Printer Friendly Page
BATTLING FOR A DIPLOMA -- Veterans find it's
hard
to be all they can be since the G.I. Bill has
failed to keep pace with college tuition.

"In a perfect world," Joey Larman
says, "you serve in the military, and you get to go to school for
free. But that's not the way it is, at least not right now."
(photo: Scott Gregory Robinson) |
For more on the G.I. Bill, use the VA Watchdog
search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/ses
search.php?q=gi+bill&op=ph
and here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/ses
search.php?q=g.i.+bill&op=ph
Story here...
http://www.washingtonpost
.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/0
8/01/AR2007080101710.html
Story below:
-------------------------
Battling for a Diploma
Veterans find it's hard to be all they can be
since the GI Bill has failed to keep pace with college tuition
By Michelle Diament
JOEY LARMAN WAS A YEAR OUT OF HIGH SCHOOL and flipping burgers at
McDonald's in King George County, Va., in 1997 when he decided that
joining the Army was his best shot at getting an education and making
something of himself. After he left the infantry -- four years, a wife
and two children later -- he was even more determined to go to college
and was counting on his military benefits to pay for it.
But it would be a long haul.
Larman, who now lives in Gaithersburg, received just enough money from
his military education benefit and grants to cover Montgomery College's
$1,400 tuition and other educational expenses each semester. He took
night classes so he could stay home with the kids, cutting day care out
of the household budget. But money was always tight. His wife made about
$35,000 a year, not much for the family of four to live on in suburban
Washington.
The finances got even trickier after Larman finished his associate's
degree at Montgomery College and transferred to the University of
Maryland in 2004 to complete his bachelor's. His tuition skyrocketed to
more than $3,000 a semester. Larman took out loans to cover the
difference between his tuition and his military benefit for the first
year. But by the start of his senior year, he had tapped all of his
benefits. All the while, bills would arrive before there was money to
pay them. One time, the family's only car needed more than $1,000 in
repairs and Larman had little choice but to put the charges on a credit
card.
Despite the hurdles, Larman saw it through. He graduated in May 2006
from Maryland with a degree in marketing, 4 1/2 years after starting
college and nearly $15,000 in debt.
"If you want something, you have to be willing to do what it takes to
get it," says
Larman, 29, who now is a civilian contract specialist for the Defense
Department. "Yeah, in a perfect world, you serve in the military, and
you get to go to school for free. But that's not the way it is, at least
not right now."
It hasn't always been this way. The idea of college benefits in exchange
for military service originated with the Servicemen's Readjustment Act
of 1944, legislation aimed at assimilating the 16 million troops
mobilized for World War II back into civilian life. Under that law,
commonly referred to as the GI Bill, the government set a generous
tuition limit that picked up the entire tab of most veterans' educations
and also helped with housing and other reentry costs. About half of that
era's veterans took advantage of the college benefits offered.
The bill has been renewed by Congress over the decades, with changes
reflecting whether the nation is at war or peace and how high veterans'
benefits are on the nation's priority list. The current version --
called the Montgomery GI Bill, after the late Rep. Gillespie V. "Sonny"
Montgomery (D-Miss.), a champion of veterans -- took effect in 1985
during peacetime. Veterans' advocates complain it has not kept pace with
rising college tuition and increases in the cost of living, and there
are two bills afloat in Congress that seek to reform it.
Currently, most veterans max out their benefits at $38,700 for their
entire college education. Meanwhile, the total cost of in-state tuition,
fees, room and board at this country's public four-year universities
averaged $46,817 over the past four years, according to the College
Board. That figure doesn't take into account books or living expenses
such as health care.
Enlistees who want educational benefits must contribute $1,200 during
their first year of service. In exchange, veterans who enlisted for
active duty later receive $1,075 a month (or slightly more if they
contribute an extra $600 anytime during their service) for up to 36
months, or four academic years, as full-time students. The benefit must
be used within 10 years of military discharge. Like Larman, many of
today's veterans are older and apt to have families, which can make the
financial and time limits challenging.
These days, 95 percent of enlistees pay into the GI Bill program. Of
those, 29 percent never use the benefits. And, just 9 percent redeem the
full amount they're eligible for. Officials at the Department of Veteran
Affairs emphasize that 71 percent of veterans in the program use some
portion of the education benefit, more than ever. But the VA doesn't
track how many veterans complete degrees.
Veterans using the benefit are taking on multiple jobs, crashing with
Mom and Dad, putting tuition on credit cards and taking out student
loans to make ends meet, advocates say. "You have these soldiers coming
back, and they want to go to school as a way to decompress, and they're
having to work two to three jobs to make it," says Patrick Campbell,
legislative director at the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America.
Campbell was a combat medic in the National Guard in Iraq and now works
full time while using the GI Bill to attend law school full time at
Catholic University, a route that for many veterans would be simply too
overwhelming. "You're either going to get a full-time job or go live on
Mama's couch and go to school. And you don't want to live on Mama's
couch after a year overseas," he says.
Both bills under consideration in Congress would eliminate the
$1,200-contribution requirement and increase the benefit to reflect the
cost of schooling today. Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) and Iraq veteran
Rep. Patrick Murphy (D-Pa.) introduced legislation in May that would
provide for full tuition, fees, books, and room and board for eight
semesters. A similar bill, introduced in January by Sen. Jim Webb (D-Va.),
a former Marine and Navy secretary, would also offer veterans full
tuition and housing. In addition, Webb's bill includes a monthly stipend
of $1,000 and increases the amount of time veterans have to use their
benefit from 10 to 15 years after discharge.
Updating the GI Bill, Webb says, is a cost of war. "If you're not going
to take care of people you send to war, don't send them to war," he
says. But, he argues, it's a cost with a clear return. He cited a 2007
government report that concluded that World War II veterans who took
advantage of their educational benefits had higher earnings, lower rates
of post-traumatic stress disorder and an easier time readjusting to
civilian life than those who did not. "You don't lose money when you
pour it into people's heads," Webb says.
In recruiting offices nationwide, however, a different scenario is
playing out. Slick advertising brochures highlight a $72,900 college
benefit, an amount that most recruits will not be eligible for because
it factors in bonuses reserved for enlistees with special skills or
those who commit to jobs that are difficult to fill. But the message
seems to work. A 2004 survey commissioned by the Army found that
educational benefits were the most common reason cited by young adults
for considering enlistment.
The benefits are what sold Edwin Cadena, 23. As a senior at Westfield
High School in Chantilly, Cadena had his sights set on college. With
high grades and a résumé full of extracurricular activities such as
soccer, track and salsa dancing, Cadena was admitted to the University
of Virginia. Just one thing stood in his way -- money.
So instead, with his college acceptance letter in hand, Cadena signed on
a different dotted line. He enlisted in the Marine Corps and, for four
years, served as an amphibious assault vehicle commander. Cadena
deployed to Fallujah, Iraq, in 2005 and, with limited infantry in the
area, found himself patrolling streets and knocking on doors in search
of machine guns, artillery rounds and materials insurgents use to
produce improvised explosive devices, or IEDs. He once watched an
explosion engulf troops just 500 feet from him. Another time, a roadside
bomb detonated next to his vehicle, leaving him unconscious.
Even so, Cadena figured his benefits from the GI Bill would help make
his service worthwhile. But when his service was up, Cadena realized he
still wouldn't have enough money to attend U-Va., even with in-state
tuition. Today, Cadena gets about $1,200 a month from the GI Bill. He
lives with his parents to save on rent and has a part-time job making
$12 an hour scanning and entering forms into corporate databases. Even
with Northern Virginia Community College's comparatively low tuition of
about $1,100 a semester, Cadena can't afford to get a place of his own.
Once he finishes his associate's degree next spring, he hopes to
transfer to one of Virginia's public four-year universities, where he'll
likely pay at least three times as much in tuition alone.
"The college money was primarily the reason why I joined," he says. But
"every year college tuition goes up and up. So every month you can get
that money, and it's worth less and less."
Michelle Diament is a freelance writer. She can be reached at
michellediament@gmail.com.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --