Posted on Nov 25, 2014
LTC(P) Harden Hopper
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Posted in these groups: Retirement logo Retirement
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PO1 Disaster Survivor Assistance Specialist
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Edited >1 y ago
Something to toss into the pot. Many times I have had to deal with National Guard members who had never deployed and thus were not eligible for VA benefits. Just doing the minimum in the Reserves/Guard won't get you anywhere - but then I think we all know that. I think the issue of parity is a gross misnomer. I did both reserves and AD - but not Guard. Training was and probably is still a function of money available - ergo it's possible to have a big year and max out on points in one year and barely make a "good" year the next. However, with parity comes risk and immersion. As MAJ Robert (Bob) Petrarca mentioned with increased rank comes increased focus and "time for the flag" - but there still remains some possibility for a career for the Guard/Reservist as a civilian. On AD, I had two shore commands - which SHOULD have been rather peaceful and uneventful - one out of two ain't bad I guess. In the one shore command I was actually able to be "human"... I had some time off (read: greater than 10 hours a week) and for a short time actually had a part-time job. For the rest of my 23 years - not so much. While onboard ship - the ship was my life. Whether I was underweigh or on the pier getting ready to get underweigh it was a constant sprint. Though while at the pier I will confess to working only 12 hour days (not counting duty days). At sea....meh...18 hour minimum and 20 hours the average day, 7 days a week.

So, do I think the Guard/Reservist that didn't spend 20+ years on AD (or a day for day equivalent) should get paid full benefits and retirement the day they retire? Ahhhhhh.....NO.
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CMSgt Robert Gates
CMSgt Robert Gates
>1 y
I had 12 years Active Duty and transferred to the Reserves where I served another 24 years for a total of 36 years military service. During the Gulf War 70% of my squadron were called to Active Duty. Being in Aircraft Maintenance, many of those called up went down range with their Active Duty counterparts. Could not tell the difference as well as it should be. I retired at age 55 (High Year Tenure). I received on base privileges and that was it. It was not until I turned age 60 that I received my retirement and Tricare benefits. It would seem that those who were called up should receive some retirement benefits. There has been numerous thoughts of reducing down from age 60 to a lower age for retirement based upon time served while being called up. Those plans never made it very far. AFA and AFSA organizations have been at the forefront of these plans. Just some thoughts from someone who served in both arenas.
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MAJ Robert (Bob) Petrarca
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I don't have issue with it and Tricare has been fantastic as a primary health insurance. CW5 (Join to see) we serve 48 drill periods - 4 per month (2 days) or split as needed for training, plus our 2 weeks title 32 active duty as a unit or for individual schools not to mention ADSW - additional title 32 for planning, ADVONs, etc. For me, it was more like 1 weekend & 2 days ADSW a month and 5 weeks AD a year. 75 points is a "good" year for NG and reserves towards retirement and every school and AD day above that gives you more points. A deployment year you could earn you 500+ points which increases your retirement pay. I had 7 years with at least 150 points or more.
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CW5 Desk Officer
CW5 (Join to see)
>1 y
MAJ Robert (Bob) Petrarca, thanks for the clarification. I had no idea that much time was involved. I thought one weekend a month and two weeks a year.
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MAJ Robert (Bob) Petrarca
MAJ Robert (Bob) Petrarca
>1 y
Well like everything else CW5 (Join to see), ads are deceiving. The average Joe does just that, a weekend a month and 2 weeks a year. You get to senior enlisted an O ranks and its almost impossible to do the bare minimum. A lot of "For the Flag" time is also involved. As a M-Day company commander I was in the Armory 2-3 times a week. Then if you get money for MOS/specialty and career schools, you have to do those or lose the money.

In 2005 when we deployed, we did Yama Sakura in Japan in January as our AT. I was on the ADVON so that was 3 weeks. We got alerted for Iraq in February. Another 2 weeks of planning conferences in between April & May, 5 weeks at Grafenwoehr for pre deployment exercise with 5th Corps. This was all before we MOBed to Dix in August then Deployed in OCT. Thank God our civilian jobs are protected by law and that my employer at the time was understanding.
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SSG Peter Ludlum
SSG Peter Ludlum
>1 y
CW5 (Join to see) As a lot of folks do Chief. We had several folks from OIFII get diverted from going home to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. People forget we have state missions and we are the only military force other than the Coast Guard that operates within the boarders of the US.
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LTC Charles T Dalbec
LTC Charles T Dalbec
3 y
Retirement points are limited to 365 points per year!!
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COL Jason Smallfield, PMP, CFM, CM
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In order to proper answer the question of are the retirement systems for active and reserve fair and equitable, I would need to understand both systems which I do not. A sub question is if the retirement systems are fair and equitable within their respective components (active and Guard/Reserve). Some data points.
- About 330 million Americans and about less than 1% of Americans serve in the military.
- Only about 15% of Active Army Soldiers serve until retirement.
- An active Soldier can retire at 20 years with 50% basic pay (not total compensation). Each additional year earns an additional increase of 2.5% (ie 30 years is 75%: 10 years x 2.5% = 25% increase above 50%).
- A LTC who retires at 20 years earns more than a MSG who retires at 20 years due to difference in base pay for each even though each earned 50% retirement.
- Is a 20 year or nothing system fair and equitable for a Soldier who serves 17 years and then is forced out due to reduced force size and not due to any personal misconduct?
- What is the reserve retired system (basic facts)?
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SSG John Erny
SSG John Erny
>1 y
COL Jason Smallfield, PMP, CFM,

Sir, it is based on points, for example my three years of active duty gave me 360 points (yes they round down) For one training day you get two points assuming 12 2 day drills = 48 points. AT is active time so you get 1 point per day 2 weeks = 14 points plus 15 membership points = 77 points. They then total up your points after you retire and run it through a formula.

You can earn extra points through CC courses, funeral honors, or taking part in a guard event say helping the recruiter.

When money is not tight plan on at least two or three six day drills and attending both Schools and AT. It is not hard at all to get over 100 points from days in uniform alone. My high I think was 120 days, that is a third of a year. I had one 3 week AT helping a unit deploy.
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LTC(P) Harden Hopper
LTC(P) Harden Hopper
>1 y
Jason - to shed a little [more] light on it: The traditional reservist/guardsman doesn't draw retired pay until age 60. In addition, that pay is a prorated amount that essentially accounts for the relative time or days a reservist spent on duty compared to an active duty counterpart. This is reflected in an accumulated points system for drills, schools, mobilization to active duty, etc.

A typical example would be a reservist retiring at 40 with 20 years of service. The individual would wait until 60 to draw the check. But, their points might only reflect 10 years of relative active duty time. Therefore, the individual would draw half of what an active service member would draw in monthly retired pay.

That is of course one hypothetical example, and other things factor in, like grade, time in service, etc which affect point values. The relative active duty part makes sense to me, in reflecting a benefit for service, but not the wait for drawing the benefits.
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LCDR Doug Nordman
LCDR Doug Nordman
>1 y
The Reserve/National Guard retirement topic is the most popular post on the blog, and the most misunderstood/underappreciated systems as well. To be fair, it's also one of the most horrifically complicated pension plans you'll ever encounter.

For example SSG Erny, when you transition from active duty to the Reserve/Guard your record is supposed to reflect a point for each day (leap years included). I'm not sure why a one-year mobilization would only give you 360 points instead of 365 (or 366) but when you file for retired awaiting pay then your pension will be calculated by dividing your points into that same 360 number. That's because a military pay year has 12 30-day months, or 360.

More mind-boggling (or mind-numbing) details are at these posts:
http://the-military-guide.com/2012/02/27/calculating-a-reserve-retirement/
http://the-military-guide.com/2014/11/01/comparing-an-e-7-active-duty-pension-to-an-e-7-reserve-pension/ (just updated to 2014 pay tables!)

Over the months since I've written that Reserve retirement post, I've noticed that it gets exceptionally heavy traffic on Sunday evenings. In other words, lots of people start reading it right after everyone gets home from the drill weekend-- is that correlation a coincidence or causality?

And here's more regulations on active-duty pensions:
http://the-military-guide.com/2012/07/05/the-regulation-for-calculating-an-active-duty-pension/

Just in case you're looking for more:
http://the-military-guide.com/2013/08/05/military-reserve-retirement-points-and-good-years/
http://the-military-guide.com/2013/11/07/options-for-national-guard-and-reserve-retirement/
http://the-military-guide.com/2013/09/30/national-guard-and-reserve-retirement-at-the-maximum-pay/
http://the-military-guide.com/2013/09/26/reserve-retirement-eligibility/
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