LISTEN: Gov.
Huntsman |
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| Educational Benefits |
Paying For College
Short on Funds?
Don't let that shortchange your higher
education.
Think you might want an associate, bachelor's or
master’s degree? Let the National Guard pay for
it.
We take college seriously, so we offer programs
that cover everything from tuition to expenses.
All that, and your steady Guard paycheck too.
If you’re a high school grad or a graduating
senior, you can get started now. If you need
your GED, you can get that through us too, and
prepare for college—with our help—at the same
time.
Don’t wait! The sooner you leap, the faster life
gets great.
Full-time school. Part-time Guard. It's a
no-brainer.
Standard Programs:
100% Tuition Assistance – Pays up to 100 percent
of college tuition—nearly $20,000 over four
years
Montgomery G.I. Bill – Monthly stipend of up to
$333 for college expenses—about $11,000 over a
three-year period
The Army National Guard Kicker – Supplement to
the Montgomery G.I. Bill, pays additional $350
per month in living expenses—up to $12,600 over
36 months
Student Loan Repayment Program (SLRP) – Pays off
existing student loans up to $50,000, as well as
student loans acquired after enlisting
Higher Education
is within your reach.
The cost of
higher education should not stop you from
reaching your goals in life. In the Army
National Guard, you can receive 100% Tuition
Assistance to help pay for college or a
vocational training program.
Together
with your monthly drill pay and allowances, the
Guard offers a generous list of education
benefits that will help in paying for college.
The Montgomery G.I. Bill and Army National Guard
G.I.Bill Kicker provide monthly stipends of over
$625 a month for a 36-month period. Many states
offer additional tuition
assistance.
Education Support
Center.
The Army National Guard
Education Support Center helps Soldiers achieve
personal academic goals. Whether your goals
included vocational training and/or
certification, an Associate's or Bachelor's
Degree, the Education Support Center is a
valuable tool for all Guard Soldiers.
The
center provides degree planning, military credit
evaluations, and college credit assessments. It
also serves as a virtual counseling and
information center for Guard Soldiers and their
spouses. Guard members can take advantage of
every opportunity to complete their degree by
maximizing non-traditional classes or
courses.
Did you know that college credit
may be granted for military courses and
training? The Education Support Center knows
which colleges recognize the top-notch training
Guard Soldiers receive and reward those Soldiers
with well deserved academic credit. Counselors
can provide Soldiers with a degree-completion
roadmap that applies personal and professional
experience towards college-level credit.
Additionally, they can recommend distance
education alternatives to classrooms to assist
Soldiers with busy lifestyles.
Start
Benefiting Right Away.
A number of
educational benefits begin as soon as you enlist
in the Army National Guard. These include free
academic testing (such as SAT, CLEPT and more)
and 100% Tuition Assistance. When you complete
Basic and Advanced Individual Training, you will
be eligible to begin taking advantage of the
Montgomery G I Bill and the Army National Guard
G I Bill Kicker Benefits.
There are
60,000 Reasons to Get a Higher
Education
There are many great
reasons to join the Utah Army National Guard.
One of them is that you can earn over $60,000
towards a college education. With more than
3,200 armories across the nation, chances are
good that you'll be able to serve in or near
your hometown or wherever you go to school.
There's a college degree waiting for you.
Join the team that will help you get
it.
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Space A Travel
Space
Available Travel allows you to fly free on a
military plane anywhere in the U.S., Guam, the
Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico, when space is
available. |
Members of the Army National Guard
are entitled to travel, at no charge and on a
space-available basis, on military aircraft
within and between the Continental United
States, Alaska, Hawaii, Guam, U.S. Virgin
Islands, and Puerto Rico. To make use of
space-available transportation, a member of the
Army National Guard must meet the following
conditions:
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He or she must
have a current, valid military ID card.
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He or she must be
in a pay or non pay status, and perform regular
periods of inactive duty training – drill.
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He or she must
have a DD Form 1853. The DD Form 1853 authorizes
him or her to use military space-available
transportation. The unit commander must sign
this form or other duly designated authority.
Members may go
to a Passenger Service Center in the passenger
terminal to register for Space-A flights or may
register by mail, fax, or e-mail.
The
request should provide a statement that required
border clearance documents are current and a
list of up to five country destinations.
Travelers remain on the Space-A register for 60
days after registration, or for the duration of
their travel orders authorization, or until they
are selected for travel, whichever occurs first.
Each terminal maintains a Space-A
register (organized by priority and date and
time of registration for travel) that is updated
daily. The register is located in the terminal
and directly accessible to you. Travelers may
call the terminal directly to find where they
stand on the travel register.
A valid
military ID card is required for all passengers.
Passports, visas, and immunization records are
also required for overseas travel, along with
leave orders or other travel authorizations.
Once registered, the traveler must wait for
notification that his or her travel category and
date/time of sign up has been reached. When
selected for a flight, the traveler must be
ready to proceed. Space-A travelers are not
required to be present for all scheduled
departures.
In addition to their facing
frequent long waiting periods, it should be
noted that the Government is not obligated to
provide return or continuing transportation to
Space-A passengers. Space required passengers or
cargo may require the removal of Space-A
passengers at any point. If removed en route,
you may re-register with your original date and
time of registration. Passenger agents will
assign a new date and time to any country you
change or add on your application.
Space-A passengers should ensure
adequate funds are available to procure
commercial transportation for return flights or
accommodations for lengthy stays while awaiting
Space-A flights. Successful Space-A journeys
require patience and flexibility.
Space-A travel
seats are normally available after all official
duty passengers have been accommodated.
Passengers are permitted to sign up for a
maximum of five destinations, with the last
destination being "all" to qualify for any
opportune travel to a destination not normally
served by the departure terminal.
Space-A passengers are removed from the
Space-A register when they:
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Are selected for
a flight.
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Have not moved by
their leave expiration date.
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Have been on the
Space-A register for 60 days.
Space-A travelers may
re-register after they are removed from the
list; however, they will be given a new
date/time of sign up and drop to the bottom of
the list in their respective category.
The Space-A passenger should be prepared
to spend time awaiting travel, and always be
ready to travel at personal expense. As long as
seats are available on an aircraft, every
attempt will be made to use them for Space-A
passengers.
Passengers will be offered
air transportation on a first-come, first-served
basis, based upon established space-available
categories.
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ESGR-Employment
Rights
The Uniformed Services
Employment and Reemployment Rights Act (USERRA),
enacted October 1994 and significantly updated
October 1996 and 1998, provides protection and
rights of reinstatement to employees who
participate in the Guard and Reserve.
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Important
Note. Through the National Committee for
Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve
(ESGR), the Department of Defense (DoD) works
hard to obtain and sustain employer and
community support for National Guard and Reserve
members who periodically are absent from their
civilian jobs to perform military duty. After
reading the following, if you still have a
question about employment rights, the
experts-DoD, the U.S. Department of Labor
Veterans' Employment and Training Service
(VETS), and ESGR-suggest you start by
contacting ESGR. This is not only your
best option for speedy resolution; it protects
all your levels of appeal if they are needed.
You can
contact ESGR Ombudsmen Services through your
local ESGR Committee or the National
ESGR Headquarters or use our toll-free
number, (800) 336-4590-ask for Ombudsmen
Services.
ESGR Ombudsmen
are qualified to help, sympathetic to the needs
of both the employers and employees, and
committed to remaining impartial in their
counsel. They provide informal mediation
services in conjunction with the Veterans'
Employment and Training Service (VETS), U.S.
Department of Labor. Volunteer members are
trained by ESGR and VETS to provide assistance
to employers and employees in the resolution of
employment conflicts that can result from
military membership, training, or other service
requirements protected under USERRA.
The
information provided below should not be
considered legal authority, but is provided as
general information about the Uniformed Services
Employment and Reemployment Act
(USERRA).
USERRA Facts, Questions
and Answers for Employers
1. Is an employee
protected from unlawful discrimination by an
employer based on military
affiliation?
Yes. USERRA provides
protections for initial hiring and adverse
employment actions by an employer if the action
relates even in part to the employee's military
service. This protection also extends to
potential witnesses of a discriminatory action
on the part of the
employer.
2. Can an employer refuse
to allow an employee to attend scheduled drills
or annual training?
No. Employees must be
excused from work to attend inactive duty
training (drill) or annual training and the
employer must treat the employee as if he or she
has not been absent.
3. Is there a limit to
the amount of military leave an employer must
permit?
Yes. Although there is no
longer any differentiation between voluntary and
involuntary military duty, there is a 5-year
cumulative service limit on the amount of
voluntary military leave an employee can use and
still retain reemployment rights.
4. What is not included
in the 5-year cumulative total?
The 5-year total does not
include: inactive duty training (drills), annual
training, involuntary recall to active duty, or
additional training requirements determined and
certified in writing by the Service Secretary,
and considered to be necessary for professional
development or for completion of skill training
or retraining.
5. Is prior notice to the
employer required for leave of absence for
military duty?
Yes. Unless precluded by
military necessity, advance notice must be
provided either orally or in writing. The
context for what constitutes timeliness of
notification was not spelled out in detail by
Congress under USERRA. However, employees who
participate in the National Guard or Reserve
should provide their employers as much advance
notice as possible. Failure to provide notice
could result in a denial of the protection of
USERRA.
6. What are valid
military orders?
All written or verbal orders
are considered valid when issued by competent
military authority. A military member in receipt
of official orders is obligated by federal
statute to execute them. The recurring
requirement to perform inactive duty training
(drill) is an example of when written orders may
not be formally issued.
7. When may an employer
require an employee to provide official, written
military orders?
After periods of military
leave of absence for more than 30 days, the
employer has the right to request such
documentation, which can be used to establish
the employee's basic eligibility for protection
under USERRA. All National Guard and Reserve
members are encouraged to provide a copy of
orders, the annual drill schedule, or other type
of documentation to employers as soon as
available and, if possible, before the
commencement of military
duty.
8. What if the employee
cannot provide satisfactory documentation for
military service in excess of 30
days?
The employer must promptly
reinstate the employee pending its availability.
The employer may contact the military unit if
necessary.
9. Can an employer
require an employee to apply for military leave
of absence or otherwise submit official
documentation for approval of military leave of
absence?
No. As stated earlier, an
employer may not require documentation for
notification prior to military duty. Further, an
employer does not have a "right of refusal" for
military leave of absence, so long as the
employee has not exceeded the 5 years of
cumulative service provided under
USERRA.
10. Can an employee be
required to find someone to cover his or her
work period when military duty interrupts the
work schedule?
No, an employee is
responsible for notification but not for
altering the work schedule or finding a
replacement.
11. Can an employer
require an employee to reschedule drills, annual
training, or any other military duty
obligation?
No. When military duties
would require an employee to be absent from work
for an extended period, during times of acute
need, or when (in light of previous leaves) the
requested military leave is cumulatively
burdensome, the employer may contact the
military commander of the employee's military
unit to determine if the duty could be
rescheduled or performed by another member. If
the military commander determines that the
military duty cannot be rescheduled or canceled,
the employer is required to permit the employee
to perform his or her military
duty.
12. Is an employer
required to pay an employee who is on military
leave of absence?
No. While many employers
offer differential pay or a specific number of
paid military leave days, an employer is not
required to pay an employee on military leave of
absence.
13. Are there time limits
for an employee to return to work after
completion of military duty?
Yes. There are three formats
for reinstatement (application for
reemployment), dependent on the duration of
military service. Please refer to question 15
for a detailed breakdown of these formats. An
employer should reinstate an employee within a
matter of days of application, if not on the
same day as the application is
made.
14. After completion of
weekend drill, what is the time limit for an
employee to return to work?
Either the beginning of the
next regularly scheduled work day or during that
portion of the next regularly scheduled shift
that would fall eight hours after the end of
drill and a reasonable amount of time to commute
home. For example, an employer cannot require a
service member who returns home at 10 p.m. to
report to work 2.5 hours later at 12:30 a.m.
However, the employer can require the employee
to report for the 6 a.m. shift, or scheduled
work period, the next morning (after reasonable
commute from military duty to home followed by
8-hours). Included in the 8 hour period is time
for rest and the commute to
work.
15. What is the time
limit for an employee to return to work after
Annual Training or other types of extended
military leave of absence?
Time limits for returning to
work depend on the duration of the orders. The
rules are: Service of 1 to 30 days: the
beginning of the first regularly scheduled work
day or 8 hours after the end of the military
duty, plus reasonable commuting time from the
military duty station to home. Service of 31 to
180 days: application for reinstatement must be
submitted not later than 14 days after
completion of military duty. Service of 181 or
more days: application for reinstatement must be
submitted not later than 90 days after
completion of military
duty.
16. What if the employee
has an accident, is delayed by lack of military
transportation, or is otherwise unable to
report back in a timely manner?
The employee must report
back to work as soon as possible. If the reason
for the employee's delay is not related to
military duties, the employee is subject to the
personnel policies and practices the employer
would normally apply to employees with unexcused
absences.
17. What if an employee
is injured or incurs a disability during
military duty?
The deadline for
reinstatement may be extended for up to 2 years
for persons who are convalescing due to a
disability incurred or aggravated during
military service, and employers must make
reasonable accommodations for the impairment.
18. What job position is
an employee returned to after military leave of
absence?
Except with respect to
persons whose disability occurred in or was
aggravated by military service, the position
into which an employee is reinstated is
determined by priority, based on the length of
military service. The rules are: Service of 1 to
90 days: (a) in the job the person would have
held had he or she remained continuously
employed (possibly a promoted position), so long
as the person is qualified for the job or can
become qualified after reasonable efforts by the
employer, or (b), if the person cannot become
qualified, in the position the person was
employed on the date of the commencement of the
military service. Service of 91 or more days:
(a) same as for service of 1 to 90 days, or a
position of like seniority, status and pay, so
long as he or she is qualified, or (b) if the
person cannot become qualified, in the position
the person was employed on the date of the
commencement of the military service or which
nearly approximates that
position.
Note: The
reemployment position with the highest priority
reflects the "escalator" principle, which
requires that a returning service member steps
back onto the seniority escalator at the point
the person would have occupied if the person had
remained continuously employed.
USERRA specifies that
returning employees must be "promptly
reemployed." What is prompt will depend on
individual circumstances. Reinstatement after 3
years on active duty might require two weeks to
allow giving notice to an incumbent employee who
might have to vacate the position.
Important Note.
Through the National Committee for Employer
Support of the Guard and Reserve (ESGR), the
Department of Defense (DoD) works hard to obtain
and sustain employer and community support for
National Guard and Reserve members who
periodically are absent from their civilian jobs
to perform military duty. If you have a
question about employment rights, the
experts- DoD, the U.S. Department of Labor
Veterans' Employment and Training Service
(VETS), and ESGR-suggest you start by
contacting ESGR. This is not only your
best option for speedy resolution; it protects
all your levels of appeal if they are
needed |
MEDICAL-TRICARE
MEDICAL
TRICARE Offers Benefits to
Activated Reservists and National Guard Members.
Family members of Reserve component members
(National Guard and Reserve) ordered to active
duty for more than 30 days under 10 U.S.C. or 32
U.S.C. are eligible for TRICARE
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Members of the reserves and
National Guard who are called to active duty
will be eligible for health care benefits under
TRICARE, just as other active-duty service
members are. Their families will also become
eligible for TRICARE benefits, if the military
sponsor's active-duty orders are for a
long-enough period of time.
Families of members
called to active duty in response to the Sep 11,
2001 terrorist attacks are eligible for enhanced
benefits under the TRICARE
Reserve Family Demonstration
Project.
TRICARE eligibility for the military
sponsor begins on the effective date of their
orders to active duty. Needed care will be
provided by uniformed services medical treatment
facilities, and by authorized civilian health
care providers.
Families of
activated reservists and National Guard members
become eligible for health care benefits under
TRICARE
Standard or TRICARE
Extra on the first day of the military
sponsor's active duty, if his or her orders are
for a period of more than 30 consecutive days of
active duty, or if the orders are for an
indefinite period.
TRICARE Standard is
the former CHAMPUS program with a new name.
Benefits under TRICARE Standard are the same as
they were for CHAMPUS.
For active-duty families,
TRICARE Standard pays 80 percent of the TRICARE
allowable charge for covered health care
services that are obtained from authorized,
non-network, civilian health care providers.
Those who receive the care are legally
responsible for the other 20 percent of the
allowable charge, plus other charges billed by
"non-participating" providers, up to the legal
limit of 15 percent above the allowable charge.
Providers who "participate" in TRICARE accept
the TRICARE allowable charge as the full fee for
the care they provide.
Persons who use TRICARE
Standard or Extra pay annual deductibles for
outpatient care of $150 for one person, and $300
for a family (for active-duty military sponsors
who are E-4 and below, the amounts are $50 for
one person, and $100 for a family). TRICARE
Extra features discounted cost-shares (15
percent of negotiated fees) when TRICARE network
providers are used, but it's available only in
the same geographic areas as the HMO-type health
care option, TRICARE Prime.
Families of
reserve/National Guard members who are called to
active duty for 179 days or more may enroll in
TRICARE
Prime or may be eligible for TRICARE
Prime Remote. But enrollment
forms must be completed, and military medical
facilities and/or TRICARE Prime network
providers must be used.
Since many reserve families
may have continuing relationships with providers
who aren't in the TRICARE networks, enrolling in
TRICARE Prime (and thereby having to use only
providers who are part of the TRICARE Prime
network) may not be the best choice for these
families. TRICARE Standard may work better for
them.
Also, persons who
are covered by other health insurance (such as a
civilian employer's health plan) should be aware
that TRICARE pays after those plans have made
their payments for health care services. The
only time TRICARE is not second payer is when
Medicaid (a public
assistance program) is involved, or if the
patient has a health care insurance policy that
is specifically designated as a TRICARE
supplemental policy. In those cases, TRICARE
pays before the other insurance.
TRICARE Standard users
should make sure that the provider from whom
they seek health care has been certified by the
regional TRICARE contractor as an authorized
provider of care for TRICARE patients (check
with the provider, or with the regional TRICARE
contractor). If they receive services from a
provider who is not authorized, the cost of
services-even though they might otherwise be
covered by the program-will not be shared by the
government.
Activated
reservists/National Guard members should check
with their reserve centers or unit commanding
officers to make sure that all information about
themselves and their family members is current
and accurate in the Defense Enrollment
Eligibility Reporting System (DEERS) data base.
Incorrect information can result in delayed
claims processing, problems with the use of
retail pharmacies and the National Mail Order
Pharmacy (NMOP) benefit, and
other difficulties. For information about DEERS
enrollment, contact the DEERS Telephone Center
from 6 a.m.-5 p.m., Pacific Time, toll-free, at
1-800-334-4162 (California only), 1-800-527-5602
(Alaska and Hawaii only), or 1-800-538-9552 (all
other states).
If you're an activated
reservist or National Guard member, you can get
more information about your family's TRICARE
Standard benefits from the TRICARE Standard
Handbook. To get one, check with your nearest
uniformed services hospital or clinic, or any
TRICARE service center. Or, write to the TRICARE
Management Activity, 16401 E. Centretech Pkwy.,
Aurora, CO 80011-9043.
You can also get
information from the TRICARE Web
site or from the Reserve Affairs
Web site.
The TRICARE
Dental Program (TDP) is a voluntary
dental insurance program for the Selected
Reserve, Individual Ready Reserve, and all
eligible uniformed services family members. To
be eligible, you must have at least 12 months of
service commitment remaining and participate in
the program for at least 12 months after which
enrollment is month to month.
Selected Reserve members are
responsible for just 40 percent of the monthly
premium; the government pays the rest. Other
Reserve component members are responsible for
the full premium. When called to active duty for
more than 30 days, you are eligible for dental
care at military treatment facilities free of
charge, and thus are disenrolled from the
TRICARE Dental Program.
Eligible family members are
invited to enroll, even if the sponsor, does
not. Family members are responsible for the full
premium, except when you are called to active
duty for more than 30 days, which reduces the
premium share to 40 percent; the government pays
the rest. Although family members enroll under
the sponsor’s Social Security number, there will
be two separate premium payments — one for you,
the sponsor, and one for family members. NOTE:
Family members are not bound by the 12-month
minimum enrollment commitment if the sponsor is
ordered to active duty for a contingency
operation as defined in law. In this case, you
have 30 days from activation to submit the
enrollment application. Family members must
remain enrolled during the entire active duty
period in support of the contingency operation.
Additional
information on the TRICARE Dental Program is
available at the United Concordia Companies,
Inc. Web site at http://www.ucci.com/, or call toll free
1-800-866-8499 for general information, or
1-888-622-2256 to enroll. To contact the Managed
Care Support Contractor for your region, go the
regional
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