From PRI's The World
22 March, 2010 07:00:00
Veterans Job Fair in Redford, MI
(Image by Flickr user MichiganMoves (CC: by-nc-sa))
Young American soldiers back from Iraq and
Afghanistan struggle to find employment in a jobless recovery.
This story is adapted from a broadcast audio segment;
use audio player to listen to story in its entirety.
Story by Kirk Carapezza,
PRI's "The World"
At Fort McCoy in southwester Wisconsin,
more than 300 soldiers file past the barbed wire perimeter and enter the
military headquarters building. Fresh from duty in Iraq, the soldiers
of the 32nd Infantry Brigade Unit are sunburned and tired. They'll stay
here at the sprawling military training center for five days,
demobilizing. That involves sitting through seemingly endless briefings
covering everything from marriage counseling to coping with stress
disorders, and finding employment.
Rick Larson, a retired Army
Officer who leads the briefing on finding work, addresses a group of
soldiers.
"As you know with the economy, it's hard out there. So
I’m not going to try to blow smoke. How many people here will be looking
for jobs when they go back to their home?"
About half the
soldiers raise their hands, including 24-year-old Sergeant Lee Jones.
Jones was a high school senior when the war in Iraq began. Over the last
four years, he's been deployed three times, working his way up to
Special Operations in the Army National Guard and Reserves.
He
says his time in the service has taught him about leadership and
discipline, but coming home and looking for work is like having been
stuck on a deserted island. "Everyone’s moved on, but you seem to have
been in the same place the entire time."
The US Bureau of Labor
Statistics says in 2009, veterans 24 years old and younger had an
unemployment rate of roughly 27 percent, about 10 percent higher than
civilians of the same age group.
Ken Grant with the Wisconsin
Department of Workforce Development says it's party because some
employers simply won't hire a veteran.
"Let's face it, you know
having the guard and reserve soldiers on multiple deployments and then
taking them away from that employer, that does hurt them," said Grant.
Grant
adds that even when young vets do get jobs, many of them find their
positions difficult to keep in this economy.
"The younger person
is the first one to let go from a factor or a closing. They don't have
the experience or the seniority, so they would be the first ones out the
door. We're a heavy manufacturing state, such as the auto industry,
these employers have closed their doors."
This makes it difficult
for young veterans and reservists like Raymond Lynch. The 23-year-old
signed up for the Army in 2003, has been deployed to Baghdad two times
since then, and was laid off from a landscaping job last year, three
months before his most recent deployment.
"They usually lay off
anyways in the winter," said Lynch. "But they had to do it a couple of
months short ... just because there wasn't much money coming in for
landscaping because of the economy."
Lynch says he's planning to
ride out the recession by going back to school, though he's not sure for
what.
"At one time I wanted to be a teacher. One time I wanted
to be a psychologist. Now I don't know."
During a short break in
the briefings at Fort McCoy, Sergeant Lee Jones listens as another
veteran's representative talks about finding a job.
"The process
can be as simple as you get referred to a job, you go down, you
interview, you kill the interview, you're ready to go," said the
representative. "Or, it can be more time consuming and we need to do
more things to make you job ready."
Jones says he'd like a law
enforcement or security job. Something, he says, that has a rigid
structure outside the barbed wire.
But Jones says he's getting
married in the spring and will take any job he can find. "I would like
to be somewhere where it's a self-worth job; not a job where I feel
stuck, and right now with getting married and everything, it's crucial
to have paycheck."
To help these young veterans to adjust and
find that elusive paycheck in a jobless recovery, labor officials say
they're planning additional job fairs specifically targeting veterans
late this year.
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