Veterans Compensation Benefits Rate Tables

Now if the actuaries were to project these costs out for the next 50 years, the length of time a young disabled soldier will live from this day forward, we may then get a grasp on the real cost of war.

 
Veterans Compensation Benefits Rate Tables – Effective 12/1/11
Basic Rates – 10%-100% Combined Degree Only

Rates (No Dependents): 10% – 20%
Without Children
With Children
30% – 60% 30% – 60%
70% – 100% 70% – 100%
To find out how to use these rate tables CLICK HERE
________________________________

10% – 20% (No Dependents)
Percentage
Rate
10% $127
20% $251

30% – 60% Without Children
Dependent Status
30%
40%
50%
60%
Veteran Alone $389 $560 $797 $1009
Veteran with Spouse Only $435 $622 $874 $1102
Veteran with Spouse & One Parent $472 $671 $936 $1176
Veteran with Spouse and Two Parents $509 $720 $998 $1250
Veteran with One Parent $426 $609 $859 $1083
Veteran with Two Parents $463 $658 $921 $1157
Additional for A/A spouse (see footnote b) $42 $56 $71 $84

70% – 100% Without Children
Dependent Status
70%
80%
90%
100%
Veteran Alone $1,272 $1,478 $1,661 $2,769
Veteran with Spouse Only $1,380 $1,602 $1,800 $2,924
Veteran with Spouse & One Parent $1,466 $1,701 $1,911 $3,048
Veteran with Spouse and Two Parents $1,552 $1,800 $2,022 $3,172
Veteran with One Parent $1,358 $1,577 $1,772 $2,893
Veteran with Two Parents $1,444 $1,676 $1,883 $3,017
Additional for A/A spouse (see footnote b) $99 $112 $127 $141

30% – 60% With Children
Dependent Status
30%
40%
50%
60%
Veteran with Spouse & Child $469 $667 $931 $1169
Veteran with Child Only $420 $601 $849 $1071
Veteran with Spouse, One Parent and Child $506 $716 $993 $1243
Veteran with Spouse, Two Parents and Child $543 $765 $1055 $1,317
Veteran with One Parent and Child $457 $650 $911 $1145
Veteran with Two Parents and Child $494 $699 $973 $1219
Add for Each Additional Child Under Age 18 $23 $30 $38 $46
Each Additional Schoolchild Over Age 18 (see footnote a) $74 $99 $124 $148
Additional for A/A spouse (see footnote b) $42 $56 $71 $84

70% – 100% With Children
Dependent Status
70%
80%
90%
100%
Veteran with Spouse & Child $1,459 $1,692 $1,902 $3,037
Veteran with Child Only $1,344 $1,561 $1,754 $2,873
Veteran with Spouse, One Parent and Child $1,545 $1,791 $2,013 $3,161
Veteran with Spouse, Two Parents and Child $1,631 $1,890 $2,124 $3,285
Veteran with One Parent and Child $1,430 $1,660 $1,865 $2,997
Veteran with Two Parents and Child $1,516 $1,759 $1,976 $3,121
Add for Each Additional Child Under Age 18 $53 $61 $69 $77
Each Additional Schoolchild Over Age 18 (see footnote a) $173 $198 $223 $248
Additional for A/A spouse (see footnote b) $99 $112 $127 $141

FOOTNOTES:
1. Rates for each school child are shown separately. They are not included with
any other compensation rates. All other entries on this chart reflecting a rate
for children show the rate payable for children under 18 or helpless. To find
the amount payable to a 70% disabled veteran with a spouse and four children,
one of whom is over 18 and attending school, take the 70% rate for a veteran
with a spouse and 3 children, $ 1,565, and add the rate for one school child,
$173. The total amount payable is $1,738.

2. Where the veteran has a spouse who is determined to require A/A, add the
figure shown as “additional for A/A spouse” to the amount shown for the proper
dependency code. For example, veteran has A/A spouse and 2 minor children and is
70% disabled. Add $99, additional for A/A spouse, to the rate for a 70% veteran
with dependency code 12, $1,512. The total amount payable is $ 1,611.

To find out how to use these rate tables CLICK HERE.
For prior rate tables on this topic choose
one:  12-1-2009  12-1-2008  12-1-2007  12-1-2006  12-1-2005  12-1-2004
12-1-2003  12-1-2002  12-1-2001  12-1-2000  12-1-1999.
If you do not have Microsoft Word software installed, you may download free
viewer and reader software to view the document cited below.
For additional historic rate charts on this topic CLICK HERE.

God Bless
Jose M. Garcia PNC
National Service Officer
Catholic War Veterans,USA
josegarcia4@sbcglobal.net
Better to understand a little than to misunderstand a lot.
In God We Trust

Veterans Day At The Merritt Center

The Merritt Center Veterans Program
 

Open House for Supporters of

Vets Returning from Combat

 

A chance to visit with returning veterans and those

who have supported the Merritt Center’s training

for integration and civilian reentry with donations

At The Merritt Lodge in Payson, AZ

Veterans Day, Nov. 11, 2013 10am-4pm

 

Send email to RSVP with number of friends and family attending.

www.merrittcenter.org

 

 

The Merritt Center, a 501C3 organization, offers a free 4-weekend

educational program to returning combat vets. Stop in to hear the

stories of these veterans and those who have financially supported the

Program that allowed them to return “all the way home”. Tour the Lodge,

enjoy refreshments and listen to the musicians who have supported this

Veterans Program from the beginning in 2005. Talk with the Vet Mentors

who, after graduating from the Program return to give something back to

those just entering the Program. We are grateful for every donation to

keep this Program available to more and more vets.

The Merritt Center Veteran Program – Basic Training for Life

For more information or application:

www.merrittcenter.org

800.414.9880 – 928.474.4268

Why Not Debate Military Suicides?

The exponential increase in the rate of military and veteran suicides in the past year is not a  sideshow to our war on terrorism, it is a war of its own, a war against a terrorized psyche.

Approximately 7000 veterans and active duty military service members have cashed in their mortal lives in the past couple years. For each combatant killed in action 25 are dying by suicide.

“The dog barks and the caravan passes.”

In a new-found healthy and supportive environment of, “support the troops,” contrary to the Vietnam war where the suicides were off the charts, (111,000 est.), the dominant culture has not yet penetrated the impact of 4-5 tours of duty for these young warriors. Neither have the clinical mental health professionals. They may understand the symptoms,but few have discerned the full impact of multiple deployments.

“Understanding is the booby prize.” Werner Erhard

Tons of veterans have shared with me how well clinicians understand what many veterans of combat call the “checklist PTSD” therapy. They have a good fund of knowledge about the litany of symptoms, but often lack the bonding ability to lead them out of the nightmarish morass of somatic hell.  I do not fault them. They cannot be expected to go to the depths of existential pain that is the burden of many returning veterans. Only their comrades can go there.

A former Army combat platoon leader in Vietnam, Bill Black, observes, “this lack of bonding moves the veteran into isolation and knowing that no one is touching his/her environment, they just stop listening.”

Lydia Brewer, who assists in managing a website, (LivingWithPTSDwives.yuku.com), for the wives of veterans for the past 11 years, indicates , “they know the problems they have right up front, because of the screening process and all the outreach programs.”  She states, “that has a paradoxical component in that unlike you guys who had a healthy dose of repression and denial, but still maintained some hope for your future, these young soldiers are told upon mustering out that they are damaged goods  which may well interfere with some natural hope for the future.”

“One who reaps the wind, sows the storm.” With upwards of 50,000 troops rotating to polite society in the next two years, we have yet to see the eye of the storm, in all its manifestations of adaptive behavior and all too frequent career ending self destructive habits.

Again Bill Black asserts, “the national discussion of employment, the economy and abortion relegate veteran suicides to a side show.”  With fewer that 1% of the nation serving in the Armed Forces, the lowest since WWI this topic of suicide makes headlines and dies there for lack of resonation in the community.

These veterans are returning to a nation in angst and a house divided. A well trained soldier is skilled, not just in the art of warfare, but in the unseen talent of absorbing the dangers of their entire milieu, both physical and mental.  It is  a survival trait.

One may assert that the collective mental apparatus of one nation under God, has gone askew. Short of autocratic rule few see this pugilistic mindset that permeates the land coming into a state of equilibrium in the near future.

The soldier is but the new canary in the mine shaft–first to feel, first to manifest the symptoms of a democracy at risk. A sovereignty that has sold its soul to global and corporate interests, with us as the cops.  A Republic yes, but a divisive populace that mimics the very fragmented nation states that they were fighting to stabilize.

In many respects the polarity experienced from the day they kiss American soil, mirrors the chaos of the enemies turf. Separating these worlds is a daunting task for any sentient being. We owe them more mature governing, and much more truth.

Electing to serve your nation in the Armed Forces is not just a job, it is the adoption of an identity, a replacement of the self for a mission that embodies the assumed unified cause of your mother country. That unified mission, upon return to civilian or state side duty is vacant in our nations leaders. We are subsumed with greed and self serving motives, leaving the submerged identity of the sailor, soldier, Marine with few causes to adopt. So they isolate in an uncanny way just like the veterans of Vietnam.

They begin their daily lives to the cacophony of waring political parties and their assigns, knowing full well that this drama of fools and court jesters is playing to an Al Jezzera audience every day and assisting in the recruiting of more insurgents. We owe them more maturity.

The transitioning veteran is  queried incessantly by the red and blue state mavens, many wanting to use them for political gain. They isolate.

“We have met the enemy and the enemy is us.”  Military suicides beg for a national debate, the nature of which a repressed  populace in disconnect about the nature of war is ill prepared. I suggest we prepare before entering the next war, or we will have a social fabric so frayed that it will take decades to heal.

It is this writers belief that the death instinct is a primary inherent form of aggression that we are born with…a desire to unbind all connections and return to a null peaceful state where one can begin anew. The multiple tour veteran has little opportunity to renew–ergo, the internalized aggression. Ironically the canary is mirroring our nations aggression turned inward.

Why is this not worthy of a national debate?

“Boys with a normal viewpoint were taken from the fields and offices and factories and classrooms and put into the ranks. They were remolded; and they were made over; they were made to ‘about face’, to regard murder as the order of the day. They were put shoulder to shoulder, and through mass psychology and they were entirely changed. We used them for a couple of years and trained them to think nothing at all of killing or of being killed. Then suddenly we discharged them and told them to make another ‘about face. This time they had to do their own readjusting without mass psychology, without officers aid and advice, without nation wide propaganda. We didn’t need them any more so we scattered them without speeches or parades. Many, too many of these fine young boys are eventually destroyed, mentally, because they would not make that final, ‘about face’ alone.”   This was written by Smedley D. Butler, Major General United States Marine Corps. Two -time Congressional Medal of Honor recipient. He was referencing soldiers in World War l ! The, “war to end all wars.”

Ignoring this national epidemic is form of suicide.

 

Continuation of Agent Orange Saga

This ongoing struggle for full reconciliation and justice by retired Major Carter, does indeed seem to have merit. Until informed to the contrary by readers and/or other officials, I will continue to put this forth to cyberspace for the test of truth.  Having been affected by Agent Orange myself, and knowing how long this battle has lingered for many, I am a bit sympathetic to the cause. Feel free dear readers to correct or refute Major Carter’s claims.

Today, an informed, expert opinion was published from yet another eminent scientist with an international reputation in Agent Orange issues. Dr. Dwernychuk firmly endorsed the opinions of Drs. Sinks, Berman, Goeppner and Stellman. These experts together have weighed in against the VA’s dismissal of C-123 aircrew exposure concerns, insisting that the airplanes left us exposed to dioxin. Along with the American Legion and the Vietnam Veterans of America, these scientists are our A Team as we approach the VA.

Strategy: our approach has many facets. First, we are trying to get the first of our veteran’s claims approved, and then use it to help justify subsequent applications and appeals. Second, we seek the leadership from American Legion and Vietnam Veterans of America in arranging a sit-down with Secretary Shinseki to ask him to use his authority to do what’s right…designate C-123 veterans to be presumptively exposed to Agent Orange. Chipping in here will be the Third Estate…Tom Philpott and others. Finally, because and new legislation could only come about long after we’re pushing up daisies, we need our legislators, the public and other veterans to help us advance claims by precedent-establishing court rulings (that means a three-judge BVA decision rather than single judge.)

The VA opinion Dr. Wayne Dwernychuk discusses is my own (attached)! On September 25 my own application for Agent Orange exposure benefits was turned down by the VA’s director of Compensation Services, Mr. Tom Murphy himself. That gentleman has maintained since our struggle began that C-123 veterans will not receive Agent Orange benefits…and he’s showing how determined he and the VA are to prevent our access to medical care.

Our veterans’ effort will continue to present scientific experts who oppose the VA’s position, written by Dr. T. Irons who started working for the VA last year after receiving a PhD…putting a background in fish toxicology to good use helping the VA deny C-123 veterans our Agent Orange benefits.

Cheers!
Wes Carter, Chair, C-123 Veterans Association
Mission Statement:VA Recognition ofAgent Orange Exposure by C-123 Veterans
Email: rustysilverwings@gmail.com
Web:  C123KCANCER.BLOGSPOT.COM
wwww.c123cancer.org

Arizona Department Of Veteran Services Update

http://www.vvaarizona.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/clip_image001.jpg

To ensure that the Arizona veteran community is kept “up to date” on what is happening with the Arizona Department of Veterans’ Services, we are inaugurating this monthly update that we will send out to our veteran email list.

Please forward and share with any interested veterans.

MILITARY FAMILY RELIEF FUND

  • So far in 2012, the Fund has awarded more than $463,000 to 144 military families in financial need. Total amount of assistance awarded in Calendar Year 2012 has now exceeded that awarded in CY 2011. Based on current trends, we project the Fund will award $650,000 in CY 2012.
  • Total awards since Fund established in 2008 exceeds $1.2 million.

VETERAN DONATION FUND

  • So far this year, we have awarded $33,000 in grants under five-thousand dollars from our Veteran Donation Fund.
  • This money went to organization such as the American Legion, the Military Order of the Purple Heart, to help out with the Mesa Veterans Day parade and other organizations designed to benefit Arizona veterans.
  • We have just announced another Veteran Donation Fund grant cycle for requests for grants of five-thousand dollars and more.

· All Requests for Grant Proposals of five-thousand dollars or more must be submitted through the State of Arizona’s procurement system at www.procure.az.gov

· Your organization must first register in ProcureAZ before you can submit your grant request. For information contact Katherine Harding at (602) 234-8415, or e-mail LGgrants@azdvs.gov or 1-800-367-8939 (TDD).

ARIZONA STATE VETERAN HOME-TUCSON

  • Have opened a second of the four 30-bed resident wings and continue to bring in veterans and staff. Current census is 41 veteran/residents.
  • Anticipate opening a third resident wing in early December.
  • Plans are to build a fence between the Home and the VA Medical Center. This project is being funded with the $431,000 Federal dollars remaining in the project. The fence will help with traffic control from the VA Medical Center.
  • Local Veteran Service Organizations are using the home’s conference room for monthly meetings.

ARIZONA STATE VETERAN HOME-PHOENIX

  • Phoenix Home has made two-million dollars worth of improvements and renovations in the past five years and the Phoenix home is in an outstanding condition.
  • Next major project will be to provide covered parking at the Phoenix Veteran Home.

STATE VETERAN CEMETERY-SIERRA VISTA

  • Construction on some upgrades began on Tuesday, 18 September at our cemetery in Sierra Vista.
  • We are adding an additional four columbarium walls for an additional 2600 niche sites for cremation interments.
  • We are receiving an additional $50,000 in federal VA grants to repair and enhance curbing and irrigation lines.
  • All additions and enhancements will cost approximately $1,700,000. The Department is responsible for coming up with 10% which will be reimbursed to us by the feds on completion.

CAMP NAVAJO PROJECT

  • We have received notification from the Federal V-A that they will fund the construction of a second State veteran cemetery on the 60 acres of land being turned over to us by DEMA and the Army on Camp Navajo west of Flagstaff.
  • Transfer of the 60 acres still pending action by the U.S. Corps of Engineers but they promise it will be done soon.

VETERAN FRIENDLY CAMPUSES

  • In the last legislative session, the Arizona Legislature passed a bill that requires the Department to spearhead a program to develop and track Veteran Friendly Campuses at our three major universities and the many community colleges spread around the state.
  • We continue to move forward on this operation. The three State universities have created some great veterans centers since we have been involved in this plan.
  • Some of the community colleges, Pima Community College, Glendale, Scottsdale, Gateway have all made great strides in becoming “veteran friendly”.
  • I am appointing Travis Schulte, who currently administers the Military Family Relief Fund and works on our homeless veterans program to spearhead and be the point of contact for our Veterans Friendly Campuses program.

VETERANS OUTREACH

  • On 10 October, the Director is met with the Director of the V-A Medical Center in Phoenix to discuss issues that affect our Valley veterans. It was a good, productive meeting.
  • On 13 October, the Director, the deputy director and Mike Klier are going up to Prescott to meet with the new director of the V-A Medical Center there, Donna Jacobs to talk about concerns of veterans in Northern Arizona, including concerns about a new veterans clinic in the Kingman area.
  • Last month, the Director had a very productive meeting with Director John Gardner of the Tucson V-A Medical Center.
  • The Department continues to support the Wounded Warrior Program which in turn is supporting various programs for our wounded warriors who have returned home.
  • The Director, Deputy Director Barnes, and PIO/Legislative Liaison Dave Hampton participated in the POW/MIA Observances at the State Capitol with the Governor. The event was hosted by the Patriot Guard Riders.

As you can tell, we have a lot going on at the Arizona Department of Veterans Services. We look forward to our continued good relationship with our many partner veterans’ service organizations and with the Unified Arizona Veterans, the United Veterans Council in Southern Arizona, and the Arizona Veterans Hall of Fame in our continuing effort to complete our one big mission: Supporting Arizona’s Veterans.

Joey Strickland

Director

Arizona Department of Veterans’ Services

“Arizona Proud”

Open House For Supporters Of Veterans Returning From Combat

Many of the graduates of this program are from Tucson. I am fortunate to be one and to have served as a Mentor. Please keep these remarkable healing folks in your charitable giving file.

 

 

Open House for Supporters of
Vets Returning from Combat
A chance to visit with returning veterans and those
who have supported the Merritt Center’s training
for integration and civilian reentry with donations
At The Merritt Lodge in Payson, AZ
Veterans Day, Nov. 11, 2013 10am-4pm
Call 928-474-4268 information
www.merrittcenter.org
The Merritt Center, a 501C3 organization, offers a free 4-weekend
educational program to returning combat vets. Stop in to hear the
stories of these veterans and those who have financially supported the
Program that allowed them to return “all the way home”. Tour the Lodge,
enjoy refreshments and listen to the musicians who have supported this
Veterans Program from the beginning in 2005. Talk with the Vet Mentors
who, after graduating from the Program return to give something back to
those just entering the Program. We are grateful for every donation to
keep this Program available to more and more vets.