From Military.com:
"More Than 25,000 Former Soldiers
Have Now Volunteered to Return to Duty”
The Army asked its "soldiers
for life" who are trained in medical fields to come back to do battle
against the novel coronavirus pandemic. And to date, more than 25,000 have
answered the call, officials said. The service first sent out an appeal in late
March to retired officers and enlisted soldiers from a targeted set of
specialties, asking for volunteers to re-don the uniform and reinforce Army
communities thinned by emergency field hospital and personnel deployments to
regions hit hardest by the virus. It would ultimately expand the call for
volunteers to recently separated soldiers in the Individual Ready Reserve and
to "gray-area" soldiers -- Guardsmen and reservists who have
completed 20 years but haven't yet met requirements for retirement. The field
totaled "approximately 800,000," officials said, meaning that more
than 3% of all former soldiers contacted by the Army responded to say they
could help. Now, the service is working to process the horde of volunteers,
ensuring those it takes are properly qualified and certified, and --
importantly -- not currently working in medical care in a civilian capacity. "If
individuals are already serving in their local communities, we are proud of
their service and want them to continue serving in those communities, as this
effort is not to detract from current community support, but to enhance
it," Brig. Gen. Twanda E. Young, U.S. Army Human Resources Command deputy
commanding general and reserve personnel management director, said in a
released statement. The calls for volunteers went out to those who had served
in specialties including critical care officer; anesthesiologist; nurse
anesthetist; critical care nurse; nurse practitioner; ER nurse; respiratory
specialist; and medic. But soldiers in other fields also reached out to Human
Resources Command to offer their services, officials said. And the Army does
plan to consider them for service, too.
Planners are now working around
the clock to process applications and determine where volunteers can serve,
according to an Army release. "This effort seems very simplistic --
soldiers volunteer and we just bring them back on active duty, but it requires
a specialized team of professionals knowledgeable in Reserve policy, which the
Reserve Personnel Management Directorate provides," Young said. "We
understand the urgency, thus we are working multiple shifts to sift through
screening volunteers to get them at the point of need." Once volunteers
are screened and validated, they are sorted by specialty and matched up with
Army personnel needs. No orders have been cut to date; all volunteers are still
in different parts of the vetting process, according to the release. Orders are
expected to be open-ended, and officials did note that volunteers will be given
time and flexibility to put their lives in order before they report for duty. The
Army has not provided a precise timeline for when the first volunteer soldiers
might be back in uniform, or how many volunteers it plans to accept in total.
According to the release, new volunteers are still being accepted by HRC. Army
medical detachments are already deploying around the country to assist civilian
providers with managing major virus outbreaks. Military doctors are now
assisting in New York City hospitals, and the Army has deployed three mobile
field hospital units, staffed by about 330 soldiers apiece. One of those
hospitals, deployed to Seattle, has already closed after just a few days, a
sign that patient capacity has become more manageable amid extreme social
distancing and protective measures.
^ Of course these former soldiers
are coming back to help – it’s what they have always done for their country.
Sadly, their country will continue it’s “Use them and then lose them” policy it
is so well-known for. The US Federal Government and the US Military has no problem
putting the lives of the men and women in the US Military in danger when they
are in service, but the minute they are wounded or discharged then all the official
promises made seem to all but disappear and a new fight comes about - fighting with the VA for what is already
owed you. I have seen this time and again throughout the decades and yet no
matter how poorly the US Government treats them the former soldiers continue to
come back whenever they can to do whatever they can to help. That is why
soldiers (current and former) are called heroes and not many politicians or
other Government workers are. ^
https://www.military.com/daily-news/2020/04/10/more-25000-former-soldiers-have-now-volunteered-return-duty.html
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