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Sending to College After Sending to War
In 1944, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signed into law the “Servicemen’s Readjustment Act,” better known as the GI Bill. With that one signature, the President ensured that eight million combat veterans coming home from And it was worth every penny. A 1988 Congressional study proved that every dollar spent under the original GI Bill added seven dollars to the national economy in terms of productivity, consumer spending and tax revenue. Before I served in But today, we are not investing in our troops like we did after World War Two. After contributing up to $1,800 from their first military paychecks, today’s troops can receive about $45,000 towards their education. That covers only 60-70% of the average cost of four years at a public college or university, or less than two years at a typical private college. The process to get these limited benefits is complicated. Troops have to front the money to their college, and then get paid back by the government in monthly installments. No wonder only 8% of troops even use their whole GI Bill benefit. We can do better. This year, Congress is taking action on a new GI Bill. The new bipartisan bill, originally introduced by Senator Jim Webb, would make a college education affordable to every service member returning from President Roosevelt said that the original GI Bill gave “emphatic notice to the men and women in our armed forces that the American people do not intend to let them down.” We have an opportunity to show the same support for a new Greatest Generation. Instead of hearing about a flood of homeless Iraq veterans, we could be building a generation of leaders. This Veterans Day, you can do more for the troops than just go to a parade. Go to www.IAVAaction.org and tell your representatives to make a new GI Bill their priority in 2008. |
About Paul Rieckhoff
Paul Rieckhoff is the Executive Director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America and the author of Chasing Ghosts: Failures and Facades in Iraq: A Soldier's Perspective.
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