Nov. 2 , 2008
Reservists' Rocky Return To Job Market
60 Minutes Report Also Examines Costs Borne By Employers Of Deployed Citizen Soldiers
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Play CBS Video Video Coming Home Citizen soldiers returning from active military duty are entitled by law to get back their old jobs or at least the same salaries, but many are still having trouble. Lesley Stahl reports
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Video 10/31/04: In Harm's Way In 2004, Steve Kroft reported on the insufficient armor in Iraq for National Guard servicemen and women.
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Assistant Secretary of Defense Thomas Hall. (CBS)
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"What if you worked for a company that didn't have Con-way's attitude?" Stahl asks.
"I wouldn't be able to be in the Guard or the Reserves. 'Cause I wouldn't be able to take care of my family," Vineyard says.
In all, Con-way spends at least half a million dollars a year to support its reservists and guardsmen. But it's not just the financial burden on employers.
Consider what happened in the city of Sherwood, Ore. Its 20-person police department was left without its boss when Police Chief Bill Middleton - an Army reservist - was called up twice in the last six years.
Middleton's first tour of duty was a year; his second - as an interrogator and investigator in Iraq and Guantanamo Bay - was even longer: 18 months.
Middleton thought back home everything was working fine, and he didn't have the sense that he was leaving them in the lurch.
But the city manager told 60 Minutes things were not working fine - that the police department was suffering without a chief from morale problems, and rival factions. So he hired someone new and tried to persuade Middleton to sign a contract, demoting him to "deputy chief."
"He had said it was because I was in the military, and he wanted somebody there who was there all the time," Middleton tells Stahl.
Asked if he can understand that, Middleton says, "No. I mean, I've given that city 12 years."
"But you were gone a total of two and a half years," Stahl points out.
"Correct," Middleton acknowledges.
He felt he had the law on his side, so he refused to sign the contract. And when he returned home, he still had the title of police chief, at the same pay, but he was forced to report to the new "director of public safety," who had moved into the chief's office.
"And he's going to give me guidance on how to run the police department, that I had run for 12 years," Middleton says.
Produced by Karen Sughrue
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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See all 133 CommentsWhen in the hell will this foolishness end? And then when some person loses their self-control, and snaps, goes out and breaks the law to SURVIVE, they are just slammed by the system. I DO NOT, in ANY way, condone, or support anyone who breaks the law, but ask yourself, what would you do? Your ex won''t let you see your kids, because you can''t give her MONEY. You cant drive your car,with no gas, no insurance,and NO MONEY. Your relatives are tired of you living with them, because you heve NO MONEY......
are full of ####.....I called the number that was given out by the Assistant Secretary of Defense. What a joke. I was transferred twice to a "USERRA" employee, who basically listened to NOTHING I said, then he says "There is nothing we can do for you,you need to get a private attorney to handle this"....What the hell is USERRA good for? A waste of time !!! How in the hell can you get an attorney, when you don''t even have money for food,shelter, or what''s worse, can''t pay car insurance or a car note to be able to drive legally???? The system SUCKS, and the ones that are paying the price are the ones who put their lives on hold,and on "the line" for the United States. Even the so-called "pro-bono" attorneys will NOT even respond to any phone calls or e-mails. Everybody wants MONEY. If you don''t have any, you are just a joke to them. Even sought help thru the JAG offices. They don''t have time...they say "get a private attorney"...***? The Unit is no help either. I am looking to transfer out of it. The next one maty be no dam better,though. What are we,as soldiers, supposed to do now? Just "grin" and "bear" it? What about all of the so-called wabsites, that claim, "Oh, yes, we assist soldiers and GET them jobs..." That is another LIE. My MOS is "supposedly" a "hot" career field in civilian markets. But, hey, I CAN"T TELL...!!!!
Posted by grouchyjohn "
I connsider them to be nothing less than Bush Cartel enablers- enabling a mad-man who failed every business he ever had his grubby hands on and doubled our national debt in just 7 years. If they cant get their old job back TOO BAD- you chose to help the Bush crime family and cartel by enlisting and making it possible to INVADE another country that had nothing to do with 9/11 and was never a threat to US, now we have a TEN TRILLION DOLLAR debt and throwing out $10 BILLION a MONTH on a krap-hole country called Iraq and for nothing.
The job is GONE if you are away 2 or 3 or 4 years helping the Bush crime family wage war, it is easy enough to eliminate the position, welcome back home- to the UNEMPLOYMENT lines LOL
Again THANK-YOU Leslie Stahl&60 Min
I believe that if the military wants to have individuals called up to fill individual vacancies, then the govt should provide assistance via tax incentives to employers who maintain that individual''s job till he returns.
Posted by sleepyric at 10:05 AM : Nov 03, 2008
Amen to this post. And to all those serving and those that have served, I thank you for your unselfish dedication.
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