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Military Veterans Deserve Jobs When They Return |
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While we take the time this Veterans Day to honor the courage and sacrifice shown by our veterans, we should also rededicate ourselves to making sure vets have a secure and stable life after they finish their service.
The U.S. Labor Department reports the unemployment rate among Iraq and Afghanistan veterans is 11.3 percent, significantly above the overall rate of 10.2 percent for the nation as a whole. Some 185,000 Iraq and Afghanistan veterans are out of work. Many of these unemployed veterans are National Guard or Reserve troops who were called to duty but found when they came home that their old jobs were no longer there for them.
The AFL-CIO Union Veterans Council is calling on Congress to strengthen and enforce the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act, which ensures veterans can claim their former jobs when they return from active duty.
In his Veterans Day message, Union Veterans Council Chairman Mark Ayers quotes President Franklin Roosevelt who signed the first GI Bill into law in 1944:
What our servicemen and women want, more than anything else, is the assurance of satisfactory employment upon their return to civil life.
“For today’s veterans, that same desire holds true,” Ayers says.
Click here to read Ayers’ message.
There is good news for vets on this holiday. President Obama signed on Nov. 9 a new executive order that underscores to federal agencies the importance of recruiting and training veterans, to increase the employment of veterans within the executive branch and to help recently hired veterans adjust to civilian life.
The executive order establishes a Veterans Employment Program office within most federal agencies, the White House said. These offices will be responsible for helping veterans identify employment opportunities within federal agencies, providing feedback to veterans about their employment application status, and helping veterans recently employed by agencies adjust to civilian life and a workplace culture often different than military service.
Labor Secretary Hilda Solis and Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki will chair a high-level committee to oversee the program. Click here to read the executive order.
The Union Veterans Council also is calling for other federal programs, as well:
- Expanding state and local programs for providing job training and employment counseling services.
- Increasing coverage of the new post-9/11 GI Bill to include payments for apprenticeships and on-the-job training.
- Continuing funding for the nationally recognized AFL-CIO “Helmets to Hardhats” program, which has placed tens of thousands of transitioning veterans into careers in the construction industry.
Ayers sums it up this way:
On this Veterans Day, we have the privilege of honoring these very special American men and women whose sacrifices and service are beyond most people’s comprehension. We owe them a great deal. First and foremost, we owe them our freedom. Secondly, we owe them our gratitude. And finally, we owe them the prospect of a secure and stable life upon the conclusion of their service.
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Veterans who attempt to return to civilian life and work are especially victimized by the class war that is waged against all working people. The impoverishment and destruction verges on a genocie of the unprofitable. The relentless class war, inherant under gangster capitalism, any working person who cannot generate profit for capitalists, without food, shelter, health care, employent etc., will become impoverished, marginalized and terminated .
Today’s war-mongering politicians, forever seeking more troops for more wars now in Afghanistan and next Pakistan, always flag-waving to “support our troops”, always willing to pin medals on “heros” destroyed by their wars for oil and profit, are not willing to divert enough money from the bloated “defense” budgets to allow impoverished veterans to survive.
THE NATIONAL COALITION OF HOMELESS VETERANS
http://www.nchv.org/background.cfm
“With an estimated 260,000 veterans homeless at some time during the year, the VA reaches 100,000 of those in need — leaving 160,000 veterans who must seek assistance from local government agencies and service organizations in their communities. ”
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From CommonDreams.org today:
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2009/11/11-6
Published on Wednesday, November 11, 2009 by Agence France Presse
Lack of Health Care Killed 2,266 US Veterans Last Year: Study
WASHINGTON - The number of US veterans who died in 2008 because they lacked health insurance was 14 times higher than the US military death toll in Afghanistan that year, according to a new study.
then why are our union leaders giving needed training center spots toillegal aliens?