This is a trickey one for sure, as a retired USAF Non - Commissioned Officer,(An NCOIC of LUKE AFB Ground Saftey Progam back in the early 90's) i found there was a proceedure for determining if they will pay. a) Service connection, or b) NON-Service connection.. I comes down to an investigation by the Safety Section of the Base, (usually an officer will oversee it), and they will determine if it was "LOD" , ( Line-of-Duty) or not. This is the basic thing that wll determine wether or not you get the injury, and an future poblems arrising from it, 'Compensated (S.C>),OR "Pensioned', (NON-S.C.) After your EOS ( End of Service) commitment. Basically when you get dischared, they will use the report then. There are many things to consider here, were you on base, in housing, or off base at a Gun Range, was it an unauthorized use and discharge of a weapon??? Even if you werent suppose to have, say, a minor UNLOADING a weapon , and an accidental discharge happens, VS- A Cousin drunk at a party messing with an unregistered gun and accidentely forgets to check if its loaded??? You see, its all in the 'SLANT' that the Safety Officer Gets on the situation. And NOT knowing the particulars of your individual situation, i cant help further...... BTW Service Connection is MUCH better and the money is about 2X what it is for pension, and pays for future medications, surgeries , etc surrounding the 'incident' in question. Thanks have a nice day...:)
2007-01-24 13:41:14
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answer #1
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answered by erbillgorsuch 1
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in short, yes
If you are disabled while on active duty, then the Army "chapters" you out. You have to go before a Medical Evaluation Board to determine if you are fit for duty. If you aren't, they decide what percentage of disability you have. Disability is calculated in increments of 10%.
Disability is calculated by a complex formula that takes into consideration how long you served, wartime, was the injury combat related, what you base pay at the time of discharge, and how much you can actually do in a civilian job.
Only if your injury is determined to be by gross negligence on your part or and intentional or self inflicted injury can you be denied disability payments.
2007-01-24 13:01:25
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answer #2
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answered by Richie.Rich 2
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to handle the concern of the boots: she gets a each year outfits allowance. it particularly is greater advantageous than adequate to disguise the value for brand spanking new boots. I served 8 yrs and that i offered a clean pair each and every 2 yrs. If i'm no longer fallacious it became approximately $430 a 365 days on the anniversary of going as properly. as a techniques because of the fact the scientific element of your question..... confident, I agree that militia scientific is sub-standared, even though it is powerful. they do no longer look to be doing an X-ray for a reason that she is probably no longer telling you. it is very no longer likely that they does no longer do an x-ray, so there is a few thing else occurring right here. they do no longer concern vests in case you're no longer in a try against zone. they only people who've bullet-evidence vests are the MA (militia police) and people who volunteer to soak up some slack for those difficult working persons. If she needs to pass to a civilian well-being care expert then she needs to get a referral. She is entitled to a 2d opinion, yet she needs to pass interior the direction of the suitable channels to achive that. i think of which you will be able to desire to take a seat w/ your daughter and talk this in greater element. The well-being facility won't do x-rays till she is pregnant or if there became an go out wound. i actually desire her success .
2016-11-01 05:14:46
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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Yes, you'll get it. As long as it wasn't an injury due to gross negligence on your part you'll get your disability. I knew guys injured in car accidents, off base, off duty and they collected it. I knew a guy who injured his back in a civilian gym, off duty, and he got it.
2007-01-24 14:24:15
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answer #4
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answered by Yak Rider 7
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No, it must be in-the-line of duty related injury.
2007-01-24 12:58:57
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answer #5
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answered by Garret Tripp 3
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Nope.
2007-01-24 13:01:45
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answer #6
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answered by shishka 2
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