GI Bill

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Dec 16, 2005
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SoCal
My post in another thread got me to thinking. Has anyone else used up the lion's share of their GI Bill benefits. As I mentioned there, it saved a lot in closing costs and interest payments. It also paid a nice chunk of what it cost to get my BS. I figure in a few years my family will get that last little bit from the death benefit.
 
They quit that :poop: right before I enlisted, soooooo nope.

My Dad did take advantage of it as far as education, got him through college so he could teach kids how to build houses.
 
I'm from the (next to useless) VEAP era also, we got hosed compared to the GI Bills that came before and after.
 
The best teachers I had were educated on the GI Bill. They were real teachers who I respected very much. My one industrial arts teacher was a demolition man in the Army Engineers, another stayed in the Army Reserve and ended up retiring as a Lt. Colonel. The drafting teacher was a 1st Lieutenant in the Marine Corps and spent 2 years in Korea.
They are all gone now and I use what I learned from them almost daily.
 
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The "GI Bill" was over by the time I enlisted. But I was covered by the "Montgomery GI Bill" of 1984. It didn't do squat for me due to the profession I stumbled into.

SGLI is the only thing I need to sort out for my will. I never transferred it to VGLI.....not even sure if it's worth looking into anymore.
 
I was drafted out of college, while married. By the time I ETS'd, I needed a real job and could not go back to school.
I used no part of the GI Bill, but I did use my states veterans assistance to buy a house. That got me 3.2% interest with a very minimal down payment.
 
I held off on using mine until I got my job with the National Weather Service. My thought was get the schooling I needed to benefit me in my job. It took me 6 years to even get my foot in the door and when I applied for the schooling I was told they'd expired. The only other thing I ever applied for was health care but when they found out I had insurance so that my wife was covered the shut me out again. I haven't had a damn thing to do with them ever snce. They're dead to me.
PJ
 
I bought my 1st house with VA loan at 10.2 % interest. That was a bargain at the time.
I also got my BS and MS in engineering with them.since I was married with a child they paid me quite a bit more monthly. I think it was $700 a month. That was a very long time ago.
 
I was drafted out of college, while married. By the time I ETS'd, I needed a real job and could not go back to school.
I used no part of the GI Bill, but I did use my states veterans assistance to buy a house. That got me 3.2% interest with a very minimal down payment.
I used the state system to buy a second home up north. But other than that, this state isn't really interested in vets.
 
Used it to get a bachelor's degree which I have never used.

Wish I could sell the degree.

Needs to be a market place where people with degrees who dont use them or no longer using them could sell them to people who want or need them.
 
Nope, and VA said i was too successful for medical care, of course I was not going to depend on either of them anyways....LOL.
 
After my discharge (1969-1973 USAF) I got a summer job as a construction gopher for the owner who was building an apartment complex in Austin, TX. When school started (UT-Austin) that fall, the owner hired me to be asst. manager/Mr. Fixit for that complex. I showed/rented apartments, chased down deadbeat tenants for their past-due rent, unclogged stopped up plumbing systems (ladies' sanitary napkins were the most frequent culprits), repaired minor electrical circuitry problems, drywall repairs, re-painting units to prepare them for new tenants, etc. The only thing I wouldn't do was deep steam clean carpets. Very time consuming and the outcome wasn't predictable.

So until I graduated 2 years later, I worked 40-50 hour weeks AND took full 15-hours-per-sememter course loads. Work money and GI bill paid for all of my college costs (including room and board) and paid off a car loan. When I graduated, I was debt-free. [The National Bank of Dad had closed the day I enlisted in the military and never re-opened.] My degree in accounting got me a job with a big accounting firm, and the rest is history.

Only other GI Bill benefit was obtaining a VA loan to finance the purchase our first home. Nominal down-payment ($500) required and decent interest rate.

Given my financial picture, I'll not be eligible for GI burial benefits. So, I guess I'm done. Still, you'll hear no argument from me about the sufficiency of the GI Bill's benefits - they were good.
 
It payed me to get my education and payed for my education. Let me buy a house with low interest charges. Indiana VA paid for two kids education also.
 
After my discharge (1969-1973 USAF) I got a summer job as a construction gopher for the owner who was building an apartment complex in Austin, TX. When school started (UT-Austin) that fall, the owner hired me to be asst. manager/Mr. Fixit for that complex. I showed/rented apartments, chased down deadbeat tenants for their past-due rent, unclogged stopped up plumbing systems (ladies' sanitary napkins were the most frequent culprits), repaired minor electrical circuitry problems, drywall repairs, re-painting units to prepare them for new tenants, etc. The only thing I wouldn't do was deep steam clean carpets. Very time consuming and the outcome wasn't predictable.

So until I graduated 2 years later, I worked 40-50 hour weeks AND took full 15-hours-per-sememter course loads. Work money and GI bill paid for all of my college costs (including room and board) and paid off a car loan. When I graduated, I was debt-free. [The National Bank of Dad had closed the day I enlisted in the military and never re-opened.] My degree in accounting got me a job with a big accounting firm, and the rest is history.

Only other GI Bill benefit was obtaining a VA loan to finance the purchase our first home. Nominal down-payment ($500) required and decent interest rate.

Given my financial picture, I'll not be eligible for GI burial benefits. So, I guess I'm done. Still, you'll hear no argument from me about the sufficiency of the GI Bill's benefits - they were good.
I didn't think there was any sort of financial eligibility for burial benefit.
 
I didn't think there was any sort of financial eligibility for burial benefit.

My Father's was a full military burial with honors w/motorcade escort provided by local PD, a line of LEOs/Firefighters/FT Campbell Active Duty/Vets at attention saluting as we entered the cemetery, Army Ceremonial Guard (Bearers/Flag Presenter/Chaplain/Taps Bugler), Firing Party (VFW), the whole works. It was free and organized by the local VFW and coordinated with Ft Campbell personnel. I believe the only cost was the urn and engraved plate cover with his name/rank/years of service/Korean War. I've been to a few military funerals. This was pretty impressive.
 
My FIL (WW II veteran and combat engineer serving under Patton in Europe) was only eligible for nominal (less than $5,000 as I recall) veteran's burial benefits. The VA would pay for a basic coffin (pine box) but nothing else. Same thing with my own father (WW II USN on a destroyer in the Pacific from 1942-1945) - the VA arranged for two USN CPOs to attend the graveside service, but my dad's estate was "too wealthy" to qualify for other benefits. [At the time of his death, Dad's estate was about $250,000. Several months before his death, dad had gifted about $100,000 to his will's beneficiaries: 1/2 to my sister, and the other 1/2 in equal shares to me and each of my three children.]

If I hadn't been very careful, the total funeral cost (excluding the gravesite) for my dad's burial (in 2017) would have run more than $15,000. The funeral home tried to shame me into a $8-to-10 thousand fancy coffin, $3,500 in grave-side flowers, an expensive embalming process, etc. - things dad had specifically instructed me to avoid. Decades earlier, dad had purchased grave plots decades for himself and my mom. Otherwise, we'd have had to pay another $15-to-25 thousand or more for a grave site.

My kids are OK with the wishes of my bride and me - we prefer cremations, with our ashes dumped into the least expensive container. [I drink drip-grind Maxwell House coffee - hint, hint.] And we don't care where those ashes are ultimately disposed of. We don't want to be buried - so there will be no grave sites to buy, or funeral-home memorial services to pay for.

My best advice to others - pre-plan the funeral. Do this several months in advance, at a time when emotions are less likely to drive decisions. And review those plans with the loved one - let him/her drive the process.

Remember - As my dad often reminded me, funerals are for the living. The dead don't really care.
 
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