ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY, Va. (Dec. 3, 2014) -- Through Joining
Forces, an initiative offering employment, educational and wellness
resources to military families, Pentagon officials today inducted 38
organizations into the Military Spouse Employment Partnership.
The ceremony, at the Women in Military Service for America Memorial
here, recognized corporate partners who have made substantial efforts to
reduce the high unemployment rate and close the wage gap that military
spouses face as a result of frequent relocations.
Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Military and Community Family
Policy Rosemary Freitas Williams and Principal Deputy Secretary of
Defense for Personnel and Readiness Dr. Laura Junor said their goal is
to keep military families healthy, strong, and cohabitating whenever
possible.
"We do that by working together to provide the comprehensive support and
assistance our Service members, spouses and families need to be
successful through their mobile military life," Williams said.
LINKING RESOURCES
Williams also noted the need for public-private partnerships which link
the right mix of resources and recognize that military spouses have the
education, diversity and skills to enhance workforce productivity and
produce national and international business success.
The new inductees, Williams said, join 266 enduring partners
representing all business types, from small businesses with regional
footprints to international corporations that provide products and
services for a global market.
"Our research clearly shows that when our military spouses are able to
meet their own career objectives, our military members are more likely
to remain on active duty," Williams said. "We need to retain that top
talent for national security purposes."
When military spouses are able to maintain meaningful employment despite
frequent relocations, especially following the return to civilian life
as their Service member's military career ends, Williams said they are
able to provide family financial stability which is critical to their
short- and long-term health and well-being.
"We used to think that that was a good idea; we now know it's science -- it is absolutely evidence based," Williams said.
And participating employers, she added, do more than provide mere jobs to spouses.
"You'll be providing our spouses and military families with work-life
satisfaction, strong family financial stability and ultimately, the
military personnel readiness that we need for a sustainable military
force and a strong national defense," Williams said.
MILITARY SPOUSE WORKFORCE
According to Junor, more than half of the DOD's 2,000,000-plus Service
members are married. Those spouses, many of whom are well-educated, face
perennial challenges -- including a 25-percent unemployment rate, while
another 25 percent are underemployed.
"[The spouses] are not looking for a favor; they are looking for the
opportunity to be the valuable employee that they know they are," Junor
said.
PERSONAL EXPERIENCE
Junor described her personal experience in 1992, as both a new wife and
the pursuits of Ph.D uprooted her from Washington, D.C., to Naval
Station Mobile, Alabama, with her husband, who was then a Navy
lieutenant junior grade. She recounted scouring organizations and
educational institutions for work, finally even seeking an internship,
which like previous job prospects, fizzled because employers were
reticent to hire someone who would eventually leave once their Service
member changed duty station.
Junor explained that she later accepted an offer as a visiting assistant
professor of economics at Tulane University -- two states away in
Louisiana.
"As newlyweds, my husband and I did not live in the same state," she
said, adding that experience sparked the next three to five years of
separate residences, so she could develop her career.
Junor said she and her husband decided that he'd depart the Navy in the interest of family togetherness.
"Military life is difficult for a two-career household, but the second
career for those that are looking for it, matters," Junor said. "Having
that second career is a very valuable safety net when the inevitable
transition time comes."
HIGH-QUALITY WORKFORCE
Junor emphasized the quality of today's military spouse workforce.
"You're not going to find a more resilient, motivated and adaptable
group out there," she said. "If you're willing to give them a shot, you
will get more than that in return."
http://www.army.mil/article/139333/Military_Spouse_Employment_Program_expands_partnership/
By Amaani Lyle, DOD News
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