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Brnovich Leads Effort to Protect Veteran's Rights Featured

Katie Connor, AZ Attorney General’s Office February 10, 2022 751

Attorney General Brnovich Co-Leads Coalition to Protect Veterans’ Rights and Limit the Power of Federal Agencies at the U.S. Supreme Court

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  • AZ Attorney General Mark Brnovich is co-leading a coalition of 15 state attorneys general urging the US Supreme Court to protect Veterans' Rights
  • Disability compensation is a statutory right guaranteed to veterans who suffer from personal injury or disease related to the line of duty
  • The Veterans Affair agreed to pay Buffington disability compensation but later refused after he had been recalled to active duty
  • Attorney General Brnovich is joined by Ads from Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, Utah and Virginia
  • Read more...

 

Disability compensation is a statutory right

PHOENIX - Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich is co-leading a coalition of 15 state attorneys general urging the U.S Supreme Court (SCOTUS) to hear and reverse Buffington v. McDonough to ensure federal agencies have limited power in interpreting laws. 

After serving on active duty in the United States Air Force for eight years, veteran Thomas H. Buffington was honorably discharged and sought disability compensation for tinnitus. The Veterans Affairs (VA) agreed to pay Buffington disability compensation. After a few years, Buffington was recalled to active duty in the Air National Guard, pausing disability compensation. He served from July 2003 to June 2004 and then again from November 2004 to July 2005, but upon formal application to resume the disability compensation benefits, the VA wrongfully refused.

Disability compensation is a statutory right guaranteed to veterans who suffer from personal injury or disease related to the line of duty. Federal law (38 U.S.C. § 5304(c)) specifies that disability compensation cannot be received simultaneously with active-duty pay. The same statute does not place a restriction on disability compensation resumption when active duty is again concluded. Despite this, the courts below concluded that the relevant statutes lack specifications regarding the effective date for the resumption of disability compensation, thus expanding the VA’s authority to decide these effective dates under Chevron deference.

Chevron deference is a legal principle that tells federal courts that they should generally defer to an agency’s interpretation of a genuinely ambiguous statute. The coalition argues it is the job of the courts to interpret the applicable laws when there are disagreements concerning agencies’ policymaking authority. Alternatively, the coalition’s petition argues that Chevron should be overturned.

The court below wrongfully deferred to VA’s interpretation, which expanded its power at the expense of veterans. Attorney General Brnovich will continue to fight for veterans’ rights as well as make sure agencies stay within their statutory authority.

Joining Attorney General Brnovich are the attorneys general from Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, Utah, and Virginia.

Copy of amicus brief here

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Last modified on Thursday, 10 February 2022 20:23
Published in Azveterans.news