Last Updated on February 18, 2022 by FERS Disability Attorney
There is often that final question during a consultation — of “any other advice” that can be given, or whether something else was forgotten, or the generalization of “Anything else I should know?” That is where the particulars of a case must be known, and the wide chasm that exists between “being a client” and merely receiving an initial overview of a person’s case. For, what isn’t known is often the element that can harm or injure, and the question asked but left unanswered is the one that no one thought about but should have.
Lawyers like to enter an arena of legal battles well-prepared; all questions asked, normally already are presumptively answered, and no lawyer worthy of his opponent asks a question that he or she already doesn’t know the answer to, or at least has a fairly good idea about. In a Federal Disability Retirement case, where there are multiple stages of an Administrative Process to tackle and prepare for, the First Key to success is to not submit that which will be harmful to one’s case.
As a FERS Disability Attorney who represents Federal and Postal workers in preparing, formulating and filing an effective Federal Disability Retirement application, to be submitted to the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, whether the Federal or Postal employee is under FERS, CSRS or CSRS Offset, the primary issue is obviously upon the medical report and records to be submitted; followed by the legal arguments to be presented and established, normally through an extensive Legal memorandum, which provides a kind of “road map” for the assigned OPM Specialist to review and (hopefully) become persuaded as to the validity, incontrovertible legal basis, and the substantive qualification of the Federal or Postal employee in meeting all of the legal criteria in becoming eligible for Federal Disability Retirement benefits.
For the Federal or Postal employee who attempts this complex Administrative Process without legal representation, the obstacles, pitfalls and potential hazards are many, and it is often what isn’t known that defeats a Federal Disability Retirement case.
Sure, there are cases where the presented facts, medical conditions and evidence constitute an undeniable, “slam-dunk” case, but those are few and far between, and we can all recognize such cases and a competent attorney would normally advise such individuals to go ahead and complete the Standard Forms, attach some relevant medical documentation and file for Federal Disability Retirement benefits with OPM.
Then, of course, there are cases on the far side of the spectrum that constitute a “weak” or otherwise invalid case, and those, too, are easily recognizable. Most cases, however, fall in the middle, within the spectrum where one must affirmatively and by a preponderance of the evidence “prove” one’s eligibility for Federal Disability Retirement benefits. And for all such cases that fall in that “middle” area of the wide spectrum, what isn’t known is the lynchpin that must be identified and prepared for further assessment and formulation, whether by addressing it in a medical document or reinforcing it by legal argumentation.
Sincerely,
Robert R. McGill, Esquire
Tags:
a difficult decision an ill federal worker must make: filing for disability applicant's statement of disability,
aids and fers disability,
appeal a owcp second opinion dr or filing for opm disability,
applying for federal disability,
attorney representing federal employees,
attorney representing federal workers for disability throughout the United States,
becoming medically disabled as a department of defense employee,
best legal representation for disabled usps postal workers,
blogs owcp and opm disability,
bullying and age discrimination signs in federal government,
can a federal employee who was removed get medical retirement? yes but within one year of separation,
consultation on sf3112c and other disability forms from the opm,
copd and disability retirement in fers,
csrs disability retirement lawyer,
disabilities in federal employees,
disapproval of federal disability retirement,
disk at l5 s1 a disability retirement opm,
dod civilian disability retirement processing time is normally 6-9 months but you may ask atty for latest figures,
does medicare end when fers disability converts to regular retirement? you’ll have same federal employee health insurance not medicare unless you get ssdi too,
excessive leave use by federal employee due to long term illness,
explaining and submitting list of diagnosis for medical retirement as a government employee,
faa atc medical retirement lawyer,
federal civil service disability retirement,
federal disability from federal employing agency aspergers employee,
federal disability owcp referee doctor in an impairment evaluation,
federal employee retirement for chronic pain syndrome,
federal government stress leave long term,
FERS disability retirement,
fers disability retirement and sleep apnea,
fers disability retirement application,
FERS medical retirement,
fers mental incompetence disability retirement,
filing for opm disability retirement,
how to deal with owcp while pursuing fers medical retirement,
incapacities federal employee,
law firm representing clients in opm disability law all across america,
left civil service early because of disability,
medical conditions which may qualify depend on health condition and how it affects job,
occupational retirement for postal employees in you can’t make job you was hired for,
opm advanced sick leave forms and opm disability retirement possibility,
opm disability leave,
opm disability retirement application,
opm disability retirement status,
opm harassment definition medical retirement,
opm leave sick leave permanent stress after divorce,
opm list of qualified disabilities (search for “opm accepted medical conditions”),
opm medical benefits,
opm medical decisions on crohns disease federal employee,
opm medical retirement guide,
opm office of workmans comp medical retirement office,
opm workman's comp disability retirement claim forms,
owcp claim status check medical retirement,
postal service personnel medical removal action form,
preparation sf 3112c physician's statement,
ptsd and medically retired from civil service job,
ptsd and opm,
quitting federal employment before retiring due to medical condition,
removal resign medical retirement from federal employment,
repetitive strain postal service medical retirement,
scheduled award payouts for carpal tunnel surgery plus federal government disability,
sf 3112 disability application package,
sop disability retirement opm,
stress related claims owcp medical retirement,
terminated from usps due to disabling condition,
the opm disability annuity income cap (search 80% in this blog for more information),
usps medical disability approval,
usps repetitive motion workers comp medical retirement,
vocational rehab for federal employees and other alternatives,
workman comp form 3112b medical retirement is an opm form
4 thoughts on “Legal Representation on FERS/CSRS Disability Claims: What isn’t known”