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Retirement: Retired pay offset

Retirement: Retired pay offset

A 19th-century law required disabled military retirees to forfeit $1 of retired pay for every dollar received in VA disability compensation. In recent years, Congress has enacted two separate but similar programs that enable military retirees to receive both payments, and has been slowly widening their scope and reach. In retiree circles, this issue is known as “concurrent receipt.”Concurrent Retirement and Disability Payments.

This program applies to retirees with at least 20 years of service and disabilities rated 50 percent to 90 percent that are not related to combat service.For these retirees, the offset in their retired pay is gradually being phased out over a 10-year period that began in 2005 and is due to end in 2014. Initially, the 10-year phase-out also applied to retirees with disabilities rated at 100 percent that are not related to combat service.

But Congress amended the law effective Jan. 1, 2005, to give these retirees immediate concurrent receipt of full retired pay and VA disability compensation.Those medically retired with less than 20 years of service for disabilities not related to combat, regardless of the disability rating, and those with ratings of 40 percent or below for disabilities that are service-connected but not related to combat, are still subject to the dollar-for-dollar offset in retired pay.

     

A change in law ordered by the 2008 Defense Authorization Act expands full concurrent receipt to “individual unemployability” retirees with service-connected disabilities. “IU” retirees have formal VA disability ratings of less than 100 percent, but are nevertheless considered fully disabled because their medical conditions prevent them from holding a job.

These retirees will get full concurrent receipt of retired pay and VA disability compensation retroactive to Dec. 31, 2004, and will no longer be subject to the 10-year phase-out of the offset in retired pay. However, Congress included a delayed effective date for this provision; payments will not be made until Oct. 1, 2008.

Payments under the CRDP program are made automatically by the Defense Finance and Accounting Service; retirees do not have to apply.CRDP is taxable.Combat-Related Special Compensation. Under the separate CRSC program, retirees with any VA-rated disabilities, regardless of percentage, that are the result of combat or combat-related training are eligible for a monthly payment that replaces their retirement pay offset and, in effect, gives them full concurrent receipt of both payments.

The CRSC program became effective May 31, 2003. It covers retirees who have disabilities that are the direct result of “armed conflict, hazardous military duty, training exercises that simulate war, or caused by an instrumentality of war.” Such disabilities must be compensated by VA and rated at least 10 percent disabling.

Previously, CRSC had been limited to retirees with qualifying disabilities only if they had at least 20 years of service for retired pay purposes. However, the 2008 Defense Authorization Act expands the program to so-called “Chapter 61” retirees, those medically retired by the military with fewer than 20 years of service. These retirees must still meet the other qualifying criteria, including having disabilities that are the direct result of combat or combatlike training.

Qualifying Chapter 61 retirees are eligible for CRSC, effective Jan. 1, 2008.CRSC payments, which are tax-exempt, are equal to the amount of VA disability compensation offset from retired pay.Applicants must provide adequate, detailed documentation showing that their disabilities are combat-related rather than service-related. Members must apply to their own branch of service.

Retirees who are eligible for both CRDP and CRSC — mainly those whose disability ratings result from a combination of service- and nonservice-connected conditions — are allowed to choose which program to participate in, based on which one will pay them more.

The fact that CRDP is taxable, while CRSC is not, is one consideration.

The Defense Department maintains a Web page with general information on CRDP and CRSC, including contact information for each service, at http://www.defenselink.mil/prhome/mppcrsc.html


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Posted by on Aug 8 2008, With 0 Reads, Filed under Benefits. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
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3 Comments for “Retirement: Retired pay offset”

  1. Cecil Allen Sanders Jr.

    I HAVE RETIRED FROM THE ARMY/ AND GOVERNMENT, UNEMPLOYABLE, AND TO HAVE A $640,00 OFFSET FROM MY RETIREMENT. THIS IS REVENGE FROM A POSTAL INSPECTOR, THEY CONTINUE TO TRY TO DESTROY MY FAMILY, THEY ARE DISGRUNTLED, I HAVE TALKED TO SENATORS, CONGRESSMAN, AND THE THANK YOU FOR SERVING IS LIES, I PUT IN FOR MY VETERANS UNEMPLOYABLE BENEFITS IN 1997, AND EVEN WITH AN ATTORNEY, THESE FOLKS DON’T CARE. ANYWAY I WILL KEEP PRAYING, BUT SOMEONE NEEDS TO KNOW. THANK YOU. OH
    YES, DON’T THANK THE APWU HELPS EITHER. WE GOT PROBLEMS IN THIS GREAT COUNTRY, AND IT IS THE HIGH UPS.

  2. Mike Witherspoon

    To me, after 30 years of service, doing those things required of me that ultimately left me disabled, I feel I am entitled to both the retirement and VA comp, both are earned.

    The offset is only a feel good measure when you consider the VA comp payment is tax exempt but the offset is fully taxable. So I have tax exempt money taken from my retired pay only to get it back fully taxed. Something seems really wrong here, The added taxable income has raised my tax rate two years in a row. I live off of this income as some of my problems keep me from regular employment.

    Perhaps some one can explain this.

  3. I have a 40% disability rating from the VA and have 5 of the findings rated 0%. I have heard that the VA, by law, can only rate 3 findings 0%. How can I get those other 2 findings rerated?

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