Hacker15e
Who am I? Where are my pants?
hiring of candidates for a position literally came down to disability trumping anything else.
Thanks, Trump!
hiring of candidates for a position literally came down to disability trumping anything else.
Sounds like he should have earned a bronze star...Have a friend from college who got "injured" during Desert Storm I and had his command try and push for a PH and disability. He was in SAV at the time. They were driving captured Iraqi APCs off a cargo ship and he got rear ended. He was sitting up out of the hatch and got his front teeth knocked out by hitting the coaming. The CO tried to claim, since the injury was caused by an enemy combatant vehicle, he was entitled. He refused it and fought them over the designation because he felt it devalued those who were injured in combat. The higher ups were not happy with him.
I always laugh when I hear people complaining about how many deployments they've been on. If you enlisted after 2001, or at least 2003, you knew damn well (or at least should have) what you were getting in to. Especially those who reenlisted.
Have a friend from college who got "injured" during Desert Storm I and had his command try and push for a PH and disability. He was in SAV at the time. They were driving captured Iraqi APCs off a cargo ship and he got rear ended. He was sitting up out of the hatch and got his front teeth knocked out by hitting the coaming. The CO tried to claim, since the injury was caused by an enemy combatant vehicle, he was entitled. He refused it and fought them over the designation because he felt it devalued those who were injured in combat. The higher ups were not happy with him.
When I was retiring and doing my separation physical, it was like a kind of game to see how much disability you could rack up...mostly trying to get over that magic 50% number so you could get the disability payments tax-free in addition to the retirement check. I know perfectly functional guys who currently hold First Class medicals and fly for major 121 airlines who are greater than 50% "disabled" -- some substantially more than that, too.
I have yet to submit a disability claim. I suppose I'm missing out on some extra taxpayer money, but I don't really care.
Sounds like he should have earned a bronze star...
I'm surprised anyone bothers to reenlist, especially in (USAF) fields such as aircraft maintenance, security police, and a few other fields where the people are treated like practical slave labor. The pay and even any of the dangle-the-carrot bonuses, aren't remotely worth the the work QOL and the heaping amount of BS those people have to deal with.
They give bronze stars to finance troops in Afghanistan. For doing finance.
I also wonder the same thing. I know they're going to be hurting really bad in a few years for E6+ for ATC. Everyone is jumping ship for the FAA, especially now that the FAA raised the max hire age for prior experience to 35 from 31.
About 9 months after I got out I received a letter from the AF asking me to re-enlist. I had a good laugh.
It's not the extra money that is the danger.
Thanks in part to disabled hiring practices for government jobs you are fighting in a rigged game to not claim disability. The magic number there is 30% which is effectively a "must hire first" flag over a similarly qualified applicant without it.
My dad is kicking himself for being a man about it and not claiming some of the minor stuff he had, because there are several times in his time at the VA where hiring of candidates for a position literally came down to disability trumping anything else.
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Smaller military hospitals are being overwhelmed with so many requirements such as four day EO classes, that they can't do their primary job and are being shut down because they can't provide the required level of care cost effectively. Troops and family members will then have to drive an hour+ for their "free" health care.
Well to be fair if you go to a military doctor they'll just tell you you're faking it and give you Motrin. Never mind that your leg is bent 90 degrees the wrong way.
"Army candy".
Well to be fair if you go to a military doctor they'll just tell you you're faking it and give you Motrin. Never mind that your leg is bent 90 degrees the wrong way.
reminds me of last summer when I flew a jet to an airshow for static display. Not having someone around who knew how to put the little Hornet ladder down, I decided to walk out to the wingtip and hop off. Big mistake. I was limping like a 90 year old for maybe 3 weeks after that, though after my jet broke for 4 days while at the 'show, I did manage to drink enough great PNW beer to not notice the first week. Fast forward, after a week back home powering through the pain and limping up boarding ladders in order to finish a couple upgrade flights I needed to complete, I finally went to see the doc. They x-ray'd my foot, and the general response from the doc was something like "well, I'm not an expert in x-rays, but I don't think your foot is broken. But you are definitely hurt. Here is some Motrin, don't fly for a week, cya!" haha
Great discussion gents, I feel similarly to a lot of you