Congressman Richard Hudson | Richard Hudson Official Website
Congressman Richard Hudson | Richard Hudson Official Website
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Ahead of Memorial Day weekend, Rep. Richard Hudson (R-NC) introduced the Love Lives On Act with Rep. Dean Phillips (D-MN), a bipartisan bill that will allow spouses of deceased military servicemembers to retain survivor benefits upon remarriage. The Senate companion for the Love Lives On Act is led by Sens. Jerry Moran (R-KS) and Raphael Warnock (D-GA).
"I believe our country owes a tremendous debt to the surviving spouses of fallen servicemembers,” said Rep. Hudson. “It takes great courage and strength to pick up the pieces and move forward. We must support surviving spouses who choose to remarry and remove the fear of losing the benefits paid for by their late spouse’s sacrifice.”
“As a Gold Star Son, my gratitude to our servicemembers and their families is immeasurable,” said Rep. Phillips. “Spouses of those who die in service to our nation make unimaginable sacrifices and deserve unending respect and support in return. The Love Lives On Act is part of my mission to ensure military families have access to every single benefit they are owed. I’m grateful to colleagues on both sides of the aisle for backing it, but our work is not done. I will continue to push to eliminate remarriage benefit reductions for anyone who dies in service to their country, civilian or military.”
“TAPS is grateful to Representatives Phillips and Hudson for their leadership in reintroducing the first comprehensive remarriage bill, the Love Lives On Act of 2023. This important legislation will ensure surviving military spouses retain their benefits upon remarriage at any age. Being widowed should not penalize them from finding love in the future,” said Bonnie Carroll, President and Founder of the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors, a survivors advocacy organization that has endorsed the bill.
Background:
Currently, surviving spouses of federal personnel, both civilian and military, are at risk of losing survivor benefits if they remarry under the age of 55. The Love Lives On Act would ensure military spouses are allowed to retain benefits upon remarriage no matter their age. The bill’s protections extend to surviving spouses of active-duty, veteran, and retired military personnel.
While the Love Lives On Act does not eliminate the remarriage penalty for surviving spouses of civilian federal personnel, it establishes a precedent and road map for doing so for the entire federal workforce in the future.
Key Provisions of the Love Lives On Act:
1. Allows surviving spouses of military personnel to retain the Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) and Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC) if they remarry, regardless of age. The Survivor Benefit Plan provides up to 55% of a servicemember's retirement pay to an eligible beneficiary after the servicemember dies. The Dependency and Indemnity Compensation is a tax-free monthly benefit to survivors.
2. Grants surviving military spouses who remarry access to Commissary and Exchange benefits.
3. Provides remarried surviving military spouses with children access to electronic medical records, appointments, referrals, and prescription refills. The remarried surviving spouse would also be treated as a parent.
4. Allows the surviving military spouse to keep eligibility for education benefits under the Fry Scholarship and Dependents Education Assistance. The spouse would keep these benefits if their next marriage ended in death, divorce or annulment.
5. Surviving military spouses would also be able to regain TRICARE benefits if their new marriage ends in death, divorce or annulment.
Issues: Veterans
Original source can be found here.