Legislation Summary
- Qualify 53,304 military retirees with combat-related injuries to concurrently receive both military retired pay and Veterans Affairs (VA) compensation.
- Provide total offset relief for veterans who suffered combat injuries or illnesses who were medically retired with less than twenty years of service.
Issue Background
- For more than 100 years prior to 1999, all disabled military retirees were required to fund their own veterans' disability compensation by forfeiting one dollar of earned retired pay for each dollar received in veterans' disability compensation.
- However, in 2003, due to the persistent advocacy efforts over the years by the NCOA and our Coalition partners, military retirees with a service-connected disability of at least 50% have been able to concurrently receive all of their military retirement pay and VA disability compensation without any offset.
- Unfortunately, those with disabilities rated below 50% still lose one retirement dollar for each compensation dollar received from the VA. Additionally, if a service member's career prematurely concludes due to a medical condition that forces a mandatory early retirement, the service member is also subjugated to a dollar-for-dollar reduction in their military retired pay.
- Over the past several years, members of both houses of Congress have introduced legislation calling for full CRDP, only to see their legislation dropped before inclusion in the annual defense bill.
NCOA’s Position: SUPPORT
- Military retirement pay earned by service and sacrifice should not be reduced, under any circumstance, simply because a military retiree is also eligible for veterans' disability compensation awarded for a service-connected disability.
- We are asking Senators to Co-Sponsor S.Amdt.2360. An amendment to the FY25 NDAA to include the Major Richard Star Act.
Questions?
If you have any questions about this legislation, please reach out to the NCOA's Military & Government team at LSadr@NCOAUSA.org.