By Lisa Daniel
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON – Soldiers, sailors, airmen
and Marines considering separating from the active-duty military this year may
seek employment options in the railways industry, which today became the latest
to pledge jobs to veterans.
Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood
announced the 5,000-job pledge in a conference call with reporters, making rail
the latest industry to offer jobs as part of the Joining Forces campaign. He
was joined by Ed Hamberger, president and CEO of the Association of American
Railroads, and Navy Capt. Brad Cooper, director of Joining Forces, which First
Lady Michelle Obama and Dr. Jill Biden, wife of Vice President Joe Biden,
created to help service members, veterans and their families.
Obama and Biden announced the hiring
campaign last summer, with a goal of hiring 100,000 veterans or military
spouses by 2013. Today, Cooper said, 1,600 companies have signed on to the
Joining Forces challenge, hiring 90,000 veterans and spouses with pledges to
hire 170,000 more in the coming years.
What is unique about today’s
announcement, Cooper said, is that the 5,000 rail jobs are open now or in the
very near future. They are listed on the association’s website, http://www.aar.org.
The jobs, offered by about 500
companies, range from operating locomotives to working in signaling and
telecommunications. “It’s the whole spectrum of work,” Cooper said. Most of the
jobs are in freight rail, but also with Amtrak, commuter rails and rail supply
companies, he said.
The industry is hiring because it’s
growing, Hamberger said, with some $23 billion in investments at the same time
that nearly a quarter of the freight rail workforce will be eligible to retire
by 2015.
“We want to reach out and let veterans
know that we’re hiring,” he said.
The industry has actively recruited
veterans since it sought out military academy graduates to build the first
railroad system more than 200 years ago, Hamberger said.
“We’ve learned that the skills service
members learn in the armed forces translate very well to our industry,” he
said. “We, first and foremost, are focused on safety. You learn in the armed
services that if you don’t follow the rules, bad things happen.
“We need teamwork, dependability, and
high tech,” he added, noting that military experience builds those skills.
The rail industry made more than 20,000
new hires last year –which was more than 5,000 than it expected – and one in
four are veterans, Hamberger said.
Improving the nation’s railways and
hiring veterans are two of President Barack Obama’s priorities, LaHood said.
“Today’s generation of heroes has made the United States safer and more
respected around the world,” he said. “The president has asked that we serve
them as they have served us.”
About 15,000 veterans work for the
Transportation Department, LaHood said, and 3,000 of those have disabilities,
many from their military service. The department recently created a Web portal
– http://www.dot.gov/veteranstransportationcareers – “that tells our returning
warriors what jobs are available and how they can become certified,” he said.
“Helping our veterans find work and
fulfilling our transportation needs is a win-win,” he said.
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