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Administration Threatens Veto Over Concurrent Receipt
Newport News Daily Press | June 21, 2002 | Tom Philpott

Posted on 06/21/2002 6:57:52 AM PDT by Stand Watch Listen

Senior administration officials say they will urge President Bush to veto the 2003 defense authorization bill if, as expected, it supports phase in of full military retired pay to roughly 80,000 seriously disabled retirees who also draw tax-free VA disability compensation.

The White House's Office of Management and Budget delivered the veto warning in a June 19 memo to Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

Congressional plans to allow "concurrent receipt'' of both military retired pay and VA compensation for retirees with VA disability ratings of 60 percent or higher, said OMB, "is contrary to the long-standing principle'' that no one can receive dual benefits for the same period of service. Also, it would raise mandatory federal spending by $18 billion over 10 years and "retirement accrual'' costs for the Defense Department by $11 billion, forcing "tradeoffs with war-fighting capabilities.''

The House already has passed a partial concurrent receipt provision. The Senate defense bill has similar language, but a different phase-in formula and an earlier start date, Oct. 1, 2002, versus Jan.1, 2003.

On the same day OMB warned of a veto, Senators by voice vote amended the defense bill to lift the concurrent receipt ban altogether. This was more of gesture, however, as senators had no plan to fund it. OMB estimates that ending the retired pay offset for all would raise mandatory federal spending by $58 billion and Defense retirement accrual costs by $20 billion, over 10 years.

"Should the final version of the bill include either provision affecting concurrent receipt of retirement and disability benefits,'' warned OMB, "the President's senior advisors would recommend he veto the bill.''

The seriousness of the veto threat for concurrent receipt specifically was hard to judge because OMB listed several reasons why the Senate bill might be vetoed, including insufficient funds for ballistic missile defense and continued funding for the Army's Crusader program, which Bush wants to kill. If these other sources of heartburn are relieved, would Bush still veto the bill over partial concurrent receipt alone?

"I don't know how it will play out,'' said a Republican staff member. "If the president says he will veto the bill over this issue, we will not put the bill at risk. Then the world has really changed. In a few sectors, there would be a sigh of relief, 'The President is going to take the hit!' Some [lawmakers] really don't want to spend this money.

"But can I see him sending that signal? If he does, I hope they [White House staff] have their phone banks handy.''

One official not afraid to oppose concurrent receipt is David Chu, under secretary of defense for personnel and readiness. He told a group of defense writers May 30 that raising the pay of career disabled retirees could pinch funds for more pressing needs such as improved housing for active forces. Indeed, he said, Congress isn't addressing the right problem. The real question is whether "there is something wrong with our retirement system that, in some sense, does not properly compensate people.''

The "bargain the nation had'' with these retirees, Chu said, "is that in return for your service you're going to receive the following pension and ancillary rights'' such as lifetime health care. Full retired pay on top of VA disability pay was not part of the bargain, Chu suggested.

Indeed, disability pay originally was designed for veterans injured in service who could not serve full careers, he said. Deciding now to combine payments "is not necessarily the right answer,'' Chu said. "The two systems were constructed with very different purposes in mind.''

During this critique, Chu referred to a new study on concurrent receipt that Congress had ordered last year. Two weeks later, in mid-June, Chu's office sent it to Congress. The "independent analysis,'' prepared for DoD by SAG Corp., of Annandale, Va., recommends "no changes'' to the dollar-for-dollar offset in military annuities for retirees drawing VA disability pay.

"Obviously, everybody would like to have a bigger paycheck. That's natural human instinct,'' said Chu, a former Army officer. But government spending has limits, he said.

"If we dispense it in a way that really isn't answering any problem that's out there, but it's simply making everybody feel better by sending larger checks, [then] we don't have the money to do things like fix family housing or fix the barracks.''

His argument that concurrent receipt will tap into Defense dollars is correct only under the Senate's initiative, congressional sources said. With an accounting trick that one staff member refused to describe, the House provision would have the general Treasury, rather than the Defense Department, be responsible for making extra deposits in a retirement "accrual account'' each year to cover higher future costs tied to partial concurrent receipt. The Senate plan assumes DoD would cover that tab, $11 billion through 2012.

"This is not free,'' said Chu. "Buddha is not raining cash on the federal government. If we start paying the accrual charges behind this, which we will do under current law, that means barracks I don't get to fix. And having had the privilege of touring many barracks, even renovated ones, they ain't all so great…So this is not just a theoretical let's-be-nice-to-everybody issue. This is a question of how do we use the nation's limited resources.''



TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; Politics/Elections
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To: Militiaman7
I maintain that the nation is in your debt, and you should be provided for. There is no question about that. The question is whether or not the country can continue to spend money on any programs that do not do the job that they are intended to do.

I am sorry about your situation, dont doubt that. However, the line should have been draw long ago on government spending, so that more would be availible to people like you. Thanks to a president who in all appearances is a liberal in conservative clothing, we are both screwed.

Take care.
21 posted on 06/21/2002 1:59:03 PM PDT by LibertineR
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: LibertineR
DAMNSTRAIGHT!
22 posted on 06/22/2002 7:07:12 AM PDT by advocate10
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 19 | View Replies]


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