Social Media

What does 1010 mean in military?

What does 1010 mean in military?

Military Time 1010 is: 10:10 AM using 12-hour clock notation, 10:10 using 24-hour clock notation.

Time Zone Name Letter 12-hour clock
Oscar Time Zone O 08:10 A.M.
November Time Zone N 09:10 A.M.
Zulu Time Zone Z 10:10 A.M.
Alpha Time Zone A 11:10 A.M.

Are Divorced spouses entitled to military pension?

In order for the military to provide direct retirement payments to an ex-spouse, the couple must have been married 10 years overlapping with 10 years of service. The maximum amount of pension income an ex-spouse can receive is 50% of the military retirement pay.

What is the 10 / 10 rule for military divorce?

In 1982, a law was passed called the Uniformed Services Former Spouse Protection Act (USFSPA), which gave state divorce courts the ability to treat military retirement pay as marital property that can be divided between the spouses. The 10/10 rule, which is part of the USFSPA,…

How many years do you have to be in the military to get a divorce?

So if you are close to 10 years, the parties in a family law action might want to consider stretching out the final divorce date/legal separation date, in order to meet the 10/10 rule. If the service member is ‘active duty’ (the military is their ‘full time’ job), the 10 years is 10 actual years of military service.

Who are the divorce lawyers for the military?

The receiving spouse will have taxes and other deductions taken out by DFAS, and the military spouse will not have to write out a check every month. The military divorce lawyers at Livesay & Myers have years of experience in the division of military retired pay, and other issues unique to military divorce cases.

What happens to your military pension after divorce?

And also note that with fewer than 10 years of marriage overlapping service the retiree will have to pay the retirement to the former spouse each month, as direct payment from DFAS is not available. For more information about the division of a military pension, see the Military Retirement section of the Military Divorce Guide.

In 1982, a law was passed called the Uniformed Services Former Spouse Protection Act (USFSPA), which gave state divorce courts the ability to treat military retirement pay as marital property that can be divided between the spouses. The 10/10 rule, which is part of the USFSPA,…

So if you are close to 10 years, the parties in a family law action might want to consider stretching out the final divorce date/legal separation date, in order to meet the 10/10 rule. If the service member is ‘active duty’ (the military is their ‘full time’ job), the 10 years is 10 actual years of military service.

The receiving spouse will have taxes and other deductions taken out by DFAS, and the military spouse will not have to write out a check every month. The military divorce lawyers at Livesay & Myers have years of experience in the division of military retired pay, and other issues unique to military divorce cases.

And also note that with fewer than 10 years of marriage overlapping service the retiree will have to pay the retirement to the former spouse each month, as direct payment from DFAS is not available. For more information about the division of a military pension, see the Military Retirement section of the Military Divorce Guide.