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Military Spouse Challenges |
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By
Janet Farley
Winter 2005 Print
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This is the first in a series
about the choices today's officer spouses face. Future articles will
focus on these topics to help you help yourself and other spouses
along the way.
As military officer spouses in today's armed forces, we often find
ourselves living in two distinctly different worlds. In one, we have
id cards and know our spouses' last four digits better than we know
our own Social Security numbers. They are the key that magically
unlocks the doors to our medical, dental, commissary, and PX/BX
shopping privileges. Without them, day-to-day life on any military
installation would prove difficult to say the least.
The other world is one in which many of us attempt to carve out our
own professional identities. We boldly build, sustain, and advance
our own careers despite the traditional and emerging obstacles that
can accompany being married to someone in uniform.
The many hurdles
It used to be said that if the
military wanted you to have a wife, you would have been issued one.
Fortunately, that saying has faded with time and has been replaced
with the reality that spouses - wives and husbands - do matter,
because they should. They also matter to DoD because they greatly
influence the retention and recruitment of our armed forces, an
issue of ever-growing importance.
"We know that servicemembers and family members who are satisfied
are more likely to stay in the military," explains Dr. Margaret
Harrell, a senior social scientist at the rand Corp. and the
associate director of the Forces and Resources Policy Center at the
rand National Defense Research Institute in Arlington, Va.
Harrell recently coauthored the book Working Around the Military:
Challenges to Military Spouse Employment and Education (Rand
National Defense Research Institute, 2004). Two-thirds of the
military spouses interviewed for the book's study thought the
military lifestyle had negatively affected their employment
opportunities. Although this is a shocking majority, it surely comes
as no surprise to military spouses, who have felt this way for a
long time.
"My generation of spouses was willing to subjugate our careers to
follow our husbands all over the world. I don't see [spouses today]
as willing to give up their careers in return for the military
lifestyle," says Sue Schwarz, DBA, a military spouse of 17 years and
former deputy director of health affairs for MOAA's Government
Relations Department. "I wonder what the future will hold in terms
of recruitment and retention of servicemembers when spouses want and
expect fulfilling careers," she says.
It's true. Many spouses today do expect more. For many, particularly
in the case of officer spouses, it's not always about the money,
either.
"There is often the assumption that military spouses work for
financial reasons. As a result of this study, we found out that is
not always the case. Spouses work for different reasons," explains
Harrell.
"I love my career. It's what I do, and it makes me happy," says
Keita Franklin, a licensed clinical social worker, an Air Force
spouse, and the Family Advocacy Program manager at the Army
Community Service in Stuttgart, Germany. Still, despite her love for
her job, she has concerns about its future. "I'm always worried
about getting stationed [in a place where] there isn't more than one
base to choose from [for employment purposes] or with a big city
nearby having social problems," she says.
And then there is the issue of career progression: "Think about it.
As his career progresses, theoretically yours does too. Somewhere
along the line you may have to face the possibility of a geographic
separation to maintain your career momentum," she says.
So far, Franklin hasn't had to make that kind of decision in her
career. She has, however, had to deal with the challenge of starting
over at each of the five installations where the Franklins have been
stationed. Employment opportunities and available assistance
services are different at each location, depending on the branch of
service that runs it.
One thing, however, remains constant: "It doesn't seem to matter if
you've earned a Civilian of the Quarter Award in the past or bring
exceptional performance ratings with you to the next place,"
Franklin says. "You always have to build your reputation up all over
again and establish new networking contacts in the area. It can be
very frustrating."
Frustrations aside, Franklin finds her job rewarding. "I get to stay
involved in the latest and greatest in my field as a government
employee, and that's important to me and my future career goals,"
she says. She also points to the built-in support system on any base
or post as being helpful to her and her family.
There is also the added social benefit of work. "A lot of my good
friends are people I've met on the job and work with every day," she
says.
Another employment challenge closely related to relocation is the
subject of longevity. You move somewhere, but how long are you going
to remain in that area? Elizabeth Skinner, a former Army major
turned Army spouse, found out the hard way that it matters a great
deal to potential employers. This highly skilled medical doctor who
has an extensive background in family practice has been unemployed
for two years.
"The last two years I have not been able to get a job due to the
lack of longevity in one location," she explains. "While we were
stationed at Fort Leavenworth for Command and General Staff College,
I had job offers, but because of [the] limited time of the
assignment, the practice that wanted to hire me couldn't. By the
time I [had] been accepted and [gone] through the process of getting
on all the different insurances that the employer used for billing,
I would have been gone from the area," Skinner says.
Skinner has, like most military spouses, dealt with the situation as
best as possible for herself, her family, and her career. "I ended
up having to volunteer at Fort Leavenworth through the American Red
Cross as [a] physician in the family practice clinic to keep my
clinical skills up and avoid a large gap in my résumé," she says.
"Volunteering was a great experience, and I loved working at the
clinic on post."
Even though she has opted to be a stay-at-home mom for now, Skinner
still chooses to keep her professional memberships, medical
certifications, and licenses current for the future. This means
attending conferences, continuing education courses, and
recertification boards whenever and wherever they are offered. Those
expensive fees, tuitions, and travel costs must be paid directly out
of their one-income family fund. If she had a job, her employer most
likely would have paid those bills. Still, she feels lucky that they
are able to financially manage it. Not all families are able to do
so.
Other spouses share in the licensing and certification dilemmas.
Teachers, for example, often face the problem of receiving
certification to work in one state, only to be transferred to
another state and find their credentials are not recognized.
Unfortunately, reciprocity between states is the exception rather
than the rule. This forces qualified teachers to either risk a race
against time to seek a state's requirements before being transferred
somewhere else or settle for a job other than the one they are
trained and qualified to perform.
Despite this, education remains a popular option. "Teaching is the
most common profession of all senior officers' spouses and of
spouses with a graduate degree," says Harrell.
Sylvia Moss, a DoDDS first-grade teacher who recently transferred
from Germany to Atlanta, admits the licensing issue can be tricky.
"While that part was disappointing, the experience also allowed me
to consider alternatives that I hadn't considered before," she says.
Moss ended up working for a private parochial school, where state
documents were not required. "Working with kids and watching them
grow academically, emotionally, and [socially] is what it's all
about," she says.
Another challenge that many spouses face is the availability and
affordability of quality child care on or off the military
installation. When comparing the cost of child care with the amount
of actual income, some spouses wonder if it's financially worth it
to work in the first place. Child care costs off post are high
regardless of one's rank in the military. Availability on or off
post is a continual issue of concern for everyone.
Another challenge that can't be ignored is the unpredictability of
life in today's wartime environment. Nothing is a given, and
therefore, nothing can be scheduled with any permanency. Even in
peacetime, unpredictability is business as usual for military
families.
Many military spouses these days face their servicemembers' frequent
deployments, which often translate into lonely periods of separation
and worry. Although this might be an excellent time for spouses to
busy themselves by working, many find themselves assuming the role
of single parent and choosing instead to focus on their families, if
they are able to do so financially.
In the future
To combat those and other issues,
corporate partnerships have been established to link military
spouses with employment opportunities in those businesses. Some
participating companies include BellSouth, Computer Sciences Corp.,
Dell Inc., The Home Depot, Lockheed Martin, Manpower Inc., Sears,
and others.
It's a definite step in the right direction, but there is clearly
more to be done.
"Private employers need to be educated about the military community
so that they can begin to see the value of hiring military spouses
despite the chance that they might only be there for a short time,"
says Franklin.
Harrell agrees: "The more corporate partnerships that are
established, the better for military spouses."
Local departments of labor, military family service centers, and
Army Community Services are constantly evolving and striving to
assist spouses within their respective communities. With funding
being stretched so thinly, it is often a creative process but one
that continues to progress nevertheless.
In addition to state and federal programs, nonprofit organizations
offer help as well. For example, MOAA now provides career assistance
services to its members' spouses. Résumé critiques, individual
counseling, access to the job center, and use of the tops library at
MOAA headquarters are available by sending an e-mail to
tops@moaa.org.
Finally, spouses must continue to rely on themselves and the lessons
learned by other spouses to succeed in their careers.
"Work is out there; you just have to know how to find it," stresses
Viola Barnard, a GS7 secretary working for senior leadership in the
6th ASG, Stuttgart, Germany. She credits her success finding a job
overseas within two months of her arrival to her persistence,
qualifications, and outlook. "A positive attitude makes all the
difference," she says, adding that networking and knowing how to
apply for available jobs were instrumental in her search.
"Find any opportunity to keep active and keep your skills up. This
not [only] helps you professionally keep abreast, but also avoids
too large of a gap in your résumé or CV," says Skinner.
"The bottom line is that you make a choice whether to work or not,"
Franklin says. "If you decide to work, then go for it. It's not
easy, but it's not impossible."
Janet Farley is the author
of Jobs and the Military Spouse (Impact Publications, 2004)
and The Military-to-Civilian Career Transition Guide (Jist
Inc., 2004). She also writes a career advice column for the Stars
and Stripes newspapers.
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TOPS for Spouses |
As the spouse of an MOAA
member, you are eligible for the same career transitioning help
and advice from MOAA's The Officer Placement Service (TOPS) as
your servicemember, including:
• résumé critiques;
• one-on-one career counseling;
• Marketing Yourself for a Second Career and other MOAA
publications;
• access to MOAA's Informational Networker list; and
• access to the jobs posted on MOAA's Web Base.
Visit MOAA's Career Center,
www.moaa.org/tops, for more
resources and information. |
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