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Vets Derek Hollcraft (left) and Brandon Thomas discuss life at the student-veterans office of Broward Community College, Coconut Creek, Fla.
J. Pat Carter/ASSOCIATED PRESS

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Haunted vets' oases: Community colleges

Date published: 11/11/2009

ATLANTA

--This Veterans Day, let's do more to prevent our troops from taking their own lives. Community colleges can play a pivotal role in the life-saving process.

Eighteen American war veterans kill themselves every day. One thousand former soldiers receiving care from the Department of Veterans Affairs attempt suicide every month. In January of this year, the Army reports, more of our active-duty soldiers killed themselves than died in combat in Iraq and Afghanistan combined.

T.J. Boyd nearly became one of those statistics.

Boyd doesn't look like a disabled veteran. The 29-year-old former Marine sergeant sports a winning smile and shows no obvious wounds in his muscular 6-foot frame. He even runs his own personal-training business out of his home in Sacramento, Calif.

But Boyd suffers from two of the invisible injuries of our wars: post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury. And when he returned to his boyhood home in Southern Illinois after his tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, he nearly took his own life. "I had a little .45 under my bar and I was just taking Jack Daniels to the head, just trying to drown myself and get some of that liquid courage," he says.

What saved his life was the love of a new girlfriend, who urged him to move out to California, and the veterans club at Sierra College near Sacramento, where he could share his experiences with other veterans and see that he was not alone.

Community colleges provide an ideal place for veterans to meet up with others just like themselves and process their combat traumas. Already, the VA reports, more than 500,000 returning veterans are using the GI Bill to attend college, a number expected to swell under the expanded education benefit.

The vast majority of veterans are landing at community colleges like Sierra. In California, community colleges enrolled over 15 times as many vets in 2007 as the University of California campuses did.

So it's at these community colleges that outreach efforts are most important. At Sierra College, veterans' counselor Catherine Morris has helped organize pizza parties and white-water rafting trips. She has done this primarily on her own time and with next to no financial support from the government. But her efforts have nonetheless saved lives.

"Having a place where veterans can meet and greet and have that sense of belonging is so important," Morris explains. "There needs to be a place where they can give each other hope and share stories"--without anyone around to judge. The camaraderie and the commitment to leave no one behind that exists on the battlefield can be re-created in the classroom.

To do right by our veterans, we need to increase funding at our community colleges to establish counseling centers and clubs for them. We can make these colleges a safe home from the hell of war.

This is a matter of life and death.

Aaron Glantz, author of "The War Comes Home: Washington's Battle Against America's Veterans," is a Rosalynn Carter Mental Health Journalism Fellow at the Carter Center.



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Date published: 11/11/2009


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