National Guard Hiring 1,400 Recruiters
Sunday, December 5, 2004 at 03:15AM
TheSpook
Increasing numbers of soldiers are deciding not
to join the Army National Guard after they leave active duty, a trend
so troubling that the Guard is hiring 1,400 more recruiters to reverse
it. The Guard's new recruiters plus its 2,700 already on the job will
be aiming to get high schoolers and 20-somethings to sign up like they
never have before. In fiscal 2004, the Guard had expected 7,100
soldiers to sign up after active duty tours. Instead, only 2,900 did
not even half. As a result, what's supposed to be a 350,000-member
organization had just 342,918 soldiers when the year closed out on
Sept. 30. "If a soldier is near the end of their term of service and
looking to stabilize their life, they know the likelihood is they're
going to be deployed if they join the Guard," said Lt. Col. Mike
Milord, spokesman for the Guard's headquarters in Arlington, Va. The
National Guard is similar to the Reserves in that soldiers sign up for
part-time duty. Pennsylvania enlistees can join for three years, but
most join for six because they get up to $70,000 in pay, bonuses and
college tuition, including full-tuition at any of 14 state-owned
universities. While reserve troops are always under the President's
command, each state's Guard troops answer to the governor unless they
are called to active duty. [more]
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