USA — Legislation Extends Special Stop-Loss Pay Deadline

WASHINGTON — Pres­i­dent Barack Oba­ma signed leg­is­la­tion yes­ter­day extend­ing the Retroac­tive Stop-Loss Spe­cial Pay dead­line through Decem­ber 3, DOD offi­cials said today.

Offi­cials esti­mate about 80,000 eli­gi­ble ser­vice mem­bers, vet­er­ans and ben­e­fi­cia­ries have yet to apply for the spe­cial stop-loss pay. 

“It’s impor­tant that all those eli­gi­ble for this ben­e­fit take the oppor­tu­ni­ty to apply for what they’ve earned,” said Lernes Hebert, the Defense Department’s act­ing direc­tor of offi­cer and enlist­ed per­son­nel man­age­ment. “We encour­age those eli­gi­ble to apply as soon as pos­si­ble, to avoid the last-minute rush, which can increase pro­cess­ing time.” 

The pro­gram was due to run out Oct. 21, 2010. The exten­sion is part of the con­tin­u­ing res­o­lu­tion that funds fed­er­al gov­ern­ment oper­a­tions. Con­gress has not yet passed autho­riza­tion or appro­pri­a­tions bills for fis­cal 2011. 

The pro­gram affects mil­i­tary mem­bers whose ser­vice was invol­un­tar­i­ly extend­ed under stop-loss between Sept. 11, 2001, and Sept. 30, 2009. Eli­gi­ble mem­bers or their ben­e­fi­cia­ries are required to sub­mit a claim to their respec­tive mil­i­tary ser­vice in order to receive the ben­e­fit of $500 for each full or par­tial month served in a stop-loss sta­tus. The orig­i­nal dead­line for claims was Oct. 21, 2010. 

Stop-loss allows the mil­i­tary to extend ser­vice­mem­bers beyond their end-of-term of ser­vice dates. The pro­gram has been used exten­sive­ly since 9–11 to main­tain per­son­nel strength in deploy­ing units. The pro­gram allows the mil­i­tary to extend ser­vice­mem­bers whose end-of-term of ser­vice, retire­ment or end-of-ser­vice oblig­a­tion date falls dur­ing a deploy­ment. They may be invol­un­tar­i­ly extend­ed until the end of their unit’s deploy­ment. The Army and Marine Corps used the pol­i­cy the most. 

The spe­cial pay is meant to remu­ner­ate the ser­vice­mem­bers for their sac­ri­fices. When the pro­gram began last year, the ser­vices esti­mat­ed 145,000 ser­vice mem­bers, vet­er­ans and ben­e­fi­cia­ries were eli­gi­ble. Most had already sep­a­rat­ed from the services. 

The ser­vices have sent direct mail to those eli­gi­ble under the pro­gram. The mil­i­tary has engaged with mil­i­tary and vet­er­an ser­vice orga­ni­za­tions. The ser­vices also here reached out via social net­works and media outlets. 

Last month Pres­i­dent Oba­ma reached out to vet­er­ans in a video post­ed to the White House Web site encour­ag­ing those who are eli­gi­ble to apply for the benefit. 

Source:
U.S. Depart­ment of Defense
Office of the Assis­tant Sec­re­tary of Defense (Pub­lic Affairs) 

Face­book and/or on Twit­ter

Team GlobDef

Seit 2001 ist GlobalDefence.net im Internet unterwegs, um mit eigenen Analysen, interessanten Kooperationen und umfassenden Informationen für einen spannenden Überblick der Weltlage zu sorgen. GlobalDefence.net war dabei die erste deutschsprachige Internetseite, die mit dem Schwerpunkt Sicherheitspolitik außerhalb von Hochschulen oder Instituten aufgetreten ist.

Alle Beiträge ansehen von Team GlobDef →