This is an excellent blog on various benefits veterans might consider applying for even after earning a VA 100% service connected rating. Look it over!
Colorado recognizes sacrifices of our totally disabled veterans, awarding a partial property tax exemption to 100 percent totally and permanently disabled veterans. The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs has two types of 100% disabled veterans – (1) vets with a 100% disability (2) vets with a total disability rated “Total Disability for Individual Unemployability” (TDIU.) VA benefits for the two types are identical, but Colorado’s TDIU veterans are unfairly denied the exemption
Sunday, September 5, 2021
Saturday, September 4, 2021
YouTube Video added to explain TDIU & Colorado's Disabled Vet Property Tax Exemption
Here's a PowerPoint briefing on Colorado's TDIU veterans ("total disability for individual unemployability.") Our effort is to qualify these 4800 totally disabled veterans for the same disabled veteran property tax exemption offered other Colorado veterans with a VA 100% rating.
TDIU and 100% are the only two ways VA categorizes a vet as totally and permanently disabled, but Colorado does not permit TDIU vets the small property tax exemption.
Friday, August 20, 2021
COLORADO LEGISLATURE & GOVERNMENT: "TDIU VETS ARE ON THEIR OWN"
Colorado voters approved Referendum E in 2006, not knowing that the legislature had already defined "qualified veteran" so as to exclude vets with the VA "total disability for individual unemployability," (TDIU.)
Colorado's legislators and government officials chose to interpret the requirement for the "VA 100% rating" so as to exclude totally and permanently disabled veterans who are compensated at the 100% level...because they are in fact totally and permanently disabled. The only difference being,
TDIU veterans have a totally disabling injury, worse than standard VA tables are meant to recognize, that is in fact totally and permanently disabling. These are the same totally and permanently disabled veterans – one honored by Colorado with a small property tax exemption and the other totally ignored. Are they less somehow than worthy in the eyes of our mostly non-veteran legislators?
Actually, to be completely correct, TDIU vets haven't been truly ignored. That's because the only attention given TDIU veterans byColorado's legislature and government has been opposition to extending to these vets, totally and permanently disabled in the line of duty, the small property tax exemption.
That's the extent of their efforts. Less than zero, because it was years of "absolutely not" instead of "let's find a way." That has meant years of being denied the specific constitutional benefit voters were told we approved as Article X Section 3.5 for all of Colorado's veterans with honorable service who became permanently and totally disabled in the line of duty.
Have we abandoned thousands of Colorado's TDIU veterans?