies
only to military retirement, not CRSC.
"I'm due that money because anytime you're eligible for CRSC and VA 100
percent [compensation] you're supposed to get both, and with no deduction,"
Purinton said.
When VA officials rejected the claim, Purinton turned to Rep. Carolyn
Maloney (D-N.Y.) who asked the Defense Department for an explanation. In
November 2004, Air Force Col. Virginia Penrod, director of DoD military
compensation, said DFAS was working with the VA to "rewrite" procedures so
retirees are paid in full. Eighteen months later -- more than three years
after CRSC began -- the process of payment is almost ready, an official
said.
In making his case to DoD and the VA, Purinton said he got help from fellow
retirees, including Army Lt. Col. Jerry Fleming, another victim of Agent
Orange, and Air Force Col. Win Reiter, a founder of VetsPac.com, a lobby
group that helps retirees through the labyrinth of concurrent receipt law.
Fleming, who has led online discussions of the CRSC back-pay issue for
years, said some combat-disabled retirees, sadly, will not live to see the
money. Others, when paid, will have waited nearly four years, he said.
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Larry Scott
(go
back to VA Watchdog dot Org Home Page)
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