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With your military service complete, youre eager to return home and get on with life in the private sector. 

Surely, in a booming economy, youll have your pick of jobs? 

Your training is extensive, after all – the U.S. militarys technology training and educational advancement is among the worlds very best. 

Maybe you were a squad leader in the infantry, routinely making more important decisions – life-and-death decisions – than a large global corporations CEO makes. 

Nobody questions your passion to succeed. Your record of accomplishments is long. Few can match your work ethic. 

But transitioning to private employment proves to be far more difficult than you expected. 

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Your military promotions were based on your merits – your smarts and ability to make split-second decisions under incredible duress. 

Never once did you have to prepare a resume, interview, schmooze at networking events or tell potential new bosses why you should be their choice for a job. 

In the military, you were a member of a team, living for your brothers and sisters and they for you, with continuous personal and professional support. 

But upon retirement, only disabled vets receive ongoing support from the Department of Veterans Affairs and other government agencies. 

Youre on your own – and you need soft skills” to prepare for job interviews and translate your considerable military credentials into a winning resume. 

The numbers bear out your challenge: In some regions, the unemployment rate among veterans is considerably higher than among non-veterans – up to 2.5 percent higher in Pittsburghs Allegheny County, for example. 

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Jack Wagner, a Marine Corps veteran, Purple Heart recipient and longtime local and state public servant, saw the need to address your challenge. 

Every veteran and spouse of a veteran is guaranteed a burial spot, but not a job,” he says. We teach veterans how to take off in terms of training them in the military, but we dont teach them well how to land when they come back to civilian life. 

In 2016, he led an effort with other concerned veterans to establish Pittsburgh Hires Veterans (PHV), a private, nonprofit organization that provides free one-on-one counseling and support to veterans and their spouses, including the National Guard and Reserves. 

PHVs approach is based on each individuals unique needs and challenges. PHVs team of four guided a highly credentialed personnel officer from months of unemployment into a human resources position with a global corporation. 

PHV helped one long-unemployed young man attain the skills and mindset he needed to land a solid, livable-wage job – helping him address issues resulting from his traumatic brain injury. 

PHV helped another young man move from an indoor job he disliked, occupational therapist, to an outdoor job he loves, assistant grounds superintendent at a large, historic cemetery. 

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PHV currently serves 200 veterans – double the number a year ago – and each of us can help PHV find them gainful work. 

If youre an employer, share your job opportunities. PHV is your gateway to veteran talent. 

If youre an individual, financial donations are welcome. PHV gets by solely on private funds. But you can  

also tell veterans looking for work that PHV is eager to help (be sure to like” PHV on Facebook). 

If youre with a government agency or nonprofit helping transitioning veterans in other states, collaborate with PHV to support veterans moving between regions or to simply share notes. 

What better way to serve veterans transitioning to private life than by doing our small part to help them find meaningful employment? 

Visit PHV atwww.PittsburghHiresVeterans.org.   

Tom Purcell, author of “Misadventures of a 1970’s Childhood,” a humorous memoir available at amazon.com, is a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review humor columnist. Send comments to Tom at Tom@TomPurcell.com. 

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