|

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
G.I. BILL FALLING SHORT OF COLLEGE TUITION COSTS --
Halsey Bernard made it through a tour in Iraq as
a machine
gunner. The question for him now is will he make
it through the University of Massachusetts.

For more about veterans and 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.boston.com/news/nation/washing
ton/articles/2008/02/10/gi_bill_falling_short_of_college_tuition_costs/
Story below:
-------------------------
GI Bill falling short of college tuition costs
Pentagon resists boost in benefits
By Charles M. Sennott, Globe Staff
WASHINGTON - Halsey Bernard made it through a tour in Iraq as a machine
gunner. The question for him now is will he make it through the University
of Massachusetts.
It isn't a question of academics for the 24-year-old Boston resident. It's
about money - and about the obligation of a nation to its fighting men and
women. Bernard, who served with the Second Battalion Eighth Marines in
Nasariyah, Iraq, in 2003, is one of thousands of veterans who have
returned from combat service only to find that their GI Bill college
benefits fall far short of actual costs.
"What they tell you on TV and what the recruiters tell you when you go to
sign up is: 'Don't worry. College is taken care of.' And it is not true,"
said Bernard. "Today it is a serious financial struggle and bureaucratic
struggle and personal struggle to try to go to college after serving in
combat."
Article continues below:
(use left/right arrows in screen to view more videos)
|
The original GI Bill provided full tuition,
housing, and living costs for some 8 million veterans; for many, it was
the engine of opportunity in the postwar years. But, in the mid 1980s, the
program was scaled back to a peacetime program that pays a flat sum. Today
the most a veteran can receive is approximately $9,600 a year for four
years - no matter what college costs.
Now, five years into the Iraq conflict, a movement is gathering steam in
Washington to boost the payout of the GI Bill, to provide a true war-time
benefit for war- time service. But the effort has run headlong into
another reality of an unpopular war: the struggle to sustain an
all-volunteer force.
The Pentagon and White House have so far resisted a new GI Bill out of
fear that too many will use it - choosing to shed the uniform in favor of
school and civilian life.
"The incentive to serve and leave," said Robert Clarke, assistant director
of accessions policy at the Department of Defense, may "outweigh the
incentive to have them stay."
Such administration objections infuriate the lead advocate in Congress for
upgrading GI Bill benefits, US Senator James Webb, Democrat of Virginia.
Webb, a Vietnam veteran and the only serving senator with a son who has
seen combat in Iraq, said he simply can't understand why veterans
struggling to pay for higher education is not on the nation's political
radar screen, particularly in the presidential primary season when the war
and the economy are both at the center of the debate.
"I worry about this and what it says about our nation's view of the value
of service," Webb said. "We hear from those opposed that it is too
expensive and it's too complicated. Excuse me? In 1946, they worked out
how to provide for veterans on the back of a memo pad with a stubby
pencil. . . . We are five years into the war in Iraq, we need to get this
done."
Webb's bill, which has drawn 31 cosponsors but no Senate action since he
filed it a year ago, would cover the full cost of attending state
university for in-state residents as well as a stipend for living
expenses. It is projected to cost about $2.5 billion per year.
The benefit is capped at the cost of the most expensive public state
college or university in any given state. In Massachusetts that would be
UMass-Amherst, where total student costs for a year - tuition, fees, room,
board, and books - run over $20,000.
Reservists - who now get a fraction of the benefit available to
active-duty troops, controversial in a war that leans heavily on reserve
forces - would also gain from Webb's plan. Under a draft of his bill, all
operational troops who served at least two years of active duty would
receive the same benefit.
Massachusetts already offers more higher education help to veterans than
other states, an $800 annual stipend on top of GI Bill benefits. That has
enabled Bernard to hang on financially at UMass-Boston. If the Webb bill
were to pass, Bernard's full costs at the university would be comfortably
covered, and he could focus on his studies without having to worry every
week about making ends meet.
Paul Rieckhoff, an Iraq war veteran and director of the Iraq and
Afghanistan Veterans of America, an organization based in New York, said
that enhancing the GI Bill is a solid investment in the country's future.
One study he cites suggests that every dollar spent on the original GI
Bill created a seven-fold return for the economy.
"Funding the GI Bill as Senator Webb proposes it for one year would cost
this country what it spends in Iraq in 36 hours," he said.
Cause of frustration
That promise of an education in return for
serving the country is one of the most frequently cited reasons that young
men and women join the military, and it is plastered all over recruitment
banners and television advertisements.
The limited return on the promise is one of the most common sources of
bitterness and frustration that emerge in interviews with Iraq and
Afghanistan veterans.
They are people like Liam Madden, a 23-year-old who served with the 31st
Marine Expeditionary Unit in Anbar Province in 2004 and 2005 and now
attends Northeastern University. "They dangle the promise of education
before you when you are recruited, but then they flip it around when they
don't want you to leave and warn you that it will only cover a community
college and you are better off staying in the military."
Madden, who hails from a pocket of rural poverty in Vermont, said he is
barely able to make his tuition payments at Northeastern and has gotten by
in part through paid speaking engagements for the small-but-growing
organization known as Iraq Veterans Against the War.
Beyond the financial struggle is a daunting bureaucratic obstacle course
that can confound veterans and sometimes steer them away from the benefit
altogether. That struggle starts with the requirement that all
participants buy into the program with a $1,200 upfront payment.
William Bardenwerper, an Army veteran of Iraq with an undergraduate degree
from Princeton University, described a six-month odyssey of paperwork in
trying to navigate the current GI Bill. He kept a detailed log of his
frustrating, and to-date fruitless, effort to access his benefits for
graduate school.
"Not to sound elitist," said Bardenwerper, "but if a 31-year-old Princeton
grad has a hard time deciphering what he is entitled to, then I have no
idea how a 21-year-old armed only with a GED could navigate this system."
Signs of progress
There have been, in recent weeks, some signs that
the political logjam blocking Webb's bill may be easing. He has picked up
new cosponsors, though there are still only three Republicans among them,
including the two senators from Maine. And the Bush administration has
hinted at a desire for compromise on the issue. In his State of the Union
speech last month, the president spoke of one relatively small shift -
making unused GI Bill benefits available to spouses and families of
veterans.
But there are few if any indications of a breakthrough. Meanwhile, some
private efforts are underway to try to fill the gap for veterans.
One key player is James Wright, president of Dartmouth College, who
believes the current GI Bill is outdated and an insult to combat veterans.
A Korean War veteran from a working-class background who tapped the GI
Bill to launch his academic career, Wright has helped begin a privately
funded program in coordination with the American Council on Education to
offer college counseling to veterans and help them find financial aid to
supplement the GI Bill.
Efforts by Wright, other academic institutions, and individual
philanthropists, such as billionaire financier Jerome Kohlberg, who last
year announced a $4 million scholarship fund for veterans, are helping a
few soldier-scholars. But only a few.
"There's a moral imperative for us to provide for veterans, and there is a
practical benefit to educating these men and women who have served their
country," said Wright, who last week announced that he will step down at
Dartmouth but plans to continue his advocacy for GIs and an enhanced GI
Bill. "For us to be failing to live up to that responsibility is
unconscionable."
Webb believes such efforts, as noble as they are, do not relieve the
federal government of its obligation to provide an opportunity for higher
education to those who serve the country.
But Pentagon officials say the risk that an expanded benefit could cut
into reenlistment rates is real. Clarke, of the Department of Defense,
said it is simply off-base to compare what was offered to World War II
veterans to the situation today. There was no concern about retention
rates back then, he said; rapid demobilization was the order of the day.
And Clarke said he doubts reports that military recruiters are painting an
overly rosy picture of education benefits. "I think recruiters are always
going to play up the best case, but I don't think they are going to take
that past what is the truth."
Whatever compromise emerges in Washington - if any does - it will do
little for veterans like Todd Bowers, 28, who dreamed of attending an
elite private college after returning, after being shot in the face, from
his second combat tour.
Severely wounded but also incredibly lucky, he recovered well. Ambitious,
he enrolled at George Washington University - transferring from the
community college in Arizona he had attended before his first tour.
But George Washington is one of the nation's most costly colleges, with
total expenses running over $55,000 a year. His GI Bill benefit as a
Marine reservist would cover only a small fraction of that, and his
savings - all $18,000 he had earned while overseas - and loans couldn't
close the gap.
The military sent him his Purple Heart in the mail but told him there was
nothing else they could do to help him pay for college. The financial
stress, on top of his war trauma symptoms - insomnia, nightmares, memory
loss - was too much. In the end, he dropped out.
Today, Bowers spends his time roaming through the Capitol as a lobbyist on
veterans issues for Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, pressing the
case for Webb's bill.
"You end up feeling that the military thinks that all you deserve is a
community college. It's pretty disgraceful. I think I can do better, and I
think anyone who served the country in combat deserves better," he said.
Charles Sennott can be reached at
sennott@globe.com.
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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) |

Military
Medical Malpractice
Legal
Network


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

|