[RETVET-INFO] Lawmakers promise review of military pension cuts

  • From: RETVET-INFO@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • To: <RetVet-Info@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 13 Dec 2013 19:00:40 -0600

WASHINGTON - One of the biggest sources of veterans' disappointment in the
breakthrough budget deal passed by the House on Thursday night may soon get a
fresh, second look - a trim in military pensions.

 

Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin, D-Mich., said Friday he
shares the concerns raised this week by veterans' advocacy groups about the one
percent cut in annual cost-of-living increases for non-disabled veterans under
62 years old, and will use his committee to review it after the holiday recess.

 

The COLA cut generated $7 billion towards the budget deal that is expected to
pass the Senate next week, but it infuriated veterans groups. Since the House
adjourned Friday for the rest of the year, the bill cannot be amended, so the
change is all but certain to go into law.

 

The Military Officers Association of America has estimated it will cost a
retiring Army Sergeant first class about $3,700 a year and a typical retired
officer more than $124,000 over 20 years. And in a letter to Congress and the
White House on Wednesday, members of the Military Coalition - 33 veterans and
military advocacy organizations - called the proposal "an egregious breach of
faith."

 

The Veterans of Foreign Wars was even more blunt, issuing a statement this week
that said the proposal "should be buried."

 

Levin's Friday statement reminded the public that the change won't take effect
until December 2015, and that his committee will review the issue after it
reconvenes in January, long before the change takes effect. He also noted that a
review of the military retirement and compensation system is underway by an
independent panel.

 

Speaking to Stars and Stripes, Levin said the COLA cut could be reversed and
fixed retroactively.

 

"I don't know anyone who's happy about (the deal)," Levin told Stars and
Stripes. "We're going to review it. We're going to look at the whole benefits
issue for veterans . I can't obviously make a commitment, but I am committed to
reviewing this and looking at the impacts."

 

Levin's counterpart, House Armed Services Chairman Buck McKeon, R-Calif., has
also expressed concern about the cut in pension pay. Noting the independent
panel's current study of possible reforms, he called for the panel to avoid
incremental changes such as the COLA change because they "generate uncertainty
and are corrosive to the all-volunteer military."

 

"If we are going to change compensation, I would prefer it to be done at one
time in a transparent manner that considers the entire spectrum of compensation.
By impacting the pensions of current military retirees while grandfathering
current civilian employees, this particular provision represents an imbalance,"
McKeon said.

 

Sen. John McCain of Arizona, a senior Republican member of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, called complaints about the pension cut "very legitimate"
Friday. But since far-right Republicans in the House were prepared to shut down
the government again, he said the change was a forced choice.

 

"Shutting down the government would be terribly harmful as well. Because of this
process we're in, we're faced with hot-seat choices," McCain said. "The whole
atmosphere here is totally poisoned. There's no cooperation, there's no comity,
and it can't get much worse."

 

rushing.jt@xxxxxxxxxxx 

Twitter: @Jtr1

 

 

-------

SOURCE:  Stars and Stripes article at
http://www.stripes.com/news/us/lawmakers-promise-review-of-military-pension-cuts
-1.257493

 

 

 

Other related posts:

  • » [RETVET-INFO] Lawmakers promise review of military pension cuts - RETVET-INFO