By Terry J. Allen | Special to the Vermont Guardian
With his boyish face and soft tangle of curls, Matt Howard looks like he
should have carried a fishing rod though a Norman Rockwell summer.
Instead, the 26-year-old Vermonter lugged a gun through two tours in
Iraq. Now, what the former Marine really wants to wield is a college
diploma. But he and other returning veterans are finding it hard to
collect the college benefits they expected when they enlisted in the
military.
That expectation was fueled by promises from military recruiters and the
soldiers’ own financial commitment. All new recruits are given a
one-time, use-it-or-lose-it opportunity to buy into benefits eligibility
by paying $100 a month for their first year of service. Any benefits
unused 10 years after they leave the military are forever lost,
including the $1,200 “kicker.” The almost 30 percent of active duty
veterans who bought in and didn’t collect their educational benefits
over the last decade effectively donated hundreds of millions of dollars
to the U.S. Treasury.
Many veterans who applied under the 1984 Montgomery GI Bill (MGIB) say
they faced black-hole bureaucracy and college costs that far exceeded
benefits.
“I was so disgusted by how hard it was to get my college benefits, I
just gave up,” said Howard about his first experience enrolling in the
University of Vermont (UVM). “I volunteered for the Marines, served in
Iraq, and I appreciate the pat on the back and being called hero, but
the military sells itself on money for college; it is the major
recruitment tool. This is supposedly why I sold my soul to the devil.”
Because many colleges require payment upfront, and benefit checks from
the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) typically arrive months after
the semester begins, veterans often have to pony up thousands of dollars
in tuition, fees, and living expenses to enter school. Already stressed
as they work to acclimate to civilian life, they are forced to choose
between going into debt, missing semesters, or exchanging college dreams
for low-wage work to support themselves and their families.
“It creates a significant increase in anxiety in a population that is
already anxious,” said Jim Dooley, a VA mental health clinician in
Colchester. “There is also a feeling of betrayal; they are angry enough
already.”
Gone are the post-World War II days when MGIB’s predecessor, the GI Bill
of Rights, helped educate 7.8 million of the war’s 16 million veterans
and provided a “magic carpet to the middle class.” That bill fully
covered tuition, books, and fees at any public or private U.S. college
or job-training program.
Today’s MGIB is meager in comparison. Vets who have served more than
three years and are enrolled full-time can typically collect $1,075 per
month for 36 academic months. The $38,700 total covers about 60 percent
of the average cost of college, according to the College Board’s
estimates.
While reservists don’t need to pay the $1,200 to buy into MGIB, their
benefits, and the window they have to use them, are prorated by time and
type of service and are significantly less than for active duty troops.
Some 58 percent of reservists and members of the National Guard, even
those who have served multiple combat tours, have not collected money
for education.
A few lucky veterans attend schools that have learned how to work the VA
system and have established policies that allow vets to pay when
benefits arrive, rather than pre-pay for classes. But in the end,
whether the VA educational benefits system works for an individual
depends on the cost of the school, the vet’s own economic resources and
determination, how knowledgeable and helpful the school is, and luck.
Financial Catch-22
Most schools borrow a page from the military by building in a Catch-22:
No matter when the vet notifies the VA, the agency won’t process MGIB
paperwork until the vet’s school submits a certificate of enrollment.
Although the VA accepts the certificates 3 to 4 months before school
starts, most schools won’t certify students until they begin classes.
Last fall, the VA took an average of 16 weeks to process paperwork, and
they now average between 8 to 12 weeks. Vets are lucky to get fall
tuition payments by Thanksgiving.
“By far, the majority of schools are not certifying before school
actually starts,” said a New England-based VA official. A regional VA
claims examiner puts the figure at “about half.”
Both VA officials requested anonymity because they are not authorized to
talk to media.
UVM submits the certificate of enrollment 30 days before classes start,
which still “guarantees that VA payments will be months late,” said
Marie Johnson, UVM’s associate director for customer service for student
financial services.
Despite the advance submission, it means vets have to wait well into the
semester before they see a VA check.
“I’m stressing out because I can’t survive without that check,” says
Drew Cameron, who served eight months in Iraq. Now a forestry major at
UVM, Cameron enrolled in the Army in hopes of getting a college
education. “Every single beginning of school year for six semesters
there is this huge lag,” he said of his experiences both at Community
College of Vermont where he first enrolled and now at UVM. “I submit my
paperwork to the VA on time, but don’t get the check until November.”
UVM gives its 77 vets a break by requiring them to pay only half the
tuition upfront every semester, said Johnson, and the rest in three
payments. But that means a full-time, in-state student, living off
campus, will have to find $2,500 not just once, but at the start of
every academic year.
“Maybe they should take out a loan,” Johnson suggested.
How willing schools are to let vets start classes before paying “depends
how much they got burned by vets in the past,” said the regional VA
claims administrator.
Here’s the risk: Because MGIB checks are made out directly to students,
they can attend classes, drop out, and leave the school to chase down
the debt and struggle with the paperwork.
Southern Connecticut State University certifies some 95 percent of its
400 mostly MGIB vets before classes start, says Jack Mordente, the
school’s full-time director of Veterans Affairs. “I can’t remember the
last time we got stiffed, but if we get one a semester that’s a lot.”
Johnson also cannot recall when UVM was “left holding the bag” for a
vet, but the school puts a block on student records until vets pay. Her
hands are tied, she says, by the need to protect the university from the
risk that a vet, “understandably,” will use a VA check intended for
tuition to meet such unexpected needs as “a broken car or a sick family
member.” On occasion her office has suggested to vets that they delay
school and work until they save enough to cover the gap.
“Other schools are all over the map,” said Johnson. “If they have deeper
pockets they can be more flexible.”
But the system even breaks down when full-tuition funding goes directly
to the school as it does for disabled vets. Mike Brennan, who is working
toward a master’s in social work, says it took weeks of prodding to get
UVM to fax his paperwork to the VA so that he could get the stipend owed
to disabled vets. But “at least I was able to start classes on time,” he
said.
Howard, who gave up on collecting under MGIB, eventually qualified for
disability benefits and plans to continue his education.
Some institutions, despite limited resources, trust the vets, adjust the
rules, provide hands-on counselors, and file electronically. Most of the
schools in the City University of New York (CUNY) system certify
students online well before classes begin, says Chris Rosa, in the CUNY
office of student affairs.
Alexandru Ivan left the Army in December 2006 after two tours in Iraq.
By March he was attending a two-year business administration program at
LaGuardia College. Tuition at this CUNY branch is $1,500 a semester, so
Ivan has something left over for fees and books, and, at least for now,
can supplement living expenses with savings.
“If not for Montgomery, I would not have gone to college,” said the
24-year old vet. “I just couldn’t have paid for it out of my own
pocket.”
When Ivan’s VA check was late this spring, “We let him start anyway,”
said Stanley Rumph, LaGuardia Community College’s veterans coordinator.
“We have the wherewithal, and we take the risk.” Rumph says that vets
can go to class even if the school has to wait until end of a semester
for the VA to pay up. “And we have never lost money because of it,” he
added.
LaGaurdia often checks a box on the VA form requesting a two-month
advance payment. It goes to the bursar’s office where the student picks
it up and signs it over to the school.
“Any school can do that,” says Rumph. “The money will come in and these
guys are entitled to it.”
UVM was not aware of that option, Johnson said.
While the delays are an irritation to more affluent students, those most
in need cannot bridge the financial gap.
“UVM and the VA, they are equally culpable,” says Barry, who asked us
not to print his real name. The 28-year-old Vermonter went with his
National Guard unit to Iraq in 2004 when he was in his sophomore year at
UVM. When he returned two years later after driving Humvees on IED-strewn
roads around Baghdad, what he needed most was to put his life back on
track.
Despite a good academic record, he says UVM refused him entry for the
spring ’07 semester. “UVM told me they hadn’t sent in the certificate of
enrollment paperwork to the VA, so I couldn’t get the benefits in time
for the semester. When I asked, they said they don’t know how that
happened and there was no making it right.”
Barry “was never registered,” said UVM’s Registrar Keith Williams, so he
couldn’t be certified.
Sympathetic to his plight, Barry’s professor and academic advisor let
him attend classes during the weeks of limbo, hoping that the
bureaucratic logjam would break. “I felt helpless,” said Barry’s
professor. “He wasn’t a wandering soul; he was very directed and
on-track to do something positive not only for himself but for society,
in a productive health science career — a field where we need more
people. But he hit roadblocks.”
“I got angry enough so that I called [Sen. Bernie] Sanders [I-VT],”
Barry aid, “and his office had the problem ironed out in a week, but it
was too late to enroll for the spring semester.” Sanders office
confirmed that it had intervened with the VA.
While only the most sanguine expect the vast VA bureaucracy to bend to
individual needs, LaGuardia and Southern Connecticut State show that
schools can be responsive and flexible. “We clear vets on the GI bill
for classes with a notice saying that money will be coming,” says Joe
Bello, CUNY’s veterans office coordinator. “It would be a shame if they
had to wait a whole semester just because [the VA regional office in]
Buffalo failed them.”
That is what Barry is doing. “I lost two years in the service and now I
am losing another half year,” he says, adding that he hopes to enroll in
the fall.
For now, he is unemployed and his mother is worried. “His life was
derailed, he was shot at, his friend was killed, and when he got back,
he couldn’t continue school. He doesn’t need more stress, he needs the
structure of college. I can’t believe that UVM wouldn’t let him go to
school. Why don’t they give families a break?” she said.
Education: The biggest draw
Vets are troubled not only by when they get their benefits but also by
the amount. “They told me I would get all this money for college under
the Montgomery bill,” said Howard, “but somehow I was so naive that I
didn’t know it wasn’t enough to cover school. They were very
convincing.”
With 62 percent of surveyed youth telling a Department of Defense
(DoD)-sponsored poll that the war on terrorism made them less likely to
enlist, military recruiters are hard-pressed to fill quotas.
“Educational benefits are a major inducement for many individuals,”
according to the DoD, “and typically are the reason for enlisting cited
by the largest percentage of new recruits.”
While a careful read of recruitment material provides an accurate
picture of what vets can expect, a cursory glance at the Army website
dangles a level of benefits few will reach. “Depending on how long you
enlist with the Army and the job you choose, you can get up to $72,900
to help pay for college,” the website promises. “All you have to do is
give $100 a month during your first year of service.”
Most vets, however, end up with $38,700 for 36 academic months. The
small percent who fail to sign up for the $1,200 “kicker” get no
educational benefits at all. “At in-processing before basic training,”
explained Rob Timmons of the Iraq Afghanistan Veterans Association,
“they announce you can choose to have $100 taken out of your paycheck
every month for the next year. For some, it’s no big deal. But a lot of
the disenfranchised who have never even seen $1,200 before in their
lives don’t sign up.” By missing that one-time opportunity, soldiers
forever lose their eligibility to get educational benefits under
Montgomery.
A bill introduced by U.S. Sen. Jim Webb, D-VA, proposes eliminating the
$1,200 kicker and fully funding college.
“At least half of LaGuardia’s 113 vets didn’t even know they qualified
for benefits” when they showed up at his office, says Bello. “I blame
the DoD and by extension the VA.”
Frustrated by the VA bureaucracy, many vets turn to college
administrators who have to tack veterans’ concerns and navigating the VA
on to myriad other duties.
That seems to be the case at UVM. Williams acknowledged that the VA’s
time lags combined with the administration’s lack of attention to vets’
special circumstances creates “a perfect formula for frustration. But we
are going to change that,” he says, pledging to file earlier using
quicker on-line options and give vets more personal attention.
Meanwhile, thousands more war-weary vets returning home are in danger of
slipping through MGIB’s cracks.
“It’s an extremely stressful situation for a newly returned vet,” said
Howard. “The check is late, the university is breathing down his throat.
This is the first dealing with VA that most vets have, and when they
come up against shit like this, it discourages them from claiming other
benefits, including medical disability, treatments, etc.”
---------------
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