Won a 10 year case with the Board with the help of NVSLP

I am a hundred percent VA and receive champVA. The tricare is not relevant. CRSC has already been calculated and I receive a little over $900 a month before they recoup the SBP and after all the offsets.

My CRSC was approved in October and I received my first payment in February. Hell the amount of backpay I received would not even go back to October much less 2012.
I don't think you are allowed to go the CHAMPVA route anymore now that you are medically retired. Also, might be a mess going forward since its retro. Tricare should have picked up the tab and not CHAMPVA during the time the retroactive medical retirement covered.
 
I don't think you are allowed to go the CHAMPVA route anymore now that you are medically retired. Also, might be a mess going forward since its retro. Tricare should have picked up the tab and not CHAMPVA during the time the retroactive medical retirement covered.
Thank you for the heads up. I was unaware of this. I always thought you could opt for one or the other.

I have other health insurance anyway and even before qualifying for Tricare I found ChampVA really was not helpful so maybe Tricare may work better as a secondary
 
Thank you for the heads up. I was unaware of this. I always thought you could opt for one or the other.

I have other health insurance anyway and even before qualifying for Tricare I found ChampVA really was not helpful so maybe Tricare may work better as a secondary
Tricare is amazing! I always go with Tricare select. That way I don't have a PCM gatekeeper. There are co pays but if used as secondary insurance you probably won't need to pay any. It's $38 per doc visit. $50 for specialist. Can see whoever you want even out of network though if you out of network there is a cap on the costs. For a family of 4 we pay about $500 annually for medical fees. That's mainly copays and there is a $150 per person with max $300 deductible meaning you pay that before everything kicks in. I usually pay that 1 or 2 months in and then unless emergencies its only a couple hundred dollars in co pays a year for a family of 4.
 
Ypur husband got screwed because the only exception to the six years was due to a correction of records. These people are incompetent. I tried to be proactive and included all the verbiage regarding the law and they still managed to screw this up
Ypur husband got screwed because the only exception to the six years was due to a correction of records. These people are incompetent. I tried to be proactive and included all the verbiage regarding the law and they still managed to screw this up.
Yes, my husband's grant and back pay was because of a correction of military records that would have taken him back to 2002 except that medically retired veterans only got include for retro pay in 2008, and yes, they only went back 6 years. So yes, he initially got screwed for only 6 years, even though the Army knew better by then. After the Barring Act lawsuit, the military decided they wouldn't give ANY back pay unless a veteran filed before August of 2025 (He filed in Feburay of 2025). Everything about this is wrong. We only got an update from Army HR department that my husband was in the queque due to having a good friend with active duty contacts! And then Army sent a formal letter. If you filed before August 2025 (something - various dates posted) you will get your full retro pay.
 
Congratulations on obtaining relief at the ABCMR. NVLSP and the BigLaw attorneys handling their cases pro bono are a tremendous resource for veterans.

It will likely take 6 months or more for your military records to be corrected to reflect your disability retirement effective May 2012. Particularly with the National Guard Bureau involved, it will take time to get orders cut and for DFAS to calculate and pay any retroactive disability retired pay due. The retired pay calculation will net out any VA benefits received as well as Survivor Benefits Program premiums that would have been paid. You will also need to set up a DFAS retired pay account, which will also involve completing the SBP paperwork. You should be contacted by someone at the US Army Physical Disability Agency to help you start getting the administrative things taken care of.

It is not prudent to apply for CRSC until all of this correction action is complete to ensure that the CRSC office at the Army Human Resources Command has all your updated, corrected information for determining your CRSC eligibility. The Army HRC website has information on CRSC and applications.

Keep in mind that because your disability retirement making you eligible for CRSC was the result of a correction of records, you will be eligible for retroactive CRSC payments back to the corrected retirement date of May 2012, or the date upon which you started receiving VA benefits if later (assuming you meet the combat related and VA eligibility criteria). You are not limited to only 6 years of retroactive CRSC payments.

As a general rule, veterans eligible for military disability retired pay pursuant to Chapter 61, U.S. Code with less than 20 years of active service, became eligible for CRSC effective January 1, 2008, assuming the veteran met the combat-related and VA rating requirements. See 10 U.S.C. § 1413a (the statutory authorization for CRSC); DoD 7000.14-R, Financial Management Regulation, Vol. 7B, Ch. 63 (June 2024) (the DoD regulation implementing the statutory authority).

Although not referenced in the text of either 10 U.S.C. § 1413a or the CRSC provisions of DoD 7000.14-R, a claim for a CRSC payment is subject to the six-year statute of limitations of the Baring Act, 31 U.S.C. § 3702. See Soto v. United States, 92 F.4th 1094 (Fed. Cir. 2024). Accordingly, the government is limited to paying CRSC for the period within six years after the claim accrues. In the CRSC context, claim accrual is the date upon which the veteran became eligible for CRSC, even if the veteran failed to submit a claim.

One exception to the time of claim accrual triggering the six-year limitations period involves a correction of records. If a veteran becomes eligible for CRSC due to a correction of the veteran’s military or naval records (through a lawsuit or correction board action), then the veteran’s claim for the CRSC payment accrues on the date of the record correction. See DoD 7000.14-R, Financial Management Regulation, Vol. 7B, Ch. 10, ¶ 2.3 (June 2024) (“2.3 Statute of Limitations. If a payment is due as a result of a correction of record, the claim for such payment accrues on the date of the correction. A claimant has 6 years from the date of the correction of record to claim the payment owed as a result of the correction of record.”). As a result, the calculation of the amount of any retroactive CRSC payment due would be based on the corrected date of CRSC eligibility resulting from the record correction action (typically the corrected, retroactive date of disability retirement) and would not be subject to the six-year statute of limitations except going forward from the date the court or correction board ordered the correction of record.

When you do apply for CRSC, you should make the factual background regarding the correction of records clear in the CRSC application in continuation sheets to the form. It is important that you make clear to the CRSC office at HRC and DFAS that your retroactive effective date of disability retirement was due to a records correction. This would include the relevant Claims Court decision, ABCMR Record of Proceedings, amended orders and DD 214 (if one), and a copy of DoD 7000.14-R, Financial Management Regulation, Vol. 7B, Ch. 10, ¶ 2.3. Otherwise, you risk getting an analyst who is not familiar with the process who might simply apply the six year statute of limitations without much thought.
Maybe you can clarify something for me. What day determines your crsc backpay to? Is it the eligibility date on the crsc letter or is there something DfAS does to determine that?

I have ran in to an issue where they are saying they only owe me backpay to October and I need to know where to begin to address that
 
The pro bono attorneys were such good people that honestly had they not gotten involved then I probably would’ve just let it go. I will be eternally grateful to them
Big Guy what is the name of your case in COFC? thanks Aaron
 
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