We have to start doing better by these guys - at UPS you're vested after 5 years and eligible for a small pension, but in the military it's 20 or nothing. They guy could flesh out his twenty with reserve time, but there's every chance he'd be called up at some point. As far as healthcare . . . move to IL and enroll in vetscare.
But the truth is the guy's got almost no skills that translate to civilian jobs. After 10 years in they ought to get partial pensions. If you can have something to show for slinging boxes, you ought to have something to show for being a SEAL.
Does no reporter do their job and research? A 16-year retirement, when offered, *does* include a reduced pension and the opportunity to continue in TRICARE under whichever health insurer is in charge of the geographical region he lives in.
AS WELL as continuing on VA benefits for 5 years, which then goes to income based after that.
He could have also requested Desk duty or gone to reserves, there are always options what he could have done for his last 4 years before retirement.
@1: Not that it makes the situation any better really, but many private security companies love ex-special forces guys, and pay ridiculous salaries. Not to mention the training they receive in demolitions, operation of special vehicles, and the repair of firearms and equipment.
But it can be hard for veterans due to the fact that they do not have the neat, tidy certifications and degrees that so many companies require.
But my understanding of the situation is that there are certain benefits that can be accessed ater 16 years, which includes a small pension and VA benefits, which would include health care.
If he has medical issues from service, he is eligible for medical care and disability pay for the rest of his life. Now VA medical isn't the greatest and disability pay isn't a lot, but it's far from nothing.
"""[Esquire reporter Bronstein] said there wasn’t space in the article to explain that the former SEAL’s lack of healthcare was driven by an ignorance of the benefits to which he is entitled.
“That’s a different story,” Bronstein said in a phone interview with Stars and Stripes about what he omitted from the article."""
That different story would have some credibility with me. It was a LONG article too, there's no way there wasn't room to put in a sentence about how he is entitled to some care.
Sorry. Pensions are the golden handcuffs that keep folks working in some jobs. Teachers do not expect to receive a regular pension unless they work the full 30 years. Why should that soldier expect anything at all when he QUIT before he was eligible? No sympathy here.
But the truth is the guy's got almost no skills that translate to civilian jobs. After 10 years in they ought to get partial pensions. If you can have something to show for slinging boxes, you ought to have something to show for being a SEAL.
AS WELL as continuing on VA benefits for 5 years, which then goes to income based after that.
He could have also requested Desk duty or gone to reserves, there are always options what he could have done for his last 4 years before retirement.
That information is just a phone call away.
sigh.
It's like reporters are exaggerating things!
the deal is 20 years, and you get a pension & health care for life. he took the deal.
it wasn't a good deal.
But it can be hard for veterans due to the fact that they do not have the neat, tidy certifications and degrees that so many companies require.
But my understanding of the situation is that there are certain benefits that can be accessed ater 16 years, which includes a small pension and VA benefits, which would include health care.
http://www.stripes.com/blogs/the-rupture…
"""[Esquire reporter Bronstein] said there wasn’t space in the article to explain that the former SEAL’s lack of healthcare was driven by an ignorance of the benefits to which he is entitled.
“That’s a different story,” Bronstein said in a phone interview with Stars and Stripes about what he omitted from the article."""
That different story would have some credibility with me. It was a LONG article too, there's no way there wasn't room to put in a sentence about how he is entitled to some care.
He has 5+ years of free, no questions asked healthcare (and then more depending on situation and current income at that time) through the VA.
Yes, it makes for great headlines, though, doesn't it!
http://twitchy.com/2013/02/12/lying-liar…
http://gawker.com/5983706/esquire-editor…
http://gawker.com/5983327/the-seal-who-s…