Guest guest Posted January 6, 2001 Report Share Posted January 6, 2001 http://www.angelfire.com/il2/VeteranIssues/ [VeteranIssues] VA Claims, Why Should I Worry About The Effective Date > The Answerman: Why Should I Worry About The Effective Date? > > Dec 30, 2000 > E. Howell > Stars and Stripes Veterans' Advocate > > > Congratulations: Your disability is service-connected. The rating schedule > says you have the best rating your symptoms will support. (The Schedule for > Rating Disabilities, Title 38, Code of Federal Regulations, Part 4, is found > at your local library or at www.access.gpo.gov/nara/cfr.) > > What about your rating's effective date? > > The general rule is that the effective date for an award of disability > compensation is the " date of receipt of the claim [by the VA] or the date > the entitlement arose, " whichever is later. You may ask, " Why should I care? > I got my award. " > > You should care because an early effective date can mean a substantial > payoff in past-due benefits. It is not unusual for a claim to take several > years to produce an award. Assume you filed a claim for disability > compensation at the regional office (RO) on Jan. 2, 1991, five years after > your discharge from active duty. Your claim is denied for lack of service > connection. You appeal to the Board of Veterans Appeals (BVA) and submit > more evidence, but the BVA remands it to the RO for further evaluation. > > The RO works on it, finds your disability service-connected and gives you a > rating of zero percent. You appeal to the BVA, but it's denied; so you > appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims. The court remands > your claim to the BVA, and it sends it back to the RO. Sound familiar? > > On Dec. 1, 1997, after two more years of fighting, you get an award of 10 > percent with an effective date of Sept. 1, 1996. You appeal again. > > After another remand to the RO, you receive a favorable C & P ( " Compensation > and Pension " ) exam from a VA doctor on July 4, 1998, and eight months later > the RO grants you a 50 percent rating with an effective date of July 4, 1998 > (the date of your C & P exam). > > Should you appeal this award? Yes! There are good arguments for earlier > effective dates: > > Sept. 1, 1996, is a possibility because that was when you had the medical > exam that resulted in your award of 10 percent. > > What about Jan. 2, 1991, the date you filed your claim? That's your best > date, because when you filed your claim, you had good medical support for > your disability. > > Are these details worth the aggravation of further appeals? Usually they > are! You are receiving your 50 percent disability every month from 1998. But > you have a good argument for backdated payments of 50 percent from 1996, and > a reasonable argument for backdated payments going back to 1991. > > Some veterans won't appeal because they fear the VA may use it as an excuse > to reduce their benefits. That is a possibility if the VA orders a new > medical examination, which they have a right to do. However, an appeal for > an earlier effective date is an administrative matter and not an attempt to > raise your disability rating; and since this appeal comes within the > one-year time limit for an appeal, it is unlikely to trigger another C & P > exam. > > Therefore, go for it! The law provides for these past due payments and you > are entitled to them. > > One more thing: Sometimes, if your award is at the top of the rating > schedule for your disability, the VA may say: " The benefits granted > represent a complete grant of benefits sought on appeal. Therefore, unless > we hear to the contrary from you within 30 days, we will assume that you are > satisfied with our decision and do not wish to pursue your appeal further. " > > The law says you have one year from the date of that notification to file a > notice of disagreement (see Title 38, Code of Federal Regulations, 3.109), > and you still may have an appeal for the correct effective date. Don't be > intimidated into abandoning your appeal just because the 30 days have > expired. > > E. Howell, an attorney in Washington, D.C., served as a judge advocate > with the U.S. Air Force. After retiring as a colonel in 1991 he served for 7 > years as the first chief of the Article III Judges Division, Office of the > United States Courts, in Washington. > > > > " Keep on, Keepin' on " , Support Veterans > & Thanks.......Colonel Dan > See my web sites at: > http://www.angelfire.com/il2/VeteranIssues/ > and http://hometown.aol.com/dancolonel/VetsIssue.html > > Forward to a veteran or Sign up a Veteran to this list at: > /subscribe.cgi/VeteranIssues > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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