Last Updated on February 22, 2011 by FERS Disability Attorney
There is “The Law” — the originating, statutory authority which is passed by Congress — then, the compendium of the entirety of the legal arena, which includes decisions handed down by Administrative and Federal Judges, which comprise the expanding and evolving interpretation, clarification and extension of “The Law”.
Unfortunately, in making its decision on an Application for Federal Disability Retirement benefits under FERS or CSRS, the Office of Personnel Management constrains itself (and its knowledge of the law) to a template based upon a “7-part criteria” which is extrapolated from the Code of Federal Regulations.
This 7-part criteria is a simplistic and misleading application of the law. It is not so much that it is an “error” on the part of the Office of Personnel Management to apply such a criteria; rather, it is that, in evaluating and determining the sufficiency, viability, and meeting of the standard of proof of “preponderance of the evidence” of a Federal Disability Retirement application under FERS or CSRS, it simply does not go far enough. Because the 7-part criteria fails to include the interpretive evolution of the entirety of the laws governing Federal Disability Retirement, it fails by excluding many Federal Disability Retirement applications which are based upon legal criteria which fall outside of the delimited circumference and parameters of what OPM has set forth.
In short, they are “behind the times” in many instances, and so when a denial is based upon a misapplied criteria, it is important to point out to OPM that X law applies in particular case Y — where “X” is outside of the scope or knowledge of the Office of Personnel Management.
Sincerely,
Robert R. McGill, Esquire
Tags:
Accepting opm disability clients all across America,
civil service disability,
disability retirement at the USPS,
federal disability attorney,
federal disability law blog,
fers litigation and case laws on disability benefits,
FERS medical retirement,
filing for opm disability retirement,
how postal employees qualify for disability,
how postal employees qualify for disability retirement,
how the office of personnel management decides who's disabled and who is not,
if the opm specialist misinterprets opm disability law,
interpretation of case laws in cases of disability retirement for federal employees,
interpretation of judge-made decisions in opm disability cases,
law firm representing clients in opm disability law all across america,
medical retirement in the us post office,
misinterpretation of past opm disability cases,
misinterpretation or misapplication of OPM disability law,
misinterpretation or misapplication of OPM disability laws,
misinterpreted laws in the opm denial letter,
misstatements as basis for denial,
nationwide representation of federal employees,
office of personnel management disability,
OPM disabililty application,
opm disability case laws,
OPM disability lawyer,
opm disability legal criteria in the medical narrative documents,
opm eligibility criteria,
opm medical retirement qualification ruled by legal criteria of eligibility,
opm's 7-part criteria to approve disability claims,
opm's reviews for federal disability elegibility,
OWCP disability retirement,
Postal Service disability,
qualifying federal employees for fers disability,
steps to prove disability under fers csrs laws,
talking about federal disability retirement elegibility,
the legal and medical standards the opm uses to decide who qualifies for fers disability,
understanding opm disability judge-made laws,
USPS Disability,
what medical standards the opm uses to approve or deny disability?,
when the opm disability specialist misstates laws,
who approves disability retirement for federal and postal employees?,
who is supposed to process your fers disability retirement application?