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Property tax exemption for vets
February 21, 2012
If you are a disabled veteran, you might be exempt from paying
property taxes.
Dear Sgt. Shaft:
I understand that Virginia now offers a property tax exemption for
disabled veterans. What is the procedure for establishing this
eligibility?
Billy W.
Via the Internet
Dear Billy,
Those in the know tell me that veterans rated by the U.S. Department
of Veterans Affairs (VA) as having a 100-percent, permanent and total,
service-connected disability are exempt from paying real estate taxes on
their primary residence. The exemption is based on the veteran's disability rating rather than the
level of compensation. The exemption includes property held jointly by a
husband and wife, and applies to the residence and up to one acre of
land.
The surviving spouse of an eligible veteran may also receive the real
estate tax exemption if the veteran died on or after Jan. 1, 2011. The
spouse will lose the exemption if he or she remarries or does not occupy
the property as his or her primary residence. For more information,
contact the commissioner of the revenue for your locality (http://www.vacomrev.com/web/guest/District/ViewAll
Localities?p_p_state=normal).
Shaft Notes:
• MarineParents.com Inc. and its Gold Star Family Support Group
are heartened by the recent proposal to clarify rules related to the
Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA) as they affect military members and
their families.
However, while acknowledging the important role of caregiver for a
wounded service member, the proposed rules do not go far enough. In our
view, the parents of service members who have died should also be
covered by these new regulations. These families experience an
unimaginable grief that has a direct impact on not only physical and
mental health, but how it manifests itself in the workplace.
We urge the Department of Labor to broaden the scope of its proposal
and to mirror the language in the Farley-Kluger Amendment to the FMLA of
1993 (www.farleykluger.com), which petitions
Congress to amend the Act to include time off for the loss of a
child.
In 2011, The Senate Bereavement Act of 2011, inspired by the
Farley-Kluger Amendment, and introduced by Sen. Jon Tester of Montana,
proposed the FMLA extend leave options. We believe there is no better
time than now to include any and all loss of a child.
• Following the Secretary of Defense's announcement outlining
the Department's FY 2013 budget request, the Fleet Reserve Association
(FRA) advised House and Senate leaders of the association's strong
opposition to proposals aimed at significantly reducing military
retirement benefits. In a letter to leaders of the Senate and House
Armed Services Committees -- Sens. Carl Levin (Michigan) and John McCain
(Arizona), Reps. Howard McKeon (California) and Adam Smith (Washington)
-- FRA National President Jeffrey Gilmartin outlined the concerns of
past, present and future service members who are increasingly concerned
about pending cuts to the Defense budget.
During a recent press briefing, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta and
Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
announced advance details of the FY 2013 Defense budget, that will
include a new TRICARE-for-Life enrollment fee for
Medicare-eligible military retirees, substantially increased health care
and pharmacy costs for all retired service members and a commission to
explore "cost-effective" changes to the existing military retirement
system.
"Many of these retirees were promised free health care for life in
return for careers of service with low pay and often arduous duty and
associated sacrifices," Mr. Gilmartin explained in the letter. "The
majority of them retired from the enlisted ranks with significantly less
retired pay than more recent retirees who've benefited from significant
(and long overdue) pay and benefit enhancements enacted since 2000.
These older retirees are increasingly anxious about plans to impose a
TRICARE-for-Life fee and increase TRICARE Prime premiums above and beyond the
13-percent hike and future CPI-indexed adjustments authorized for this
year."
Despite endorsements from senior uniformed leaders, there are also
serious concerns within the career force -- tomorrow's retirees -- about
proposals to revise the military retirement program.
"Based on response to FRA's recent online survey, those currently
serving are gravely concerned that amending retirement benefits will
negatively impact recruiting, retention and overall military readiness,"
Mr. Gilmartin said.
FRA also called on the lawmakers to honor commitments made to those
who served in the past as well as safeguard the interests of those
serving today and in the future.
"Military service is unlike any other career or occupation and
providing benefits commensurate with the associated level of service and
sacrifices is part of the cost of defending this nation," Mr. Gilmartin
said.
• The Department of Veterans Affairs partnered with the First
Army at Camp Shelby, Miss., to launch a streamlined version of its
online application for VA health benefits (VA Form 1010EZ) for service
members returning from deployment. VA will introduce it at
demobilization sites nationwide by early spring 2012.
"This online application demonstrates VA's commitment to work with
the Department of Defense to make it easier for service members to get
the care they earned by their service," Secretary of Veterans Affairs
Eric K. Shinseki said. "The new, online system noticeably reduces the
paperwork and reduces a 10-day process to three days."
The application is used to enroll in the VA health care system, which
has more than 1,000 sites of care across the country.
Enrollment for VA health care is done as part of a service member's
demobilization. The online form allows the application to be completed
during a regularly scheduled briefing for all service members on VA benefits.
Quick enrollment is important for returning troops because recently
discharged combat veterans are eligible for five years of cost-free care
and medications for conditions potentially related to combat
service.
The new application was piloted as part of the demobilization process
at Camp Shelby. Based on the results, VA plans to collaborate with DoD
to offer this online application at all 61 demobilization sites
nationally.
For more information, service members may contact VA at 1-877-222
VETS (8387) or visit VA's health eligibility website at www.va.gov/healthbenefits.
Send letters to Sgt. Shaft, c/o John Fales, P.O. Box 65900,
Washington, D.C. 20035-5900; fax 301/622-3330, call 202/257-5446 or
email sgtshaft@bavf.org.
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