From Military.com:
“Gold Star Spouses Who Remarry
Face Losing Survivor Benefits. This Bill Would Change That”
Spouses of troops killed in the duty
often face a grim penalty if they remarry: they lose their government-granted
survivor benefits. Two veterans serving in Congress say that needs to change. Under
current law, "Gold Star" spouses lose their Survivor Benefit Plan
benefits if they remarry before turning 55. They also lose their Dependency and
Indemnity Compensation benefits if they remarry before turning 57.
But a new bill, the Captain James
C. Edge Gold Star Spouse Equity Act, introduced Thursday by Reps. Michael
Waltz, R-Fla., and Seth Moulton, D-Mass., would remove such age limits. Waltz
is a National Guard colonel and Green Beret who served multiple combat tours in
Afghanistan, the Middle East and Africa. Moulton is a Marine veteran who led an
infantry platoon during the invasion of Iraq in 2003, and served four tours
there. "These arbitrary age limits are completely nonsensical and only
punishes those who forever mourn the loss of their spouse," Waltz said
Friday in a news release. Moulton said the nation owes a debt to Gold Star
families that cannot be repaid, and the remarriage penalty must be eliminated. "When
Americans sign up to serve in the military, they should know the American
people have their backs," Moulton said. "If they sacrifice their
lives for our country, the least our country can do is take care of their
families."
The Survivor Benefit Plan pays
the surviving spouse of a service member who dies on active duty 55% of what
the service member's retirement pay would have been, if he or she had retired
at 100% disability at the time of death. Surviving spouses of retirees could
still lose SBP benefits if they remarry before age 55, as they are not covered
under the legislation. The Dependency and Indemnity Compensation benefit is a
monthly payment of $1,357.56 that the Department of Veterans Affairs pays to
eligible survivors of active-duty service members who died in the line of duty,
and survivors of veterans whose deaths are deemed service-related. The advocacy
group Gold Star Wives of America supports the bill. "Making it possible
for these surviving spouses to be able to move forward without losing financial
benefits honors the commitment that we have to those who have paid the ultimate
sacrifice," Nancy Menagh, president of Gold Star Wives of America, said in
the release.
^ It is one thing if a couple
divorces and then remarries and another one completely if one of them dies
while actively serving in the US Military and the spouse later remarries. The
US Federal Government, the US Military, the US States and Ordinary Americans owe
a lot to the Soldier that died as well as their surviving family. I really hope
this passes. ^
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