The American Legion is concerned that provisions in a proposed federal act
could harm the delivery of services to U.S. military veterans.
The Supporting Knowledge and Investing
in Lifelong Skills ("SKILLS") Act now being considered by the U.S.
House of Representatives was introduced by Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C. The
measure is designed to reform the nation’s workforce-development system by,
among other things, streamlining what the sponsors consider duplicative and
ineffective job-training programs.
At stake are the fates of the
Legion-supported Disabled Veterans’ Outreach Program (DVOP) and Local Veterans’
Employment Representatives program (LVERs) as administered by the Department of
Labor’s Veterans Education and Training Service (VETS). Under the proposed
SKILLS Act, these programs would be replaced by Veterans Employment Specialists
provided at the local level from a general allocation fund. This would
eliminate VETS oversight of these outreach and employment assistance activities.
The Legion has long supported Labor’s VETS program. For
instance, at its last national convention, Legion leadership adopted a
objecting
to a then-active proposal to transfer VETS from the Department of Labor to the
Department of Veterans Affairs. The resolution stated, in part, "DoL has
expertise in job placement, job development, vocational counseling, vocational
testing, job-search training, and any other area of employment services…"
"These same attributes apply to
this situation as well," said Joe Sharpe, director of the Legion’s
Economic Division. "We believe strongly in the Department of Labor’s
expertise and experience and think that any move to compromise VETS’ oversight
of these vital veterans’ programs by eliminating the current DVOP and LVERs –
would be a huge and ultimately costly mistake."
VETS itself recently issued a detailed
point paper concluding, "We believe the approach taken under the SKILLS
Act would reduce the level and quality of services currently provided to
veterans."
In one of his first speaking engagements, Assistant
Secretary of Labor Keith Kelly, who leads the VETS program,
his
office’s unwavering support of job-seeking veterans. He spoke to attendees of
the Legion’s Washington Conference on Feb. 26 – barely a month after he took
the job.
JT
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