Today brought a most welcome phone call from Cheyenne! Veteran-Directed Home & Community-Based Services is poised to expand. Nothing locked-down just yet, but the biggest goal I had this year was to win VA administrators' agreement to get the process started.
The specific news was about the medical center anticipated development of their own VD-HCBS program to serve elderly and disabled veterans in that part of VISN-19 territory.
Very welcome news, indeed. Our thanks not only to Cheyenne but to all the state, federal and local leaders who voiced their opinion about how valuable this program is to vets otherwise facing nursing home placement.
UVC...THANKS!
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
Saturday, December 9, 2017
MORE GOOD NEWS: CHEYENNE VAMC TO WORK ON EXPANDING VETERAN-DIRECTED HOME & COMMUNITY HEALTH SERVICE
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Thursday, December 7, 2017
Colorado’s Disabled Veterans’ Property Tax Exemption – The “Missing in Action” Law
by Wes Carter, National Chairperson, The C-123 Veterans Association
It’s hard to believe. Over this last
decade state officials simply ignored property tax provisions spelled out in Colorado’s
constitution to provide a small exemption to totally disabled troops retired by
the military for line-of-duty injuries. It’s like the law simply went missing
in action.
Back in 2006 voters amended our
constitution, approving by a four-to-one margin to provide a small,
partial property tax exemption. Only about $480 on average, the exemption is
for two categories of injured servicemembers: Troops retired by the military as
totally and permanently, and second, veterans rated 100% totally and
permanently disabled by the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Referendum E carefully addressed both of the above categories because there are three differences between them:
1. Not all disabled military retirees also seek a VA disability rating – ratings must be applied for
2. Although based on similar laws, often military retirees face years of delays with claims and appeals to receive VA ratings, but military disability retirements are effective immediately upon leaving active duty
3. The military views a disability as medically unable, through line-of-duty illness or injury, to perform one's military specialty or be retrained in another; VA views disability as the percentage of loss of capacity to work in meaningful employment, somewhat similar to Social Security disability rules
(real example: Northern Colorado resident Vietnam-era veteran medically retired as 100% by the military in 1991 because of Gulf War injuries. Filed VA claims for numerous 100% disabling injuries and Agent Orange illnesses in 1992-1994 but not finally approved for 100% VA disability rating until 2015. Per our constitution's Article X Section 3.5, this veteran was eligible for Colorado's disabled veteran tax exemption in 2007. As of December 2017, still no state web site instructions or forms permit his application because only federal VA 100% disability ratings are mentioned, not his 100% military medical retirement.)
Referendum E carefully addressed both of the above categories because there are three differences between them:
1. Not all disabled military retirees also seek a VA disability rating – ratings must be applied for
2. Although based on similar laws, often military retirees face years of delays with claims and appeals to receive VA ratings, but military disability retirements are effective immediately upon leaving active duty
3. The military views a disability as medically unable, through line-of-duty illness or injury, to perform one's military specialty or be retrained in another; VA views disability as the percentage of loss of capacity to work in meaningful employment, somewhat similar to Social Security disability rules
(real example: Northern Colorado resident Vietnam-era veteran medically retired as 100% by the military in 1991 because of Gulf War injuries. Filed VA claims for numerous 100% disabling injuries and Agent Orange illnesses in 1992-1994 but not finally approved for 100% VA disability rating until 2015. Per our constitution's Article X Section 3.5, this veteran was eligible for Colorado's disabled veteran tax exemption in 2007. As of December 2017, still no state web site instructions or forms permit his application because only federal VA 100% disability ratings are mentioned, not his 100% military medical retirement.)
Problem: Through an oversight when the 2007 statute was drafted, the category
of totally disabled military retirees was simply not mentioned…language about
them is in the constitution, but was absent from the text of the law.
In 2015 concerned citizens discovered
this missing language issue and asked the legislature to align the constitution
with the statute. Both houses approved HB-1444 unanimously and it was signed into
law in May 2016.
And it has been simply ignored since
then.
Here's the law describing the partial
tax exemption. The bold type was left out of the enabling statute:
“(3.5) ‘Qualifying disabled
veteran’ means an individual who has served on active duty in the United
States armed forces, including a member of the Colorado National Guard who has
been ordered into the active military service of the United States, has been
separated therefrom under honorable conditions, and has established a
service-connected disability that has been rated by the federal department of
veterans affairs as one hundred percent permanent disability through
disability retirement benefits pursuant to a law or regulation administered by
the department, the United States departments of homeland security, Army, Navy,
or Air Force.”
May 2016. Governor signs HB16-1444. I'm on right. |
Now the statute has been repaired,
the missing words added to comply with the constitution. However, there's a problem with
the way the law finally gets administered: Colorado officials simply haven't
gotten around to its section addressing totally and permanently disabled
military retirees so they’re still denied their property tax exemption. Officials never changed the application forms, the
rules or the instructions.
The governor signed HB16-1444, an act unanimously approved
by both houses of the legislature in May 2016 and placed those missing words from
the constitution into the law, effective June 2016. His signature has been
ignored, and without any constitutional or legal authority at all, totally
disabled military retirees continue to be taxed and their rights abused.
When I've discussed this taxation disconnect
with officials there's no disagreement about the problem. They just don’t see ignoring
it as a big deal.
This is a big deal! The constitution
expresses people’s will. Officials from the governor on down have sworn to
protect and defend it. A constitutional provision like this can’t simply be
ignored. You may recall that in 1776 unfair taxation led to some disagreement
between England and her American colonies.
Now that this problem has been
pointed out to state officials, they’ve indicated rules and application forms might
be set right by January 2018. But that’s so very late, especially considering
the constitution provided their exemption effective ten years ago.
Few Coloradoans tolerate being
wrongfully taxed. We owe these veterans so much more than this small tax
exemption they’ve earned through disabling line-of-duty injuries. Colorado has no
excuse for failing to provide it.
These veterans have been patient long
enough. The constitution has been ignored long enough.
Wednesday, December 6, 2017
Colorado Disabled Veteran Property Tax: A Colorado Editorial
VA "UNEMPLOYABILITY" - How
did it disqualify vets from Colorado's Disabled Veteran Property
Tax Exemption?
by Wes Carter, National Chairperson, The C-123 Veterans Association for the Fort Collins Coloradoan
by Wes Carter, National Chairperson, The C-123 Veterans Association for the Fort Collins Coloradoan
In 2006 Colorado
voters amended our constitution to provide totally disabled military veterans a
small partial property tax exemption. This is now Article X Section 3.5 of the
constitution and 39-3-202 of our statutes. The Legislative Council 2006 Blue
Book explained to voters that federal VA disability ratings are the standard
followed by Colorado to qualify veterans for their exemption.
VA has two ratings
recognizing a veteran’s total and permanent disability. One rating is for
injuries VA rules consider 100% disabling. The other rating is for severe
military injuries even worse than the disability percentage VA
rules allow for that particular injury or illness, and which make the veteran
unable to work for the remainder of his/her lifetime...that rating is termed,
"Total Disability Individual Unemployability" (TDIU.) Both of these VA
ratings are for total and permanent disability based solely on military
illnesses or injuries.
Nothing in the law
permits denying TDIU veterans the tax exemption, yet the state refuses to honor
any applications without a basis for refusal. Looking back to the Blue Book’s Referendum
E explanation, voters were told it is for veterans so disabled by military
illness or injury that meaningful work is impossible for their remaining
lifetime. Referendum E passed by a decisive four-to-one margin.
Because voters
amended the constitution addressing veterans whose permanent and totally
disabling illnesses and injuries caused unemployability for life, there is no
justification for agencies to invent disqualifiers for
TDIU.
But that’s what happened,
and it’s wrong.
As per Colorado’s
constitution, federal VA ratings must be respected. Veterans rated totally and
permanently disabled, including TDIU, must be afforded their lawful property
tax exemption.
Other Coloradans wouldn’t tolerate being unconstitutionally taxed.
These veterans have been
patient long enough.
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