Enthusiasts dressed in replica U.S. Army WWII-era military attire parade along Utah Beach on June 6, 2024 as part of the “D-Day” commemorations marking the 80th anniversary of the World War II Allied landings in Normandy.
Loic Venance | Afp | Getty Images
A federal law has forced nearly 122,000 disabled veterans in the last 12 years to return payouts — some totaling tens of thousands of dollars — they received to leave the military when it needed to downsize, according to new data obtained by NBC News.
The statistics come amid renewed calls to change the little-known law, which prohibits veterans from receiving both disability and special separation pay, which are one-time, lump-sum incentives offered to service members when the U.S. had to reduce its active-duty force.
“Nobody realizes that they are doing this to so many people,” said Vernon Reffitt, who was recently told to repay the $30,000 he got to leave the Army more than 30 years ago.
The clawbacks have thrown many veterans into sudden hardship. One said it would take him nearly 15 years to pay back what he owes. Another said he has to cut out expenses that are not a necessity, as his wife, who works full-time, is considering taking on another job to make ends meet.
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs said it had to recoup special separation payments from more than 17,000 veterans in the 2018 fiscal year — the highest annual amount so far. That total swelled from about 12,400 the previous year, although it’s unclear why.
The number of recoupments fell nearly each following year until the PACT Act, a measure that expanded benefits to millions of veterans exposed to burn pits and other toxic substances during their service, was signed into law in August 2022, VA statistics show. The recoupments demanded from vets in fiscal year 2023 grew to nearly 9,300, from 7,940 in 2022.
VA press secretary Terrence Hayes said the agency cannot speculate on why numbers rise or fall. He said the VA is legally bound to recover special separation benefits from veterans before those eligible can begin receiving disability payments.
At least two veterans who had long been receiving both benefits said the VA caught its own error only after they submitted PACT Act claims.
Shawn Teller accepted a one-time gross payment of about $10,700 to leave the Army in 1996, when the U.S. had to reduce its active-duty force. Then in 2012, the veteran, who served about eight years, including in operations Desert Storm and Desert Shield, began receiving monthly disability compensation for an old knee injury.
He filed a PACT Act claim for asthma in the summer of 2023, which the VA granted, slightly increasing his disability rating. But the benefit was short-lived. Months later, the VA sent him a letter, saying he should not have been receiving both disability and separation benefits without penalty for the last dozen years.
“It was something somebody overlooked at the time, and then they caught it now,” said Teller, 55, who lives in Walnut Creek, California.
Beginning in July, the VA wrote, it would start withholding Teller’s monthly disability payment of about $586 until he repays the amount of his separation pay.
“I rely on this pay every month,” Teller said. “It’s not right.”
Similarly, NBC News previously reported that Reffitt, the Army veteran, began receiving disability compensation in 1992, the same year he took the special separation pay.
But after Reffitt filed a PACT Act claim for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease — which was denied — the VA began withholding his monthly disability pay in May until he repays the $30,000. It would take the 62-year-old nearly 15 years to do so.
“This is wrong,” the Twin City, Georgia, resident said.