Stalled hearing leaves reservists waiting for a solution to GI Bill restrictions

May 9, 2017
  • Industry News
  • gi bill
  • veteran

Nearly 4,700 reservists and guardsmen have been unfairly barred from earning post-9/11 GI Bill benefits available to active-duty servicemembers, veterans advocates say, triggering delays that will likely defer their education for years.

The issue lies with the Pentagon’s use of Title 10, Section 12304b, a specific deployment authorization used by the Defense Department to increase operational use of reservists and cut the cost of their benefits. Any reservist who deploys under the authorization is restricted in the ability to accrue GI Bill benefits, pre- and post-deployment health care and other resources during that duty.

Other deployment orders, such as those used for combat tours, allow part-time troops to rack up some benefits at the same rate as active-duty troops. VA pays out higher percentages of tuition and housing costs under the GI Bill the longer someone serves on active duty.

Read more at Stars and Stripes: https://www.stripes.com/news/stalled-hearing-leaves-reservists-waiting-for-a-solution-to-gi-bill-restrictions-1.467343#.WRIQe1XyuUl