• MSN
  • Hotmail
  • More
    • Autos
    • My MSN
    • Video
    • Careers & Jobs
    • Personals
    • Weather
    • Delish
    • Quotes
    • White Pages
    • Games
    • Real Estate
    • Wonderwall
    • Horoscopes
    • Shopping
    • Yellow Pages
    • Local Edition
    • Traffic
    • Feedback
    • Maps & Directions
    • Travel
    • Full MSN Index
  • Bing
  • NBCNews.com
  • TODAY
  • Nightly News
  • Rock Center
  • Meet the Press
  • Dateline
  • msnbc
  • Breaking News
  • Newsvine
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Food
  • Health
  • Money
  • Pets
  • Moms
  • Style
  • Travel
  • Books
  • KLG & Hoda
  • Video
  • More
    • Comics & Games
    • Concert Series
    • Good News!
    • Hip2Save
    • Horoscope
    • Lotto
    • Photo Features
    • Relationships
    • Rossen Reports
    • Tech
    • Weather
  • Recommended: Buzz: How much it takes to get by in America
  • Recommended: Reduce the hassles of summer travel (and save money)
  • Recommended: Big gas savings! Kmart goes for giggles again
  • Recommended: Cheapism: Best budget umbrella strollers


Life Inc. is about how the economy is affecting you: your life, your job, your family, your finances, your spending. Check us out on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.

  • ↓ About this blog
  • ↓ Archives
    • Icons Email E-mail updates
    • Icons Twitter Follow on Twitter
    • Icons Feed Subscribe to RSS
  • Advertise | AdChoices
    25
    Apr
    2013
    3:08pm, EDT

    Advice for vets looking for work and employers who want to hire them

    By Herb Weisbaum, TODAY contributor

    The job market is tight and that doesn’t make things any easier for the thousands of vets returning home and wanting to re-enter the civilian work force.

    According to the Family Work Institute, vets who have served since 2001 and returned to civilian life have higher unemployment rates (men, 9.5 percent; women, 8.3 percent) than their civilian counterparts (men 8.1 percent; women, 7.7 percent).

    In other words: Our youngest and most recent veterans are having a harder time finding jobs than the average civilian.

    During a TODAY Money web chat on Thursday, Ken Matos, director of research at the Families and Work Institute, spoke with vets who need a job and with employers who want to hire them.

    “Our conversations with employers and veteran job candidates have pointed to two big problems,” Matos explained. “First, many employers are just now building up the programs and processes to streamline the recruitment, retention, and development of veteran employees and their families. Second both civilian employers and military veterans can get tripped up by some basic communication issues around understanding the significance and relevance of military experiences to civilian workplaces.”

    JT: How can we use military service as a selling point to get a job? Should I play it down or up in my resume?

    Ken Matos: That's a common and important question. My answer is yes, you should mention your military service. However, how you present that information is important.

    When describing your military experiences, you will want to translate your position titles and tasks into terms that employers can understand. Many military terms are daunting to civilian recruiters.

    Some great free online tools for rewriting a military resume to match civilian job descriptions are available at sites like Mynextmove.org, vetsuccess.gov and military.com.  

    Bobbie: I'd like to hire vets but I hear mixed things about how they do in civilian jobs. What do you think? And where do I start if I want to hire them?

    Ken Matos: Some of the common areas where there can be friction is in recognizing that the military is a very different work culture than many civilian workplaces. It emphasizes teamwork and tight coordination.

    Yet, a few open and supportive conversations can make a big difference in helping vets and their coworkers understand each other's perspective and smooth out those rougher interactions.

    Sometimes it’s as simple as pointing out what their new priorities should be and giving them a chance to make that a reality.

    Read the rest of the Q & A below:

    2 comments

    I wanted to let some service members know that I work at a wonderful store and we are always looking for smart, kind, hard working people. Look for a Trader Joe's near you. I have been with my store in Leawood almost 2 years and I have the best boss anyone could ever wish for. He's young, smart and  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: military, veterans, careers, workforce-training, consumerman
  • 15
    Jan
    2013
    2:28pm, EST

    Wal-Mart plans to hire 100,000 veterans

    Retail giant Wal-Mart has announced that over the next five years it projects hiring 100,000 honorably discharged vets who are in their first 12 months off active duty. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By Ben Popken, TODAY contributor

    Send idea Send me your news tips

    Facebook Follow us on Facebook

    Twitter Follow me on Twitter

    Wal-Mart will hire every veteran who wants to trade their camo fatigues for khakis and dark-blue polos, the company announced Tuesday.

    "Sadly, too many of those who fought for us abroad now find themselves fighting for jobs at home," Wal-Mart U.S. President and CEO Bill Simon said in a speech before the National Retail Federation. "Not every returning veteran wants to work in retail.  But every veteran who does will have a place to go. We project that Wal-Mart will hire more than 100,000 veterans over the next five years."

    As of December 2012, the unemployment rate for veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars was 10.8 percent, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The current national unemployment rate is 7.8 percent. By the end of 2012, there were 226,000 unemployed Iraq and Afghanistan veterans.

    The announcement comes at a time when Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer and the nation's largest private employer, is trying to burnish its image. The company has been criticized over the years for offering low-paying jobs and its sourcing from Chinese manufacturers has been brought into question. Recently, allegations have been leveled that the company made bribes in Mexico to obtain building permits and there have been calls for improved supply chain oversight following the deadly fire at a Bangladesh factory that supplied clothes to several global retailers, including Wal-Mart.

    The retailer's hiring program will be open to veterans honorably discharged within the past 12 months. "All types" of jobs will be available, spokesperson Brooke Buchanan told TODAY, from part time to full time and management. These positions will be in stores, regional distribution centers, and the headquarters in Bentonville, Ark. Salary will depend on position. Benefits are included for full-time jobs.

    Openings will be be dependent on each facilities' staffing needs, the company said. No new positions will be created. Employee transfers between facilities will not count as new hires towards the 100,000 projection. However, the company said, if someone leaves their job at Wal-Mart and then comes back to work for the retailer later, that will be considered a new hire.

    Wal-Mart currently employs 1.4 million and "experiences significant turnover in associates each year," according to a March regulatory filing. Over 100,000 of those employees are veterans, according to the company, which declined to provide the number of currently available open positions.

    Under employer tax incentives for hiring veterans extended as part of the fiscal cliff deal, Wal-Mart can get a tax credit of $2,400 for hiring veterans that have been searching for work for at least four weeks but less than six months. Veterans with service-related disabilities are worth even more, up to $9,600 per hire.

    Several veterans groups greeted the announcement with gusto. Nonprofit veteran's advocacy group Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA) founder and CEO Paul Rieckhoff told TODAY that "IAVA applauds Wal-Mart's leadership on veteran hiring... we need more employers to appreciate that these young men and women are not a charity, they are an investment. Wal-Mart's footprint is large enough that they can single-handedly impact that unemployment number, especially if they exceed their 100,000 jobs goal." On Jan. 9, the IAVA announced receiving a $50,000 grant from Wal-Mart to promote employment of veterans in New York state which the group said it will use to build an online job-search tool and fund a job fair for veterans.

    An interesting wrinkle in the program is that job-seeking vets who meet the eligibility requirements will get "priority applicant status." If a job is between two equally qualified candidates, one a vet and one a civilian, the vet gets the job, Buchanan said.

    In the same speech announcing the veteran's initiative, Wal-Mart's CEO also announced plans for Wal-Mart and Sam's club to buy an additional $50 billion in U.S.-made products over the next years. The approach is two-pronged. The retailer will increase purchases of categories that are already sourced in the U.S., like basic clothing, sporting goods, games, storage products and paper goods, and will encourage the development of U.S. production in furniture, textiles, and high-end appliances, said Simon.

    The White House, which has made promoting the hiring of veterans by the private sector a priority, welcomed Wal-Mart's pledge to hire more veterans. 

    "This is exactly the kind of act we hoped would be possible when we started Joining Forces — a concrete example of our nation's love and support that our troops, veterans, and their families can feel in their lives every day," said first lady Michelle Obama in a prepared statement. "So today, my challenge is simple: for every business in America to follow Wal-Mart's lead by finding innovative solutions that both make sense for their workplaces and make a difference for our veterans and their families."

    In August 2011, President Barack Obama issued a challenge to employers to hire or train 100,000 veterans and military spouses by 2013, a torch that Mrs. Obama and Vice President Joe Biden have picked up as part of the Joining Forces initiative. At an event in August 2012, Mrs. Obama announced that more than 2,000 American companies had taken up the challenge, hiring 125,000 veterans and military spouses.

    Veterans often face unique challenges re-entering civilian life. They may carry physical or mental disabilities, such as PTSD and traumatic brain injury. Wal-Mart told TODAY that veterans would have to pass the standard background and criminal record checks but would not be subjected to any additional psychological screening. A standard employee telephone helpline would be made available to employed veterans suffering from PTSD or any other disabilities, Wal-Mart said.

    "Obviously this is a good move that an employer wants to hire veterans. Our concern is that the jobs might be low wage and not offer enough health benefits," said Paul Sullivan, a board member for D.C.-based veterans' rights group Veterans for Common Sense. "I am concerned this is a public relations exercise to make the company look good. Veterans need fair wages, union representation and a job that offers a career, not just a low-wage position."

    375 comments

    Congrats U.S. vets! Now you too can get a job that: - pays you slave...err I mean, minimum...wages - refuses to give you sick time off of work (it's better for WalMart's profits if you have to work while sick, infecting your customers and co-workers. After all, those customers will be back to buy on …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: money, military, careers, featured, us-business
  • 3
    Jan
    2013
    7:56am, EST

    Free tax software available for some military families

    Courtesy TurboTax

    By Herb Weisbaum, TODAY contributor

    Military families have special challenges with their finances and that includes tax preparation. TurboTax has just released a new version of its tax preparation software created specifically for military filers. For a limited time, it’s free for junior enlisted personnel.

    “TurboTax Military Edition was created by active reserve and retired military personnel and military spouses, and they really understand the unique challenges of filing taxes when you’re in the military,” explained spokeswoman Julie Miller. “There are more than two million military taxpayers, and because they have a unique set of needs, we realized that we had to have a more personalized product that met those needs.”

    TurboTax Military Edition gives step-by-step guidance to help service members claim every deduction and credit they’re entitled to, so they can keep more of their hard-earned money. This includes determining state of residency, filing in multiple states, deductions for relocation expenses and uniforms, combat pay, and what to do if you have a PCS (permanent change of station).

    “It speaks their language,” Miller said. “It uses the terms they’re familiar with to make it easier for them.”

    TurboTax will be fully up to date with the new tax laws by early next week, Miller said. From now through Feb. 14, this software is free for junior enlisted personnel (rank E-1 to E-5) in any branch of the Armed Forces. It’s also available during this time period for $24.95 (a $5 discount) for anyone ranked E-6 through officer.

    Every military member using this TurboTax software, even the free version, can get one-on-one advice via phone or chat from one of the company’s tax experts.

    Intuit, the parent company of TurboTax, also has joined with Operation Homefront to help military members who need financial support and assistance.

    Through a joint fundraising effort called Mission2Match, Intuit will match up to $1 million in donations made to Operation Homefront through April 15, 2013. TurboTax customers can donate as part of their online tax preparation.

    “We are asking our customers to join us and give generously to support U.S. servicemen and women and their families,” Dan Maurer, an Intuit senior vice president, said in a statement.

    Donations are also being accepted on the TurboTax Facebook page and YouTube channel. Only donations made through this Mission2Match program are eligible for the company’s match. Donations will be matched a second time if donors tweet about the fundraising effort (#mission2match).

    “We’ve found that many people want to support our service members, but don’t always know how,” said Jim Knotts, president and chief executive officer of Operation Homefront in a statement. “By combining their technology and huge public reach, TurboTax is giving their customers the opportunity to provide that support exactly when it is most on their minds.”

    Herb Weisbaum is The ConsumerMan. Follow him on Facebook and Twitter or visit The ConsumerMan website.


    More money news:

    • Bill targets 'abusive' gift card fees
    • Social Security can be fixed (but it won't be pretty)
    • Hey, hot stuff! You're fired
    • Financial moves to make before the new year
    • Sign up for our TODAY newsletter

    Follow TODAY Money on Twitter and Facebook


     

     

     

    3 comments

    Or, better yet, starting Jan. 8th, Military One Source offers FREE tax return service and live support through H&R Block for ALL members, regardless of rank. Our family has used this great service the last two years.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: taxes, military, featured, turbotax
  • 9
    Nov
    2012
    10:44am, EST

    Employers step up efforts to recruit, hire veterans

    Getty Images

    Veterans Michael Futch, right, and Logan Remillard register for the "Hiring Our Heroes" job fair in Utah last November. Companies say they are are stepping up efforts to hire veterans.

    By Allison Linn, TODAY

    Veterans who are looking for work may have reason to feel more optimistic about their job prospects this Veterans Day: A new survey finds that businesses appear to be making a greater effort to hire them.

    The CareerBuilder survey finds that 29 percent of employers are actively recruiting veterans, up 9 percent from a year ago.

    In all, 65 percent of the 2,600 employers surveyed on behalf of CareerBuilder said they would be more likely to hire a veteran over another, equally qualified candidate.


    The efforts come amid increased attention to the plight of job-seeking veterans. Unemployment has been a particularly big problem for young veterans who are returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to high unemployment and low job prospects.

    The unemployment rate for veterans who have served since Sept. 11 was 10 percent in October. That’s far higher than the comparable unemployment rate of 7.5 percent for the entire population. The figures are not adjusted for seasonal variations.

    Send idea Send me your story ideas

    Facebook Follow us on Facebook

    Twitter Follow me on Twitter

    Many young veterans are expected to enter the workforce in coming years, as the U.S. withdraws from wars in the Gulf and potentially looks to shrink its overall presence as well. The job market has been slowly improving, and that could help increase their changes of finding a job.

    But experts say the young veterans are facing additional roadblocks as well.

    Many don’t have the skills or experience in crafting a resume and interviewing for a job outside the military. They also may not know how to translate their military skills into civilian language that would make them attractive to employers.

    Some veterans are also finding that the skills they learned have in the military, such as driving a military truck or serving as a military medic, don’t translate directly into civilian life. That means they have to spend time and money getting the same certifications to do their job outside the military.

    Advocates argue that veterans also bring a special set of skills to the workforce, such as loyalty and the ability to perform under pressure. Other perks, such as the good publicity that comes from hiring veterans, probably don’t hurt, either.

    Related:

    • Report: Military-friendly firms stir upswell in hiring
    • Younger veterans want to work but face roadblocks
    • Why companies do, or don’t, hire veterans

     

    37 comments

    Let us not forget that just as there are many recent veterans out of work there are also thousands of Vietnam era veterans such as myself, who are unemployed. I was laid off three years ago from a well paying graphics arts job. There is a great deal of apparent age discrimination taking place. Hopef …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: military, veterans, employment, featured, commentid-military
  • 21
    Jun
    2012
    7:39am, EDT

    Defense cuts could further dim US jobs picture

    By Eve Tahmincioglu

    As the war in Afghanistan winds down, the impact on the nation’s employment picture goes beyond veterans returning home who are looking for work.

    There are thousands of civilian jobs related to the war effort, and cutbacks in defense spending have already led to reductions in these defense-related jobs, including direct government positions or those with defense contractors. The loss of these jobs isn’t good news for the still-dim employment picture.

    “It will create a greater supply of workers and create more pain overall for the U.S. work force,” said Gautam Godhwani, CEO of jobs website SimplyHired.com.

    For May, the number of openings for defense-related jobs across the Web, including job boards and company jobs sites, declined by 4.2 percent compared to the previous month, according to SimplyHired.com research. And unless Congress acts to curb some of the projected defense cutbacks, he added, things will only get worse next year.


    Follow @todaymoney

    Indeed, Boeing officials recently warned that any further cutbacks to defense spending could devastate the defense industry and lead to thousands of jobs lost. 

    The decline in defense and aerospace employment has already begun. Last year, contractors shed nearly 35,000 jobs, and through May nearly 11,000 more have already disappeared, according to a report from Challenger Gray & Christmas released this week.

    There has also been a significant downsizing of civilian workers at the Department of Defense, which saw its work force drop to 790,000 from more than 800,00 in fiscal year 2011, stated a report from the department's comptroller.

    And the number is expected to drop further. A story in FederalTimes.com from December reported that in the next decade the Department of Defense’s civilian work force will plummet by 20 percent to 630,000, “the smallest since the Defense Department's creation in 1947.” 

    The combination of the war winding down, vets returning to the work force, cutbacks in defense-related industries and the inevitable reductions by their suppliers, Godhwani said, all add up to a recipe for fewer job opportunities.

    But, he maintained, some states and occupations will benefit from the influx of more civilian workers with defense-related skills.

    For example, in cities such as Detroit and Las Vegas,  the number of workers for each job opening is about five to one, compared to Washington, D.C., and Boston where there are one or two individuals for every job, Godhwani said.

    Also, he added, workers with specialized skills in defense-related industries, including technology and engineering, could be hired by employers who are having difficulty filling jobs.

    Among defense-related occupations, all of the top 10 have been declining since 2009 and are expected to decrease even further through 2015, according to a 2011 Secretary of Defense report titled “Defense-Related Employment of Skilled Labor.” These occupations include business and financial, record-keeping clerks, construction trades, maintenance and computer specialists.

    Even if some of these workers are able to fill a talent gap in the civilian work force, overall it’s going to be tough to add more jobless individuals to the long lines of the nation's under- and unemployed.

    More money and business news:

    • Boardrooms the next battlefield for gay rights
    • The world's most reputable companies are ...
    • How much wedding will $20,000 buy? 
    • Flint tops list of most dangerous U.S. cities
    • That bundle of joy will now cost you $234,900
    • Video: Why more grads are moving back home
    • Sign up for our Business newsletter

    Follow msnbc.com business on Twitter and Facebook 

     

    222 comments

    this article and the premise behind it is a joke. it almost sounds like they are actually saying if we dont keep the war in afganistan going that the enonomy will greatly suffer? really? so extending vietnam 2.0 is good for the economy? what would make more sense is cut the military budget at least  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: boeing, jobs, defense, military, unemployment, aerospace, featured
  • 20
    Jun
    2012
    3:39pm, EDT

    Jobless vets need to think outside military box

    By Eve Tahmincioglu

    Veterans have to get out of the military mindset if they’re going to adapt to the civilian workplace. And that means gearing up for a new outlook even before they leave the armed forces behind.

    While it’s important to be proud of military service, it’s also critical for a vets career to know how to play up and play down their years serving your country, advised Randy Plunkett, the director of community and government outreach for Military.com, during our live web chat Wednesday.

    “Two common mistakes transitioning military make are to not start early in transitioning and to use military jargon on their resumes,” he told readers.

    One reader, Phil, a captain in the Army with a degree in history from West Point, asked Plunkett: “What kind of jobs are available for someone with my background?”

    Plunkett’s response:

    “Think about your ancillary experience. Not only do you have a degree, you have more than just your army job. You are a human resources manager - talking with soldiers about their careers, you supervise and manage extensive training programs, you actively participate in performance reviews, and you have extensive diversity and inclusion workplace experience.”

    It’s all about taking your experience in the military, he explained, and pointing out how what you did can fit into the real work world.

    “We need a fundamental change in thinking,” he stressed. “Military members have to think in terms of their big picture, large category experience, not just their classification.”

    Here’s the entire Q&A with Plunkett:

     Join us next Wednesday for another live web chat with an expert that will address money or work issues.

    5 comments

    You know it sure is a shame how we do our soldiers. We send them overseas to fight wars we cant possibly win. they come home blown to pieces. Living with horrible nightmares, PTSD, they're having hard times finding jobs, rate of homeless vets vs civilian is double. are we really doing this to our mi …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: jobs, military, unemployment, veterans, featured
  • 20
    Jun
    2012
    7:03am, EDT

    Veterans return from war to find jobs gone

    Courtesy Andrae Evans

    Andrae Evans in Kandahar during humanitarian patrol in 2009.

    By Eve Tahmincioglu

    Members of the National Guard and Reserve sign up to serve our country as needed, and when they return home many expect to find their civilian jobs waiting for them.

    Unfortunately, that’s not always the case.

    Tim Hack

    Adrae Evans with his daughter Ariel, wife Kristin, and son Gabe, before his 4th deployment.

    Andrae Evans was an insurance sales manager and a member of the New York Army National Guard in 2004 when he was deployed to Iraq. When he was released from active duty in 2006 his former employer, MassMutual Financial Group, would not reinstate him to the position he left behind.

    “I hoped to work things out with MassMutual and believed, wrongly, that they would do the right thing,” said Evans, who's been unable to find work and recently took on a temporary National Guard assignment. He is now in Bagram, Afghanistan, and is suing MassMutual. The company says they were not required to reinstate Evans because he was an independent contractor, not an employee.

    In another case, a prosecutor for the Baltimore City State’s Attorney’s Office, Andrew Gross, signed up for the U.S. Army Reserve in 2009, and when he returned from a six-month military training program found his job wasn’t waiting for him when he returned.

    “I was told I’d have to go to the back of the line to get my job back,” said Gross, who sued the State’s Attorney's office and settled the case late last year.

    Mark Cheshire, a spokesman for the state’s attorney’s office, said the new state's attorney inherited the case from his predecessor and moved “to resolve the matter in an equitable fashion" when he took office.

    National Guard and Reserve soldiers have faced numerous deployments and calls to duty during the years of war over the past decade, and many have returned to find they no longer had jobs they expected to return to. Some contend they have faced  discrimination on their return, or retaliation for their military service.

    Such actions are illegal under the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act, or USERRA, which is supposed to help protect veterans when they return to the workforce. 

    Complaints brought under the law have escalated in recent years, mirroring the number of guard and reservists returning to their civilian lives.

    Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve

    Number inquiries from vets regarding USERRA and total number of cases taking on by the government.

    According to data from the Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve, inquiries under the law started to skyrocket in 2010, more than doubling to 34,612, compared with a year earlier. The number of Guard and Reserve members who came off active duty during 2010 also spiked to 91,931 from 48,702 in 2009 before dropping to 45,968 last year, according to the Defense Department.

    The number of USERRA complaints also dipped to about 30,000 in 2011, and shows signs of leveling off so far this year. But many veteran advocates expect the problem to continue as the drawdown from Afghanistan proceeds.

    “I think as the wars have gone on it has challenged, both spiritually and pragmatically, civilian employers' approach to USERRA,” said Ward Carroll, editor of the Military.com website and blog.

    While he’s empathetic to employers who’ve had to function without key employees during their deployments, he stressed the importance of complying with the law.

    “It’s part of your duty as an American employer to comply with USERRA and help citizen soldiers,” he said. “Between now and 2014, these challenges to USERRA will continue.”

    Steven D. Silverman, the attorney who represented Gross in his suit against the Baltimore City State’s Attorney, said he’s seen a doubling in USERRA claims in his practice over the past year. “I attribute that to the economy and ignorance of the law by employers,” he said.

    Indeed, a March survey by Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America found that nearly 40 percent of veterans polled felt their employer didn’t have enough information about their rights under USERRA.

    Gross said he doesn’t believe his managers wanted to undermine military service. “I think if they had an understanding of the law this wouldn’t have happened,” he said.

    In the case of Evans, who worked for MassMutual, his complaint is that he was not reinstated in the higher position he got before being deployed, said Michael Macomber, an attorney with Tully Rinckey who is representing him. The law, he noted, doesn’t just call for hiring employees back, but also keeping them in a similar position.

    MassMutual said in a statement it is “fully complying” with USERRA and will “vigorously defend” its position in court.


    Follow @msnbc_business

    A tight job market has exacerbated the problem in recent years, agreed government officials and legal experts. The unemployment rate among veterans who've been on active duty since September 2001 was 12.1 percent in 2011, compared to 8.2 percent overall, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    Of course while business conditions may change, most employers want to do the right thing and comply with the law by hiring back returning veterans.

    “I believe our employers by an overwhelming vast majority are living up to their responsibilities under USERRA," said Ronald Young, director of family and employer programs and policy in the Pentagon’s Office of Reserve Affairs.

    While Young acknowledged some of the uptick in USERRA complaints might have resulted from employers skirting the law, a big chunk had to do with better tracking of cases and more outreach to employers and employees by the government.

    His agency recognizes employers that do a good job supporting National Guard and Reserve members by awarding them the Freedom Award. This year Intel Corp. made the list.

    Courtesy Mark Miera

    Mark Miera

    “We have tools in place to help managers fill temporary positions for whatever reason the position is open,” said Lisa Malloy, a spokeswoman for Intel, which employs 100,000, including about 3,000 who have been in the military. 

    Mark Miera, 43, a National Guard member in New Mexico who’s worked for Intel for 18 years, has had two deployments since 9/11, including a stint in Afghanistan that ended in December.

    When he was overseas colleagues messaged him about a position as manager of construction at Intel, and before he came back to work he ended up with a promotion.

    “Intel has always moved beyond the requirements of the law,” he said. “They don’t question protecting veterans returning from war and their positions.”

    (For more on this issue, join a live web chat Wednesday at noon ET with Randy Plunkett, Military.com's government relations and community director. Click here to join the chat.)

    More money and business news:

    • Boardrooms the next battlefield for gay rights
    • The world's most reputable companies are ...
    • How much wedding will $20,000 buy?
    • Flint tops list of most dangerous U.S. cities
    • That bundle of joy will now cost you $234,900
    • Video: Why more grads are moving back home
    • Sign up for our Business newsletter

    Follow msnbc.com business on Twitter and Facebook 

     

    170 comments

    War is good for the corporations but not too good for the people asked to fight it. You took an oath to protect the constitution from all enemies foreign and DOMESTIC. The constitution has been made null and void by foreign emissaries (dual citizenship Israeli's working for US government )and their  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: military, unemployment, national-guard, vets, featured, reserve, userra
  • 31
    May
    2012
    7:19am, EDT

    Shady car dealers targeting military buyers

    By Herb Weisbaum, The ConsumerMan

    Cody Cameron, a Marine stationed in Jacksonville, N.C., got burned when he bought a used car. He paid $17,000 last year for a 2004 Nissan 350-Z with 60,000 miles on it. He figured the car would last him a long time. It didn’t. 

    “I drove the vehicle for about two weeks. And one day all of the wheel studs on the left rear tire just popped off and the tire took off down the road,” he recalls. 

    He was able to get the dealership to pay for the repairs.  But about a week later, the studs broke again. This time they refused to pay. 

    Cameron couldn’t afford the repair work, so he took the car to another dealer, hoping to get some money for a trade-in. That’s when he discovered his car had been in a wreck. The AutoCheck report showed extensive damage to the left side of the vehicle. 

    “When I bought it, I specifically asked the salesman – multiple times – if it had been in a wreck,” Cameron tells me. “And he said no. There were no accidents.” 

    Right now, Cameron’s 350-Z cannot be driven. But he’s still on the hook for the payments. He’s suing the dealer. 

    It’s a common problem
    It’s unfortunate. Shady car dealers often target military customers. Unethical salespeople see them as easy marks. 

    Holly Petraeus, director of the Office of Servicemember Affairs at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, warns military personnel to be on guard when they walk onto a car lot. 

    “You have these car places that spring up around military installations selling used cars for a very marked-up price and then putting high financing on top of that,” she says. 

    Military personnel can be especially vulnerable customers. They’re young. This may be their first car purchase. They often have a limited or negative credit history. 

    Petraeus (whose husband, Gen David Petraeus is CIA Director) tells me everyone in the service is afraid of doing anything that could cost them their security clearance. A bad credit report is the No. 1 reason for having that clearance pulled. 

    “They’re very conscious of that,” she says. “So somebody can threaten them and say, ‘If you don’t pay up then you’re going to get in trouble,’ which of course, is the last thing they want.” 

    Holly Petraeus is not the only one sounding the alarm. The auto experts at Edmunds.com advise military customers to watch out for deceptive sales practices. 

    "Military personnel have a steady income. The government is paying them every single month for their service. Unscrupulous car dealers know that and are really anxious to get into that income stream,” says Edmunds.com’s Carroll Lachnit. 

    Edmunds.com warns military families to be on the lookout for crafty salespeople who use patriotism as part of their sales pitch. 

    "We're trying to get them to be aware that appealing to their pride or flattering them may not be sincere appreciation for their military service, but just another way to get their hooks into that paycheck,” Lachnit says. 

    Car dealer rip-offs affect mission readiness
    Rosemary Shahan, president of Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety, has a long list of “unconscionable practices” she says unethical dealers use on military buyers. They include: falsifying loan applications, bait-and-switch financing and selling a car they know has been in a wreck without telling the customer. 

    “Auto sales and financing scams are leading causes of financial readiness problems for military service members and their families,” she says. 

    Two years ago, while Congress was debating the Dodd-Frank bill on financial reform, Air Force Secretary Michael Donley wrote a letter to lawmakers. It said: 

    “I'm sure you agree that Airmen who are distracted by financial issues at home decreases readiness. Protection from unprincipled automobile lending enables our Airmen to concentrate on their primary mission -- fly, fight and win in air, space and cyberspace." (See full letter) 

    In a similar letter, John McHugh, Secretary of the Army wrote: 

    "Over the years, many of our Soldiers have fallen victim to predatory lending practices and have entered into contracts for prohibitively expensive financial products promoted by some unscrupulous car dealerships and lenders. Though the Army does educate our Soldiers about buying cars in our normal financial education curriculum, the fact remains that junior enlisted Soldiers … remain an easy target for dishonest brokers.” (See full letter) 

    McHugh’s letter listed the results of an informal Department of Defense survey of officers who do financial counseling for the four main branches of the armed forces. The vast majority (79 percent) reported they were seeing military members with auto financing problems. Many of these clients, they reported, worried they could not make their car payments. 

    The National Independent Automobile Dealers Association(NAIDA) does not shy away from the problem. 

    “Try as we may to get rid of them, there are still bad actors in our industry,” says Steven Jordan, NIADA’s chief operating officer. “We are aware of the growing issue regarding vehicle purchases and financing by military personnel and we feel there is no place in our industry for those who wish to take advantage of or deceive our military personnel with improper disclosure or unfair & deceptive trade practices.”

    Protect yourself
    There are things everyone – military and civilian – should do when buying a vehicle. 

    • Do your homework. Check out the dealership. Talk with friends and go to the Better Business Bureau website. Learn the actual market price of any vehicles you are interested in. It’s easy. Just go to Edmunds.com, Kelly Blue Book  or TrueCar. 
    • Never shop alone. You should always have someone there to watch your back. Remember, dealership salespeople do this every day for a living. No matter what they say, their job is to get the most money possible on every transaction. 
    • Don’t let anyone pressure you into signing the sales contract. Once you sign it, the vehicle is yours and you are legally required to make the payments. There is no three-day “cooling-off period” for car sales. 
    • Never buy a used car until you have it inspected by a qualified independent mechanic. They can spot damage from a previous wreck or potential mechanical problems. The small price you pay for this inspection (normally $100 to $150) could save you literally thousands of dollars down the road.

    More detailed advice for U.S. service members is available at “Boot Camp for Military Car Buyers.” 

    You can also read my car-buying tips at ConsumerMan.com.

     

    275 comments

    My grandfather got out of the USN after WW1 in 1918. My father got out of the USN after WWII in 1945 or 6. I got out of the USN the end of 1972. I am somewhat not surprised that used car dealers that focus on the Military personnel have not changed their stripes one bit.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: autos, military, featured, consumer-news, consumerman
  • 26
    Mar
    2012
    7:30am, EDT

    Younger veterans want to work, but face roadblocks

    Rachel Mummey / for msnbc.com

    Tyson Akers was turned down for a security job with the Iowa National Guard in the midst of a 13-month job search. The veteran juggles going to school full time at Iowa State University while raising two young sons with his wife, Amanda.

    By Allison Linn, NBC News

    Tyson Akers joined the Marines straight out of high school and spent more than eight years in the infantry, including four tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    When he left the military in February 2011 because he wanted more time at home with his young children, he knew any civilian job would be different than what he’d done in the Marines.

    “Your job was to go out and be on the front line and pray to God nothing happened to you,” he said. “It’s hard to translate that over to the civilian world.”

    But Akers, 29, didn’t count on a job search that has lasted more than a year, leaving him demoralized and even questioning his decision to leave the Marines.

    “You start thinking to yourself if it’s even possible to get a job once you’re out,” he said.

    While older veterans generally have a relatively low jobless rate, the unemployment rate for veterans who have served in the post-9/11 era averaged more than 12 percent last year, compared with under 9 percent for the general population, according to government data out last week. 

    The problem of veteran unemployment is widely recognized. President Barack Obama has referred to it frequently and just last month pledged to get more veterans back to work.

    Send idea Send me your story ideas

    Facebook Follow us on Facebook

    Twitter Follow me on Twitter

    "They've already risked their lives defending America,” he said. “They should have the opportunity to rebuild America."

    With the U.S. making plans to withdraw from Afghanistan and possibly shrink the military, thousands more young veterans like Akers are likely to be looking for work in the coming months and years.

    Yet there are plenty of roadblocks preventing veterans from getting civilian jobs, including a lack of job-seeking skills and a mismatch between military experience and civilian requirements.

    ‘Hard to translate’
    Younger veterans especially may lack the experience crafting a resume or handling a job interview. And after emerging from years in the jargon-filled military culture, they may have a hard time explaining how their military experience would benefit a civilian employer.

    “They have a difficult time translating their military cultural language into civilian cultural language,” said Randy Plunkett, director of community and government outreach for military.com, a website aimed at the military community. “They undersell themselves. They don’t see and have a good handle on how to self-promote (and) how to articulate the skills they bring to the table.”

    Akers, who lives in State Center, Iowa, thought that it wouldn’t be too hard to get a job as a security guard while he attended Iowa State University full time with support from the GI Bill.

    Instead, over the past 13 months he’s endured rejection after rejection as employers told him that they had more qualified candidates. His wife, Amanda, said one prospective employer even told him his deployments didn’t count as security experience.

    Recently, he got a break: A job interview with another former Marine at a security company run by other veterans.

    He found out this week that he had gotten a security position, starting at 20 hours a week and paying $9.50 an hour. Although he had hoped to secure a supervisor position, at least it's a start.

    Even companies that actively seek out veterans say it can be tough to get them hired.

    Jim Barr, vice president of government relations with Ryder, said the trucking company has made a point of trying to hire veterans who drove or worked on trucks in the military. But to drive for Ryder, veterans need a civilian commercial driving license, and requirements vary by state.

    Some require hundreds of hours of training, and military experience may not count. In other cases, Barr said, the veterans may be able to waive the training but have trouble getting a truck for the test.

    “They sound like kind of minor barriers, but if you don’t have the truck to take the test with, you can’t take the test,” Barr said.

    States including Washington, Utah, Colorado and Texas have been working to remove some of the licensing barriers.

    Eddie Crosby, 36, served in the military from 1996 to 2000 and then re-enlisted from 2004 until 2010. He worked as a military truck mechanic and driver and trained for dealing with chemical spills. He has been surprised he has been unable to translate his experience into a civilian job.

    He used the GI Bill to go to civilian truck driving school. But even after he got his commercial license, he said many companies were looking for someone with more experience on the road.

    To save money, he moved to Hermiston, Ore., where he’s living with his fiancé in a 26-foot camp trailer on his family’s property. He is about to start a part-time, minimum-wage job at a potato chip factory.

    “I loved my military service, I really did,” Crosby said.

    But it’s hard to find himself, at age 36, scrounging for entry-level jobs.

    “Everybody that I graduated high school with, they’re 10 years on a job, and here I am struggling to pump gas, you know?” he said.

    Slipping through the cracks
    Experts are seeing some of the biggest disconnects for veterans with medical experience and training.

    One issue is that a military medic may end up doing advanced work that may not translate directly to a credential in civilian life, said Steve Gonzalez, assistant director of the American Legion Economic Division. It can then be tough to figure out how to apply that experience toward a civilian medical license or credential.

    There also are legitimate differences between medical work you do in the military and in civilian life, said veteran Ben Chlapek, deputy chief at the Central Jackson County Fire Protection District in Missouri. A medic who served in combat may not have experience with common civilian issues such as drug abuse, domestic abuse and pediatric patients.

    Follow the story of Staff Sgt. Charles Weaver over the past ten years, from 2002 when he had been a soldier of Operation Iraqi Freedom to today - having returned back home to the United States, but now fighting to be a productive and employed individual.  NBC News' Tom Brokaw reports 'Hiring our Heroes' on Sunday, March 25th, at 7pm/6c. 

    “Soldiers rarely deliver babies,” Chlapek said.

    He said some potentially good candidates slip through the cracks when they realize they can’t get a job right away, or one that pays as well as their military job did.

    “A lot of times they’ll call us or come in, and then they’ll disappear,” he said.

    Even when the skills transfer directly, it can be tough to juggle military and civilian careers.

    Todd Fredricks, 46, of Athens, Ohio, always dreamed of having his own rural medical practice, but he also wanted to serve in the military. As an Army flight surgeon in the reserves, he deployed to the Balkans once and to Iraq three times, most recently in 2011.

    The transitions made it impossible to keep up a medical practice, and he now works full-time in a hospital in West Virginia.

    “I practice the medicine that I do now because it’s the easiest way I can enter and leave service,” he said.

    Peter Leon, an administrative nursing supervisor with Panorama City Medical Center in California, also considers himself lucky: As an RN, he was able to easily transition back and forth between his job stateside and his military deployments as a reservist.

    Leon, 44, last deployed to Iraq in 2008, and now that he has a young daughter he no longer volunteers to go overseas. But he misses his military duty.

    “I wish I could go back and deploy again,” he said. “I feel more useful out there than I do here.”

    There are other success stories. J.P. Morgan, 36, served in the military as an aircraft electrician from 1994 to 1998.

    In 2004, he rejoined the military as a reservist, partly because he would get additional training he could never afford as a civilian. That has allowed him to get the certification he needed to become an aircraft maintenance technician for Southwest Airlines.

    Morgan, who lives in Dallas, left the reserves in 2010.

    “The military – it was wonderful to me in that respect,” he said.

    (This story has been updated from an earlier version to reflect new information that Tyson Akers has landed a job.)

    What do you think is keeping recent veterans from finding jobs? Discuss it on our Facebook page.

    For more on Hiring our Heroes, an initiative from NBC News and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce that aims to get veterans back into the workforce, click here. Learn more about job fairs for veterans here. 

    Show more
    Explore related topics: military, employment, featured, hiringourheroes
  • 20
    Mar
    2012
    11:17am, EDT

    Many recent vets face another battle: Finding a job

    Ralph Orlowski / Getty Images

    The unemployment rate for 18- to 24-year-old veterans who have served since Sept. 11 was 30.2 percent in 2011.

    By Allison Linn, NBC News

    The job market in this country has been gradually improving, except for some veterans: A new report finds that the situation has actually gotten a little worse for recent veterans who are trying to find work.

    The unemployment rate for veterans who have served since Sept. 11 was 12.1 percent on average in 2011, according to a government report released Tuesday. That’s slightly higher than in 2010, when the average unemployment rate for the year was 11.5 percent.

    That’s the opposite of how it is for nonveterans. The unemployment rate for nonveterans averaged 8.7 percent in 2011, down from 9.4 percent in 2010.

    The situation is especially dismal for young vets. The unemployment rate for 18- to 24-year-old veterans who have served since Sept. 11 was 30.2 percent in 2011, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports. For 25- to 34-year-old veterans from that era it was 13 percent.

    Unemployment is a particular problem for those veterans who have served since Sept. 11. The unemployment rate for all veterans, including those who served in previous conflicts, averaged 8.3 percent in 2011, down just slightly from 8.7 percent a year earlier.

    Send idea Send me your story ideas

    Facebook Follow us on Facebook

    Twitter Follow me on Twitter

    Experts say young veterans are at a disadvantage in part because they have been serving in the military while other young people were going to college or a trade school and making connections in their field of choice.

    These more recent vets also may be finding that the skills they learned in the military don’t translate directly into a new job because they lack the certification or training that they need to do the same job in civilian life.

    In general, the unemployment rate for younger workers also has been higher than for older workers over the past few years.

    Private groups, government agencies and some elected officials have been working to smooth the path for young veteran jobseekers. It’s a problem that’s expected to get worse as more troops withdraw from the Gulf and the military grapples with budget cutbacks.

    “Our veterans have made sacrifices on behalf of the nation, and I ask all employers to renew their commitment to veterans, because the best way to honor our veterans is to employ them. No veteran should have to fight for a job at home after fighting to protect our nation,” Labor Secretary Hilda Solis said in statement Tuesday.

    Related:

    TODAY sponsors job fair for veterans

    Defense cutbacks worry some military families

    We are the median: Living on $50,000, military-style 

     

    98 comments

    I think a big part of the problem is the way that hiring is done these days. There was once a time when companies were willing to train someone if they knew they were getting a smart, hard working person. Those days seem to be gone. Now they are looking for VERY specific kinds of experience. If you  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: military, veterans, employment, featured, hiringourheroes
  • 30
    May
    2011
    11:52am, EDT

    Post-9/11 veterans hit hard by recession

    By Patrick Rizzo

    The Great Recession has sometimes been called the “Mancession” for the huge numbers of men who lost their jobs during the economic downturn. That goes double for veterans, especially male veterans, who left the military since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, a new report from the U.S. Congress Joint Economic Committee shows.

    The report, released on Memorial Day, says the unemployment rate among veterans who served on active duty since that fateful day almost 10 years ago averaged 11.5 percent in 2010, versus a jobless rate of 8.7 percent for all veterans and a 9.4 percent rate for non-vets. Bureau of Labor Statistics data for April 2011 put the unemployment rate for post-9/11 veterans at 10.9 percent, compared with the 7.7 percent rate for all veterans and 8.5 percent for non-veterans.

    The congressional report also states that the current unemployment rate for post-9/11 male veterans between 25-54 years old is 9.9 percent. It’s even starker for younger male veterans between 18 to 24 years old: 26.9 percent. Four-fifths, or 81 percent, of recent veterans are male and most leave active duty during their prime working years of 25 to 54.

    Why have male veterans been hit so hard by joblessness? Aside from the numbers, the report says the skills these veterans received in the military translate into experience for industries that were hit particularly hard by the Great Recession: mining, construction, manufacturing, transportation, utilities, information and professional and business services. They were less likely to be employed in sectors that added jobs during the recession such as education and health services.

    In addition, many went on to work in the public sector because of programs that placed an emphasis on hiring veterans. The report says that 30 percent of recent veterans work in the public sector, versus 14.8 percent for non-veterans. “Although Post‐9/11 veterans are only slightly more likely than nonveterans to work in state or local government, ongoing budget shortfalls and a

    slowdown in hiring by state and local governments could adversely affect veterans’ employment in the future,” the report says.

    Tip of the hat to the New York Times “At War” blog for highlighting the report.

    Comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: military, unemployment, veterans

Browse

  • featured,
  • economy,
  • employment,
  • personal-finance,
  • careers,
  • retail,
  • business,
  • buzz,
  • taxes,
  • cheapism,
  • workplace,
  • consumerman,
  • deals,
  • consumer-news,
  • good-graph-friday,
  • jobs,
  • unemployment,
  • retirement,
  • live-chat,
  • money,
  • career,
  • education,
  • food,
  • real-estate,
  • recession,
  • autos,
  • holiday-retail,
  • women,
  • college,
  • shopping,
  • money-911,
  • facebook,
  • housing,
  • wealth,
  • irs,
  • gas-prices,
  • work,
  • commentid-featured,
  • savings
Also

Top More on TODAY.com headlines

3155,10
Advertise | AdChoices

Eve Tahmincioglu

Eve Tahmincioglu writes the popular "Your Career" column for MSNBC.com and her blog www.careerdiva.net, covers a broad range of career and labor issues. Her blog was named one of the top ten career blogs by Forbes, US News & World Report and CareerBuilder. Last year, she was named one of the top online business columnist in the country by the Society of American Business Editors and Writers. She's al …

Let's Connect
Follow me on Twitter at Twitter.com/Careerdiva.

Allison Linn, NBC News

Allison Linn is the lead writer for TODAY Money's Life Inc. She also writes about the economy, consumer issues, personal finance, employment and workplace issues for NBCNews.com. Linn joined NBCNews.com from The Associated Press, where she mainly covered Microsoft. Previously, she worked at newspapers in Colorado, Washington and Oregon. She also spent nearly two years as a reporter in Germany.

Allison Linn, NBC News Blogroll

  • Career Diva
  • Consumer Reports Money
  • Floyd Norris
  • The Big Picture
  • The Consumerist
  • The Juggle
  • Suddenly Frugal
  • Consumer Reports Baby & Kids
  • The Economist Free Exchange
  • Bucks
  • Brazen Careerist
  • On the Job
Let's socialize!
Want more Life Inc.? Follow me on Twitter, check us out on Facebook or send me your news tips or story ideas.

Patrick Rizzo

Archives

  • 2013
    • May (42)
    • April (66)
    • March (75)
    • February (72)
    • January (74)
  • 2012
    • December (57)
    • November (94)
    • October (75)
    • September (69)
    • August (51)
    • July (58)
    • June (76)
    • May (63)
    • April (62)
    • March (77)
    • February (69)
    • January (48)
  • 2011
    • December (62)
    • November (69)
    • October (63)
    • September (62)
    • August (58)
    • July (54)
    • June (42)
    • May (48)
    • April (43)
    • March (47)
    • February (36)
    • January (43)
  • 2010
    • December (65)
    • November (64)
    • October (51)
    • September (43)
    • August (16)

Most Commented

  • Here's how much Americans think families need to get by (239)
  • Storm after the storm: Consumers warned about fake Oklahoma charities (20)
  • Big gas savings! Kmart goes for giggles again (19)
  • How to tie the knot on a shoestring (17)
  • Buzz: Snooping bosses don't surprise many (6)

Other blogs

  • Hip2Save

More on TODAY.com

3155,8
© 2013 NBCNews.com
  • Today.com Money
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Help
  • Site map
  • Careers
  • Closed captioning
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Advertise