Posted on Mar 23, 2016
SSG Senior Maintenance Supervisor
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We hear about how all these Vets are triple dipping, but I don't think people are educated on how hard it actually is to do this, and how very small of a percentage of people can qualify to do this.

You have to meet all of these requirements: Serve over 20 years, receive a 50% or more VA Rating, be deemed unemployable or 100% disabled by the VA, AND qualify for SSI benefits.
Posted in these groups: Retirement logo Retirement
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Responses: 616
PO2 Paul Dempsey
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Less than 1% of American's serve. If you where harmed physically or for that matter pyhchologicaly while serving you deserve compensation and plenty of it. Those who have served stepped up when others didnt. I say what you get is a small price for the 99% who didn't step up to pay. You should be able to live financially secure as payment for your service and it's life long affects. If they think it's not fair let's go to mandatory service for all. Otherwise if you didnt step, shut up.
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FN Douglas Finney
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VA Disability can be seen like a lawsuit settlement- you were injured wrongfully and you have won a lawsuit that states it pays you x dollars per month for your lifetime. SSDI is a benefit paid into by the recipient that is awarded upon proving a disability. Anyone who retires from the Military has EARNED their pension. Anyone that served and collects disability has been through a painstaking process to get rates for a VA disability. These are earned things or contractual obligations that had to be won. This isnt getting over. These are real solutions to real problems that real people put their asses on the line to earn. If you think it isnt earned, then I challenge you to go serve an enlistment and convince me AFTER you are honorably discharged.
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Maybelle Schreible
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After what our servicemen-and-women go through and how little they get paid to go through it, I'm surprised that there are even 11% down-voting this. Good grief. When people are hurt, they're HURT; if disabled, they're DISABLED. Since when did our culture get so heartless that we would accuse hurt and disabled people of scamming the system? Is there anyone out there scamming the system? Probably. Are they in the majority? No way. Let's give people - especially those who have served our country - the benefit of the doubt here, folks. Taking care of our veterans is tax money well spent; in my opinion it's better spent than buying more weapons to start new wars and make another whole generation of disabled veterans!
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CW3 Raymond Mead
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First of all what do you consider "Triple Dipping."? I draw fifty percent service connected disability, fifty one percent in military retirement, and I have lived long enough to collect my Social Security. All of these are earned entitlements. When I retired as a Regular Army Warrant Officer, if I had gone to work for the DOD I would have forfeited a percentage of my retirement pay under the Dual Compensation Act. That was to discourage "Double Dipping" where people came back to work at their old job as GS-11 or higher. I declined paying to work for the Army. Interestingly SGMs were exempt from Dual Compensation, as were all enlisted personnel. And yes they did make more money than they did on active duty, but where is the harm in that? At one time in the early seventies when DOD was reviewing the retirement program, there was discussion of an offset to retirement pay in the amount of Social Security when the service member reached the age to receive it. That was shot down because it money that had been deducted from military pay and any employment after retirement. Also, if we live long enough the chances of our retirement pay increasing to a point where it is more than our active duty pay becomes a possibility. That was the case of some senior NCOs who retired in the Early seventies who had retired before the large increases in retirement pay during those years. A question I have always asked of critics of Double or Triple Dipping is what is the difference if a retiree draws his retirement Military Disability, and works a good job or if he dose the same thing and quits when is old enough for Social Security, or continues to work and draws all three plus his salary? We are allowed to draw all three entitlements and a full paycheck if we waits until we are sixty seven. It is no sin to draw more in retirement than we did on active duty. I receive almost twice what I earned on active duty and it still isn't as much as my active duty contemporaries do today. Isn't that what capitalism is all about?
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PO2 Higinio Casarez
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what people don't understand is these people sacrificed a lot and really are still paying for it. whether its PTSD or loss of limbs, so yeah if they meet the requirements, then go for it.
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CW4 Craig Urban
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I do
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CW4 Craig Urban
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I tripe dip. W4 pension 26 years. OPM 18 years. Social Security. I paid my taxes. The deduct 10 percent of my SSA for medicare and I am not covered overseas.
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Cpl George Goodwin
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Not exactly sure what you mean by triple dipping but here is my opinion. If you received a medical retirement or a regular retirement from the military you should not be eligible for VA compensation. You are already compensated for your injury or time. If you were found to have a service related matter after separation that is what the VA is for. If you need other VA services, go for it.
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SFC Carlos Cruz
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SGM Mikel Dawson, I am very confused why you lost your 40%! The reality is you shut had got more as a veteran & need to appeal your case if you have your medical records. I am at 90% hoping to get my 100% because I am n’t able to work plus three surgery. My point is it make no cents why you lost your case & why are you who work hard didn’t fight for what you earn. Good luck & hope you get back your rating.
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CPL James S.
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Offered IMHO only based on my observations as an Army Brat, active duty member and now as a disabled veteran.

As for triple dipping, which I assume is retirement for the military, civil service and then disability from the VA: none of that is a reward for anything. it is *earned* by service or infirmity due to service and often paid for in blood, sweat and tears.

another observation
In any other job, if the company you work for creates a situation where they are the direct cause of an injury then that company is required, by law, to cover the expenses of your injury treatment. This does not in any way affect the retirement benefit which you pay into and can draw in the future, even if it's with the company. The only effect it may have in the future is your Social Security payout.

Taking that into consideration: why should anyone have to discontinue receiving financial compensation if it's earned?
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