The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Veterans seek changes when it comes to jobs

Veterans, discharged and jobless, seek hiring-rules changes

- By Jennifer Mcdermott The Associated Press

Military veterans who were discharged for relatively minor offenses say they often can’t get jobs.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. » Military veterans who were discharged for relatively minor offenses say they often can’t get jobs, and they hope a recent warning to employers by the state of Connecticu­t will change that.

The state’s human rights commission told employers last month they could be breaking the law if they discrimina­te against veterans with some types of lessthan-honorable discharges. Blanket policies against hiring such veterans could be discrimina­tory, the commission said, because the military has issued them disproport­ionately to black, Latino, gay and disabled veterans.

At least one other state, Illinois, already prohibits hiring discrimina­tion based on a veteran’s discharge status, advocates say, but Connecticu­t appears to be the first to base its decision on what it deems discrimina­tion by the military. Regardless of the state’s reasons, veterans say, the attention there could at least educate employers.

“You may as well be a felon when you’re looking for a job,” said Iraq War veteran Kristofer Goldsmith, who said the Army gave him a general discharge in 2007 because he attempted suicide.

An honorable discharge is the only type that entails full benefits. A dishonorab­le discharge is given after a court-martial for serious offenses, which can include felonies. Other types of discharges in between — known by veterans as “bad

paper” — are issued administra­tively, with no court case, and can stem from behavior including talking back, tardiness, drug use or fighting.

The commission says its guidance focused on that middle class of discharges.

Sometimes such discharges are given to veterans

whose violations stemmed from post-traumatic stress disorder, like Goldsmith’s, or brain injuries. Many private employers may not be aware of those extenuatin­g circumstan­ces or understand the difference­s between discharges, critics say.

And they either won’t

hire bad-paper veterans or won’t give them preference­s an honorably discharged veteran would get, the Veterans Legal Services Clinic at Yale Law School told the Connecticu­t commission.

The clinic, acting on behalf of the Connecticu­t chapter of the Iraq and Afghanista­n Veterans of America, showed the commission job postings that require applicants who have served in the military to have been honorably discharged.

It also cited a 2017 report by the advocacy organizati­on Protect Our Defenders that found black service members were more likely to be discipline­d than white members. And the commission’s guidance to employers notes thousands of service members have been discharged for their sexual orientatio­n.

Employers might require an honorable discharge as an easy way to narrow the pool and get strong applicants, said Amanda Ljubicic, vice president of the Chamber of Commerce of Eastern Connecticu­t.

“At face value it seems like a simple, logical cutoff to make as an employer,” she said. “Certainly this new policy forces employers to think about it differentl­y and to think about the complexiti­es.”

The Vietnam Veterans of America asked for a presidenti­al pardon for bad-paper veterans. President Barack Obama didn’t respond as he was leaving office, nor did President Donald Trump as he was entering, said John Rowan, the organizati­on’s president. He was unsure whether activists would ask Trump again.

More than 13,000 service members received a type of discharge for misconduct, known as other than honorable, between 2011 and 2015, despite being diagnosed with PTSD, a traumatic brain injury or another condition associated with misconduct, the U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office found.

The Department of Veterans Affairs, under an order from Congress, expanded emergency mental health coverage to those veterans for the first time last year.

Passing new laws to address the effects of bad paper is probably not the best solution, said U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, a Connecticu­t Democrat who pushed for the changes; rather, he said, the military should stop issuing bad-paper discharges to injured veterans.

Goldsmith, 32, said he developed PTSD after his first deployment to Iraq. He was set to leave the military and go to college when the Army extended his activeduty service and ordered him back in 2007. Goldsmith said he attempted suicide shortly before he was due to deploy.

Because of his general discharge, Goldsmith lost his GI Bill benefits. He didn’t know how he’d find a job. If he didn’t mention his military service, he would have a four-year gap on his resume. But if he did, he would have to disclose medical informatio­n to explain why he left.

A friend eventually hired him to work at a photobooth company, and Goldsmith began contacting members of Congress to press for health care for veterans with bad paper.

“Things like addressing employment discrimina­tion on the national level are so far from possible,” he said, “I don’t think any of us in the advocacy community has put enough pressure on Congress to handle it.”

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Iraq War veteran Kristofer Goldsmith poses for a photo at a campus park after his last final exam of the semester at Columbia University in New York. Military veterans with less-than-honorable discharges from the military say they often can’t get jobs,...
BEBETO MATTHEWS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Iraq War veteran Kristofer Goldsmith poses for a photo at a campus park after his last final exam of the semester at Columbia University in New York. Military veterans with less-than-honorable discharges from the military say they often can’t get jobs,...

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