FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
February 11, 2002
Law
Increases Veterans' Burial Benefits
WASHINGTON
-- Under a new law, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) will increase
reimbursement for funeral expenses and cemetery plots for service-disabled
veterans and provide government markers for veterans' graves even if families
already have installed private markers.
"The
modest increases in payments to veterans' families, and the additional monuments
to our heroes' service, are steps toward better acknowledging this nation's
appreciation of its veterans," said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Anthony
J. Principi.
The
Veterans Education and Benefits Expansion Act of 2001 increases the burial and
funeral expense allowance for veterans who die as a result of a
service-connected disability from $1,500 to $2,000 and the cemetery plot
allowance, for certain other disabled veterans, from $150 to $300.
The
law also directs VA to honor requests for government markers for veterans buried
in private cemeteries even if their graves have headstones or markers furnished
at private expense. Previous law
prevented VA from providing markers in that situation.
These increases are among many provisions of Public Law 107-103 that
expand other veterans' benefits.
About
9,800 families receive funeral expense reimbursement for service-connected
deaths each year. The $500 increase
in the funeral reimbursement, the first since 1988, is expected to increase the
government's cost by about $5 million a year.
This change applies to deaths on or after Dec. 1, 2001.
About
90,000 families become eligible for the plot allowance annually.
The cost of increasing the amount, which had been $150 since 1973, will
be about $13 million a year. The
higher allowance will be paid for deaths on or after Dec. 1, 2001.
The
plot allowance is paid when a veteran is buried in a non-government cemetery.
Also, the veteran must meet one of the following three criteria: The veteran was
eligible to receive VA disability compensation or a VA pension, was discharged
from military service due to disability or died in a VA hospital.
In
the past, people who submitted VA applications to receive a government marker
had to certify that the veteran's grave was unmarked.
Some families complained of unfairness because they could not obtain the
government's free marker to commemorate the veteran's service if
they had purchased a marker.
Under
the new law, the applicant must certify that the marker will be placed only in a
cemetery. VA will send the marker
only to a designated cemetery.
The
new provision for markers applies to veterans' deaths on or after Dec. 27, 2001.
By Feb. 1, 2006, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs will report to
Congress on how much this benefit is being used and recommend whether or not to
continue it.
From: Veteransinfo.net
Burlington Veterans Services
Town Hall
Burlington,
MA 01803
Office:
781 270-1959
E-Mail:
Veterans@BurlMass.org