UA’s Veterans In Piping Program
April 15, 2009
Helping returning vets readjust to life
outside the military, including training them for a new career.
To train one soldier from the recruiting station to the first unit
station can cost an average of $50,000 to $64,000, according to the Army Public
Affairs office. But that intense training can work against soldiers when their
military duties are over. “When the time comes for military veterans to return
home, they do not receive training to readjust to life outside the military,”
explains Judae Bost’n, Ed.D., a
trainer/counselor at Bates College, Tacoma, Wash.
To help veterans coming home
from the Middle East, Bost’n works with the United Association to offer career
and lifestyle transitioning as part of the UA Veterans in Piping (VIP) Program.
This national program ( www.uavip.org) trains returning veterans for new careers in the construction industry. “Career and lifestyle transitioning
are a key part of the training that the United Association is providing for
veterans,” says Mike Arndt, director of
training for the United Association. “Returning veterans need to rebuild
their civilian lives. We hope that our program will break new ground in
helping our returning heroes.”
“When a soldier returns to the states,
any readjustment problems they may experience must be resolved before they get
worse,” states Anne St. Eloi, M.Ed., the
UA special representative who developed the VIP Program at the request
of UA General President William P. Hite.
“That is why the program starts with two weeks of career and lifestyle
transitioning.”
Intensive Training
Career and lifestyle transitioning are not happening for all
returning veterans and that’s a shame, Bost’n said. “If a soldier has been
deployed, he or she really needs to have the chance to re-assess and reflect on
their life experiences. During World War II, soldiers had to take a long boat
ride home, and that gave them lots of time to reflect on what had happened to
them. Today, they may be in combat one day and then, 24 hours later, they’re in
their local airport.”
She stresses that military training
shapes every aspect of soldiers’ lives. “They need that kind of intensive
training to stay alive on the battlefield,” she says. “They also need to know
they are working in unison with the soldiers around them. When they return to
civilian life, they need to adjust to the fact that people usually don’t work
together with that kind of precision. This can be extremely disorienting for
them.”
This is especially true for soldiers
who entered the military right after high school, as well as soldiers who grew
up in military households, Bost’n adds. Basically, most of their adult-life
mental processes have been military, and to suddenly leave that can place them
in a fish-out-of-water situation.
Plus, military personnel
soon find that people in the civilian world communicate in a different manner,
Bost’n said. “It’s like people in the civilian world are speaking the same
language, but a different dialect,” she notes. “Plus, military personnel may be
unaccustomed to things not happening when they request them.”
Bringing Together The Pieces
Bost’n considers herself a puzzle-master and helping veterans to
bring together the pieces of their new identity as a civilian is very much a
matter of puzzle-solving.
“I have to take them back to who they
were before they received their military training,” Bost’n explains. “A word
they lost track of in the military is ‘I.’ In the military, ‘I’ is not how
things get done. ‘We’ is how things get done. They have to determine who their
‘I’ is in civilian life.”
The UA VIP Program’s career and
lifestyle transitioning is held eight hours a day, five days a week for two
weeks. It is very intensive, with strong follow-up.
Following the career and lifestyle transitioning,
the VIP Program enters a 16-week period of hands-on welding training. Skilled
welders are in short supply, St. Eloi notes, and the welding training element
helps to assure that participating veterans will be able to find work
nationwide. “From that point on,” she says, “the participants are able to
apprentice with the UA, so they can enjoy life-long careers as journeymen in
the construction industry.”
Bost’n notes that the veterans are
really enjoying their work with the unions. “Union life is a culture that is
both agreeable and understandable to them,” she said. “Union members, like
members of the military forces, receive a lot of training and have clear-cut
roles among their personnel. Union members call each other their brothers and
sisters, and that kind of unity appeals to veterans. We all want to belong, and
the veterans are receiving that sense of belonging in their new roles in the
construction industry.”
Camp Pendleton
The UA VIP Program is currently underway at Camp
Pendleton, Calif., training active duty veterans.
The Marines have allotted
space for two state-of-the-art welding trailers, outfitted to cover every
aspect of the accelerated welding training that is part of the program. Working
with District Council 16, which encompasses 13 local unions in Southern
California, this training will be completed at the San Diego UA training
facility.
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