05/20/2022 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 05/20/2022 10:59
WASHINGTON - At a hearing of the Senate Defense Appropriations Committee this week, Senator John Hoeven urged Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall to help ensure:
"Education benefits are one of the top recruitment tools available to our armed services. In order to maintain the readiness of our forces, whether active duty, guard or reserve, we need to make sure the benefits are accessible and that we have parity between the different components of our military," said Hoeven. "That's why we established the Air Guard tuition assistance pilot program, which gives these servicemembers the same benefits as their Army Guard counterparts. At the same time, we worked to change DoD's policy regarding concurrent use of federal tuition assistance and GI Bill benefits and restore the full education assistance owed to our tremendous Guard and Reserve members."
Restoring Guard & Reserve Education Benefits
Currently, individuals who qualify for Montgomery GI Bill - Active Duty (MGIB-AD), also known as the "Post 9/11 GI Bill," are able to simultaneously use federal tuition assistance and GI Bill benefits. In 2014, Department of Defense (DoD) issued a policy that prohibited similar concurrent usage of tuition assistance with the Montgomery GI Bill - Selected Reserve (MGIB-SR). As a result of the Hoeven's efforts and his legislation, DoD has now updated its policy to allow Guard and Reserve members to utilize both their GI Bill benefits and the tuition assistance concurrently, providing parity with active duty servicemembers.
Providing Tuition Assistance to Air Guard Members
At the same time, Hoeven has been working to provide tuition assistance for Air National Guard members that is in line with their Army National Guardcounterparts. In 2019, Hoeven announced that North Dakota had been selected by the National Guard Bureau as one of 14 states to participate in a pilot program to provide college tuition assistance to the state's Air National Guard members.
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