Responses: 8
SGT (Join to see) Took care of my whole college expenses. Never had to pay back any loan. It was a God sent for me.
(5)
(0)
I got this info from armytimes.
As it stands, the transferability process is rigid, unintuitive and unforgiving, rife with bureaucratic and administrative hurdles. In some instances, benefits have been revoked because veterans were grossly misled by military officials, inevitably leaving their dependents robbed of the opportunity to leverage the Post 9/11 GI BIll to pay for an education. Other veterans have met all the requirements for transferability, including additional time served, only to be told errors in online filings made them ineligible to transfer their benefit.
Even if the majority of Post 9/11 GI Bill transfers are successful, when things go awry — there are often catastrophic economic consequences for the affected families, with little to no formal avenues for redress. Through no fault of their own, some of these unlucky families have been left with debts upwards of $60,000, despite being told that they were eligible to transfer benefits.
In an effort to cut costs, rules around transferability are becoming more stringent and increasingly difficult to comprehend. A new law limiting transferability is due to go into effect next month, further complicating this issue.
Beginning in July, transferability will be limited to service members with less than 16 years of active duty service. That means service members who served for nearly the entirety of the War on Terror will no longer be able to transfer educational benefits to their dependents. New rules also stipulate service members who cannot commit to four additional years to qualify for transferability, are ineligible to transfer benefits under any circumstance. These new policies cut corners and save money at the expense of veterans who’ve given years — sometimes decades — in service to our country.
As it stands, the transferability process is rigid, unintuitive and unforgiving, rife with bureaucratic and administrative hurdles. In some instances, benefits have been revoked because veterans were grossly misled by military officials, inevitably leaving their dependents robbed of the opportunity to leverage the Post 9/11 GI BIll to pay for an education. Other veterans have met all the requirements for transferability, including additional time served, only to be told errors in online filings made them ineligible to transfer their benefit.
Even if the majority of Post 9/11 GI Bill transfers are successful, when things go awry — there are often catastrophic economic consequences for the affected families, with little to no formal avenues for redress. Through no fault of their own, some of these unlucky families have been left with debts upwards of $60,000, despite being told that they were eligible to transfer benefits.
In an effort to cut costs, rules around transferability are becoming more stringent and increasingly difficult to comprehend. A new law limiting transferability is due to go into effect next month, further complicating this issue.
Beginning in July, transferability will be limited to service members with less than 16 years of active duty service. That means service members who served for nearly the entirety of the War on Terror will no longer be able to transfer educational benefits to their dependents. New rules also stipulate service members who cannot commit to four additional years to qualify for transferability, are ineligible to transfer benefits under any circumstance. These new policies cut corners and save money at the expense of veterans who’ve given years — sometimes decades — in service to our country.
(4)
(0)
Read This Next