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Why is it when you are a surviving spouce you do not get your benefits you deserve from the military?

2007-01-18 10:23:37 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Military

12 answers

Trust me the "system" is flawed.

The only advise is to see such as a "National service Officer" from the Disabled American Veterans, DAV. Office at most state VA centers not the local chaper but they can direct you.

It is all up to the "Laws" that cover your situation. I could type for an hour and not cover the issues.

If he died "active duty" that allows greater benefits, if he died with a certain VA disability rating that helps as well, if he was a veteran with no disability then there are few options, not many.

You are in a "big boat" with many widows, and it does not reflect well on the veteran: your husband.

The VA controls most of the programs, hense the DAV advise.

I worked for the folks a long time ago, as a psychologist, not a lot of fun, I had the "widows & orphans" for Chapeter 31 education section.

My favorite story is a widow (I know two) of Medal of Honor recipients: one gets a meger pension called "DIC", an ID card and a few medical benefits that well help if you are over 65 on medicare but not great for the "real world", the other is a serviced connected MOH widow; she gets DIC and a bit more:

Neither get a cent of the MOH check their husband's recieved every month, sucks as they depended on that money before the veterans death. The VA can well mess with all, they follow the "laws" our great congress enacts.

There are a few "widows" groups but most are such as "Gold Star" spouses, etc.

Laws and policies do change: keep informed and good luck.

2007-01-18 10:37:54 · answer #1 · answered by cruisingyeti 5 · 0 0

Widows do get benefits. They get to keep their ID card and all the associated benefits (health insurance, PX/commissary privileges, etc) unless they re-marry. Surviving dependants are also eligible for the service member's GI Bill and VA home loan benefits (unless, again, they re-marry). In addition to all of that, they receive life insurance, final pay, death gratuities, and other benefits related to the death of their spouse.

I have never known a surviving spouse to not get the benefits the military offers. They are usually pretty good about taking care of the family that is left behind. I would imagine there is a big difference, though, when you are considering a single servicemember. The parents or other beneficiary do not get all the benefits that a spouse or minor child would get.

2007-01-18 11:12:43 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

there isn't something talked approximately as Wahabi madhahab or college this could be a bypass to reform it is better if human beings keep on with putting forward Muslims and seek for for what the prophet did and reported in common of the Quran and shown by using technique of the Sahaba of the 1st technologies. Shafi, Malik, Hanbal, and Hanifa used to declare we could opt to be incorrect or appropriate and what we are asserting or all and sundry else must be rejected, distinctive than what the Prophet is shown to have reported. Misyar and Urfi marriages are criminal in the event that they fulfill the marriage situations. Consent of the Woamn, presence of a Wali and a couple of witnesses and has no unlawful difficulty in Misyar if a female waves her appropriate for financial help or she accepts no sexual relationship it fairly is her prerogative, those are actually not any greater unlawful situations what's a controversy with Misyar is how secretive it fairly is by using actuality it ought to opt to alter into Makrooh or Haram. Urfi is a classic marriage distinctive than it is not registered indoors the courtroom docket as registration is new civil difficulty to guard the girls, regardless of the reality that it would not make the marriage unlawful. the situation with Urfi is how secretive it is and the information of the Wali (as in Egypt bing Hanafi they don't rigidity that difficulty and it is being abused by using technique of youthful green women) yet Muta'a has the main significant Haram difficulty and that's ending actuality (marrying for one month for faster or later even for few hours --- criminal prostitution --- it is not suited)

2016-10-31 11:30:17 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Yes they still get their military benefits.. They get SGLI, the kids get college money, they get social security, commissary and medical. The kids maintain ID cards until they are 18 unless they are full time students and then they keep them until they are 23. The spouse maintains her ID card until she remarries, once that happens she loses her Military benefits.

2007-01-18 13:45:16 · answer #4 · answered by mpwife_99 3 · 0 0

Simple - the spouse is not entitled to any benefits once the service member passes away. The military recognizes the service member as the one who "deserves" benefits, not the spouse. It wasn't the spouse who was in the service.

The benefits are actually awarded to the military member, and the spouse is entitled to them as long as he/she remains married to the military member and as long as that military member remains among the land of the living. The harsh reality of it all is that the spouse didn't do anything to earn the benefits - the military member did. When the military member is gone, so are the bennies.

2007-01-18 10:32:28 · answer #5 · answered by Team Chief 5 · 0 2

Can you give a little more information as to what benefits you aren't getting that you feel you should be getting?

2007-01-18 10:29:20 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Beyond SGLI, final pay and allowances, and ID cards (don't know the length of time the widow and kids keep them, tho)...what else is there?

2007-01-18 10:28:16 · answer #7 · answered by BDZot 6 · 0 0

You do. You just have to know how to ask for them. They assume if you do not claim them that you do not need them. Same with a veteran claiming disability. until they do so, the government considers them to be without complaint. Ever hear the proverb, "The squeeky wheel gets the grease?"

2007-01-18 10:29:43 · answer #8 · answered by sjsosullivan 5 · 1 1

I have never known a widow who did not get their benefit.
I assume you are thinking rather than studying the facts.

2007-01-18 10:27:00 · answer #9 · answered by Wolfpacker 6 · 1 0

If your husband died in active service you have benefits you should get. See your local vets organisation or your lawyer.

2007-01-18 10:31:42 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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