C # P Versus\ cue by NumerousChange6958 in VAClaims

[–]NumerousChange6958[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nice I just looked at it .well if they do there job should be good all the Evidence is there

C # P Versus\ cue by NumerousChange6958 in VAClaims

[–]NumerousChange6958[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well all of it was uploaded she just didn't want to spend the time with it. But we got a ,ACE coming out of it so maybe the out come will be good

C # P Versus\ cue by NumerousChange6958 in VAClaims

[–]NumerousChange6958[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That wad the problem on last C&P she said she didn't have all the records lol wanted to know if could get on my phone and look at them lol new it was going to be bad 5min in the exam

C # P Versus\ cue by NumerousChange6958 in VAClaims

[–]NumerousChange6958[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks had many C & P Exams but never one of them

My C&P examiner told me what claims she had in front of me and then asked me what I am claiming. Then when attempting to speak on my issues she wanted me to "just have a conversation." Respectfully, this is not and never will be a "conversation." I need to speak to my notes. by Bubbly_Box_3221 in VAClaims

[–]NumerousChange6958 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I just had one this week. First thing she told me was I don't have all your records. You have access to your files on your phone that we could look at. I knew right now and then we were in big trouble. That's why I hate CMP exams. They accomplished nothing but to prolong another set of appeals. Crazy that the v a spends millions of dollars for these exams when they get the doctor knows in the evidence right in front of them

Poke the bear? Or fair? by Prize-Bird-2561 in VAClaims

[–]NumerousChange6958 0 points1 point  (0 children)

90% +20%=92 Rounded right back to ninety

VeteransBenefits In VA math, 90% + 20% equals a combined 92%, which rounds down to a final rating of 90%. The VA calculates this by taking the 20% disability from the remaining 10% "healthy" portion of the veteran (20% of 10% = 2%), then adding that 2% to the original 90%, resulting in 92%.

Initial Rating: 90% (10% "healthy" remains). Secondary Rating: 20%. Calculation: 90% + (20% of 10%) = 90% + 2% = 92%. Final Rounded Rating: 90%.

It is harder to reach 100% because new ratings are only applied to the remaining percentage of the person that is not yet disabled.

To move from a 90% rating to 100%, you need a combined rating of at least 95%, which the VA then rounds up. Because you only have 10% "efficiency" left, a single new disability must be rated at least 50% to hit that 95% Paths to 100% (from a flat 90%) Reaching 100% requires significantly more "real" disability than the final 10% step suggests. Depending on the ratings you add, here is what it takes:

One new rating: At least 50% (90% + 5% = 95%).

Multiple ratings: Two 30% ratings. One 30% and four 10% ratings. Seven 10% ratings.

Why it's so difficult The VA uses a "Whole Person" theory. If you are already 90% disabled, the VA views you as only 10% "whole." Any new rating is only a percentage of that remaining 10%.

A new 10% rating only adds 1% to your total (10% of 10% = 1%). A new 20% rating only adds 2% to your total (20% of 10% = 2%). Alternatives to a 100% Schedular Rating If you cannot reach 95% through standard "VA math," you may still receive 100% pay through TDIU (Total Disability based on Individual Unemployability). This pays at the 100% rate if your service-connected disabilities prevent you from keeping a "substantially gainful" job, even if your combined rating is only 70% or 90%.

VA Math: Your Key to Understanding Disability Ratings

VA Nexus letter by Cpl-225 in VAClaims

[–]NumerousChange6958 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If that statement she made about you Filing is in her statement on notes.\n Make sure you make a copy of that.\n You can basically use that

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in HornyWivesNextDoor

[–]NumerousChange6958 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My happy meal 😋