The Voice is the e-mail newsletter of The Special Needs Alliance. This installment was written by Sandra L. Smith, CELA, a partner with Oast & Hook, P.C. in Suffolk and Virginia Beach, Virginia. She is the editor of the firm’s weekly newsletter, the “Oast & Hook News,” which is available on the firm’s website. She is certified as an elder law attorney by the National Elder Law Foundation. Ms. Smith is the co-author of the “Special Needs Trusts” chapter for the Elder Law in Virginia handbook published by Virginia CLE. She is a member of the Board of Directors and the immediate past president of Commonwealth Community Trust, a pooled trust in Richmond, Virginia. She retired from the United States Air Force as a Lieutenant Colonel with over 20 years active duty service, and earned her Juris Doctorate degree from the College of William and Mary School of Law.

January 2011 - Vol. 5, Issue 1

Many families of children with disabilities are also military families. One benefit that may be available for these children is the military Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP). The SBP will pay up to 55% of the military member’s retirement pay to a spouse or a dependent child when the retiree dies. The benefit is adjusted annually for inflation. The military member also has the option to select a lower benefit at a lower cost and has the option to choose coverage for only the spouse, spouse and children, or only children.

If a member wants to decline SBP coverage entirely, he or she can only do that with the written consent of the spouse. If a member selects spouse and children coverage, the children do not receive SBP until after the death of the military retiree and his or her spouse. The member’s military retirement pay is reduced by approximately 6.5% for spousal coverage, and he or she pays approximately $20 per month for dependent children coverage.

SBP can be an excellent benefit for children with disabilities, but families need to be aware of all the options for their children before deciding to elect child coverage. Receipt of the SBP benefit may result in the child losing other important disability benefits.

Children with disabilities are usually eligible for Supplemental Security Income (SSI) at age 18 if they meet the income and asset requirements for these benefits. SSI provides funds for food and shelter. Children with disabilities that occurred prior to age 22 may also be eligible for Social Security on the record of a disabled, retired or deceased parent. SBP can provide an additional source of income for the child with disabilities. If a child with disabilities is receiving SSI, the SSI payment is reduced dollar-for dollar by unearned income; therefore if the child also receives SBP, SSI could be reduced or eliminated.

Because the child is the SBP beneficiary, the SBP funds cannot be paid directly into a special needs trust in order to avoid receipt of the monthly income by the child. Congress would have to amend the U.S. Code in order for the SBP payments to be paid directly into a trust without the payment being considered as received by the child.

Children with disabilities who are receiving SSI are also able to receive Medicaid, including Medicaid waiver services. Medicaid can provide for supervision, job training and assistance in addition to health benefits. In military families, a child with disabilities who is over 18 years of age can be designated an Incapacitated Dependent with the filing of a DD Form 137-5. This designation can also permit the child to be eligible for health care benefits under TRICARE.

TRICARE and Medicaid complement each other, and together can provide a wide array of services and benefits for the child with disabilities. Some states have an absolute income cap for Medicaid benefits while other states allow a recipient to spend down excess income on medical services in order to qualify for benefits. If a child’s SBP income is too high, he or she may not be able to receive Medicaid or Medicaid waiver services.

Military families should consider all benefits that will be available to their children with disabilities, and decide before the military member retires whether or not SBP is a good fit for their child. This is particularly true if the family wants the child to receive Medicaid waiver services in the community. Unfortunately, once the SBP beneficiary payments start, there is no way to stop them.

If the military member has already made an SBP election involving the child with disabilities, he or she can apply to the Board for Correction of Military Records for their respective service in order to modify the SBP election. This application must be made while the military member is still alive, using the DD Form 149. The member will have to justify the change in the election. For example, he or she might explain that they did not understand that electing coverage for the child with disabilities could adversely impact the child’s eligibility for other important benefits.

A completed DD Form 149 should be sent to the service address listed on the form. The Board for the military member’s service meets periodically to review and act on such requests.

Military families who are eligible to receive SBP and have a child with a disability should work with a qualified attorney to ensure that they are fully educated on all benefits for which their children are eligible. It is critical that parents do their homework and make the appropriate decisions before the military member retires.


About this Article: We hope you find this article informative, but it is not legal advice. You should consult your own attorney, who can review your specific situation and account for variations in state law and local practices. Laws and regulations are constantly changing, so the longer it has been since an article was written, the greater the likelihood that the article might be out of date. SNA members focus on this complex, evolving area of law. To locate a member in your state, visit Find an Attorney.

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