Last Updated on September 21, 2022 by FERS Disability Attorney
The “I was told” phenomenon is pervasive in our society, where information is plentiful, and more dangerously, where the dissemination of such information, at no cost to the recipient (except for detrimental consequences resulting from reliance upon the purveyor of such vast knowledge of unsolicited tidbits), is promulgated without discretion or discriminating tastes.
It is the one aspect, of course, in which George Orwell was perhaps mistaken; for, in his book, 1984, Orwell conveys the notion that it is the societal limitation of words which will lead to restriction of knowledge. In the modern world, however, it has become the unfettered expansion of any and all information, which has had the collateral effect upon society of engendering dangerous ignorance.
In preparing, formulating, and filing for FERS Disability Retirement benefits from the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, it is important to first obtain accurate information, then to determine the relevance and applicability of such information, then to act upon it.
The “I was told” phenomena should be ignored, as such nebulous sources of information, unless verifiable, should never be relied upon. For example: Having an active EEO matter does not extend the Statute of Limitations in being required to file a Federal Disability Retirement application within one (1) year of being separated from Federal or Postal Service. And another: One does not need to, and should not, wait for Social Security to make a determination in order to file for Federal Disability Retirement benefits for OPM.
Remember always that the 1-year Statute of Limitations is a “hard” limitation; there are only a limited number of exceptional circumstances which can climb over that obstacle, and one should not try to test the strength or height of that wall.
Sincerely,
Robert R. McGill, Esquire
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