|

VA Watchdog Stuff
cups, hats, shirts
click here to
support the site

Be sure to get all five
VA Watchdog dot Org
RSS feeds --
Daily VA
News Flashes
House CVA
Veterans' News
Senate CVA
Veterans' News
VA Press
Releases
VSO Press
Releases

Download
your
free copy of the
2007 VA benefits
handbook here...

|
Printer-Friendly Version
COMPLEX G.I. BILL MAKES FOR A ROCKY ROAD FROM COMBAT
TO COLLEGE -- He knew how to be a Marine. He
hadn't a clue
how a Marine becomes a college student. Neither,
it seemed,
did anyone else on campus.

For more information about the G.I. Bill, use the
VA Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=g.i.+bill&op=ph
Story here...
http://www.usatoday.com/ne
ws/education/2007-12-26-gi-bill-main_N.htm
Story below:
-------------------------
Complex GI Bill makes for a rocky road from
combat to college
By Mary Beth Marklein, USA TODAY
STARKVILLE, Miss. — By the time he completed his
four-year stint in the military three summers ago, Frank Wills had gotten
used to taking orders, carrying a rifle and taking pictures of the dead as
a combat photographer.
He knew how to be a Marine. He hadn't a clue how a Marine becomes a
college student.
Neither, it seemed, did anyone else on campus. Advisers at one school
Wills attended gave him incorrect information. Officials at a second
offered no help at all. Often, he says, he felt like "the new kid who
didn't fit in."
Article continues below:
"ASK
THE BUILDER" VIDEOS -- HOME IMPROVEMENT TIPS
(use left/right arrows in screen to view more videos)
|
The Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944, better
known as the GI Bill, helped turn a college education into a right of
middle-class America. It covered the cost for millions of World War II
veterans as compensation for having disrupted their lives to serve.
Today, with tuition climbing and a college degree increasingly seen as the
ticket to economic security, the promise of money for education is no less
important to service members. The Department of Defense says 95% of
Marines, Army, Navy, Air Force and U.S. Coast Guard sign up for the GI
Bill when they enlist.
For many, like Wills, 28, it is the reason they join. Yet his experience
and those of other recent veterans suggest that in many cases, the road
from combat to college can be riddled with potholes.
There are myriad opportunities for missteps: For starters, today's GI Bill
is far more complicated and less generous than it was during World War II
or even Vietnam. Colleges today face an unprecedented challenge in trying
to manage the disruption, academically and otherwise, of National Guard
and reservists,who are called to serve while enrolled in school.
And while there are a smattering of support programs, including one by the
Department of Education, no central authority offers comprehensive
information.
True, veterans can make matters worse for themselves. "Some of them have a
real short fuse and can't deal with it," says Vietnam War veteran Jack
Mordente, who directs an office for veterans services at Southern
Connecticut State University in New Haven — a rarity in higher education,
he says. Some campuses have responded more quickly than others. But he and
others say colleges must be better prepared.
"We owe veterans. They have to be thought of as a special population,"
says Gwendolyn Dungy, executive director of the National Association of
Student Personnel Administrators. "We're sitting here and we are not ready
for them."
More are seeking benefits
For Wills, who was part of the initial 2003 invasion into Iraq,
persistence paid off. Here, at Mississippi State University, he found
refuge in the school's Center for American Veterans. Created last year, it
offers everything from a sympathetic ear to help applying for federal GI
Bill education benefits to finding money to pay for books while awaiting
the GI Bill funds.
This is a sharp contrast to his earlier experiences. When he left the
Marines, he enrolled in a community college in Florida. The GI Bill barely
covered his needs, but he later learned about a loophole that probably
would have enabled Wills to get additional financial aid.
At his second school, academic counselors erred in advising his class
choices, Wills says. "I could have transferred (to a four-year university)
a semester earlier if my advising would have been accurate."
To Vietnam War veteran Chuck Goranson, Wills' story rings all too
familiar. He has been helping veterans cut through the red tape at the
University of Wisconsin in Madison since 1972 through a student group
called Vets for Vets.
Though the number of recent combat veterans pales compared with Vietnam —
about 1.6 million have been deployed so far vs. 8.7 million back then —
the paperwork has grown far more complex. Until this spring, even the
departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs were giving conflicting
information about eligibility requirements for one benefit.
In the Vietnam era, "there was essentially just one kind of GI Bill, and
you signed up for it and you got it," he says. Now, there is a GI Bill for
members of the regular military, another for Reserve forces, including the
National Guard, and additional benefits for Reserve members who have
served at least 90 days in combat after 9/11. That's not to mention
vocational training for disabled veterans and tuition waivers offered by
some states.
Some veterans may be eligible for more than one benefit, "and the rules
are different on all of them," Goranson says.
All those rules can be perplexing not only to veterans, but often also to
university clerical workers faced with the paperwork.
"They don't have time to keep up with the intricacies," says Mordente,
president of the National Association of Veterans' Program Administrators,
whose members represent about 300 colleges.
Nearly 440,000 service members attending about 6,800 institutions ranging
from truck-driving academies to graduate programs are expected to seek the
benefit this year. That's up 24% since 2001. Numbers were flat between
1995 and 2001.
The bureaucracy at the Department of Veterans Affairs also can contribute
to frustrations. Keith Wilson, the VA's director of Education Service,
says the increase in claims, along with staff cuts, led to delays in
turnaround time. And efforts to fix the problem late last year created a
Catch-22, he says; staffers who had been taking toll-free calls from
veterans were reassigned, and less knowledgeable contractors handled the
phones from last October to March. Since then, Wilson says, the amount of
time to process claims has dropped from 46 days to 20 days. He would like
to whittle that to 10 days.
Meanwhile, many National Guard and Reserve members called up to serve
while attending college face another challenge. A Government
Accountability Office report issued last year estimated that 82% of the
nation's colleges enroll such students and most (though not all) have
policies in place to help them. But it also chastised the Department of
Education for failing to take steps to determine whether eligible service
members are getting help.
When Dan Rosenthal, 24, and about 70 other National Guard members wanted
to resume their studies at Florida State University in 2004 after an Iraq
deployment, for example, they were told they would have to reapply. A call
from the state National Guard's top brass to then-governor Jeb Bush solved
that problem in time for the summer semester.
Though more colleges may adapt as more veterans return, the transition has
left some bitter. For Maine Air National Guard member George Eaton, 28, of
Bangor, the headaches started with a "nasty letter" he received in 2002
while serving in a hostile fire zone in Oman. It said he owed money to the
University of Maine in Orono, from which he had withdrawn.
During a later deployment, he thought he had arranged with a professor at
the university's Augusta campus to receive an incomplete for a course,
which would allow him to make up the work without penalty. But his
transcript said "stopped attending," which he says triggered a suspension
of his GI Bill payments. He got no credit or refund.
"Let's just say it has been quite a road," Eaton says.
Things are improving
Sometimes, even well-intended gestures can rankle. After the names of
fallen service members appeared in chalk this spring on a University of
Kansas walkway, a group of veterans thanked the unidentified scrawlers for
their concern in a letter to the student newspaper, but added, "Watching
oblivious students walk on these names while talking on cellphones or
listening to iPods evoked feelings of anger and rage."
And Warren and Michele Persak of Mechanicsburg, Pa., were incensed by the
treatment their son Bryan received when he returned to Virginia Tech from
Iraq in spring 2005. Bryan, an Army reservist who had withdrawn in fall
2004, moved back in with college roommates in Blacksburg and planned to
resume courses that fall. On the advice of a counselor who treated him for
post-traumatic stress disorder, he wanted to pick up where he left off.
But when he tried to buy coveted Hokies football season tickets in advance
with his buddies, he was told that because he was not taking classes, he
would have to wait till fall, just as a recently admitted high school
senior would have to wait.
"My husband was actually told that there is no difference between (Bryan)
… and an incoming freshman," says Michele Persak, who appealed to the
provost to no avail. "We, and everyone we told that story to, were
shocked. He was in an active war zone serving our country … not attending
the senior prom."
Bryan Persak, 24, who graduated in May, snared tickets on his own, but, he
says, "it's more than just the tickets. The school just seemed not to
care, and that really bothered me."
Not everyone hits a snag. Natalie Rooker, 25, of Manchester, Mo., spent
her last three months in the Navy on a ship in the Pacific Ocean. She
applied for the GI Bill online and had no hassles getting her benefits or
registering for classes. She started at a local community college in June.
For those who do get tangled in the process, things are starting to
change. Next month, two national associations, working together, plan to
survey campuses nationwide to determine what services are available to
veterans. Some campuses — notably, public institutions in Minnesota and
California — are beefing up advising or outreach to veterans as more of
them return from service overseas.
And veterans themselves are working to change the federal landscape. A
proposal scheduled to be discussed at a House Veterans Affairs Committee
hearing in January that would toughen up the federal law, for example, was
drafted by a veteran, Patrick Campbell, 29. He spent his first semester
back from Iraq in October 2005 haggling with a student lender who insisted
he had defaulted on his loan.
The proposal from Campbell, legislative director of Iraq & Afghanistan
Veterans of America, a non-profit group in Washington, would require,
rather than encourage, colleges to refund 100% of a student's tuition and
fees and guarantee that students who serve can re-enter with the same
educational and academic status they had when they left for duty.
In recent years, veterans on dozens of campuses, ranging from the
University of Iowa to Columbia University in New York to Santa Fe
Community College in Gainesville, Fla., have founded groups similar to
Madison's 25-year-old Vets for Vets.
Colleges also are starting to respond. In California, to which about
27,000 veterans migrate each year, heads of the state's three public
higher education systems, along with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, last year
launched an initiative. While it gets no additional funding, it is aimed
at making the state a leader in providing veterans with educational
opportunities and assistance.
At Citrus College in Glendora, Calif., a new course called "From Boots to
Books" helps veterans adjust to civilian life, academically or otherwise.
Coordinators plan to add counseling services for post-traumatic stress
disorder next semester.
Army veteran Andrew Davis, 26, who founded a veterans group at the
University of Minnesota in 2005, worked with state lawmakers to push
through legislation last year that, among other things, requires state
colleges and universities to provide office space for representatives of a
newly enacted veterans assistance program. The program was expanded this
year.
A veteran also was behind the new center at Mississippi State, where Frank
Wills and about 400 other veterans make up about 2.5% of the student
population.
The campus, about 32 miles from Columbus Air Force Base, has a rich
military legacy: One of its most famous alumni is G.V. "Sonny" Montgomery,
father of the 1985 version of the GI Bill, which updated the legislation
to cover an all-volunteer force.
Last year, retired Air Force general Robert "Doc" Foglesong became the
university's new president. He's responsible for the Center for American
Veterans, which offers a place where vets can "come back and just unscrew
themselves," he says.
"When I got out, there was a void in my life," Foglesong says. "If we're
serious about our vets, we've got to accommodate those vets in a different
way."
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
Don't forget to read all of today's VA
News Flashes (click here)
Click here to make VA Watchdog dot Org your homepage
email Larry
(go
back to VA Watchdog dot Org Home Page) |

VA Watchdog Stuff
cups, hats, shirts
click here to
support the site

|