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G.I. BILL EDUCATION BENEFITS FALLING SHORT FOR
VETERANS -- "Be all that you can be --
deep in credit-card debt."

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Story here...
http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/o
p_ed/hc-henican1204.artdec04,0,5996227.story
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-------------------------
GI Bill Education Benefits Falling Short For
Veterans
ELLIS HENICAN
They're coming home, the lucky ones are, pulling their lives back together
after harrowing times in the war zone.
And the GI Bill is there to help them, same as it was for "the greatest
generation," who returned to civilian society after World War II.
Um, well, not exactly.
American vets now coming back from the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are
facing an ugly surprise — and I don't just mean the iffy health care at
their local VA hospital. The educational benefits that sounded so alluring
in those upbeat recruiting ads? They don't come close to covering the real
costs of college.
"Four hundred dollars? Are you kidding?" Army Reserve Spc. Sheila Pion
said of her monthly stipend. "Just my textbooks cost $410."
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A seven-year reservist back home in Long Island
City, N.Y., and attending John Jay College of Criminal Justice, Pion
served at an Army hospital in Kuwait, tending to wounded soldiers. "It was
important duty," said Pion, 24. "I was happy to do it. But the whole point
of me joining the military was to pay for my education. And the
educational benefits are nothing like they lead you to believe."
"Be all that you can be" — deep in credit-card debt!
"The few, the proud" — the never able to graduate!
Members of Congress from both parties are constantly saying how much they
support the troops. So this is what they mean by support? Sending our
soldiers back to society in the civilian equivalent of un-armored Humvees?
Wall Street legend Jerome Kohlberg is sure that isn't right. The
81-year-old billionaire, who co-founded the Kohlberg Kravis Roberts
private-equity firm, served in the Navy in World War II. He knows
something about the GI Bill. It helped him get three degrees — from
Swarthmore College, Harvard Business School and Columbia Law School.
"I benefited tremendously," Kohlberg recalled Tuesday. "It enabled me to
broaden my experience and background and make me valuable to a series of
employers and legal firms."
Just like it did for 8 million other World War II vets. "Those people
really made the middle class," Kohlberg said. "Just think if they hadn't
gone to school what their leadership and earning potential would have
been."
Under today's GI Bill, regular-service combat vets get $1,101 a month, far
less for fighting members of the National Guard and Reserve. No one's
going to Harvard or Columbia on that kind of money. And even to qualify,
today's soldiers are required to deposit $100 a month into their own
education fund, months or years before they ever get a nickel back.
"A combat tax," the troops have starting calling these paycheck
deductions.
"I happen to be against this war," Kohlberg said. "But we can't ignore
this. It's very difficult, the entrance back to civilian life. The best
thing we can do, not only for the veterans but for our country, is to help
these men and women get an education."
Kohlberg isn't just talking. He has taken $4 million and set up a Fund for
Veterans Education, awarding scholarships to two veterans in every state.
Pion is one of the New Yorkers. A junior at John Jay, she said she's
hoping for a law enforcement career, perhaps with the federal Witness
Security Program.
She says her $3,000-a-semester stipend "will make a huge difference for
me. My senior year, I was going to have to put on a credit card." Pion
said she's still glad she served. "I would never tell someone not to join
the military," she said. "But if you're doing it for the education
benefit, you really have to think twice."
Kohlberg said he understands his gift won't alone meet such a massive
challenge, even if other private donors jump aboard. Washington has to
step up, too.
But that is a possibility. Sens. Jim Webb and Chuck Hagel, both
infantry-combat veterans from Vietnam, called recently for a post-Iraq GI
bill that is far less stingy. They, like Kohlberg, believe that
"supporting the troops" should be more than just a slogan.
"You've listened to Sheila Pion," the Wall Street and Navy veteran said.
"Think of what this new generation can do. Veterans will be the backbone
of this country, the same as they were before. We just have to help a
little."
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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