Last Updated on March 4, 2010
Whether or not one should hire an OPM Disability Attorney at the initial stage of the process of filing for Federal Disability Retirement benefits under FERS or CSRS, or whether to wait for a denial; such a question must be answered by each Federal or Postal employee, based upon the strength of a case, based upon the financial resources of the individual and the family, and based upon the ability of the potential applicant to organize, compile, streamline, delineate, communicate, descriptively convey, and methodologically argue the strength of a case. Much of being able to successfully compile the multiple facets of a Federal or Postal Disability Retirement application depends upon the discretionary ability to make judgments about which aspects to emphasize and magnify; which aspects to de-emphasize; and (often) most importantly, which issues to “leave alone”.
Whatever it is that one does in preparing a Federal or Postal Disability Retirement Application under FERS or CSRS, the “What to Do” list must always include what NOT to do. Whatever it is that one does, one should do nothing that is going to negatively impact one’s application or case. And, above all, remember that the person who “assumes” that the Federal Disability Retirement application will be approved at the first stage, and prepares such a packet, is often the person who regrets having said “this or that”, or wishes that “x, y or z” had not been included. This is especially true when it gets denied the first time, and then the second time, and it is now being reviewed by an Administrative Judge. On the other hand, I have found that there are few, if any, issues which are not ultimately “correctable” or able to be “explained away”.
Sincerely,
Robert R. McGill, Esquire
hello my name is david blake. I am writting you in hope to recieve advic and direction on applying for postal disabilitiy retirement.