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TROOPS DON'T ALWAYS FIT THE BILL, THE G.I.
BILL,
THAT IS -- Even as some states expand G.I. Bill
benefits,
not all are getting what they thought would be
theirs.

We have three stories.
First, a look at those not getting their G.I.
Bill benefits. Second, a look at expanding tuition breaks.
Then, a state-by-state look at some recent changes in vets' education
benefits.
First story
here...
http://www.usatoday.
com/news/education/2007-07-
10-gi-bill-report_N.htm
Story below:
-------------------------
They don't
always fit the GI Bill
By Mary Beth Marklein, USA TODAY
To U.S. Rep. Vic Snyder, D-Ark., the inequity
is unconscionable.
As a Marine, he served 13 months in Vietnam during that war. After he
got out, the federal government paid for his last two years of college,
plus three years of medical school.
Fast-forward to today. One of Snyder's Washington-based staffers, Jamaal
Lampkin, 28, served 13 months in Iraq. He worked with civilians to
rebuild schools, establish a well-water system and otherwise develop
local infrastructure. He even took a bullet in the shoulder from an
AK-47 assault rifle, for which he received a Purple Heart.
Yet when his term of service with the U.S. Army Reserves ended, so did
the government's offer of tuition assistance.
The GI Bill, the landmark federal law that has put millions of returning
veterans through college or other training programs since 1944, still is
available to the majority of today's veterans.
The education benefit has grown more complicated over the years, and it
does not cover as much as it once did. Even so, for Lampkin and
potentially tens of thousands of other veterans honorably discharged
after serving in Iraq and Afghanistan, there is no such benefit at all.
As part-time troops, or so-called "Citizen Soldiers," members of the
National Guard or Reserves do not receive the same GI Bill benefits as
full-time members of the military. Education assistance lasts only as
long as they remain in the Guard or Reserve. Full-time servicemembers
earn education benefits that they can use for up to 10 years after they
leave the military.
The disparity is not new, but for years it remained a non-issue. When
the latest version of the law was enacted in 1985, the argument was that
the regular armed forces sacrifice more for their country, often being
assigned to far-flung parts of the globe for months at a time.
National Guardsmen and Reservists, in contrast, have typically given up
just a weekend a month and a couple of weeks each summer for drills.
Service can be limited to drilling with their hometown units and brief
periods of active duty. That's how things went for Lampkin when he
joined the Army Reserves in 1998 while a sophomore at Hendrix College in
Conway, Ark. He still had plenty of time to pursue his degree.
But that changed after 9/11. Since then, nearly 600,000 National Guard
and Reserve troops have been called to full-time duty for periods up to
more than a year, with more than 425,000 deployed to Iraq, Afghanistan
or nearby areas. About 133,000 have served more than one tour of duty,
Department of Defense numbers show.
Some re-enlist when their term is up, usually after six or eight years.
Others, like Lampkin, want to pick up where they left off. He had just
graduated and was planning to pursue a master's in business when he was
deployed.
But by the time he came home in 2004, it was too late to cash in on the
tuition benefit. He would have had to re-enlist — and risk another
deployment — to keep it.
"I had the opportunity to serve my country in Iraq, and I just wanted to
move on," says Lampkin, who has put his grad-school plans on hold. "I
was wounded just like a large number of soldiers. It's only fair that I
receive the same benefits."
Snyder thinks so, too. "How is it fair when two members serve side by
side in combat, they return home together, both leave the service, but
one will have education benefits … and the other will not have any?"
Congress addressed some inequities in the GI Bill in 2005, when it
increased benefits for Guardsmen and Reservists who have been mobilized
for more than 90 days since 9/11. Still, many say that's not enough. And
the benefits still end when the recipient leaves the military.
That could change. The Senate this month is scheduled to consider two
proposals that together would enable Guardsmen and Reservists to receive
benefits commensurate with their increased service and to carry it with
them when their commitment ends. Snyder helped shepherd a similar bill
through the House.
While at least two dozen proposals related to GI Bill education benefits
have been introduced this year, a coalition of military, veterans and
education-related groups is urging lawmakers to make Snyder's bill their
top priority.
Funding is a primary obstacle. But Sen. Blanche Lincoln, D-Ark., sponsor
of the Senate bills, says the change, estimated to cost $205 million
over five years, is worth the investment.
"The point is to give hope, dignity, training and skills to these folks
coming back so they can reintegrate and become more productive than they
were before (they were called up)," she says. "These men and women have
earned it."
The Defense Department has argued against the proposed changes, saying
the current arrangement does what it is supposed to do — help recruit
and retain members. "We need an incentive that encourages them to stay,
not to leave," deputy assistant secretary Craig Duehring told members of
a House committee in March.
At an earlier hearing, another Pentagon official also argued that
recruits know what they signed up for when they enlisted. "If people
agree to that service, under those conditions, I think that needs to be
honored," deputy undersecretary Michael Dominguez testified.
That doesn't seem right to Tiffany Jenkins, 26, who had to take out
$11,000 in student loans to cover her final semester of college. Had she
not been called up, Jenkins says she could easily have completed her
bachelor's. But her year working in a hospital in Iraq as part of her
six-year term with the Iowa Army National Guard ate up three semesters
of her schooling. She says the Guard should have at least extended her
benefits for the amount of time that she was away.
"I'd done my National Guard and enjoyed my service overseas as much as
one could," says Jenkins, who earned a bachelor's in computer science
last December from the University of Iowa.
But instead of being thanked, "I'm actually being penalized."
-------------------------
Second story here...
http://www.usatoday.
com/news/education/2007-
07-10-gi-bill_N.htm
Story below:
-------------------------
Veterans' tuition breaks expand
By Mary Beth Marklein and Clair Lorell, USA TODAY
A growing number of states are cutting college
tuition for recent veterans in a show of gratitude, but also in some
cases to fill gaps in the federal GI Bill. Though most of the state laws
honor veterans for their sacrifices, some also address disparities
between the treatment of members of the regular military — Army, Navy,
Marines and Air Force — and of National Guard troops, over whom states
have jurisdiction.
Until 9/11, National Guard units were rarely deployed to combat zones or
for long periods of time. Since then, about 240,000 Guard members, many
of them college students, have been called up.
"The National Guard has been mobilized in a way that no one
anticipated," says Texas state Sen. Leticia Van de Putte, president of
the National Conference of State Legislatures. "So yes, (state
legislation) is bubbling up."
The number of states offering a tuition break to recent veterans has
more than tripled, from six to 19, since 9/11. Five states passed laws
this year; several have proposals in the pipeline. Benefits range from a
full ride for veterans in Illinois to a tuition freeze in Tennessee for
Guard and Reserves mobilized for at least six months. They typically
must attend a state school and meet residency and academic requirements.
Nearly every state today also offers tuition help for Guard members who
attend college while enlisted, but those benefits end when members leave
the service. They also end for members of the Reserves.
Congress has tinkered with federal laws, and several Senate proposals
would expand benefits even more. But University of Kansas senior Dan
Parker, 25, a Marine who served two tours in Iraq, says states have some
responsibility because rapidly rising tuitions and shrinking higher
education budgets contribute to the problem.
"If you want (to get) a four-year education on the GI Bill, you're going
to have to go in debt or work all the time," says Parker, who helped
craft a bill this year that led to a $250,000 scholarship fund for
Kansas veterans.
But as states face tight budgets, lawmakers struggle with where to draw
the line.
• In Wisconsin, where a 100% waiver kicked in this month, some lawmakers
want to pare back eligibility.
• Maryland placed 40 applicants on a waiting list after exhausting its
$500,000 scholarship budget.
• Last year, Massachusetts enacted only part of a proposal, providing a
fee waiver to National Guard members but not to other veterans.
Contributing: Heather Collura, Marissa DeCuir; Ben Jones, The
Post-Crescent in Appleton, Wis.
-------------------------
Third story here...
http://www.usatoday.
com/news/education/2007-
07-10-gi-bill-states_N.htm
Story below:
-------------------------
States all over the map on tuition aid
The landmark federal GI Bill has provided
education benefits to veterans since 1944. Today, every state offers
some sort of tuition benefit for members of its National Guard units.
But with more Guard members deployed to combat zones since 9/11, many
state legislators are looking for ways to help them and other recent
veterans. State benefits typically are available only to those attending
state-supported institutions and who meet certain academic requirements.
Highlights of recent developments:
Alabama
No tuition breaks for veterans, but since 2003, tuition has been waived
for spouses and children of National Guard members called to active duty
in Iraq.
Alaska
A bill enacted this year is designed to ensure that a tuition waiver
program for Guard members is fully funded.
Arizona
A tuition waiver for widows and children under 30 of U.S. soldiers
killed in the line of duty goes into effect Sept. 9. A tuition proposal
this year that would have benefited current or former Guard members who
have received a Purple Heart since 9/11 did not pass.
Arkansas
A 2005 resolution encourages state schools to participate in a partial
tuition waiver for Guard members. Under federal law, state Guard members
can have 75% of their tuition waived at a state-sponsored institution.
Schools that choose to participate cover the remaining 25%.
California
California doesn't reduce or eliminate tuition or fees for veterans in
state-supported colleges. A pending bill would waive resident fees for
Californians after they leave active duty and exhaust federal GI Bill
benefits. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the Democratically controlled
Legislature currently are at odds over his proposal for a $1.7 million
college-fees assistance program for National Guard members to aid
recruitment and retention.
Colorado
A law this month makes members of the armed forces and their dependents
eligible for in-state tuition if the member gets stationed in Colorado.
A proposal that did not pass would have allowed schools to seek
reimbursement from the state for refunds given to activated military
personnel.
Connecticut
The state has waived tuition for veterans since 1974; legislation did
not pass this year that would have expanded the benefits to include
fees.
Delaware
No legislation has been introduced or passed that would waive or reduce
tuition for recent veterans enrolled in state-supported colleges or
universities.
Florida
Proposals this year that would have required state universities and
community colleges to waive a percentage of the in-state tuition rate
for veterans did not pass. Last year, Purple Heart veterans became
eligible for tuition waivers.
Georgia
In 2005, the state passed the HERO (Helping Educate Reservists and their
Offspring) Scholarship for Guard and Reservists who, as of May 3, 2003,
served in a combat zone.
Hawaii
Bills to waive tuition for Hawaii National Guard members to attend state
schools have been introduced nearly every year for the last few years,
but none have passed.
Idaho
A 2004 law says Guard members called up for duty beyond training for 30
days or more will have lost tuition refunded.
Illinois
Veterans have generally been given a free ride at state schools since
1920, but state funding in recent years has come up short. A proposal
this year would ensure colleges that absorb the cost get reimbursed by
the state.
Indiana
Legislation this year that would have provided free tuition to state
universities for Indiana National Guard members called to active duty
since Sept. 10, 2001, died.
Iowa
The state last year expanded a longstanding War Orphans Fund to include
dependents of soldiers killed in action in a combat zone after 9/11.
Kansas
The state Legislature this year for the first timeappropriated $250,000
for scholarships for Kansans who served in Iraq or Afghanistan for at
least 90 days after 9/11. The Kansas Board of Regents plans to
distribute the funds on a first-come, first-served basis.
Kentucky
Tuition waivers for children and spouses of disabled and deceased
National Guard and armed forces members were changed this year to
increase the age of eligible children from 23 to 26 and to extend
waivers from 36 to 45 months.
Louisiana
No new tuition legislation was introduced in 2007. A 2005 law exempts
some Guard members from all or part of tuition imposed by certain
Louisiana public institutions.
Maine
A bill introduced in the 2007 session that would have established a
tuition waiver for veterans did not pass.
Maryland
The Legislature created a scholarship for veterans who fought in Iraq or
Afghanistan since 9/11, and funded it this year at $500,000. Available
to eligible applicants on a first-come, first-served basis, it has been
offered to at least 67 veterans and 41 dependents.
Massachusetts
The state waives tuition, but not fees, for all veterans. Fees were
waived for the first time last year for Guard members. A fee waiver for
all veterans was reintroduced this year. Fees can represent up to 75% of
college costs.
Michigan
A pending proposal would waive tuition for recent veterans and the
families of soldiers killed in action. Since 2005, Michigan has had
tuition grants for the children of veterans who are killed, missing in
action or are permanently disabled.
Minnesota
Veterans attending public or private colleges in the state who served in
the armed forces on or after 9/11, and who have exhausted other federal
and state benefits, can be reimbursed $1,000 per semester up to $10,000
under a law that took effect this month.
Also receiving the benefit: Minnesota National Guard members with five
years or more of service, and surviving spouses and children of those
who died serving in the military on or after 9/11. Also, the state
allocated $52,000 to extend education benefits to spouses, as well as
children, of soldiers killed in action.
Mississippi
A handful of bills were introduced this past session, which ended in the
spring. One passed; it expands tuition assistance for National Guard
members to include room and board. No new funds were appropriated.
Missouri
In April, lawmakers debated but ultimately failed to approve a bill that
would give combat veterans a 75% reduction in credit-hour costs. The
bill may have failed because of high revenue losses that state
universities likely would see. The University of Missouri, for example,
projected a $1.3 million tuition shortfall if the bill had passed. The
second-largest public university, Missouri State University, projected
an $850,000 tuition shortfall, with no state money earmarked to make up
the difference.
Montana
The state since 1989 allows state colleges and universities to waive
tuition for veterans. That program was expanded in 1997 to include
waivers for National Guard members.
Nebraska
No new legislation regarding tuition assistance for veterans or Guard
members was introduced this year. In 2005, a bill was enacted that
changed the tuition waiver for Guard members from 50% to 100%. Tuition
has long been waived for dependents of veterans killed in combat.
Nevada
Lawmakers in 2005 made permanent 2003 legislation guaranteeing free
tuition at state universities and colleges for Nevada National Guard
members, including recruits. Lawmakers also approved legislation to
reimburse Guard members for textbook expenses.
New Hampshire
A bill effective July 1 establishes a tuition voucher program for Guard
members and changes the source of funding of Guard tuition assistance
from schools to the state.
New Jersey
In January, a law passed that extended eligibility for tuition to former
members of the New Jersey National Guard and increased the number of
tuition-free credits available to Guard members and dependents. It
extends the eligibility to 16 credits per semester and allows Guard
members whose education was interrupted by their duty to continue to
receive the free tuition benefit following discharge for one semester or
a period of time equal to their length of deployment, whichever is
longer.
In the event of medical discharge as a result of illness or combat
injury, a Guard member who was enrolled in a degree program can continue
to receive the free tuition benefit through completion or for five
years. Last year, New Jersey prohibited public colleges and universities
from imposing non-resident tuition fees on members of the state Guard
and their surviving children or spouses if the member was killed in the
line of duty.
New Mexico
Legislation that was introduced this year but did not pass would have
extended a scholarship for Vietnam veterans to include recent veterans.
Certain dependents of combat veterans are eligible for full tuition
waivers.
New York
Several bills that would have increased tuition awards for veterans died
in the New York Legislature. Currently, veterans are eligible for awards
of $1,000 per semester for full-time study or $500 per semester for
part-time study.
North Carolina
Lawmakers this year proposed helping National Guard members pay off
their student loans. It would be another expansion of the state's
tuition assistance program for the Guard, following changes in 2005 that
raised the maximum tuition payment and provided money for buying
textbooks. The tuition breaks, funded out of the state budget, help
students at public and private colleges.
Another recent change in tuition laws has allowed active-duty military
personnel stationed in North Carolina, and their dependents, to take
advantage of in-state tuition rates at public universities. Lawmakers
this year have proposed expanding that benefit to all Defense Department
employees, which would mean universities would lose revenue.
North Dakota
A 2005 law waives tuition for dependents of deceased veterans. A bill
passed this year extends Guard tuition assistance to include all
accredited post-secondary schools.
Ohio
No tuition-related laws passed recently to benefit recent veterans; a
2004 law requires public and private colleges to grant leave to students
called to active duty and either refund or offer credit for tuition
paid. Also in 2004, legislators expanded eligibility for a 25-year-old
Ohio War Orphans Scholarship Program to include Iraq veterans' families.
Oklahoma
No tuition assistance is offered to combat veterans. A bill currently
pending would require the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education to
provide a tuition grant program for National Guard members taking
graduate or professional courses.
Oregon
Under a proposal passed this year and expected to take effect this fall,
resident student-veterans would receive up to $150 a month for up to 36
months. The aid could be used only after the student had exhausted
federal GI Bill benefits.
Pennsylvania
A state agency extended the eligibility period for the Armed Forces Loan
Forgiveness Program to the end of this year. The program forgives loans
of up to $2,500 for veterans who haven't defaulted and who were on
active duty between 9/11 and Dec. 31, 2007.
Rhode Island
While colleges are given state-appropriated money for Guard members,
there has been little legislative action for combat veterans or their
dependents. In 2005, a bill failed that would have given military
Reserve members the same tuition assistance that is now offered to Guard
members.
South Carolina
In South Carolina, Gov. Mark Sanford last month signed into law a bill
that will offer members of the National Guard free tuition at
state-supported colleges and universities and some private institutions.
Another bill that would provide tuition assistance for full-time
military veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan was introduced and
is expected to go forward next year.
The state also offers free tuition to the children of veterans who were
killed, wounded or are missing in action. The new National Guard tuition
program pays all tuition and fees up to $18,000. The Legislature
appropriated $1.3 million for tuition grants for that program and
another $1.7 million for a program that pays student loans for Guard
members.
South Dakota
No legislation was introduced in 2007 pertaining to special tuition
rates for veterans. But there were several laws passed in 2006 and 2004
that improved educational access for military members and their
families:
Tennessee
The state this year will begin freezing college tuition for members of
the Reserves or the National Guard if they are mobilized for at least
six months of active duty. The law went into effect on June 25. Under
this law, if a Reservist or Guard member is enrolled at a state school
at the time their status changes to active duty, all school fees will be
frozen at the rate when they departed school. The University of
Tennessee system this August will increase tuition 6%.
Upon their return, fees would not increase for a time period equal to
one year plus the amount of time served on active duty. The offer is
good only for servicemembers who complete their military obligations
under honorable conditions and who re-enroll in a state school within
six months from release of active duty.
Texas
Congress tweaked its 84-year-old tuition exemption so that veterans can
use both the federal GI Bill and the state exemption in the same
semester.
Utah
A law this year waives undergraduate tuition at state institutions of
higher education for surviving dependents of Utah resident military
members killed while serving in federal active duty.
Vermont
The 2004 Armed Services Scholarship expanded an existing benefit for
children of National Guard members to also include Guard members,
military veterans and spouses and children for both.
Virginia
The state this year created an in-state tuition benefit for active-duty
servicemembers and for activated members of the National Guard and
Reserve who are stationed in Virginia but are not Virginia residents.
Washington
Colleges are not required to waive tuition, but because waivers are
available, legislation enacted last year directs state colleges and
universities to take steps that would help them identify and assist
veterans who need financial aid. Beginning this month, tuition and fees
will be waived for dependents of combat veterans who are totally
disabled, reported missing or killed in combat.
West Virginia
Beginning this month, tuition is waived for honorably discharged
veterans who earned a Purple Heart. Legislators also passed a bill that
covers tuition costs for active-duty National Guard members pursuing a
master's degree.
Wisconsin
In 2006, Wisconsin passed legislation that waived 100% of tuition for
veterans, up from a 50% waiver, enacted in 2005. But as the program's
costs balloon, some lawmakers want to stop funding graduate school
tuition and create a 10-year limit for claiming benefits.
Wyoming
Since 2006, Wyoming has had free tution for overseas combat veterans, as
well as widows, and orphans of deceased veterans. The state reimburses
the schools for waiving tuition.
Sources: National Conference of State Legislatures; Iraq and Afghanistan
Veterans of America; USA TODAY research. Contributing: Heather Collura,
Marissa DeCuir, Clair Lorell, Mary Beth Marklein, USA TODAY; Marty Roney,
The Montgomery Advertiser; Dennis Wagner, The Arizona Republic; Joanne
Bratton, The Baxter Bulletin, Mountain Home, Ark.; Jake Henshaw, Gannett
News Service/Sacramento; Maureen Milford, The News Journal, Wilmington,
Del.; Dan Nakaso, The Honolulu Advertiser; Tim Evans, The Indianapolis
Star; Jessie Halladay, The Courier-Journal, Louisville; Joseph Gidjunis,
The Daily Times, Salisbury, Md.; Lawrence Schumacher and Dave Unze, The
St. Cloud (Minn.) Times; Julie Goodman, The Clarion-Ledger, Jackson,
Miss.; Wes Johnson, Springfield (Mo.) News-Leader; Jeff DeLong, Reno
Gazette-Journal; Laura Bruno, Daily Record, Morristown, N.J.; Gary
Stern, The Journal News, Westchester County, N.Y.; Jordan Schrader,
Asheville (N.C.) Citizen-Times; Lori Kurtzman, The Cincinnati Enquirer;
Tracy Loew, Statesman Journal, Salem, Ore.; Ron Barnett, The Greenville
(S.C.) News; Stu Whitney, Argus Leader, Sioux Falls, S.D.; Leon Alligood,
The Tennessean, Nashville; Jennie Coughlin, The Daily News Leader,
Staunton, Va.; Ben Jones, The Post-Crescent, Appleton, Wis.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --