Thornberry: Defense Bill Conferees
Kept People A Priority
House-Senate conferees negotiating the final FY 2018 National
Defense Authorization bill rejected most Senate-passed provisions to slow
compensation growth, including a modest cap on the January pay raise and cuts
to housing allowances for most dual-service couples.
Rep. Mac Thornberry (R-Texas), chair of the House Armed Services
Committee and leader of House Republican conferees, said all conferees had “the
welfare of servicemembers foremost in our minds. Some of that is pay and
benefits, but also, [considering] recent naval accidents and air accidents,
it's making sure they have equipment that works.”
Conferees, therefore, opted to accept the House-passed plan for a
2.4-percent military pay raise, matching recent private sector pay growth,
rather than the 2.1-percent raise backed by senators, which would have saved
$1.5 billion through 2022.
They also rejected the call of senators to cut housing allowances
for dual-service couples with children. Under the Senate plan, one
servicemember no longer would have been eligible for Basic Allowance for
Housing at the higher “with dependents” rate.
“We have had these discussions before with the Senate,” Thornberry
said in a phone interview late Wednesday. “Their concern is that a housing
allowance designed to pay housing cost is no longer seen that way,” but
includes “extra pay.”
“And that's right,” Thornberry said. “The question is: How do you
back out of that?”
One reason conferees refused to cut BAH for dual-service couples
was because “the overwhelming majority are enlisted folks,” Thornberry said.
Higher pharmacy copayments. Conferees accepted the
Senate's embrace of a DoD plan to increase pharmacy fees and encourage
greater use of generic drugs, on-base pharmacies, and mail orders. In the year
ahead, copayments for a 30-day supply of brand drugs at retail or a 90-day
supply by mail order will be raised to $28 and will climb to $45 by 2026.
Copayments for generic drugs at retail will be raised to $10 in 2018 and to $14
by 2026. To encourage greater use of base pharmacies, where drugs will remain
free of charge, the plan will add a $10 copayment for mail-order generic drugs,
rising to $14 by 2026.
Senators added that generic copayments on mail orders, which
aren't in the DoD drug plan, should be able to partially offset shipping and
administrative costs and be consistent with cost shares charged for generics at
TRICARE retail outlets.
Survivors of servicemembers who die on active duty and members
retired for disability would be exempt from drug copayment increases.
Thornberry said House conferees were reluctant to accept the
copayment increases but understood the Senate argument that accepting the
pharmacy fee plan would free up “mandatory” budget dollars (versus
“discretionary” defense spending) to go toward fixing other issues for
surviving military spouses.
Special Survivor Indemnity Allowance (SSIA). With
higher drug copayments, DoD has lowered mandatory spending on medicine by $2.1
billion through 2022. Conferees agreed this means enough money has been freed
up to make permanent and begin adjusting for inflation the $310-a-month SSIA
that otherwise is due to expire next May.
Congress first approved SSIA in 2008 to mitigate a cut in Survivor
Benefit Plan (SBP) payments that occurs when surviving spouses also are
eligible for Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC) from the VA.
Tax-exempt DIC is payable if a servicemember died in the line of duty or died
in retirement due to service-related injury or disease.
Congress won't eliminate the SBP/DIC offset entirely, arguing that
doing so is unaffordable. But House-Senate conferees accepted the Senate plan
to make the SSIA permanent and to adjust it annually using the same COLA or the
COLA used to protect the value of military retired pay.
“It was a pretty significant concession by the House to go to the
TRICARE pharmacy copays in order to pay for the widow's [allowance],” said
Thornberry. “I think the way it came out was the right thing to do, but there
was back and forth and concessions on both sides.”
Grandfathering TRICARE fees. One
of the most confusing results of negotiations to shape the final 2018 National
Defense Authorization bill is the decision to sustain language from last year's
defense bill that “protects” working-age retirees from TRICARE fee changes to
take effect in 2018 for new service entrants.
Congress approved a host of TRICARE reforms last year but
grandfathered all currently serving members and all retirees under the age of
65 from what appeared be significant fee increases. Defense officials
complained this would force DoD to administer two sets of fees for the next 50
years to shield current servicemembers and retirees from higher out-of-pocket
medical costs.
In their FY 2018 budget request, DoD officials urged Congress to
repeal the grandfather language and let every generation of non-disabled
retirees under the age of 65 face the same TRICARE fees, copayments, and deductibles.
The Congressional Budget Office weighed in, estimating removal of the
grandfather protection would save the department almost $4 billion over the
next five years.
In late September, however, the Defense Health Agency (DHA)
published near-final regulations to implement TRICARE reforms. They included a
surprise new method of calculating current fees for active duty families and
retirees under 65 and their families for care outside military treatment
facilities.
Defense officials argued the new “fixed dollar” fees for the newly
renamed TRICARE “Select” option, which will replace TRICARE Standard and Extra
Jan. 1, merely will reflect average fees current servicemembers and retirees
already pay. But the new fixed-dollar fees have turned out to be higher than
some TRICARE “reform” fees planned for new entrants in 2018 and beyond.
The Military Coalition, a consortium of associations advocating
for military families and retirees, protested to Congress last week that DHA's
methodology is flawed. The planned fixed-dollar fees, they argued, will exceed
rather than mirror the average fees paid by current TRICARE participants as DHA
contends.
The uncertainty made it easy for House and Senate conferees to
accept the House plan and preserve the grandfather provision for working age
retirees. But in doing so, given the fixed-dollar fee schedule now set for
TRICARE Select, DoD actually will be saving total health care dollars by
keeping current retirees away from fee changes for new entrants who eventually
will qualify for retirement.
Thornberry said his committee had set out to protect retirees from
higher fees by adhering to the notion not to retroactively “change [the] rules
of the game or promises you made. … That was the position the conference was
able to adopt.”
Thornberry acknowledged, “It actually is a little more complicated
than that. Because if you took away the grandfathering there would be some
people in some instances that would benefit with lower costs.”
Thornberry promised to watch how TRICARE fees evolve for separate
generations. But for now, he said, he wants current servicemembers
grandfathered “unless there is just an overwhelming case that servicemembers
and retirees would be better off if we took that grandfathering out.”
Using Your TSP as Your “Base Camp” for Retirement Funds
After you leave the Service, your Thrift Savings
Plan (TSP) does not have to collect cobwebs due to non-use.
TSPs
only accept contributions from government paychecks. Retirement pay does not
qualify for TSP contributions. However, you can transfer existing retirement
assets outside the TSP back into the TSP after you leave the Service. Transfers are not the same as contributions. Why would you consider this plan of
action?
The TSP is the least expensive investment
account you will ever own. The average cost of the TSP is 29 cents per $1000
invested. It is practically free. An inexpensive investment account outside the
TSP would compare at $1.90 to $7.50 per $1000 invested. Typical rates in the
financial industry can run from $10.30 to $25 per $1000. If you invest through
an insurance product (variable annuity or variable universal life for example)
you could be paying $30 dollars or more per $1000.
Let’s talk cost factor as money in your pocket.
- $10,000 in the TSP upon
separation earning an average annual return of 7% over 30 years would grow
to $70,000.
- Same $10k with a standard
adviser fee of 1% of assets under management at 7% for 30 years is
$56,500. Keep in mind that if you are paying 1% of assets under
management, you are probably paying annual fees internal to your mutual funds, ETFs,
insurance products, etc., in additionto
your 1% fee.
- $10k with a 1.5% fee at 7% for
30 years; $48,700. This is an average managed mutual fund fee.
- Finally, $10k with a 3% annual
fee (ex: insurance product) at 7% for 30 years; $31,300.
Cost matters but so does simplicity. After the
Service, you may change jobs several times. In each job, you will contribute to
a 401k. Over time you can collect 401ks if you don’t have a plan to consolidate
your retirement assets. I present the TSP as your “base camp.”
The traditional TSP will accept transferred
retirement assets from traditional IRAs and traditional employer retirement
plans.
The Roth TSP will accept transfers from Roth
employer retirement accounts but will not accept Roth IRA transfers (yet).
You must have an existing traditional TSP to
transfer money into the account. The Roth transfers on the other hand do not
require an existing Roth TSP as the transfer will open a Roth TSP as part of
your existing traditional TSP.
If you do this, read up on using your portfolio
allocation to properly manage your assets to achieve a growing or stable
account value. Allocation articles are on the MOAA financial blog. Also review
TSP.gov for transfer details.
Female veterans at greater risk for
mental illness, heart disease, and cancers than civilian women
Women who've served in the military are more likely to suffer from
suicidal thoughts, cardiovascular disease, arthritis, and other problems
according to a new study looking at the health of female veterans.
Female vets report higher rates of cancer,
mental illness, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and depression when
compared to women with no military experience, the Health of Women Who Have Served Report found. MOAA
teamed with United Health Foundation to produce the report.
More than 8 percent of the female veterans
surveyed over a four-year period reported having suicidal thoughts in the past
year - nearly twice that of their civilian counterparts. About a third reported
arthritis, compared to about 26 percent of civilian women. Other findings
include:
- About 13 percent of women who
served had cancer, compared with roughly 11 percent of women who did not.
- Nearly 42 percent reported
getting insufficient sleep, compared to 34 percent of civilian women.
- About a third of female
veterans reported mental illness in the last year, compared to about 22
percent of women who didn't serve.
Members of Congress, VA officials, and other
leaders met in Washington Thursday to discuss the study's findings.
“The focus of the study released today is so
incredibly important and so needed,” said Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), a
retired Army officer who lost her legs in Iraq. “That data is missing in the
health care and scientific world in terms of the research and analysis of
female vets. People talk about it, but actual reports like this one are so
rare.”
There are about 2 million female veterans and
another 200,000 women on active duty, according to the report. Since 2000,
there's been a 30 percent increase in the number of women who've joined the
military, said Rep. Julia Brownley (D-Calif.), who serves on the House
Committee on Veterans Affairs.
“While we have made improvements, the VA remains
ill-prepared to deal with growing number of women veterans whose mental and
physical health care needs can be different from their male peers and from
civilian women,” Brownley said.
The data on female veterans from the MOAA-United
Health Foundation study, Brownley added, will help congressional veterans
committees set new policy that benefits them.
Dr. Patricia Hayes, the VA's chief consultant
for women veterans' health, said the study's findings were consistent with what
she sees in her female patients. Despite facing some higher rates of health
problems, female veterans show tremendous resilience.
That's likely why 56.4 percent of female vets
reported being in very good or excellent health compared to civilian women,
according to the study.
“There's an attitude of 'I'm feeling pretty OK
and healthy and functional,' even in light of the trends and similar data
showing higher [rates of certain health problems],” Hayes said.
Starting a dialogue
Now that there's data on some of the physical
and behavioral health problems facing female veterans, it's important to
research what might be causing them, said Capt. Kathy Beasley, USN (Ret),
director of MOAA's government relations health affairs.
“We can't develop solutions until we know the root of some of the
problems,” Beasley said. “We've got some cardiovascular, musculoskeletal, and
behavioral health concerns - significant disparities between women who served
and their civilian counterparts. Why is that? What are the factors that are
contributing to those outcomes?”
The
study on female veterans provides an opportunity for more research, policy
changes, or better access to VA or community health care that will benefit
female veterans, said MOAA President and CEO Lt. Gen. Dana T. Atkins, USAF
(Ret).
It's important for health care providers to start asking more
women if they've served in the military, Hayes added, especially if they're
seeing doctors outside the VA in their communities. If female veterans are at
higher risk for some cancers, heart disease, or depression, doctors need to ask
them the right questions and test them for some conditions earlier than they
test women who didn't serve.
That applies to male veterans, too, Hayes said. If doctors know
someone served in the military, it will help them better understand their
health challenges. That's one reason it benefits veterans to go to the VA for
at least some of their health care, said Deputy Secretary of the VA Thomas
Bowman, a retired Marine Corps officer.
Bowman said he's dedicated to ensuring VA health facilities are
providing good care to women. His sister served in the Air Force, he said, and
she's been candid with him about some of the VA's shortcomings when it comes to
treating women.
“We want to make sure that women vets will choose VA for their
health care,” Bowman said. “We've made significant strides, but we can't give
up on that, and we're not going to.
“I think this study helps focus VA and some of its activities,”
Bowman said.
Be Smart About Charitable Giving
In 2015, Americans donated $373.25 billion to charity, a more
than 4-percent increase from 2014, according to the National
Philanthropic Trust.
Nonprofit organizations noted they received about half of these
individual donations at the end of the year, either because of the holiday
spirit of giving or a desire to give before the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
deadline. Whatever your reason for giving, how and to whom you give can make
your philanthropic gift - no matter the size - more meaningful.
The 2012 Nonprofit Almanac estimates there are more than 2.3
million charities in the U.S. This number includes 40,000 registered military
and veteran nonprofit organizations that support servicemembers, veterans, and
military families and tens of thousands more nonprofit organizations that in
some manner touch servicemembers, veterans, and military families.
With so many charities, choosing the right one can seem
daunting.
Making a meaningful donation
Select a cause that is meaningful to you and one about which you
are passionate. What injustice would you correct? What changed your life? From
feeding hunger or curing cancer to preserving the environment or supporting an
institution that positively affected you or your family members' lives, it's a
personal choice and one for which there is no single right answer.
When you pick a cause in-line with your values and beliefs, you
have identified your philanthropy. By doing so, you will feel less inclined to
support impulsive solicitations that play on your compassion. In some cases,
these solicitations do more to line the pockets of the solicitors than actually
help anyone in need, but it can be hard to determine effectiveness when faced
with an immediate request. It's best to research a charity before making a
donation.
Narrowing down the choices
Once you have selected a cause, you typically will find many
charities support that cause. How do you make sure your donation is going to a
legitimate and effective organization that benefits the cause that is important
to you?
Gone are the days when you could rate a charity's effectiveness
solely based on which one has the lowest overhead expenses, which exposes only
the poorest-managed charities. Donors' reliance on only this indicator
discourages nonprofit charities from reinvesting into their own development -
which, like successful for-profit organizations, they need to do. This lack of
reinvestment can keep charities from achieving their long-term goals, which are
important to you as a donor.
Instead of using a one-dimensional test, independent charity
evaluators review charities for accounting transparency and discrepancies,
defined goals, efficiency, and whether they are registered as tax-exempt with
the IRS. (Read “Your Guide to Charity Evaluation
Tools.”) Some charity reviews even are beginning to measure
effectiveness by looking at how close a charity has come to no longer being
needed; a successful charity sometimes is one that works toward its own
obsolescence. Independent charity evaluators also can help determine whether an
organization is fraudulent or attempting to solicit donations by using a name
similar to well-known organizations.
Even if a charity has checked out, avoid the temptation to spread
your donations across too many charities. According to Charity Navigator, one
of the largest charity evaluators, focusing your contributions allows more of
your money to go directly toward helping your cause rather than toward
processing expenses.
Helping veterans
Are you still wondering which cause should be the focus of your
charitable giving? Consider that in the years since Sept. 11, 2001, the U.S.
Census Bureau shows 6 million Americans have served in the military, more than
2.5 million veterans have deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq, and more than 2
million still are serving in either the active or reserve forces. According to
the Government Accountability Office, 1 million servicemembers will transition
to the civilian sector in the next five years.
The Philanthropy Roundtable and the DoD
Recovering Warrior Task Force have identified private and
public charities whose efforts are making significant improvements in the lives
of veterans and their families. These efforts often complement or provide
assistance in health care, education, employment, and quality-of-life issues
for which government support is limited or unavailable. These charitable
efforts help veterans make successful and rapid transitions after military
service while avoiding common problems. For example:
• Younger post-9/11 veterans are experiencing significantly higher
unemployment rates than nonveterans of the same age.
• Getting into a higher education program is only half the issue;
once there, veterans must figure out how to graduate. Veterans and military
family members sometimes need mentoring and counseling to adapt to the new
climate.
• Pro bono legal and financial advice can put veterans on the
right path and prevent potential problems down the road.
• Many veterans need assistance navigating the red tape involved
with obtaining physical and mental health care or direct care services that
offer greater privacy and access. There's also a need to support caregivers of
wounded warriors.
• Family members need support extended to them in the areas of
education, employment, or quality-of-life improvements to alleviate the burdens
of multiple separations, deployments, and moves.
• Injured veterans need housing and adaptive improvements while
recovering. Temporary housing for families near hospitals is beneficial when
veterans need specialized care.
Many veterans need our support, and the desire to help them and
their families in need reflects a fitting gratitude for their service to
country.