Published
for the Fort Bliss/El Paso, Texas Community
July
29, 2004
Guard,
Reserve Soldiers have jobs after deployment
Samantha L. Quigley
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON – National Guard troops, reservists and active duty
military people can rest easy that their jobs will be waiting for them
when they return from deployment.
That is the message the U.S. Office of Special Counsel conveyed in an
interview with the Pentagon Channel today.
Passed in October 1994, the Uniformed Services Employment and Re-employment
Rights Act is the tool the Office of Special Counsel wields to back
up that statement. The act states that uniformed servicemembers cannot
lose their jobs or benefits because of a call to military service.
“You have to look at it as if (the service member) stayed on the
job. That’s what they’re entitled to … as if they
were on an escalator,” said Special Counsel Scott Bloch. “And
even while they’re gone, that escalator continues to go up whether
it be seniority, or whether it be accrual of pension benefits or any
other rights that go with employment.
USERRA also applies to active duty service members,” he said.
For example, if you decided to join the military while working for a
private employer (or are called up), you have employment rights and
restoration-of-benefit rights for five years after you sign up, Bloch
said.
Servicemembers who meet conditions set forth in USERRA are guaranteed
full restitution of employment, all seniority that goes with that and
any employment benefits that accrue because of that job. The conditions
stipulate that the employer be informed that an employee has been called
up or is joining up. The employee must serve in the uniformed services
and must report back to the employer in a timely fashion upon completion
of service.
As with every rule, there are exceptions. An employee is not necessarily
entitled to receive pay or accrue vacation or annual leave while serving
with the military. However, should servicemembers returning from deployment
encounter difficulties getting reinstated to their previous or equivalent
positions, the Veterans Employment Training Service Office within the
Department of Labor should be their first stop.
If an investigation yields no satisfactory resolution, the next stop
is the courtroom. Federal employees have the option of asking OSC to
prosecute in court on their behalf. Private-sector employees’
cases are handled through the Justice Department.
Recently, the OSC filed a USERRA case against a federal agency, the
first in its 25-year history. Bloch said the case would benefit the
individual and any others who work for that agency. “We filed
that only because the agency would not do the right thing with regard
to the Postal Service employee,” Bloch said.
Bloch recently signed an Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve Statement
of Support, pledging to honor re-employment rights and to enforce USERRA
vigorously and thoroughly for all guardsmen and reservists.
“We’d just like to leave guardsmen and reservists with the
firm impression and knowledge that our office stands ready, willing
and committed to enforcing their rights,” Bloch said. “We
stand as the prosecutor of the cases, and we stand as a guardian of
those rights, and those individuals have no need to fear whether their
job is going to be protected and whether we are going to enforce those
rights.”