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Evacuated Soldiers Now Get Immediate Combat Injury Pay

Dec 17, 2007
BY C. Todd Lopez

WASHINGTON (Army News Service) -- When Soldiers are evacuated from a combat zone due to a combat-related injury, they no longer need to wait 30 days to begin receiving their Combat-Related Injury Rehabilitation Pay.

Now, CIP kicks in immediately, ensuring troops continue to receive an additional $430 dollars a month, even while they are recovering in a military hospital. The change is more in line with what Congress envisioned when the program was created, said Craig Taylor, Combat Injury Pay program coordinator.

"This will alleviate the hardship of the stopping of the hostile combat pay when a Soldier is medically evacuated from the theater of operation," Mr. Taylor said. "Soldiers medically evacuated out of theater up until now had to wait one to two months to see the CIP in their pay, and that is counter to what the Congress intended for the program."

Military members may be entitled to receive special benefits such as hostile fire pay, hazardous duty pay and imminent danger pay while deployed to places such as Iraq or Afghanistan. That pay can add up to $430 dollars a month.

Military Families often plan their finances around that special pay continuing for the duration of a deployment. But when a military member is forced to leave the combat zone for medical reasons, that pay stops. The CIP is meant to alleviate the hardship caused by that unexpected loss of income.

Active-duty Soldiers who receive CIP will see this benefit annotated on their Leave and Earnings Statement as "Fly Deck Pay." National Guard and Reserve personnel will see it annotated as, "Other Credits," with an explanation in the remarks section.

Soldiers who believe they may be eligible to receive CIP should contact their Warrior Transition Unit chain of command, local Wounded in Action DFAS representative, or call 1-800-237-1336. Additional information about the program can be found here.

Article Opinions

Proud Mom of a Soldier wrote:

AMEN. This is the way it should have always been. Our Soldiers are fighting this war to keep us all free, so their pay should go on also. Our Soldiers are so deserving of much more!! I'm proud to be a Mother of a Soldier who's fighting for us.
Posted on 01/02/08 04:18:13

Peggy Bradford wrote:

I am a proud grandmother of a Soldier of the US Army she was wounded in Iraq and was never given time to come home to heal she was wounded from a Mortor atack in Iraq her colon was slpite in half. She is now starting College and on very little funds still in the Army no extra pay for being wounded just a purple heart. This is the thanks our Soldiers get she is very depressed with PTSD crys so much and given 300 alounce to live on while in College never received anything for being wounded in Iraq can't even get hepl in the proscess of being release from Army to College she is a basket case. Where is her help? Was told she coun't leave the Military or get paid for being hurt I'm very up set with this Freedom
Posted on 01/03/08 14:46:21

Steve from Tampa wrote:

Why do we have this for active duty personnel? Is their regular pay suspended? No.........so why? I can see this is one is sent home for an extended period of time but otherwise this is really not fair and a slap in the face to other active duty personnel. The problem is with the rating and actually getting benefits AFTER one is discharged from the military. There is a way to play the game and most older retired people can tell you how to do it. To get PTSD benefits right away is a joke and it usually will take an average of 10-25 yrs to even get a small percentage. The whole thing is a mess. When I was discharged from coming back from VN wounded, there were teams of VA people that roamed the halls of Letterman Army Hospital in SF just mentally beating up people on their ratings. Things like "You can still work with one arm" and "Don't be a baby because you lost an eye" were the daily norm. On a recent visit to James Haley VA Hospital in Tampa I saw the same! "You have a personality disorder and thats why you drove too close to the roadside" was tld to a Iraq vet who was the victim of a roadside IED.......double amputee. So my advice to others who need claims.......bypass the VA and go to a veterans group that has a congressman/woman put 'chasers' on the paperwork. The VA 'helpers' at the VA that put your claim in will damage your chances more than you think. Trust me. Watch how the pro's work the system. Accept 10% and then file year after year after year. There are savy 19 -20 yr active duty people in now that are getting 'hurt' moving file cabinets and logging this info now as we speak so they will have all their ducks in order when they need to file their claim(s). Just because got hurt, got a purple heart, or got a limb amputated does not mean any compensation. Even if it is recorded. The VA is on a campaign to find medical school drop-outs that have 2 years plus of med school under their belts to that they know just a hair more medical tech lingo than do. Thats how it worad but true.
Posted on 01/10/08 11:03:03

Concerned Parent wrote:

I agree, where is our help for our Soldiers? Let's screw them out of everything they earned! Is this the military way? I can tell you first hand the VA system is pathetic also. I'm not really sure if I was a veteran if I'd truly want to use the VA system. God Bless our troops now & all who served in the years past.
Posted on 01/26/08 07:00:40

T. Brown wrote:

I am a dissabled vet and have delt with the Va now for over three years after being ambushed and discharged from the army for my medical reasons. I have one thing to say: The VA is run by very ghostly people: for those of you who want socialized healthcare, You are going to get something that is built using the VA's as a model. And that right there scares me. I wait right now a the minimun three months just to see my primary physician and am mostly found in the ER just so I can get medical treatment immediately.
Posted on 03/16/08 16:44:02

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