| Former VA Secretary
Join AMVETS in Planning Young Veterans Symposium
Anthony J. Principi Accepts Leadership Role on Project
WASHINGTON, Oct. 17 — Former Secretary of Veterans
Affairs (VA) Anthony J. Principi has agreed to co-chair the National
Symposium for the Needs of Young Veterans, a landmark project that
AMVETS, one of the nation’s foremost veterans organizations,
will host next year in Chicago, Ill. The Symposium, scheduled for
October 18 to October 21, 2006 is expected to draw upwards of 1,500
veterans from across the country.
Symposium attendees will address
the unprecedented challenges service members coming home from
Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere are facing
as they transition to post-military life. The Symposium will
focus on ways to ensure that these new veterans as well as current
ones
have access to promised health care, education, civilian employment
and job training benefits. The issue of benefits for National
Guard and reservists because of their expanded military role is
also
expected to be on the Symposium agenda.
“The benefit system created more than 50 years
ago, as good as it was then, needs to be modernized. Our military
has changed.
The
needs of our veterans have changed. The Symposium is going to challenge
veterans to suggest concrete ideas on how to make the system more
effective and efficient,” said Principi.
Younger veterans
have an active role in the Symposium as participants and as organizers
according to William Boettcher, AMVETS past national
commander who is co-chairing the event with Mr. Principi. “Our
goal is to have 50 percent of our participants under the age of
40. They don’t have to be AMVETS members or associated with
any of the other veterans organizations. The Symposium will be
a place to listen to the ideas of as many veterans as possible
and come up with an action plan to modernize the benefits system,” said
Boettcher. Principi has dedicated much of his career to serving
veterans. Prior to his term as secretary of veterans affairs from
2001 to
2005, the combat-decorated Vietnam veteran was chair of the Congressional
Commission on Servicemembers and Veterans Transition Assistance,
which, in 1999, presented a report that raised concerns about the
adequacy and effectiveness of programs and services provided to
service members and veterans.
“The benefits we offer our young men and women
in uniform have to meet their needs. It’s a promise we’ve
made to every generation that has served and one we must honor.
The Symposium
will be a forum for out of the box thinking on the benefit system
of the future,” said Principi.
A leader since 1944 in preserving
the freedoms secured by America’s
Armed Forces, AMVETS provides, not only support for veterans and
the active military in procuring their earned entitlements, but
also community services that enhance the quality of life for this
nation’s citizens.
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