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Concurrent Receipt Stripped
At the last minute before passage, Congress
stripped a breakthrough concurrent receipt
provision from the legislation extending
unemployment compensation benefits. .
Career Spouses Barred from Education Program
MOAA will seek congressional help to push
the Pentagon to reopen the popular My Career
Advancement Accounts to spouses of career
officers and enlisted members.
New Tack on TRICARE 26
MOAA and The Military Coalition are pushing
to change a provision in the Defense
Authorization Act to continue TRICARE
coverage for eligible children until age 26,
without any premium penalty.
MOAA Voices Concerns to Senate Leaders
VADM Norb Ryan asked top legislators to
protect against taking troops' and families'
longstanding sacrifices for granted in
considering likely deficit commission
proposals for benefit cutbacks.

Concurrent Receipt Stripped
MOAA was encouraged about prospects for
near-term concurrent receipt progress when
this week's arrival of newly-appointed Sen.
Carte Goodwin (D-WV) provided the 60 votes
needed for Senate passage of H.R. 4213, the
American Jobs and Closing Tax Loopholes Act
of 2010.
Already passed by the House, the legislation
included President Obama's proposal to
phase-out the disability offset to military
retired pay for severely disabled medical
retirees.
But last-minute negotiations to nail down
the necessary votes led to removal of all
provisions - including the concurrent
receipt fix - other than the extension of
federal unemployment benefits through
November 30.
The concurrent receipt language would have
phased out the offset for all Chapter 61
(medical) retirees, regardless of years of
service, whether the disability was
combat-related or not.
H.R. 4213 provided a golden opportunity for
further concurrent receipt progress, and its
removal on the eve of passage is yet another
bitter disappointment on the road to winning
fair treatment for all disabled retirees.
But it still doesn't rule out progress this
year.
MOAA is working with Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid (D-NV), the long-standing
concurrent receipt champion, to introduce
the same provision as an amendment to the
2011 defense authorization bill, which the
Senate is expected to take up in September.
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Career Spouses Barred from Education
Program
MOAA strongly disagrees with the Pentagon's
July 20 decision to severely limit military
spouses' eligibility for the wildly popular
My Career Advancement Account (MyCAA)
program.
Last year, the new program was offered to
all military spouses, authorizing up to
$6,000 for servicemembers' spouses to enroll
in a wide variety of educational, licensing,
and credentialing programs to help offset
employment disruptions caused by
military-ordered moves.
Caught by surprise when more than 130,000
spouses applied, and fearing the program
would run out of money, the Pentagon
abruptly suspended it without any advance
warning in February.
Following an uproar from outraged spouses,
the program was reopened on March 13 to
already-enrolled spouses, pending further
Pentagon review of the program's fate.
At that time, MOAA strongly urged defense
leaders not to disenfranchise spouses of
career members - those who suffer most
because of multiple military moves.
Unfortunately, that advice went unheeded.
Under the new rules that will take effect
October 25, 2010, only the most junior
servicemembers' spouses will be eligible
(E-1 through E-5 in the enlisted grades,
warrant officers in grades W-1 and W-2, and
officers in grades O-1 and O-2).
In addition, the program will be restricted
to covering licensure and credentialing
programs and courses leading to an
associate's degree. Reimbursements will be
limited to $2,000 a year, with total
payments not to exceed $4,000 per eligible
spouse.
MOAA believes strongly that restricting
eligibility to spouses of first-term
personnel - many of whom won't stay for
military careers - misses the whole point.
Covering courses leading to associate's
degrees, but not bachelor's or master's
degrees that are essential for nursing,
teaching, and other portable careers seems
equally incongruous.
"When the program first kicked off last
year, spouses were excited and grateful that
the Defense Department was finally
acknowledging it had some obligation to help
them ease their own personal sacrifices,"
said MOAA Government Relations Director Col
Steve Strobridge (USAF-Ret). "That's why
they were so angry when the program was
suspended in February, because they saw it
as backtracking on the only funded career
program they ever had."
"The program restart in March offered a new
ray of hope, but this new restriction yanks
the rug out from under career spouses yet
again," Strobridge said.
"MOAA believes longer-serving spouses
deserve fairer treatment, and we'll be
asking Congress to help them get it."
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New Tack on TRICARE 26
National health care reform legislation
authorized children to be covered under
their parent's healthcare plan up until age
26.
In order to bring TRICARE into compliance
with this new policy both the House and
Senate included provisions in their versions
of the FY2011 National Defense Authorization
Act to allow dependent children to remain in
TRICARE until age 26 (nicknamed "TRICARE
26"). These provisions would require parents
to pay additional premiums for their
children’s coverage to be set by the
Pentagon.
At the time the logic was, "if gray area
reserve retirees will need to pay a full
premium, aged-out dependents probably should
too. Why give a small group of dependents
who happen to be aging out this particular
year a special premium break that won’t be
allowed for them next year or for other
similar dependents aging out in future
years?"
Our assumption at the time was that civilian
insurance plans implementing the new
requirements for coverage of children until
age 26 would also require a special additive
premium for that coverage.
But that's proving not to be the case. Many
civilian plans are implementing the extended
coverage already without charging any extra
premium, and FEHBP is doing the same for
children of federal civilians (i.e., if they
already have family coverage, there won’t be
any extra charge to add the extra
dependent(s).
To us, that changes the scenario. Military
parents under the new law shouldn't get
socked with extra premiums if civilian
parents aren't.
For this reason we're working closely with
legislators on an amendment to the defense
authorization act for a permanent law change
to allow the dependent children of currently
serving and retired servicemembers to
continue on TRICARE coverage until age 26
without an additional premium.
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MOAA Voices Concerns to Senate
Leaders
On July 21, Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid (D-NV) and 21 other Democratic
senators, including the Armed Services and
Veterans Affairs Committee Chairmen, invited
MOAA President VADM Norb Ryan and other
association leaders to discuss military and
veterans' legislative issues.
Key topics of discussion were the need for
aggressive measures to help wounded warriors
get disability claims resolved promptly and
fairly and help returning vets find
employment.
Noting that the unemployment rate for new
veterans is over 12%, Sen. Amy Klobuchar
(D-MN) asserted, "Our vets were first in
line to sign up when we needed them in
wartime, and they shouldn't be waiting in
line when they return and are looking for a
job."
Attendees expressed support for Sen. Max
Baucus's (D-MT) and Sen. Patty Murray's
(D-WA) veterans jobs bill and Sen. Daniel
Akaka's (D-HI) initiatives to improve
Post-9/11 GI Bill coverage, caregiver
protections, and claims improvements.
There was a consensus that the disability
claims system needs a fundamental overhaul,
in close consultation with stakeholder
veterans' associations. In addition,
attendees urged Hill and Administration
leaders to more actively invest in veterans'
employment. "We spend lots of money on
recruiting and training and the GI Bill,"
said VFW Executive Director Bob Wallace,
"but we spend zero on marketing veterans'
skills to employers."
Admiral Ryan expressed MOAA's disappointment
that President Obama's concurrent receipt
proposal was removed from the unemployment
compensation extender bill at the last
moment before Senate passage. He urged the
senators to include it in the defense
authorization act and make sure that
important legislation is given priority in
this wartime environment.
Ryan also expressed concern that many in
government have become desensitized over
time to our troops' and families' terrible
and continuing sacrifices, and the need to
guard against any insensitive proposals by
the upcoming deficit commission for deep
cuts in military and VA benefit programs.
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