Overcast
55°
Morris, IL
Overcast|Forecast »

National Guard soldiers and airmen face unemployment crisis

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 2)

1st Lt. Dalia Sanchez, who commands the 756th, also worries about the toll it can take on her soldiers’ financial stability, family relations and mental health.

“I think it exacerbates any reintegration issues they already have,” said Sanchez, a social worker in her civilian career. “It can make depression worse, anxiety worse, sleep problems worse.”

Sgt. 1st Class Timothy King, a military police member from Whittier who deployed with the 756th, said his marriage collapsed because he was away for three of the last six years. But he needed the deployments because he couldn’t find civilian work. Now he is in divorce proceedings and racking up credit card debt while caring for two young children and applying for jobs as a police officer.

“After being on deployment where your adrenaline is high every single day … it’s just hard to sit on your butt all the time and not do anything,” he said. “I don’t feel like much of a man anymore.”

Hoping to head off a crisis, the National Guard in California and other states is taking a more aggressive approach to unemployment.

Under a pilot program launched in late January, members of Shepard’s Work for Warriors program reached out to the 756th to help troops start looking for work two months before they returned to the United States. They created a database with the service histories and educational qualifications of all those in need of employment. And they looked for jobs that would be a good fit.

Trucking and security firms had many openings. But soldiers applying for the slots often struggled to translate military skills into terms a civilian employer could understand, Shepard said. Work for Warriors staff helped them purge their resumes of military jargon and focus on skills that would be useful in the workplace: leadership, discipline, responsibility.

Others had skills they could not use because they lacked civilian credentials, such as commercial driver’s licenses. A new state law will allow troops qualified to drive large military vehicles to obtain the licenses without taking a road test. The California Trucking Assn. has provided vehicles for service members to take the test.

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all