ary Officer - ArkLaTex MOAA
Transcription
ary Officer - ArkLaTex MOAA
From: Ark–La–Tex Chapter of The Military Officers Assn. of America P.O. Box 134 Barksdale AFB, LA 71110-0134 www.arklatexmoaa.org Phone: 318-456-5976 POSTMASTER: Please send the change of address orders to: MOAA, PO Box 134, Barksdale AFB, LA 71110-0134 PERIODICAL l i t a ry O f f i c e r i M e h T Newspaper The monthly Newsletter for Members of the Ark-La-Tex Chapter of The Military Officers Association of America. MOAA is the nation’s largest and influential association of military officers. It is an independent, non-profit, politically nonpartisan organization. WEBSITE WINNER 2005-2006-2009-2010-2013- RUNNER UP 2011 NEWSPAPER WINNER 2006 & 2011, 2012 & 2013- RUNNER UP 2000 THRU 2006 & 2011 5-STAR CHAPTER 2004 THRU 2011 - UNIQUE COMMUNICATION 2010-2011 VOLUME 01 ISSUE 24 Editor- C o l . S t e v e d e P y s s l e r , U S A F , R E T #379 1,440 Mailings May 2015 MOAA 2014 Annual Letter now online Never Stop Serving – That’s the promise of the Military Officers Association of America (MOAA). The organizations 2014 Annual Letter to Members is now available online at www.moaa.org/annualletter/ The letter highlights the victories, careers, services, strength and goals of the MOAA and it’s effect on the lives of spouses and families and on our national media. We hope that you will take a moment and read up on all ways being a member of MOAA ensures the growth and effectiveness of this organization. Fallen Soldier Cross Monument Dedication Ceremony 25 May There will be a dedication ceremony for the Fallen Soldier Cross Monument at the Northwest Louisiana Veterans Cemetery on Memorial Day 25 May. See page 2 for more details. Super Scholarship Dinner Sat 13 June Barksdale Club Ballroom 5pm–6pm: Social Hour 6pm: Buffet Dinner 6:45pm: Award Ceremony Over 20 students will receive scholarships totaling over $25,000! You must come to this great ceremony and meet these super young people. They are the finest youths and our future generations. The guest speaker will be Lt. Col. George Finck, USAF (Retired) and recipient of the Air Force Cross for combat action in Vietnam – the top USAF award and second only to the Congressional Medal of Honor. Door Prizes will be given out Note: Our chapter has the biggest, best, with the most scholarship money of all the almost 400 MOAA Chapters. Highly recommend all our enlisted officers attend this special event. Reservation for 13 June Super Scholarship Dinner Rank:_____________Name:____________________________________ Guests:_____________________________________________________ $20 Buffet x Total # Guests:_____________ Total Amount:$__________ Check Account No. ________________________________________ Credit Card (Mastercard or Visa only) No.________-_______-________-_______ Expiration Date: __/__ MOAA Member? ____Yes ____No Mail to: MOAA, PO Box 134, Barksdale AFB, LA 71110 2 May 2015 The Military Officer Dedication of Fallen Soldier Cross Monument at NW LA Veterans Cemetery set for Memorial Day, Monday 25 May The dedication of the Fallen Soldier Cross monument will be held with the annual Memorial Day services at 12 noon at the Veterans Cemetery. The ten foot tall bronze monument will also have in front a kneeling lady with an American tri-fold flag. A Victory Garden will be in front on the monument and be surrounded by all the State flags. The guest speaker will be Lt. Gen. Wilson Commander of Air Force Global Strike Command. The monument has been approved by the Arlington National Cemetery and will be the only monument in a Louisiana State cemetery. THIS IS AN HISTORIC EVENT FOR LOUISIANA VETERANS.You and your family and friends are all cordially invited to attend this event which will have lots of military pageantry. Great opportunity for picture taking! To reach the NW LA Veterans Cemetery travel west on I-20 from Shreveport and take Exit 8 (Bert Kouns Industrial Loop/LA 526; go south on Bert Kouns to traffic signal at intersection of Woolworth Road (fire station); turn right and continue to end of road at Intersection of LA 525/Colquitt Road; turn right and continue to 4-way stop at intersection of LA 169 in Spring Ridge; turn left and go 1 mile to intersection of LA 789; bear left on LA 789 and continue for about 2 1/2 miles. Look for sign to Northwest LA Veterans Cemetery Contents of the Ark-La-Tex Chapter Military Officers Association of America (MOAA) newsletter are not necessarily the official views of, or endorsed by the U.S. Government, the Department of Defense or the Department of the Air Force. The appearance of advertising In this publication, including inserts and supplements, does not constitute endorsement by the Ark-La-Tex Chapter Military Officers Association of America (MOAA) or the Natchitoches Times, the publishing company, of the products or services advertised. ARK-LA-TEX CHAPTER OF THE MILITARY OFFICERS ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA Board of Directors/Positions/Duties TITLE/POSITION/DUTIES President 1st Vice Pres 2nd Vice Pres 3rd Vice Pres Secretary Treasurer Immed Past Pres Director Director Director Director Director Director Director Director NAME HOME PHONE CELL PHONE E-MAIL WORK CONTACTS Stewart Greathouse Bill Davis 318-965-0990 318-510-3082 318-347-4838 318-754-7976 instugator@gmail.com bdavis@bossiersheriff.com 318-456-7644 billdavis77@yahoo.com Walt Slocombe David Lay Philip Blaufuss Dave Jampole Henry Burns Daniel Charchian William Cocke Steven dePyssler Stan Johnson James Kendall Ivan McKinney Anthony Wolf 318-752-1507 318-868-5483 318-797-3953 318-949-4342 318-949-9115 318-918-7755 318-797-9703 318-456-5976 318-742-9637 318-965-5115 318-742-0895 318-965-2057 318-840-6302 318-426-1221 318-393-0509 318-469-5122 318-773-9069 703-268-8068 318-469-7637 318-525-4920 318-455-3483 318-573-0261 318-458-9440 318-564-1667 slocombe@suddenlink.net davidljlay@yahoo.com pblaufuss@aol.com dave@customalpha.com burnsh@legis.state.la.gov b1charch@aol.com billyboy61930@att.net steven.depyssler@us.af.mil b52stan81@suddenlink.net flyboyjim6@aol.com mckinneyivan@bellsouth.net lwaeltbd@aol.com 318-456-3806 djampole@yahoo.com Doris Everhart-Franklin: e-mail: doris.everhart-franklin@us.af.mil (For Base Approval) Casualty Assistance: Director dePyssler Dinner Reservations: 1st Vice President Davis Finance: Treasurer Blaufuss Finance Committee: Pres. Greathouse/Treas. Blaufuss/Dir. Kendall Historian/Awards: Director Slocombe Membership: Director McKinney Newsletter/Membership: Director dePyssler COMMITTEE CHAIRPERSONS Programs & Events: Roster Updated: Lt Col (Ret) John Seanor/Phone: 318-456-4480/E-Mail: rao@us.af.mil ROTC/JROTC Coordinator: President Greathouse Scholarship/Letters To The Front: George Finck - 965-4124 - gfinksr@gmail.com Transition Center: 3rd Vice President Slocombe Web Master: Immediate Past President Jampole The Military Officer is published monthly by the Ark-La-Tex Chapter, The Military Officers Association of America, P. O. Box 134, BAFB, LA 71110. For address changes, please mail to: Military Officers of America Association (MOAA), P.O. Box 134, BAFB, LA 71110 or email: rao@barksdale.af.mil or fax: 318-456-3520. Annual dues are $20 (includes $3 dues and $17 subscription). Mail article suggestions, recommendations and complaints to MOAA at the above address. This newsletter is designed to provide information in regard to subject matter covered. It is published with the understanding that the editor is NOT engaged in rendering legal, accounting or other professional service and is strictly a volunteer without pay. If legal advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional person should be sought. The opinions expressed are those of the editor and not of the chapter. The Military Officer May 2015 3 CAPITOL HILL UPDATE The Bill Box contains a listing of bills that AUSA is currently tracking. VETERANS’ ISSUES Senate Action S. 167 {Clay Hunt Say Act} Cosponsors: 35 • Directs the Secretary of Veterans’ Affairs to provide for the conduct of annual evaluations of mental health care and suicide prevention programs of the Department of Veterans’ Affairs and would require a pilot program on loan repayment for psychiatrists who agree to serve in the Veterans Health Administration of the Department of Veterans’ Affairs. • Introduced by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. • Referred to Committee: Veterans’ Affairs • Signed into law Feb. 12, 2015. RETIREE ISSUES House Action H.R. 303 {Retired Pay Restoration Act} Cosponsors: 19 • Permits additional retired mem- bers of the Armed Forces who have a service-connected disability to receive both disability compensation from the VA for their disability and either retired pay by reason of their years of military service or Combat-Related Special Compensation. • Eliminates the phase-in period under current law with respect to such concurrent receipt • Introduced by Rep. Gus Bilirakis, R-Fla. • Referred to Committees: Armed Services; Veterans’ Affairs H.R. 333 {Disabled Veterans’ Tax Termination Act} Cosponsors: 24 • Permits retired members of the Armed Forces who have a service-connected disability rated less than 50 percent to receive concurrent payment of both retired pay and veterans’ disability compensation • Eliminates the phase-in period for concurrent receipt Barksdale ITT new location The Barksdale AFB Information Tickets and Tours office has a new location! We are now located in the new MSG Building on Kenney Ave. We are located on the first floor in room 1003. The ITT office offers a variety of discounted tickets for the military, such as Disney World, Universal Studios, Six Flags, and Medieval Times. Our most popular by far is the Disney World Military Salute ticket that we sell for $177 for a 4 day park hopper! That is more than half off the regular price! Visit our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/BarksdaleITT for any local events we might have, or www.Barksdaleservices.com to see a list of what we offer! We are open Monday-Friday 1000-1400, or call with any questions at 318-456-1866. • Extends eligibility for concurrent receipt to chapter 61 disability retirees with less than 20 years of service. • Introduced by Rep. Sanford Bishop, D-Ga. • Referred to Committees: Armed Services; Veterans’ Affairs Senate Action S. 271 {Retired Pay Restoration Act} Cosponsors: 8 • Permits certain retired members of the uniformed services who have a service-connected disability to receive both disability compensation from the Department of Veterans’ Affairs for their disability and either retired pay by reason of their years of military service or Combat-Related Special Compensation. • Introduced by Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev. • Referred to Committee: Armed Services HEALTH CARE ISSUES House Action H.R. 218 (CHAMPVA Children’s Protection Act of 2013) Cosponsors: 2 • Increases the maximum age for children eligible for medical care under the CHAMPVA program. • Introduced by Rep. Corrine Brown, D-Fla. • Referred to Committee: Veterans’ Affairs SPOUSE/FAMILY ISSUES Senate Action S. 759 (The Military Spouse Job Continuity Act) Cosponsors: 7 • Allows a credit against income tax for amounts paid by a spouse of a member of the Armed Forces for a new State license or certification required by reason of a permanent change in the duty station of such member to another State. • Introduced by Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa. • Referred to Committee: Finance MOAA Awarded Top Advocacy Association by THE HILL newspaper 7 years in a row ***2007–2013*** Information about this publication Published by Ark-La-Tex Chapter of MOAA. “Military Officers Association of America, Ark-La-Tex Chapter Newsletter” is published to inform members and family members of changes in legislation, defense policies and other matters affecting their military rights, benefits and obligations. It also contains information about Barksdale AFB and the local retiree community. While every effort is made to verify information in this publication, we can’t guarantee the accuracy of information furnished by outside agencies. Everything advertised in this publication shall be made available for purchase, use or patronage without regard to race, religion, sex, national origin, age, marital status, physical handicap, political affiliation, or any other nonmerit factor of the purchaser, user or patron. Advertising inquiries should be directed to: Col. Steve dePyssler at 318-456-5976 or email to rao@us.af.mil. USPS No. 11960 “The Military Officer” Editorial and Publication Published each month at 800 Kenney Ave. Rm#24, BAFB, LA 71110 Periodicals Postage paid at Bossier City, LA. 71111 Postmaster: Send address changes to: Ark-La-Tex Chapter MOAA P.O. Box 134, Barksdale AFB, LA 71110-0134 Membership in the ArklaTex Chapter MOAA with $20 annual dues includes $3 Dues and $17 subscription price to The Military Officer Advertising rates will be furnished upon request. The advertiser shall defend and indemnify and hold harmless The Military Officers Association of America, Ark-La-Tex Chapter against any claim of liability or loss asserted or established against it by reasons of the publication of any advertisement or any part thereof submitted by or published at the direction of the advertiser. For questions about advertising, call (318) 456-5976. For questions about membership information, call (318) 456-4480. 4 May 2015 The Military Officer You may be entitled to more social security than you’re getting Social Security might end up being your most valuable retirement asset... and the most difficult to understand. The system has more than 2,700 core rules and thousands more codicils. A single misstep could cost you as much as one-third of the money you might have received. Here’s a closer look at four Social Security guidelines that are poorly understood, even by financial planners. You might have more than one benefit available to you, but you can’t claim more than one at a time. Examples of benefits in addition to your standard retirement benefit: • If your spouse (or former spouse if you are divorced and your marriage lasted at least 10 years) is alive, you might qualify for a monthly spousal benefit equal to as much as 50% of your spouse’s “full retirement benefit”-the amount your spouse would receive if he starts his benefits at his “full retirement age,” which is 66 for people born between 1943 and 1954 ... between 66 and 67 for people born between 1955 and 1959 ... and 67 for people born in 1960 or later. • If your spouse or ex passes away, you might be entitled to a monthly survivor benefit of as much as 100% of the retirement benefit that he could have received if he were still alive. Social Security rules make it difficult to understand that you can’t get more than one of the benefits at the same time. The rules seem to indicate that Social Security Info Faster processing The Social Security Administration will expedite disability claims for applicants with severe medical conditions. The agency lists 225 conditions for which the expedited process applies. (You can find the list at www.social security,gov/compassionateallowances.) These claims should be decided within days, the agency says. Online statements The Social Security Administration reports that more than 13 million “My Social Security” accounts have been created. With an account, you can see your Social Security benefits statement online; it provides estimates for retirement, disability and survivor benefits. Go to www.social security.gov/mystatement for more info. Lost social security form If you got Social Security benefits last year but haven’t yet received (or have misplaced) Form SSA-l099, you can quickly print a replacement by setting up an online Social Security account. There are other ad vantages, too. You can get an estimate of future benefits if you’re still working, track yearly earnings and set up direct deposit for payments. To set up an online account, go to www.socialsecurity.gov/myaccount. Divorce and benefits My husband and I divorced after 20 years and he has remarried. Which wife gets the Social Security benefits? You both do. You and the new wife can each claim spousal benefits while he lives and survivor’s benefits when he dies. Neither of you gains (or loses) a dime just because there’s more than one of you on his account. The three main claiming rules for an ex: You were married for at least 10 years, you haven’t remarried and you’re 62 or older. You have one advantage over the current wife. She can’t claim spousal benefits until her husband files for retirement himself. A divorced wife can get those benefits even if her ex has not retired, provided that he’s eligible to claim and they’ve been divorced for two years or more. you can receive your own retirement benefit plus the portion of another benefit that is in excess of your retirement benefit-but that’s really just a confusing way of saying that the smaller of the two benefits is eliminated. What to do: It sometimes is worth claiming first one benefit, then switching to a different one later on. Doing this delays the start of the second benefit, which could increase the size of the check that you receive each month from that benefit for the rest of your life. There are many complex rules governing this. It’s easy to make a mistake and apply for two benefits even though you intended to apply for just one. If this happens, you might eliminate any upside to switching benefits later. Three important benefit-switching guidelines: • It may not be wise to claim a spousal benefit before you reach your foil retirement age. Doing so would cause you to be deemed to be filing for your own retirement benefit at this early age, too; forever reducing your monthly retirement benefit. • If you are married, you cannot file for a spousal benefit until your spouse has filed for his own retirement benefit (though if you are divorced, you can). • Although your monthly retirement benefit continues to increase in size for each month you delay starting it until age 70, spousal and survivor benefits stop Don’t confuse wills and trusts Trusts are an essential part of estate planning, but many people make a mistake that essentially vitiates their purpose by not transferring all of the assets they could have into the trust. A trust disposes of assets outside of probate, which is a procedure under the administration of a court that marshals the decedent’s assets, pays creditors and others, and disposes of the assets of the estate according to the decedent’s will. Probate involves, at the very least, an executor, an attorney, an appraiser and filing fees. By using a trust, the trustor (the person who transfers the assets going into the trust) can avoid these expenses to a considerable extent. The trustor, however, must put assets into the trust. And sometimes assets are forgotten, or the trustor thinks the attorney is responsible for their transfer. When the trustor dies, assets that should have been disposed of outside probate be come entangled in that complicated and costly procedure. Maintain good records so that assets intended for the trust are listed and easy to find. Biggest mistake in estate planning What’s the biggest mistake people make with estate planning? As long as the world keeps changing, there is always a chance that an estate plan put in place in the past will no longer work as intended. Consider how the federal estate-tax exemption has changed. In recent years, the allowable amount that can be passed tax-free to non spousal beneficiaries has jumped to $5.43 million from $1.5 million. Many people have two trusts one for their spouse, one for other beneficiaries and direct that the second trust be funded first, up to the exemption amount. The second trust, if unrevised, could consume all the decedent’s estate, leaving nothing for the spouse. Similarly, say you named your young children as beneficiaries on your retirement plan. Years later, one dies. If that original beneficiary designation hasn’t been revised, there is potential to completely disinherit one set of grandchildren. Review your estate plan annually. The most common mistake in estate planning is failing to do it. Basic estateplanning needs include: a will (pay attention to who you name as executor); a durable power of attorney for health care (don’t let the state make “do- or do-not-resuscitate” decisions on your behalf); and a durable power of attorney for financial matters (specify whether you want this to be immediately effective or “springing,” which means it isn’t effective unless you are incapacitated). Estate planning all-in-one guide The American Institute for Economic Research offers a publication that helps devise a “master plan” to handle your estate if you become incapacitated or die. If Something Should Happen includes worksheets to help pull together pertinent information. Copies are $10; order one at www.aier.org/bookstore, or call 888-528-1216. The Military Officer May 2015 5 6 May 2015 The Military Officer Fleming says 4 star at BAFB removes BRAC worry Former BAFB Congressman John Fleming said the U.S. Air Force’s decision to upgrade the command at Barksdale Air Force Base is good news for its longevity. Air Force General Robin Rand will be the new 4-star Commander of Global Strike at Barksdale Air Force Base, pending U.S. Senate confirmation. When asked about the future of Air Force Congressman Barksdale Air Force Base for potential cuts, John Fleming he quickly replied, “What’s really important about that is, it obviously takes away the worry that Barksdale is on the chopping block for BRAC (Base Realignment and Closure). Obviously that’s not gonna happen, since we’re upgrading our command.” When asked about the details of the new 4-star at Barksdale, Fleming said, “Just this past week, I had questions in the House Armed Services Committee to an Admiral Haney, who is part of that nuclear enterprise.” “I asked him about what the current policy is of the Pentagon, relative to moving from a triad, which is bombers, missiles and submarines down to a diad, which is what many in Washington really want,” Fleming continued, “and he (Haney) reiterated what the Pentagon has been saying, and I’ve been saying.” “We need to maintain a nuclear. triad; we need to modernize our: nuclear weapons, because many of them are becoming obsolescent and would questionably work if called upon,” said Fleming. Emphasizing the need for nuclear upgrades, the Congressman said, “Our delivery system we have, the B-52’s that have been in operation now, we have grandsons of some of the original pilots who are flying them now,” adding, “and there’ll be another generation or two even before the next bombers come off the assembly line.” Optimistic about Global Strike, Fleming summed up his thoughts, “So, I’m very happy with the developments that we’re seeing out of the Air Force.” Air Force is short 520 active duty fighter pilots The Air Force doesn’t have enough fighter pilots in its active duty cockpits, and the service fears a long-term drop in those available to train new pilots and test new aircraft, service leaders told lawmakers March 19. The active-duty Air Force is 520 pilots short of its total manning requirement, with that projection expected to grow in the near future due to an increase in private airlines luring the pilots away and continued effects of force structure cuts, according to joint testimony to the Senate Armed Services Committee by William LaPlante, assistant secretary for acquisition; Lt. Gen. James Holmes, deputy chief of staff for strategic plans and requirements; and Lt. Gen. Tod Wolters, deputy chief of staff for operations. “The shortfall evolved from force structure reductions that cut active-duty fighter squadrons and fighter training squadrons to a number that cannot sustain billet requirements,” the testimony states. “As a result, the Air Force is currently unable to produce and experience the required number of fighter pilots across’ the total force.” The service is prioritizing its overall manpower to keep Guantanamo to close by 2017 President Obama will make big headway on shuttering Guantanamo Bay. By year-end, he’ll have removed all but 30 of the 122 detainees left at the naval base in Cuba, sending them to Kazakhstan, Uruguay and other countries that’ll take them. Invoking executive privilege, he’ll transfer the remaining 30, considered by Washington to be the most dangerous terrorists, to wellguarded U.S. facilities. He’ll get his way by noting that the cost of housing a per- operational cockpits full, causing a drop in air operations expertise during higher-level planning and a drop in fighter pilot experience for trainers and test programs. “Without these fighter pilots, the Air Force will be very challenged to continue to provide the air supremacy upon which all our forces depend,” the testimony states. The Air Force projects that the airline industry will hire about 20,000 pilots over the next 10 years, and with changing requirements, the companies will target military aviators at an increased rate, Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Welsh told the Senate Armed Services Committee on March 18. Budget restrictions have limited flying hours, causing frustration among pilots. This frustration will return if sequestration comes back, Welsh said. The Air Force uses big bonuses to try to keep its pilots around. The service offers Aviator Retention Pay payouts for eligible pilots who agree to serve for nine more years, at a rate of up to $225,000. Fighter pilots, other valuable pilots and combat systems officers who sign up for five more years can also get a $125,000 bonus. son at Guantanamo Bay is nearly $3 million a year versus $34,000, on average, for an inmate held at a high-security U.S. prison. The detention facility will be closed by the time Obama leaves office in 2017. Troops in Iraq Look for the president to double the number of U.S. troops in Iraq. But the move won’t stop Islamic State rebels from being a threat to the U.S. and allies in the Middle East and elsewhere. Short of an all-out war in Iraq and Syria, which the U.S. doesn’t have the stomach for, the rebels will keep hitting and running, even as U.S. forces continue to have success in identifying and targeting ISIS leaders. Obama will reluctantly provide 5,000 troops, advisers, contractors and support staff, on top of the 4,700 who are already in Iraq or are committed to be there early in 2015. Cost of Wars Almost $2 Trillion A Dec. 8, 2014, Congressional Research Service report says the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and counterterrorism Commander up for promotion A recent commander of the 2nd Bomb Wing at Barksdale is up for promotion to general officer and a plum position, and other officers either once stationed at Barksdale or under Air Force Global Col. Andrew Strike Command also Gebara are set for moves, the Pentagon has announced. Col. Andrew Gebara commander of the local active-duty B-52 wing from May 2012 to August 2014, was named for elevation to brigadier general, according to a release from Air Force headquarters Friday. Gebara’s new job will be as deputy director of nuclear operations at Headquarters U.S. Strategic Command, Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska. Lt. Col. Burns, USA, Retired announces run for La. Senate District 9 State Rep. Henry Burns made it official. He has tossed his hat into the ring for the Dist. 36 state senate seat that will be up for grabs in October’s statewide elections. Burns, who was first elected in 2007 to serve Dist. 9, is seeking to replace Benton Republican Robert Adley, who is term-limited after serving 12 years. Editors note: Burns is a board member of the Ark-La-Tex Chapter of the Military Officers Association of America (MOAA). operations elsewhere cost a combined $1.6 trillion between Sept 11, 2001, and Sept. 30, 2014. Some 92% of these expenses fall under the Defense Department. But VA medical care expenditures for the wounded are included in the remaining 8%. Physically wounded from both wars total 52,304 plus 128,496 veterans formally diagnosed with PTSD. Not calculated are lifetime costs of medical care for disabled veterans. A June Boston University study claims that amount through 2054 could be a whopping $1 trillion. The Military Officer May 2015 7 Letters to the Editor Sci-Port a gem for Shreveport, region February 20th 2015 Dear Col. dePyssler, I want to thank you so much for all the information you gave me, it was invaluable. I don’t know what the widows of Shreveport/Bossier would do without your help. You are an amazing man and I may take you up on the offer of investment advice. Sincerely Mary K. Shouse, Bossier City Dear Editor, As a native of Shreveport who now lives in Dallas, I want to share a terrific experience that my family had while in Shreveport over the holidays. We went to Sci-Port. My husband and I took our two children, niece and nephew, who range in age from 4 to 10. It was one of the best experiences I have ever had anywhere with four small children. As any parent or caregiver knows, finding indoor, fun, educational activities that last longer than 10 minutes and are enjoyable for adults as well as children is like the search for the Holy Grail. It seems unattainable. In Dallas we are fortunate to have the Perot Museum of Nature and Science, which offers stunning architecture, outstanding lab experiences, and an amazing exhibits. However, I found Sci-Port to be more accessible for children of elementary school age, with many hands-on activities demonstrating basic scientific principles and fewer video screens. We even lucked into a “holiday season” chemistry presentation, during which a Sci-Port employee conducted experiments, including making snow, then turning it green and red. Sci-Port is a gem for the residents of Shreveport and the entire region. We can’t wait to go again! - Frances Seiber Knipp Dallas, Texas La. National Guard Youth Challenge Program Dear Editor, The Louisiana National Guard Youth Challenge Program (YCP) is an alternative educational program which offers 16-18 year old adolescents an opportunity to change their future. Students looking for a way to succeed outside of a traditional school setting learn self-discipline, leadership, and responsibility while working to obtain a high school equivalency diploma. In total, YCP is a 17 month program which consists of two phases. During the 5 month Residential Phase, students live on site at one of the three locations: Camp Minden near Shreveport, Camp Beauregard in Central Louisiana, and The Gillis W. Long Center near Baton Rouge. During the Residential Phase, students attend school, receive individual counseling, and are supervised 24 hours a day. After graduation, students return home and enter the 12 month Post Residential Phase. During this phase, which is designed to help students continue in a positive direction, graduates are assisted by case managers and community mentors to continue their education, enroll in college, begin job training, find employment, or enlist in the military. 8 May 2015 The Military Officer Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) question and answer A complete and detailed description of SBP can be found at http://militarypay.defense.gov/Benefits/SBP.html. DFAS provides a treatment of the SBP plan’s major provisions at http://www.dfas.mil/retiredmilitary/provide/sbp.html. These websites are the most important tools for any RSO looking to understand the provisions of the SBP plan overall. SBP Basics Retired pay stops with the death of the retiree. The Survivor Benefit Plan was created to permit a retiree to provide a portion of his or her retired pay to an elected beneficiary or beneficiaries after his or her death. The SBP benefit is inflation protected as the base amounts, premiums and annuity amounts are increased with each cost of living increase applied to retired pay. Coverage is available for a spouse, former spouse, children, a combination of spouse or former spouse with children, or a insurable interest person (such as a business partner or parent) if there is no spouse at retirement. The SBP annuity will generally be 55% of the base amount selected for coverage. The base amount can be the maximum of the gross monthly retired pay entitlement, or any lesser dollar amount down to the $300.00 minimum. At retirement, a member must elect SBP coverage. He or she must also elect the type of coverage desired. However, if a member is married, he or she may not reduce or decline spouse coverage without his or her spouse’s written consent. If a member is married and has made no other valid election, the full basic SBP for spouse and children is automatic. If a member has a former spouse, that may affect his or her options. In general, once a SBP election has been made, it cannot be canceled or changed except in specific instances such as a change in your marital status or after the loss of a beneficiary. Q1: What happens if a member elects SBP coverage, then after retirement decides he or she no longer wants coverage? SBP is an irrevocable election. The only circumstances in which a member can remove SBP coverage are: • loss of beneficiary (death, divorce, child age, etc.) • termination of coverage during 2536 months of retirement (must be made on DD Form 2656-2) • withdrawal due to VA disability (member must be rated 100% by DVA for five consecutive years beginning at retirement -OR- member must be rated 100% by DVA for ten consecutive years beginning after retirement) Q2: What happens if a member wishes to make an election requiring spousal concurrence, but the spouse is unable to sign documentation due to being unavailable? If an election requires spousal concurrence, then that concurrence must be obtained and obtained in the proper form before the election is valid. If the member wishes his or her election to become valid, the form(s) must be mailed, faxed, emailed, etc. to the spouse for signature. Whether the spouse is across the country or even the world, he/she must still sign documentation and validate his or her signature with an appropriately signed and dated notarization. If the spouse’s whereabouts are truly unknown, the Secretary of the member’s branch of service may be able to exempt the member from the spouse signature requirement. Q3: Is it true that the surviving spouse of a member receiving a SBP benefit will lose the benefit if he or she remarries? If a surviving spouse annuitant remarries before the age of 55, he or she will lose their benefit. However, the benefit will be reinstated if the new marriage ends for any reason (death, divorce, annulment). If a surviving spouse annuitant remarries after the age of 55, his or her benefit will not be affected. For former spouse SBP beneficiaries (in cases in which the member is still alive), FS SBP coverage is suspended upon remarriage prior to 55. In these cases, coverage be reinstated if remarriage ends for any reason (death, divorce, annulment). Q4: What information in regards to Former Spouse SBP are we authorized to release to former spouses? The information we are allowed to divulge is limited to: The level of coverage (can divulge only if the FS is beneficiary) The amount of the annuity payable (can divulge only if FS is beneficiary) Q5: What rules govern changing SBP coverage from a Former Spouse to a current Spouse upon the death of the covered Former Spouse? Effective January 8, 2014, DFAS’ Office of General Counsel clarified the laws regarding the change of SBP coverage from Former Spouse to Spouse upon the death of the former spouse. Situation 1: Any retiree who is married and elects Spouse coverage at retirement, then divorces that spouse and elects Former Spouse coverage for the former spouse, CANNOT elect to cover his/her current spouse upon the former spouse’s death. It does not matter whether or not the Former Spouse SBP coverage was court-ordered. Once the former spouse dies, the retiree cannot add his/her new spouse to the SBP The ONLY circumstance under which a retiree in Situation 1 can change his/her SBP coverage from Former Spouse to Spouse is if the change is made while the Former Spouse is alive Situation 2: Any retiree that has BOTH a spouse and former spouse at retirement, who elects Former Spouse SBP coverage pursuant to a court order, is eligible to change his/her SBP coverage to Spouse upon the former spouse’s death. This is because the retiree’s actual spouse was an eligible beneficiary at retirement, but the retiree was required by a court order to establish Former Spouse coverage If the retiree made a voluntary election for Former Spouse coverage at retirement, while he/she also had a current spouse, then SBP the coverage cannot be changed to spouse upon the former spouse’s death. New Survivor Benefit Plan Trust now available Recently passed legislation now allows Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) income to be paid into a special needs trust. After numerous years as a MOAA legislative priority, legislation passed at the end of December 2014 allowing the Survivor Benefit plan (SBP) to pay a special needs trust. Many families have been waiting for this SBP change for years. What does it mean? In this context, a special needs trust is a legal document that establishes an account to oversee financial assets of a mentally or physically incapacitated child - specifically a child, by this law. When a special needs trust is designated as the beneficiary of an SBP annuity, SBP income can be paid to the trust and managed for the benefit of the incapacitated child’s life. A designated trustee manages the trust assets. A key benefit of a special needs trust is that SBP income placed in the trust will not disqualify a child from other state or federal aid that might have been jeopardized had the SBP income been paid directly to the child. SBP income will be exempt from state financial means tests determining other aid eligibility. To qualify, a special needs trust must provide that upon the death of the beneficiary, remaining assets in the trust revert back to the state. The state will use the remaining trust assets to offset its prior costs, up to an amount equal to the total assistance paid on behalf of the beneficiary. It will take a while for DoD to figure out how to implement this new legal provision and put all the management systems in place. Currently, there are no details for how to establish a trust for your beneficiary. Here’s what we don’t know yet: • whether current SBP participants will be given an option to change their SBP beneficiaries to a special needs trust; • whether DoD will consider an open season enrollment to allow retirees who have incapacitated children and did not enroll in SBP at retirement to take ad vantage of this new beneficiary category; • whether survivors currently receiving SBP income will be allowed to divert their income to the new trust beneficiary; and how members coming up on retirement and making the SBP decision will be managed. MOAA will be working closely with the service pay agencies to make suggestions and monitor the progress of this policy development. Until more details become available, we all are in limbo. For general information on special needs trusts, consult legal counsel. To keep up-to-date on other important legislative news affecting the military community, subscribe to MOAA’s weekly Legislative Update e-newsletter at www.moaa.org/email. SBP Resources For more Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) information - including several publications that are free to MOAA Premium and Life members - visit www.moaa.org/sbp. The Military Officer Casualty Affairs - Make your wishes known now To assist you in making certain decisions concerning your funeral service. By making your wishes known now, you’ll spare your family the additional stress of having to make these decisions within a few hours of your demise. 1. Does your primary next of kin (PNOK) know where to locate the following documents or information: a. DD Form 214, Certificate of Release or Discharge from Active Duty. This very important document shows proof of your military service and is needed to apply for burial entitlements and a variety of other benefits. You’ll receive the original copy upon retirement; NPRC/NCPMF-C, 9700 Page Blvd, St Louis MO 63132 also retains a copy. b. DD Form 93, Record of Emergency Data. You’ll receive a copy upon retirement; the original is on file at DF AS-CL. After retirement, you may change the DD Form 93 by completing an AF Form 694, Data for Payment of Retired AF Personnel. If you’ve already done so, a copy of the form will suffice. c. Birth Certificates. You should have the original or certified copies of birth certificates for you, your spouse, and your children. d. Will. Your PNOK should have access to your will. In addition, you should have a letter of instructions for your executor. e. Life Insurance Policies. You should ensure your PNOK has a list of all policy account numbers, policy values and types, and the name, address and telephone numbers of the policy providers. f. Account Numbers and Addresses. You should ensure your PNOK has access to bank, investment, loan, and credit card account numbers, the types of accounts and the address or telephone number of each account-holding institution. g. VA Claim. h. Do you want your body or organs donated? Do you have a signed organ donor card? Is your PNOK aware of your wishes? 2. Do you want your remains cremated or casketed? Do you want a military funeral ceremony? Where do you wish to be interred? If you wish to be buried at the Northwest LA Veterans Cemetery at Keithville, LA call 318-9250612 3. If you wish to be interred at Arlington National Cemetery, do you want the funeral service to be conducted in the “Old Post Chapel” (capacity 200) or at the Memorial Chapel (capacity 750)? Both chapels are located on Fort Myer VA. 4. Do you wish to be interred in uniform? If yes, do you have a service dress uniform completed with all rank, ribbons, badges, and other items? Uniform should be current as of your retirement effective date. 5. Do you want a privately obtained headstone or the government 01 A) supplied grave marker? 6. Do you have a family chaplain who will preside over the funeral service, or do wish to use an AF chaplain? Do you have a religious preference? 7. Do you have a preference on flowers or donations instead of? If you prefer donations instead of flowers, where should the donations be sent? Your PNOK should have access to the name, address, and telephone number of the recipient. 8. Do you want your funeral service to include an eulogy; if so, do you have a preference on who delivers the comments? 9. Would you like to have honorary pallbearers? If so, who are they? Your PNOK should have access to their names, addresses, and telephone numbers. Also, you may wish to identify a few alternates. 10. Condolence messages, cards, letters, etc will normally be sent to your PNOK’s address — do you have an alternate preference (e.g., executor)? If so, please ensure your PNOK is made aware of your preferences. 11. Do you have an updated bio that includes post-retirement information? This bio will help your PNOK prepare the obituary. Do you want a picture and/or flag in obituary? 12. Do you belong to a military association? If so, is your PNOK aware of the services they provide? 13. Which professional organizations or specific individuals do you wish your PNOK to notify upon your demise. May 2015 9 Certificate of Eligibility for widows Effective Aug. 1, 2013, most Survivor Benefit plan annuitants over the age of 55 were no longer required to complete and submit an annual certificate of Eligibility (COE) to the Defense Finance and Accounting Service. Annuitants will not receive the annual COE once they reach age 55. Their eligibility to receive annuity payments will continue without submitting the COE. The following annuitants will continue to receive COES and must submit completed forms to DFAS to continue annuity payment eligibility: • Annuitants under 55 years of age • Annuitants who are receiving hard copy checks in a foreign country (regardless of age) • Annuitants who have a permanent disability (regardless of age) For more information contact Selina Lyle, Chief, CasuaIty/SBP Operations 800 Keaney Ave Bldg, 4353 Room 25, Barksdale AFB, LA 71110 selina.lyle@us.af.mil Voice: (318) 456-2212 Cell: (318) 230-4387 Fax: (318) 456-3584 VA Benefits e-claims toolkit The VA Recently debuted its e-claims toolkit to help veterans filing claims for benefits. In addition to the kit, claimants have access to new infographics, fact sheets, and tips. At www.benefits.va.gov/benefits, you’ll find pointers like the ones below and more. 1. File your disability compensation claim electronically through eBenefits. eBenefits allows you to fill out your application, upload all required documentation, and submit your claim with ease. 2. Submit your application and all documentation within one year of starting your claim. You have the option of starting your claim early to preserve your start date, from which benefits would be paid. 3. Gather and submit all documentation simultaneously with your claim application. You will be eligible for faster processing if all your required and relevant documentation is, provided at the time you submit your claim. Find out more about eBenefits and access other MOAA veterans service organization resources at www.moaa.org/vso. Editors note: Highly recommend going through a veterans service officer. There is one in every parish/county. Reopening a VA claim A veteran may reopen a finally adjudicated claim by submitting new and material evidence. New evidence means existing evidence not previously submitted to the VA. Material evidence means existing evidence that, by itself or when considered with previous evidence, relates to an unestablished fact necessary to substantiate the claim. New and material evidence can be neither cumulative nor redundant of the evidence of record and must raise a reasonable possibility of substantiating the claim. New and material evidence received prior to the expiration of the appeal period, or prior to the appeal decision if a timely appeal has been filed, will be considered as having been filed in connection with the claim which was pending at the beginning of the appeal period. Once a decision is made, if VA receives or associates relevant official Barksdale AFB Casualty Affairs Selina Lyle 318-456-2212 service department records that existed and had not been associated with the claim when VA first decided the claim, VA will reconsider the claim. These records may include service records that are related to a claimed in service event, injury, or disease; additional service records forwarded by the Department of Defense or the service department to VA any time after VA’s original request for service records; or declassified records that could not have been obtained because the records were classified when VA decided the claim. This does not apply to records that VA could not have obtained when it decided the claim because the records did not exist, or because the veteran failed to provide sufficient information for VA to identify and obtain the records. Editors note: Always go thru a veterans service officer when possible. 10 May 2015 The Military Officer March 2015 Retiree Deaths Name Date of Death Charles K. Bowers 1-Mar-15 Jerry B. Harris 21-Feb-15 William F. Lott 3-Mar-15 Frederick C. Westergaard 3-Mar-15 Walter H. Kirkpatrick 20-Feb-15 Aubrey Howard 18-Jan-15 Walter H. Campbell 19-Feb-15 Dennis L. Black 3-Mar-15 Rex A. Ryan 10-Mar-15 Lee H. Rucker 8-Mar-15 Stephen J. Westbrook 6-Mar-15 Charles D. Wheeler 29-Jan-15 Robert C. Meredith 15-Mar-15 Clair L. Coy 16-Mar-15 Aaron D. Hemphill 12-Mar-15 Fred E. Beach 11-Mar-15 Gerald W Monismith 4-Mar-15 William L. Horne 6-Mar-15 Thomas R. Cox 24-Mar-15 Joseph Provost 30-Mar-15 William L. Mattison 14-Mar-15 Dennis C. Rushford 22-Mar-15 Wilson Updyke 1-Mar-15 Grady C. Wilson 23-Mar-15 George S. Wylie 27-Mar-15 Herbert W. Taylor 4-Jan-15 Service Air Force Air Force Air Force Air Force Air Force Air Force Navy Air Force Army Air Force Army Air Force Army Air Force Air Force Air Force Air Force USAR Navy Air Force Air Force Army Air Force Navy Air Force Air Force Grade Age CMSgt 84 MSgt 79 SMSgt 80 LTC 79 CMSgt 82 SSgt 85 SCPO 76 SMSgt 74 MSgt 66 TSgt 58 LTC 82 TSgt 72 LTC 85 TSgt 85 Cpt 76 TSgt 74 TSgt 82 LTC 80 PO2 73 SMSgt 81 LTC 80 CW2 66 TSgt 79 CPOC 80 MSgt 96 MSgt 84 Widow/Spouse Deaths Name Doris W. McGraw Date of Death 19-Feb-15 Veteran Maj. Jim F. McGraw to apply for the french legion of honor medal today! French Legion Honor for World War II Veterans By Dr. Nancy Toombs As many of you know, the 8th Air Force Historical Society has been working hard to relay the message to all our WWII veterans about the French Legion of Honor Medal. This is the highest award that France can bestow and it is given to all branches of service personnel who participated in the liberation of France. I can’t emphasize enough how important it is for every eligible veteran to make application, as it can take up to one year for your application to be approved. The main criteria for eligibility is the veteran must have participated in one of the four French campaigns. Those campaigns are: *Normandy *Ardennes (Battle of the Budge) *Northern France *Provence (Southern France) Please do not put this off—make your application today. Call Nancy Toombs at (501) 681-3126 and I will send you a package of information so you can make application NOW. You may also mail your information to: Consul General de France 1340 Poydras Street, Suite 1710 New Orleans, LA 70112 Tel: 504-569-2880 Fax: 504-569-2871 The Historical Society will be keeping a record of those veterans who have received this award. Remember, this award cannot be given posthumously unless the application has been received AND approved prior to death. If you, a loved one, or a WWII veteran you know may be eligible, please pass this information along to them. We are very proud of our Legion of Honor Award recipients and want to recognize each and every one of our heroes. The Military Officer May 2015 2014 Site Excellence Award The 2nd Force Support Squadron (FSS) at Barksdale has won the 2014 Department of Defense (DoD) RAPIDS Site of the Year Award. RAPIDS stands for Real-time Automated Personal Identification Data System and represents all of the hardware and software used to produce Common Access Cards (CACs) and retiree and dependent identification cards for active duty, retired, reserve, civilian and contractor personnel around the globe. The criteria by which a site is chosen are: production rate, low card issuance failure rates, training currency, personnel and hardware management, cardstock management, proactive troubleshooting, process innovation, and customer service. DoD contractors at Barksdale, led by Nate Waters was chosen over 1600 RAPIDS sites worldwide for providing exceptional process management and outstanding customer service and support. The DoD RAPIDS Site of the Year Award is presented annually to a site that greatly exceeds standards by adopting new procedures or tools that benefit customer service. Ms Mary Dixon, Director, Defense Manpower Data Center (DMDC) will award the Barksdale team certificates of Appreciation from the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense Personnel & Readiness for outstanding support of the Defense Enrollment Eligibility Reporting System. Pushing the limits of life longevity 1925 Turn-of-thecentury health regulations, requiring improvements such as clean water and better sewage disposal, curb outbreaks in the U.S. that are particularly deadly to children. 1955 Thanks to vaccines for smallpox, diphtheria, polio and other highly contagious-and often lethal viruses, average life expectancy goes up. 1985 Public-health campaigns on heart health and the dangers of smoking reduce heart-disease deaths. Medical advances also help extend life. 2015 Improved drugs, diagnostic tests, surgeries, disease treatments and other medical advances reduce fatality rates for cancers and other illnesses. 2045 Regenerative medicine may interrupt aging. If not, conservative estimates put life expectancy at 81 as high obesity rates offset other gains. NewsUSA 11 12 May 2015 The Military Officer Win on the car lot before you get to the car lot Plan ahead before you haggle with a salesperson who does this every day. There’s plenty up for grabs: According to Kelley Blue Book, the fair price for a new Toyota Camry is $2,000 less than the manufacturer’s suggested retail price. THE SCENARIO You see an ad for a specific car at a great price. CALL AHEAD AND SAY… “I want to see if the 2013 pre-owned hybrid SUV is still available. It is? Great! Can you have it ready to testdrive when I get there?” WHY IT WORKS Car dealers may advertise one car to get you to the lot and t h e n avoid showing it to you so you buy a pricier one, says Philip Reed, senior consumer advice editor at Edmunds.com. THE SCENARIO You know what car you want, and you want to compare prices at different dealers. SEND AN EMAIL THAT SAYS – “I’m looking for an out-the-door quote on the 2015.” Then specify the trim, options, and color. WHY IT WORKS If you call around, dealers may try to draw you into the shop without giving you the info you are looking for. By specifying all the details and making sure to get a price that covers everything, you’ll be able to make apples-toapples comparisons, says Joe Wiesenfelder, executive editor of Cars. com. And you’ll have neutralized a salesperson’s big advantage the gift of gab. AARP Driving Classes 2015 By taking the “Smart Driver Course” participants may: Update their knowledge of the rules of the road, learn or improve defensive driving techniques and extend their safe driving lifetime. Successful course completion qualifies attendees to possible discount of up to three years on auto insurance from most insurers. All classes meet on the days indicated below from 1200 to 1600 hrs. Barksdale AFB Golf Course Clubhouse. Call the Barksdale Retiree office- 318-456-4480 to register. Cost is $15 per person (proof of AARP Membership required) and $20 for non-AARP member. This can be paid by cash or check made payable to AARP. Students must attend a total of 4 hours in order to receive a certificate of completion. The Golf Course Clubhouse has a snack bar open until 2pm for meals. After 2pm there are drinks & snacks available for purchase. Food or drink cannot brought in from the outside. 2015 Classes: 28 Apr 30 Jun 25 Aug 27 Oct 15 Dec be Exchange rewards academic excellence with ‘You Made the Grade’ program Besides handling daily schoolwork, studying and tests, military students face unique challenges, including coping with separation from parents during deployments and multiple moves. In fact, according to the Military Child Education Coalition, military children typically move six to nine times by the time they’ve completed 12th grade, with many making multiple moves during high school. The Army & Air Force Exchange Service is rewarding military students who excel in the classroom with its You Made the Grade program, now in its 15th year. Students in first through 12th grades who maintain a B average or better are eligible to receive a coupon book filled with free offers and discounts. You Made the Grade offers for 2015 include free food items such as a Burrito Supreme or Taco Supreme from Taco Bell; small chicken Philly sandwich at Charleys; Popeyes Chicken Po’Boy; and a bacon double cheeseburger and small fry from Burger King. Students who make the grade will also score Snack Avenue coupons for a free fountain drink, including Yeti, a frozen carbonated drink, and a complimentary hot dog or roller grill item. Other offers include discounts on backpacks, shoes and more. Scholars can also enter the You Made the Grade semiannual sweepstakes to receive gift cards worth $2,000, $1,500 or $500. Entries for the gift card sweepstakes drawing can be submitted twice a year, with drawings typically held in June and December. “The Exchange understands and appreciates the sacrifices military students make,” said Air Force Chief Master Sgt. Sean Applegate, Exchange senior enlisted advisor. “Those who excel in the classroom, especially while dealing with multiple moves and parents’ deployments, deserve to be recognized.” Students, including those who are home schooled, can receive a You Made the Grade coupon booklet by presenting a valid military I.D. and proof of an overall B average at their nearest Exchange customer service area. Eligible students can pick up one booklet for each qualifying report card. Students and guardians can check with their local Exchange store manager for more information about the Exchange’s You Made the Grade program. ThanksUSA offers scholarships to children, spouses of U.S. Troops, ends 15 May ThanksUSA, a national nonprofit organization dedicated to thanking America’s troops through the gift of education, is inviting children and spouses of America’s armed forces to apply for its post-secondary education scholarships, according to a ThanksUSA news release issued today. Those interested can apply via the organization’s website (www.thanksusa.org), and the application period extends from today through May 15, 2015. ThanksUSA provides need-based scholarships to the children and spouses of service members across all the armed forces, including the reserves, giving special consideration to families of the fallen and wounded, according to the release. Over the past decade, the said the organization has raised more than $10 million, resulting in nearly 3,400 scholarships. Up to 500 students are expected to receive awards this season, totaling $1.5 million. ThanksUSA is a nonpartisan, charitable effort to mobilize Americans of all ages to thank the men and women of the U.S. military for their service to the nation, the release said. The organization provides college, technical and vocational school scholarships to the children and spouses of military personnel. Qualifications to receive a ThanksUSA Scholarship include: Be a dependent child, age 24 and under (as of application deadline) or Be a spouse of U.S. military service personnel AND Be current high school seniors or graduates who plan to enroll or students who are already enrolled in a fulltime undergraduate course of study at an accredited two-or four-year college or university or vocational-technical school for the academic year. The Military Officer May 2015 13 What does it take to get you moving? VA aid & Despite the abundance of supervised programs and gizmos to encourage movement, health experts are still asking what it takes to get you moving. It’s probably more than your good intentions. “It’s very challenging to rely on will power to change,” says Jeremy Adam Steeves. He’s encouraging people to increase the number of steps they take each day. “The average American is getting just over 5,000 steps a day. The goal is 10,000 steps,” Steeves says. In one experiment he divided 58 sedentary, overweight adults into two groups. During the six-month trial, one group walked for 30 minutes a day; the second group stepped in place during the commercials in a 90-minute stretch of television viewing daily. Both groups increased their daily steps while decreasing their body fat and their waist to and hip circumference over the length of the experiment. The TV-stepping group broke up their sitting time, which also is important, according to Steeves. For Marc Hamilton, the answer is to encourage more everyday movement. “If it looks like exercise and requires equipment you’ll perform it like exercise. You’ll do it for 30 minutes, check it off the list, then park yourself in front of the TV.” says Hamilton. People can “retool the habits of their day,” according to his research. “There are practical, feasible things you can do without exerting yourself. You’ll feel better, have a greater sense of energy and be more productive, “ Hamilton says. Make it a practice to get up from your desk to talk to colleagues across the room or pick up around the house every day. “You can experience healthful results based on how much time you spend moving, not just how much you exert yourself,” he says. Questions to ask before hiring a health aide No one with a need for a home health aide should be afraid to seek necessary care. But how do you ensure that your loved one is in safe hands? Lee Lindquist, M.D., chief of geriatrics at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, offers these 10 questions to ask when vetting home-care agencies. How do you recruit home health aides, and what are your hiring requirements? Do you do criminal background checks on prospective aides? How about drug screening? Are health aides certified in CPR, or do they have any health-related training? Are the aides insured and bonded through your agency? What competencies are expected of the aide? Lifting and transfers? Personal care skills (bathing, dressing, toileting)? Training in behavioral management, cognitive support? How do you assess what the aide is capable of doing? Difficulty standing on one leg? You may be in danger of a stroke If you have difficulty standing on one leg for 20 seconds, you may be in danger of a stroke. Research published in the journal Stroke found that the inability to balance on one foot could indicate damage to small blood vessels in the brain that raise the risk for stroke and mental decline. Nearly, 400 apparently healthy men and women, average age 67, were asked to stand in a flamingolike position for up to 60 seconds. Afterward, each underwent an MRI brain scan. Those who had difficulty balancing for 20 seconds were more likely to have undergone “silent” strokes, called microbleeds, that affect balance and were at risk for a serious stroke. What is your policy on providing a substitute home health care aide in the event a regular care provider cannot perform the services in your contract? If there is dissatisfaction with a particular home care provider, can he or she be replaced “without cause”? Does the agency provide a supervisor who is responsible for regularly evaluating the quality of home care? Does supervision occur over the telephone, through progress reports or in person at the home of the older adult? Help for Alzheimers Caregivers The Alzheimer’s Association hosts an online Alzheimer’s and Dementia Caregiver Center at www.alz.org/care/overview.asp attendance benefit If you think you are eligible for VA Aid & Attendance or Housebound benefits or nursing home benefits you should contact and work with your nearest VA Service Officer. It is too complicated to put in an article in this paper. USAA #33 of 100 Best Companies to Work For San Antonio, Tx., based USAA employs 26,267 people and currently has 1,100 job openings. USAA is a provider of financial services to nearly 11 million military families and has child-care centers at its four major posts (San Antonio, Phoenix, Tampa, and Colorado Springs), and all are accredited. MILITARY PAY DATES Month April May June July August September October November December Pay Date 5/1/2015 6/1/2015 7/1/2015 7/31/2015 9/1/2015 10/1/2015 10/30/2015 12/1/2015 12/31/2015 NW LA Veteran Cemetery Located in Keithville, LA Director: Timothy Johnson What should a person do if they have no one to settle their affairs after they die? When you set up your will, one of the key decisions you make is naming an executor or personal representative. Having served as executor for a friend, I can tell you it can be a fairly big job. Selling and distributing property, paying bills and filing taxes are just the tip of the iceberg. You definitely want an executor you can trust. If no family or friends are ideal, you can name a bank trust department. I found distributing personal property to be the biggest headache. The more guidance and direction you leave your executor and heirs on that topic, the better. Good luck. The Family Caregiver Alliance’s “Family Care Navigator” helps families locate government, nonprofit and private caregiver support programs. The online guide includes information on legal resources and disease-specific organizations. Find it at www.caregiver.org/family-care-navigator. 318-925-1046 • Fax: 318-925-5821 Web Site: vetaffairs.la.gov Date Opened: 2007 • Burials 853 • To pre-register furnish copy of DD-214 14 May 2015 The Military Officer AAFES out to improve customer satisfaction Before learning their recent low rating in a national customer satisfaction survey, Army and Air Force Exchange Service officials had already launched an effort to improve customer satisfaction, AAFES’ director said. Addressing customer satisfaction is the second phase of a campaign that began in October to “turn around” AAFES, said Thomas Shull, the exchange service’s CEO and director. The first phase, he said, had to be shoring up the financial health of the stores for the sake of the benefit — without raising prices for customers. Now, “2015 is the year of the customer,” Shull said. Shull, a 1973 West Point graduate, left the Army as a major in 1983 and spent 25 years in the civilian commercial retail industry. He was the first civilian director in AAFES’ history. Since he arrived in 2012, AAFES has cut $221 million in annual operating costs. And despite a decrease in the customer base and sales related to personnel cutbacks in the force, AAFES’ profits for 2014 are expected to be more than $390 million, according to unaudited results, up from $272 million in 2011. Part of the profits from the exchanges help fund the services’ morale, welfare and recreation programs. AAFES dropped by seven points from its score last year, to 68 out of a possible 100, according to the nationwide American Customer Satisfaction Index results released Feb. 18. The decline was the largest of any retailer in the department and discount store category. AAFES tied with Wal-Mart for the lowest customer satisfaction score among large retailers. ACSI surveyed 250 authorized AAFES customers worldwide, a small sample size that Shull described as “on the ragged edge of being credible.” He said AAFES officials “were quite surprised” to learn of their low rating, especially since their own survey, conducted by CFI Group Inc. of 43,000 customers about six weeks before the ACSI survey, showed a score of 80, representing an increase of one point over 2013. CFI Group uses protocols similar to the ACSI survey. While there are possible technical reasons for the decline in customer satisfaction, such as a change in ACSI survey methodology, “I’m not saying we don’t have room for improvement,” Shull said. Among the improvements slated for customer service, according to Shull: A process for escalating customer complaints to Shull and his team to deal A customer makes his purchases at the AAFES mini mall on Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. (Photo: Army) with if they can’t be resolved at a lower level. “I’ll personally respond or my team will respond,” he said. AAFES is in the process of hiring an “executive response specialist.” Online training to model great examples of customer service for employees, whether they are store associates, or work in call centers, food courts or movie theaters. A revision of return policies. An update of price-matching policies for customers who find the same item at a lower price at another store. An emphasis on helping customers order an item online or from another store if they can’t find it in their store. Certain associates will use tablets to provide a concierge-type service. Items can either be brought to the customer’s store or shipped to the customer’s home. AAFES has also been working on other elements of customer satisfaction. It has installed 424 “brand” shops within various stores, with familiar names like Carter’s, The North Face, Samsung, Adidas, Victoria’s Secret and Michael Kors. It has added 13 concessions in 39 store locations and has begun offering first-run movies from Disney, Sony and Paramount in its theaters in the continen- tal U.S. AAFES officials launched a new website in October with more offerings. After a rocky start related to software problems, the website is working well, Shull said. Sales have increased by single digits — not dramatically, he admits — but he noted that a dedicated marketing campaign for the new site has not begun and will not begin for another couple of months. Since Shull arrived, AAFES has been working to increase the number of items on shopmyexchange.com that are offered in the stores. When he arrived, there was a 6 percent overlap of items sold in stores and those offered online. Now, it’s 28 percent, he said. His first priority when he arrived in 2012 had to be shoring up AAFES’ financial health. The exchange system was losing part of its customer base because of drawdowns. “We needed to do what we could to avoid adversely affecting the benefit,” Shull said. It was a difficult situation for AAFES officials, Shull said, to improve profits without raising prices. At that time, profits were projected to drop to by $70 million annually. AAFES stemmed losses in part by by reducing the number of employee positions since 2012 by 6,200 — about 17 percent — through a hiring freeze, attrition and early retirement programs. ATTENTION! The Barksdale AFB Refill Pharmacy will be closed until 1:30pm the last Friday of each month for training. The Military Officer May 2015 15 Barksdale Exchange partners with Sears for savings on home improvement and repairs Barksdale Exchange- The Army & Air Force Exchange Service is teaming up with Sears to offer military shoppers in the United States special savings on cleaning, home improvement and repair services. Barksdale Exchange shoppers can now receive special offers on cleaning services including: • Carpets • Upholstery • Protector and deodorizer for carpet and upholstery • Tile and grout • Air ducts and dryer vents • Air purifying products Exchange shoppers receive either 10 percent off the Sears Home Services’ everyday price of cleaning services or the current sale price-whichever is lowest. Sears also offers garage doors, garage door openers as well as repair and maintenance service, including spring repair and replacement; preventative maintenance; roller replacement and tune ups and alignments. For garage doors and openers, Exchange shoppers receive either 5 percent off the regular price of cleaning services or the current sale pricewhichever is lowest. For garage door and opener repairs or maintenance, shoppers get either 10 percent off the regular price or the current sales price, whichever is lowest. Sears offers Exchange shoppers discounted home improvement services, including kitchen remodeling, vinyl siding, cabinet refacing, countertops, replacement windows as well as central heating and cooling systems. Coupons for discounts on these services are available at local Exchanges. Barksdale Exchange shoppers can also count on Sears for major appliance repairs performed in their home. The Sears Blue Crew also repairs electronics, fitness equipment and lawn equipment, no matter where the products were purchased. Exchange shoppers will receive a 10% discount on parts and labor. “Like the Exchange, Sears has been a trusted name for generations,” said the Barksdale Exchange’s General Manager, Ellen Henderson. “By partnering with Sears, the Barksdale Exchange is providing shoppers with world-class cleaning, home improvement and repair services they can count on.” For more information and to schedule appointments, military shoppers in the United States can call: • 866-858-8660 for cleaning and garage door services • 888-959-5450 for home improvement services or • 888-346-5334 for repair services The Army & Air Force Exchange Service goes where Soldiers, Airmen and their families go to improve the quality of their lives through goods and services provided. Exchange earnings provide dividends to support military morale, welfare and recreation programs. The Exchange is part of the Department of Defense and is directed by a Board of Directors, responsible to the Secretaries of the Army and Air Force through the Chiefs of Staff. To find out more about the Exchange history and mission or to view recent press releases please visit our Web site at http://www.shopmyexchange.com or follow us on Twitter at https://twitter.com/ExchangePAO. Patricia N. Miramon Attorney At Law Assisting Retirees Since 1985 More ‘value’ items come to base commissaries Are you on the lookout for the orange “Value” signs in your commissary? Officials have selected another 99 items to put under that banner, bringing extra savings. The orange signs point out items that include several cheeses, condiments, canned and powdered milk, canned soup, dry pasta, honey, rice, laundry bleach and paper towels. Defense Commissary Agency officials choose items that are competitively priced - equal to or below the price of store brands or private label brands of similar items in commercial supermarkets. These items offer an average savings of about 42 percent when compared to national brands in commercial retail stores, and 25 percent when compared to store brands and private label items in commercial retail stores, according to commissary officials. These additions bring the number of value brand items to nearly 400 - including frozen food; pet food; health and beauty items; cereals; soft drinks; coffee; canned fruit, soup and fish; and disposable storage bags. The Defense Commissary Agency reenergized its value brand program last November because officials felt their previous value brand program wasn’t always obvious to shoppers. That was highlighted last year in congressional testimony when a senior defense official and some senior enlisted advisers talked about the need for generics or store brands in commissaries to provide more savings for customers. By law, DeCA can’t create its own store brand like the military exchanges’ “Exchange Select” brand. But commissaries have long carried other options as part of programs such as “Best Value Item” and even a “Commissary Value Brand” program. “We’ve carried most of these items for years, but they were sort of hidden,” said Air Force Command Chief Master Sgt. Stuart M. Allison, senior enlisted adviser to the DeCA director, in a statement detailing the addition al value brand items. “Unless you knew to look for them, you weren’t truly aware they existed. Now we’re giving the customer a highly visible option to compare and add more savings to their shopping experience.” Those orange signs should be a reminder to compare prices. Specials and promotions will continue in commissaries and in commercial retail stores, so keep comparing unit prices price per ounce of cereal, price per ounce of canned milk, price per diaper, etc. • Probate • Estate Planning • Wills • Powers of Attorney • Trusts • Family Partnerships http://www.patriciamiramon.com pmiramon@patriciamiramon.com 3324 Line Avenue • Shreveport, LA 71104 (318) 869-0055 (888) 869-0055 (318) 865-4041 Fax 16 May 2015 The Military Officer Documents every couple needs Banks free up your credit score All couples should have durable powers of attorney for finances and health care, but these documents are even more important if you and your partner aren’t married. A durable power of attorney gives you and your partner the authority to manage each other’s finances if one of you becomes incapacitated. A power of attorney for health care, sometimes referred to as a health care proxy, gives you the right to make medical decisions on your partner’s behalf if he or she is unable to do so. Without these documents, you could be prohibited from making decisions on behalf of your partner, even if you’ve been together for years. A court may grant a family member authority to make decisions about your partner’s finances. “If you’re not married, you have no standing under the law,” says Lili Vasileff, a certified financial planner and president emeritus of the Association of Divorce Financial Planners. An estate-planning lawyer can help you draw up power-of-attorney documents for your state. Some banks and brokerage firms won’t honor power-ofattorney documents unless they meet certain conditions, so make sure the form you use will be accepted by your financial institutions. Both the power of attorney for finances and the health care proxy should be easily accessible in an emergency. Barksdale AFB Printing Services Big banks are jumping on the bandwagon to provide free credit scores to their customers. The majority are offering FICO scores, the most commonly used measure of credit worthiness among lenders. Citibank says that most of its consumer cardholders can now go online to see their FICO scores. Bank of America says it will provide FICO scores to its consumer card users later this year. Ally Financial is conducting a pilot program to supply FICO scores to its car loan customers; a full launch is planned for this summer. Those three issuers join Barclaycard, Discover, Pentagon Federal Credit Union and Sallie Mae, which already offer FICO scores. Depending on your lender, you may be able to see your score on your monthly statement, by logging in to your account online, or by viewing it on a mobile app. Your lender may also include a 12-month history of your score and key factors affecting it. Keep in mind that the scale a lender uses to evaluate your credit profile may differ from the standard FICO range of 300 to 850. Citibank, for example, provides a score based on a scale of 250 to 900. Not all of the free scores are FICO scores. USAA says that by summer it will provide all its credit card customers with their VantageScore-a score developed by the three major credit agencies (Equifax, Experian and TransUnion). Some sites, such as Mint.com, Credit.com and Credit Karma.com, will also show you free scores from the major credit agencies. Even when scores aren’t the same ones used by your lenders, they are useful indicators of your credit health. And don’t forget to check your credit report. You can get a free look once a year from each of the credit agencies at www.annualcreditreport.com. Small claims can turn into big premium hikes Filing just a single claim after a car accident raises your auto insurance premium an average of 41%, according to a new study from InsuranceQuotes.com. These rate hikes, which usually kick in only if the accident is your fault, range from a high of 76% in Massachusetts to a low of 22% in Maryland. Examining costs for a college-educated, 45-year-old woman with a clean driving record who files a $2,000 claim, the study also found that two accident claims would double premiums at renewal time. The lesson: After a minor accident, you might want to cover repair costs out of pocket rather than tap your insurance policy. You should file, though, if someone is hurt, says Michael Barry, a spokesman for the Insurance Information Institute trade group. Bodily injury costs, he explains, can reach five times the payout of a property-damage claim. Also file, he says, if your policy includes accident forgiveness-your insurer’s promise to not raise rates after your first fender-bender. Health insurance subsidies and income tax A tax complication for some who received subsidies to buy health insurance: About 5% of taxpayers will have to reconcile the subsidy with their pay. Most people opted to receive the tax credits in advance, based on estimated income. If actual income was higher, though, they will have to make up the difference. There’s a silver lining, however: The IRS will waive late payment fees and estimated tax penalties if the person files on time and doesn’t owe back taxes. An additional 4% of taxpayers will owe penalties for not having insurance in 2014. The fine for ignoring the mandate: The higher of $95 per uninsured person or 1% of household adjusted gross income above $20,300 per couple ($10,150 for one). Note: The IRS’s standard rate for business driving in 2015 is 57.5¬¢ a mile, up 1.5¬¢. The rate for medical travel and moving has fallen to 23¬¢, while the allowance for charitable driving is staying at 14¬¢. You can deduct costs of parking and tolls, too. Heirs liable for taxes on U.S. Savings Bonds Call: 318.347.0439 or 318.456.3140 email: celliad75@gmail.com or arts.crafts.barksdale@gmail.com I have a stack of U.S. Savings Bonds that are still earning interest, tax deferred. When I die, will the interest be taxable to my heirs? One way or another, income taxes have to be paid. Your executors can report the income earned up to your day of death on your own final tax return, says Alison Flores of The Tax Institute at H&R Block. In that case, your heirs would owe taxes only on the interest earned later. Or, heirs can defer taxes until the bonds are redeemed or reach their final maturity date. The Military Officer May 2015 17 Tricare no longer covers some prescription pain killers Tricare (www.military.com/benefits/ tricare) officials are rolling out a new prescription drug clearance system that will block from coverage some ingredients used in compounded medications like painkillers. The changes, which went into effect May 1, are designed to cut the health insurer’s pharmacy costs by no longer paying for compounds they considers unsafe or ineffective, Tricare officials said. They will most heavily impact prescription painkillers, which make up the majority of compounded medication filled by Tricare, they said. A compounded medication is a drug mixed with one or more non-FDA approved ingredients designed to alter the drug to fit the need of the person taking it. For example, children often take compounded medications to alter the drug’s dosage to their weight, remove dyes to which they are allergic or turn a pill medication into a liquid. For pain management, compounds are often used to turn pain medications into creams or sprays to target specific areas. Specialized compounding can also adjust the dosage to the size or pain tolerance of the patient. But a top Tricare official said in a Military.com interview that the effectiveness of those specialized pain medications are not always “supported by evidence.” At least one Military Treatment Facility (MTF) has complained recently about a marketing agent for a pain medication compounding pharmacy soliciting potential customers in the MTF’s pharmacy waiting room, he said. Compounding agents cost Tricare more than $514 million in 2014 and are on track to exceed $2 billion for 2015, officials said. Yet those agents make up only 0.5 percent of the total number of prescriptions provided by Tricare. Tricare currently fills compounded medication for about 40,000 users a month, Jones said. The vast majority of compounded medications will continue to be covered, Jones said. Although he declined to give an example of pain medication compounds that will no longer be included, he said popular compounding agents such as gabapentin and ketamine will still be covered. He was also not able to provide a percentage the compounding agents that will still be covered. Right now, Tricare chooses which TRICARE and the ACA We know it is not kind to start the beginning of the year by talking about filing taxes but there is no getting around them 2014 is the first year that the ACA-Affordable Care Act (or as it is generally known Obamacare) requires that tax payers report on their health insurance status on their federal tax forms. They must have minimum essential coverage (MEC) or pay what the federal government is calling an “individual shared responsibility” tax penalty. Shortly after the ACA was passed, TREA along with many other VSOs and MSOs successfully urged Congress to state in law that TRICARE qualified for MEC. WE also got statutory passage of a bill extending TRICARE dependent coverage to run up to age 26 through the TRICARE Young Adult program which clearly qualified as “minimal essential coverage.” So now all beneficiaries qualify under the ACA requirements if you are entitled to TRICARE coverage or you purchase TRICARE or CHCBP premium based coverage. That means that you cover the MEC requirements if you are entitled to any of the following: * TRICARE Prime (all plans) * TRICARE Standard / Extra * TRICARE Overseas (all plans) * TRICARE For Life * Transitional Assistance Management Program * Uniformed Services Family Health Plan You are also covered for the MCE requirements if you qualify and purchase: * TRICARE Reserve Select * TRICARE Retired Reserve * TRICARE Young Adult (all plans) * Continued Health Care Benefit Program For 2014 taxpayers will “self-attest” that they have qualified coverage. Starting this year TRICARE will inform the IRS of coverage and DFAS and the Uniformed Services Pay Centers will provide beneficiaries with necessary tax forms. Please note: There are also some Uniformed Services health care beneficiaries who are eligible only for care at Military Treatment Facilities (Direct Care Only). They have a special specific exemption for Taxable Year 2014 only. They will not meet the ACA’s requirements this year. (2015) compounded medications to cover based on the screening of a single ingredient submitted by a pharmacy. But the new system operated by Tricare’s pharmacy subcontractor, Express Scripts, will allow officials to screen every ingredient included in any given compound medication. If all ingredients do not match the accept list, coverage will be denied, they said. Tricare officials decided which compounding ingredients will be on the list based on FDA standards for compounding agents Ingredient screening will be instantaneous though the online Express Scripts system. When an ingredient is denied, the pharmacist will be notified about which one and given the option to call Express Scripts to explore alternatives. Tricare users who wish to can file a “prior authorization” form and appeal to Express Scripts after a denial. The appeal will be processed in no more than five days, Jones said. To avoid a disruption in service while Tricare processes drug appeals, officials will pay for some no longer covered compounds on a case-by-case basis, Jones said. Tricare users who have a have had a compounded medication filled in the last 30 days will soon receive a letter by mail notifying them of the change. Pharmacy Rx Fee Hike Due to the FY 2015 Defense Authorization Act, TRICARE has raised most pharmacy copayments. TRICARE beneficiaries who fill their prescriptions at retail pharmacies or by mail will see most copayments increase by $3. The new fee structure, which went into effect Feb. 1, will result in 30-day prescriptions at TRICARE network pharmacies for generic medications to rise from $5 to $8; brand-name medications from $17 to $20; and prescriptions not in TRICARE’s formulary from $44 to $47. Many prescriptions available through TRICARE’s home-delivery program also will see increases. A 90day supply of brand-name medication delivered by mail will rise from $13 to $16, and non-formulary items will increase from $43 to $46. Mail-order generic drugs, as well as all prescriptions filled at the military pharmacies, still will be available at no cost. In addition, beneficiaries on maintenance medications for chronic diseases will be able to fill prescriptions at a military pharmacy or obtain them through the TRICARE home-delivery program. This is the same program for maintenance medications instituted last year for TRICARE for Life beneficiaries and expanded to all non-active duty beneficiaries. Beneficiaries still will be able to fill prescriptions for brand-name drugs for acute illnesses like earaches or sore throats at TRICARE network pharmacies. 18 May 2015 The Military Officer to the international Internet. This involved new censorship software to detect and block the use of Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) that have been used to access forbidden websites outside China. The government also rolled out powerful new data mining and screening software checks for anti-government posts in real time. Currently as many as 10% of Chinese Internet users get past the “Great Firewall of China” using VPNs and other technical tools. Preventing mass unrest America Rallying support Since the U.S. has so few troops on the ground in Iraq and hardly any in Syria, it has to use different methods for finding targets for the coalition to attack from above. Just because the attacks are being made with precision munitions does not eliminate the risk of civilian casualties. There have been few of these, but none are ignored on the ground because Arab Islamic terrorists will invent them if they can to rally more support to their cause. Arab More fact than fiction An Arab newspaper revealed details of a meeting between Hamas and Iranian officials after the 40-day war in Gaza ended in August 2014. Iran agreed to overlook Hamas’ support for Sunni Islamic terror groups fighting the Iran-supported Syrian government and cooperate with Hamas on doing some damage to Israel. Iran also agreed to resume sending cash and as much military aid as they could get past the Israeli and Egyptian blockade. Hamas and Fatah are supposed to have made peace, but given the Hamas violence against Fatah supporters in Gaza, and Fatah doing the same to Hamas members in the West Bank, the Hamas-Fatah peace is more fiction than fact. China Imaginary threat Chinese claims on much of eastern Russia and increasing Chinese economic domination in the Russian Far East tends to make Russians nervous. At the moment, Russian leaders are more concerned with the imaginary threat from the West rather than the very real one from the east. Exacting revenge Russia gave the Chinese yet another reason to exact some revenge. Russia agreed to sell jet engines directly to Pakistan for the Chinese-made JF-17 fighters Pakistan is importing and building under license. China is still dependent on Russia for high-performance military jet engines, but if the Chinese followed Russian practice, they would insist that Pakistan buy the Russian engines from China so they could up the price and make a profit. The Chinese don’t forget slights like this, and the Russians know it. Net neutrality? China began the New Year with yet another major attempt to block free access Despite all the Internet censorship, Chinese citizens continue to discuss forbidden subjects like corruption at the top and Chinese who openly protest the corruption and bad government. Chinese censors aren’t really going after individual offenders as much as they are seeking to prevent mass unrest, so sometimes even the arrest and punishment of Internet offenders is not publicized. China has a growing problem with large groups hitting the streets to protest and, with the large amount of corruption and inefficiency, there’s a lot to protest. The Internet is seen as essential, economically, but also the chief means for local pro-tests to turn into major ones. That is not to be allowed, at all costs. A benefit to China When China makes itself useful to other countries it’s because it’s useful to China, often in the long run. Case in point is their willingness to sell weapons to Argentina, which is surprising because Argentina is broke and a notorious international deadbeat. China normally sells to anyone as long as they can pay cash, preferably up front if there are any doubts about the buyer’s credit rating. An exception is being made with Argentina, as it will allow South Americans to get a better view of Chinese weapons, which are touted as cheap, reliable and increasingly high-tech. Keeping it secret With all China’s new military high-tech comes the need to keep a lot of it secret, so China is building a 71-foot-high wall around its Dalian naval base in northeastern China to prevent people from taking pictures of what is going on there. It seems that past construction resulted in unexpectedly tall residences being built near the base so the military got new laws passed restricting the height of new buildings near military bases. Having existing buildings torn down is too difficult because some of the owners are powerful locals, thus the need for the wall. Colombia No plan The Colombian government has a security problem it has little control over: the growing unrest in Venezuela. Colombia fears this will escalate into a civil war and drive many Venezuelans, possibly more than a million, across the border as refugees. The Venezuelan border is already a danger zone because corrupt Venezuelan officers and officials have allowed Colombian drug gangs and leftist rebels to operate on the Venezuelan side. The U.S. has accused Venezuela of becoming a major transit point for illegal drugs coming out of Colombia and onto world markets. Everyone wants Venezuela fixed, but no one has a practical plan for how to do it. Whistleblower The U.S. instigated 17 arrests in Colombia and broke up a gang accused of smuggling Colombian cocaine via Venezuela to the United States; another dozen gang members are still being sought. The arrests were made possible by the defection of a Venezuelan security official to the U.S. where he revealed details of how this gang operated. He also identified senior Venezuelan officials who were paid off to let the gang function. Egypt No compromise Egypt has long declared that outside force would eventually be needed and saw Libyan peace talks as futile and counterproductive because the Islamic terrorist factions really have no interest in compromising. This was before IS showed up in 2014 and the IS is the most violent and uncompromising Islamic terror group out there. Iran Revealing old tech In honor of the 1979 revolution’s 36th anniversary, Iran’s government unveiled a new supersonic fighter jet called the Saeqeh 2 (Thunderbolt 2). This jet, along with its older cousins, the Azarakhsh and the Saeqeh 1, are Iran’s latest attempts to reverse engineer and improve the Cold Warera Northrop F-5E. Prior to the 1979 revolution, Iran had over 100 Northrop F-5E’s in service; they still have about 70 of them, although most are not flyable. Islam Questioning their faith In the wake of the growing number of IS videos that show Islamic terrorists killing unarmed Muslims in much more creative and gruesome ways, more Muslims are publicly raising questions about whether Islam is really a “religion of peace.” What has not yet been brought up in the Muslim world is the problem the rest of the world sees: that Islam is, in reality, the region of intolerance and hypocrisy. In retreat IS retreating in Iraq and Syria. Sunni tribes in Anbar and western Syria are in open revolt and subject to increasingly savage reprisals by IS gunmen, who are often foreigners, which makes the tribesmen angrier. Half the IS leadership has been killed by coalition warplanes since August 2014. This air support and Iraqi soldiers, Kurdish troops, Shia militias and armed Sunni tribesmen have taken back much of the territory IS overran in early 2014. American and other Western troops are rebuilding the Iraqi Army and arming anti-IS Sunni tribesmen. Iran is training and sometimes leading Shia militias. In Syria IS is getting beaten by Kurds, Syrian soldiers and more Iranian trained Shia militias. Submit or die The word “Islam” derives from the Arabic word “istaslama” which means, literally, “submission.” What is implied, for most Muslims, is that non-Muslims must submit as well, whether they want to or not. To refuse to submit is a sign of intolerance, religious bigotry, racism and blasphemy and most definitely against Islamic scripture and practice. For Islamic conservatives, clergy and scholars, there can be no other interpretation. Westerners have had a hard time understanding this crucial cultural difference, but now it is becoming violently obvious to Muslims and non-Muslims alike. At war with us The effort to eliminate the religion angle when it comes to Islamic terrorism is also present in the United States. For example, it’s official policy in the U.S. military to eliminate any mention of a war between Islam and the West. This policy is enforced despite the fact that Islam, at least according to many Muslims, is definitely at war with the Western world. Alive and well The U.S. has officially maintained the illusion that we aren’t at war with Islam since shortly after September 11, 2001, despite the fact that many Islamic clerics and government officials in Muslim nations, openly and frequently agree “Islam is at war with the West.” Many Western leaders prefer to believe that by insisting that such hostile religious attitudes are not widespread in Muslim countries, the hostility will diminish. To that end, the U.S. government has, for years, been removing any reference to “Islam” and “terrorism” in official documents. Military and civilian personnel who have spent time in Muslim countries know the “Islam is at war with the West” angle is alive and well among Muslims. When you look at the media in Muslim countries, it is all pretty explicit. Serious threat Despite the declining IS prospects, a recent opinion poll in the U.S. showed that 84% of Americans believe the IS is the most serious threat over the next decade. International terrorism also has 84% of Americans concerned; Iranian nukes frighten 77%, followed by North Korea at 64% and Russia 49%. Japan Vows revenge The Japanese government vowed revenge against IS after a video was released showing the second of two Japanese citizens being beheaded by IS. IS had demanded $200 million ransom for the two men. Muslim Conspiracy theories Many Muslims in the Middle East still believe that the Israelis and the American CIA carried out the September 11, 2001 attacks. In fact, just about any catastrophic event that makes Arabs or Muslims look bad is blamed on Israel, the Americans or some other Western state, and most Muslims actually believe it and they have no problem expressing those beliefs. These conspiracy theories extend to the belief that the Taliban, al Qaeda and IS were all Western inventions meant to discredit Islam and Muslims, in general, as well as provide an excuse to attack Islam and kill Muslims. see G-2… Page 19 The Military Officer and far fewer jobs. Nothing good comes out of taking some territory from Ukraine. Laughable Opinion polls conducted among Muslims after the January Islamic terror attacks in Paris, France, that left 20 dead found that most Muslims in the Middle East believed that the attack was actually carried out by Israeli intelligence to punish Europe for its growing support of the Palestinian effort to destroy Israel. Over 80% of Palestinians believed this. The logic of this attitude was that the only one to benefit from the attacks was Israel, so it must have been planned by Israel. Brotherhood motto “Allah is our objective; the Prophet is our leader; the Quran is our law; Jihad is our way; dying in the way of Allah is our highest hope.” — Muslim Brotherhood motto N, Korea Concessions North Korea is still seeking a high price for any sort of concession on its nuclear program. North Korea continues to hold out for a major concession; the size is unspecified, but apparently it’s more than the U.S. or its neighbors are willing to pay in order to have the North to shut down their nuclear and long-range ballistic missile programs. China is getting more nervous and more extreme in its threats to North Korea over the matter. Eased up In part because of the need to focus their anger at North Korea, China has eased up on its “hate Japan” campaign, which encourages local hotheads to be openly nasty about Japan and with Japanese-owned companies in China, and even sometimes physical with visiting Japanese citizens. The government knows it can easily turn this hate on again to deflect criticism of local bad behavior, such as corruption or unpopular government policies because of some seemingly endless self-destructive and impossible-to-change bad behavior of the Japanese. This ensures that the Japanese never have close allies in the region. Russia Hurting themselves The Russians are feeling the impact of their territorial dispute with Ukraine. That’s because GDP will shrink by at least 3% in 2015 and probably closer to 10%. If oil prices remain low, Russia will lose about a third of the $500 billion a year in export income, most of it from oil and natural gas. Their population is also shrinking, as foreigners flee and migration from Central Asia declines because of the economic problems Sweden May 2015 19 mess. Some politicians are calling for Maduro to resign, or be forcibly removed. Old tricks Exposed Failed experiment Westerners in Russia, especially those who speak and read Russian, report that state-controlled Russian media has seemingly reverted to stories and attitudes right out of the Cold War. It’s unreal but it’s actually happening. Russian media is full of stories of NATO aggression against Russia and anything that is going wrong in Russia is blamed on a NATO conspiracy to destroy Russia. The Russian aggression in Ukraine is described as a fable created by a NATO conspiracy to take over the Ukrainian government and institute a terror campaign against the ethnic Russian minority in Ukraine, especially eastern Ukraine. A Swedish newspaper exposed another incident of their government giving in to Russian pressure, when they agreed not to land any of its warplanes in Estonia or Finland during joint military exercises held in March and April. The Swedish government saw this as throwing the Russians a bone while remaining involved with the U.S.-sponsored joint exercises. Russia is also pressuring Sweden to stay out of NATO, but news stories like this make it more likely that Swedish voters would approve joining. Russia is now considered more threatening than they were during the Cold War. Venezuela’s experiment in establishing a socialist paradise has been undone by corruption, incompetence and the rapidly declining price of oil. Shrinking GDP and rising inflation has led to high unemployment/underemployment and an unprecedented crime wave, with Venezuela now the murder capital of the world. The murder rate in Venezuela is over 60 per 100,000 people a year; one of the highest on the planet and more than 10 times the rate in the United States. Doing more damage Syria In order to distract Russians from their collapsing economy, continuing corruption and the expanding police state that is dragging Russia back to the bad old days of the Soviet Union, the leadership creates crises in Ukraine. While the government can keep the discontent largely invisible via the state controlled mass media, the unease at the top is harder to conceal. The “Cold Warriors,” led by former KGB officer Vladimir Putin, dominate, and the technocrats, led by Prime Minister Medvedev, keep Putin in power. This dissent at the top is all about the technocrats doing the math and pointing out that the Ukraine aggression is damaging the economy and threatening to use nukes scares Russians as much as everyone else. Selective screening Violence continues For the second year in a row, an international survey determined that Venezuela was the most miserable nation on the planet. Venezuela’s President Maduro blames all his problems on foreign interference and economic sabotage. The United States is seen as the main villain, but no one can produce any evidence. The terrorist violence continues in the Russian Caucasus, but there is less of it. In 2014, terrorist-related deaths were down 36%, to 340. Only about 52% of those deaths were in Chechnya, but that was up 33% from 2013. Russia believes a major reason for the reduced violence was the movement of so many Russian Islamic terrorists, mainly from the Caucasus, to Syria to fight for the IS. Junk status In the West, Russian government debt was downgraded to “junk” status. This makes it much more expensive for the Russian government to borrow outside Russia. Sending a message The EU made a move sure to anger Russia by admitting, in print, that Russian troops are in eastern Ukraine. The EU also added Russian military commanders known to be controlling Russian troops fighting in Ukraine to the list of those sanctioned. The EU had previously gone along with the Russian lie that there were no Russian troops fighting in Ukraine, but as Russian involvement became more obvious and their bad behavior of making, then violating, ceasefire and other agreements, the EU decided to send Russia a message. The Russian threat According to an opinion poll, 18% of Americans sense a growing threat from Russia, believing that Russia is the most dangerous foreign threat. That’s up from 9% in 2014 and 2% in 2012. The second and morefeared threat is North Korea at 15%; which had been at the top of the list for a long time. So far the U.S. has screened 1,200 Syrian rebels to be sent to training at camps in Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar. It is believed that those selected are less likely to be radicalized and the U.S. hopes to have 3,000 trained and in action by the end of 2015. Such screening is difficult, but Saudi Arabia helped, as they have had success in that respect. The American effort is criticized for being too slow and producing too few armed and trained fighters to make a difference. At the moment, U.S. policy limits what U.S. counter-terrorism efforts can do. Venezuela Most miserable Socialism doesn’t work The Venezuelan government announced that the official inflation rate at the end of 2014 was 68.5%, compared to 56% in 2013. The government also admitted that the economy is contracting, at a rate of over 5% a year. Many believe that GDP has shrunk even more given the extent of unemployment, businesses closing, the falling price of oil and increasing shortages. Desperate for a solution, the government agreed to legalize the buying and selling of dollars, merely a band-aid applied to a much more serious wound. Some familiarity Venezuela’s government places the ultimate blame for its economic problems on foreign conspiracies, and is responding by arresting its critics and accusing them of belonging to this conspiracy. All this is meant to encourage the minority population that still supports President Maduro’s socialist revolution. The government sees a need to mobilize its supporters to use force, if necessary, to prevent the majority of Venezuelans from crippling Maduro’s revolution in upcoming parliament elections with massive losses. Currently only 22% of voters approve of Maduro and another poll shows over 80% of Venezuelans blame him for the economic Ukraine Ceasefire violated Ceasefire negotiations in Ukraine aren’t working. Russia pretends to agree to a ceasefire, then declares it has no control over rebel factions that are seeking to gain an advantage by using ceasefire terms which the Ukrainians obey, but the rebels don’t. The rebels regularly violated the September ‘14 ceasefire, even launching a major offensive in January. Since September the rebels, with the aid of up to 10,000 Russian troops inside Donbas, have gained more than 500 square kilometers of territory. This led to another round of negotiations, with Russia, as before, pretending to be the peacemaker and denying all evidence that it supervised and often carried out most of the ceasefire violations. It is happening all over again. United Arab EMIRATES Search and rescue The United Arab Emirates (UAE) resumed air attacks against IS after halting them until the U.S. increased its Search and Rescue (SAR) forces in the area. The UAE attributed the capture of a Jordanian pilot to insufficient SAR forces and, therefore, halted their air strikes. American SAR units have commando-type rescue personnel and support specialists who can quickly direct combat aircraft to where a downed pilot is, keeping hostile troops away until the pilot is rescued. It is unclear if a more vigorous SAR response would have prevented the capture of the Jordanian pilot, but the UAE believed it would, and having more SAR units was the only way to get UAE warplanes back in the air over Iraq and Syria. United Nations A gift from IS The UN is criticizing IS for marking foreign, mostly UN and mostly paid for by the U.S., food aid as coming from IS. Before IS allows food aid to be distributed, the boxes and sacks must be marked as a “gift from IS.” The UN also criticizes IS for selling some food on the market to raise cash. IS tells the UN to shut up and be grateful that IS allows the food aid in and generally does not abuse UN staff. 20 May 2015 The Military Officer Memorial Day Service at Hill Crest Memorial Park Hill Crest Memorial Funeral Home and VFW Post #4588 will sponsor the 38th Memorial Day Service at Hill Crest Memorial Park Amphitheater on Monday, May 25, 2015 beginning at 9:00 AM. All veterans organizations and other civic organizations or individuals are invited at attend this patriotic event as we honor our departed heroes. Hill Crest Memorial Park is located at 601 Highway 80, Haughton, LA. The Reverend Ken Richmond, Church of the Cross, will give the invocation. The guest speaker is Vietnam veteran and Air Force Cross Recipient Lt. Colonel George Finck, an active member of VFW Post #4588. Haughton AFJROTC cadets will present the Colors and assist Barksdale Defenders of Liberty Air Show May 2-3, 2015 with the placing of wreaths. The Veterans of Foreign Wars 12th District Honor Guard will provide a 21-gun salute and Taps to conclude the service. During the Memorial Day Service, wreaths will be placed in front of the Amphitheater by each participating veterans’ organization as well as other organizations or individuals who may wish to do so. AFJROTC cadets will assist with the placing of wreaths. Please notify George Finck at (318) 965-4124 or email at gfincksr@gmail.com if you plan to participate in this patriotic event honoring our American heroes, especially if you were not on the program last year. George C. Finck Gandy-Brown VFW Post #4588 1004 Jeter Street Bossier City, LA 71111 NW LA Veteran Cemetery status Barksdale Air Force Base Air Show is a two day event taking place on Saturday and Sunday. On both days, all static displays will be accessible and the dynamic displays will be the same. Date: Saturday, May 2 and Sunday, May 3 Show Time: 11am; Gates open at 9am Admission: Free Parking: Free; On-base parking will be made available for visitors entering the North (Bossier) and West (Shreveport) gates. All vehicles will be directed to the flight line parking area. COURTESY BUS TRANSPORTATION will also be available from Bossier Parish Community College to minimize traffic congestion on and off the base. Although intervals are not finalized, the buses will run on a continuous route to and from the show. Directions: Enter through the West Gate over the ShreveportBarksdale Bridge or the North Gate via Northgate Road. If you have an oversize vehicle or RV, enter through the East Gate via Industrial Drive. If you are a DoD ID card holder desiring access to any part of the base other than the air show main parking area, enter through the South Gate, East Gate, or Bodcau Gate. Before 8:30 a.m., UTA personnel may enter via any entrance, but must choose South Gate, East Gate, or Bodcau Gate at other times for 307 BW access. Bodcau Gate will be open from 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. daily. Please allow enough time for coming to the base, parking your car at designated areas and going through security checks. Security Advisory: No weapons are allowed. Backpacks, large purses and coolers will be prohibited on the airfield. Please check our Security FAQ for further details. Food and drinks will be available for purchase at the air show. As there are very few shaded areas, sunscreen is highly recommended. Flying begins at 11 a.m. Please allow enough time for coming to the base, parking your car at designated areas and going through security checks. The Northwest Veteran Cemetery was made possible by a grant from the US Department of Veterans Affairs. The land was donated from the parish of Caddo and all construction and equipment necessary to operate the cemetery was paid for from the grant money, The state of Louisiana must operate and care for the cemetery in perpetuity. First interment was on June 18, 2007. The cemetery encompasses 81 total acres with 25 acres developed. At present there are 12,138 casketed spaces and 3,342 cremains spaces. Vets interred - 1,337 Spouses interred - 201 A dedication ceremony for a Fallen Soldier monument and surrounding garden at the cemetery is being planned for a Sunday afternoon in May. A specific date will be announced soon. Tim Johnson Director NLVC 318-925-0612 Long-term care deductions Deduct more premiums. You can deduct more of your long term-care premiums as a medical expense in 2015. Taxpayers 71 and older can claim up to $4,750, seniors 61 to 70 can claim up to $3,800, while people 51 to 60 can deduct up to $1,430. Attention LA Veterans on 100% Disability The U.S. Army Golden Knights will be one of the groups performing at the Barksdale Air Force Base 2015 Air Show. To double your parish homestead exemption, get a letter from your VA service officer stating you have 100% disability and take it to your tax assessor to get your exemption. For example, current tax of $459 could be reduced to $224 with new tax exemption.