Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Working together to employ America

David J. Lemaire, a program support manager in Louisiana for EPI watches as Ted Daywalt signs the memorandum of agreement at the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM), 61st Annual Conference and Exposition in New Orleans Monday.


By 1st Lt. Olivia Cobiskey
EPI Director of Marketing – Media

NEW ORLEANS - The Army Reserve Employer Partnership Initiative staff hit the ground running Monday.

Before the conference even opened Ted Daywalt, CEO and President of VetJobs, signed a memorandum of agreement to "maintain a deep commitment to hiring and supporting the brave men and women who protect and defend American," at the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM), 61st Annual Conference and Exposition in New Orleans.

"The beauty of the EPI program is it emphasizes to the employer the importance of hiring member of the Reserve and National Guard," Daywalt said.

This philosophy is inline with VetJobs, which also offers resources to help veterans find employment with military friendly companies.

Not an easy task today, said Daywalt, who testified for the Commission on the National Guard and Reserve in May.

Daywalt said three surveys by Business & Legal Reports, the Society of Human Resources Management (SHRM), and Workforce Management reveal that support for employees who are active in the National Guard and Reserve by employers is declining.

The is particularly reveling of the workforce survey, in which companies were asked if they had employees deployed in Iraq and if it was a hardship to their business. Of the 335 executive and human resource managers who answered 67 percent answered yes, said Daywalt.

The companies where also asked if they knew that a military Reserve or Guard Soldier could be called up and taken away from their job for an indeterminate amount of time, would you still hire a Citizen-Soldier, 54 percent answered no.

Daywalt told the commission, that returning members of the National Guard and Reserve are increasingly finding it difficult to obtain meaningful employment equal to their education and experience due to a perceived and real bias by employers who are concerned about the uncertainty of the time their employee would be needed during a potential mobilization.

"The U.S. Army Reserve and Guard system will not work if we do not have employer support," Daywalt said.

The EPI program was created to open a direct line of communication to employers to mitigate that strain. More than 400 employers have signed memorandums of agreement with the Army Reserve including Wal-Mart, IBM, Schneider National, Inc., General Electric and Sears Holding.

"EPI establishes a means by which the Army Reserve and employers can share personnel and collaborate on human resource issues and ideas," said Lt. Col. Kris Carle, an Outreach STRATCOM Officer with Army Reserve Communication, in her booth at the Convention Center Monday. "It creates a mechanism through which employers can raise with the Army Reserve concerns and issues associated with deployments and training and collaboratively resolve them."

Several other companies also signed Monday:

American Hospital Service Group (AHSG)
Illen Products Ltd.
Rehorn Professional Groups Inc.

National Guard and Reserve Mobilized as of April 28, 2009

Army National Guard and Army Reserve - 103,709
Navy Reserve - 6,750
Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve - 14,892
Marine Corps Reserve - 7,575
Coast Guard Reserve - 697

This brings the total National Guard and Reserve personnel who have been activated to 133,623, including both units and individual augmentees.

A cumulative roster of all National Guard and Reserve personnel who are currently activated can be found here.

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