USA TODAY US Edition

Back home, National Guardsmen struggle to find jobs

Employers reluctant to hire ‘citizen-soldiers’

- Chris Kenning The (Louisville) Courier-journal

Possible future deployment­s deter employers, veterans say.

LOUISVILLE More than nine months after returning from a second deployment to Iraq, Kentucky National Guard Lt. David Doggette has been struggling to translate his broad military experience — ranging from driving a tank to leading a platoon — into a good civilian job.

Doggette, a 30-year-old from Park City, Ky. who wants a career in safety management, said finding a job in the tight labor market is made more difficult by his long deployment­s away from the workforce — and the possibilit­y of more to come.

“Everybody’s been very quick to thank me for my service, and nobody’s saying outright they’re worried about (future) deployment — but it’s definitely an undercurre­nt,” he said.

Unemployme­nt for veterans of the Iraq and Afghanista­n wars remains a problem, even more so or National Guard members who juggle jobs and repeated deployment­s.

Although still higher than the overall jobless rate of 7.8%, the unemployme­nt rate for Iraq and Afghanista­n veterans dropped to 9.7% in September, down from 11.7% a year earlier, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The Kentucky Guard’s “citizen soldiers” — who, unlike former active-duty troops, face the added difficulty of having to hold down jobs while being deployed overseas for what is often a year at a time — had a jobless rate last month of 16.3%, according to Guard figures..

Ross Cohen, senior director of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Hiring our Heroes program, which has held about 100 job fairs, said there’s an array of new programs to help.

They range from Guard outreach directly to employers to job fairs put on by veterans groups, politician­s and local workforce agencies.

One problem being addressed is showing vets how to bridge a “communicat­ion gap” as they try to translate their military skills into experience that employers can see will make them good employees.

Employers “need to know that you also learn to work well in teams, give and take orders, (can) be accountabl­e for millions of dollars of equipment and respond to changing circumstan­ces,” Cohen said.

Ted Daywalt, president of the Georgia-based group VetJobs, said it’s a national problem. While recent veterans are increasing­ly finding work, National Guard members — whose part-time role differs from full-time, active-duty troops, but who in the past decade have been mobilized at record levels — have faced steeper challenges.

Though few will openly admit it, “a lot of employers are reluctant to hire them,” said Daywalt, noting that many will volunteer for another deployment to help pay bills at home. “We get thousands of calls a month, and easily 40 to 50% of them are in the National Guard.”

 ?? ALEX WONG, GETTY IMAGES ?? A D.C. Army National Guard unit is honored Oct. 16 after being in Afghanista­n.
ALEX WONG, GETTY IMAGES A D.C. Army National Guard unit is honored Oct. 16 after being in Afghanista­n.

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