Category: Long Island Press Clips

New and Old Techs Enlisted to Treat Returning Vets

PTSD

Virtual reality therapy programs recreate experiences that returning veterans suffering from PTSD endured overseas, to help them readjust to civilian life. (Courtesy of University of Southern California Institute for Creative Technologies)

Screams and the explosion of weapons fire pierce the arid desert air as a procession of armored military vehicles edging through suburban Sadr City in Baghdad come under attack by a group of insurgents.

Seated inside a Humvee within the convoy is 24-year-old U.S. Army Ranger Chris Levi. A series of thunderous detonations liquefy a stack of four, 6-inch-wide copper plates, hurling large, molten slugs toward his vehicle at speeds just under a mile per second.

The explosively formed projectiles, called EFPs by the troops, tear through his Humvee’s door, slicing its engine and radio mount before eventually splitting off the vehicle’s entire front end.

Levi’s platoon sergeant and a nearby medic rush to the aid of the downed mortar-systems expert from Holbrook.

“I heard yelling about [someone] finding something, and the medic [was] crying and saying he couldn’t find it and that it was lost,” he recalls over a recent lunch. “I kind of turned my head and looked at them—and [the medic] started yelling that ‘he found it—he found it!’ He was talking about my heartbeat.”

For Levi, now 29, narrowly cheating death in Iraq in March 2008 came at a heavy cost. The EFPs claimed his legs and permanently injured his right arm, leaving him with nerve damage and traumatic brain injury. Upon returning home that same year, the infantryman was diagnosed with depression, anxiety and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, or PTSD.

Of the combined 2.5 million servicemen and women who fought in Iraq and are returning home by the tens and thousands from Afghanistan, 20 percent are coping with PTSD. In addition to the classic counseling methods, to better treat this steady stream of soldiers coming home from America’s longest war, veterans hospitals are increasingly offering high- and low-tech rehabilitative options, such as virtual reality (VR) and complementary and alternative medicine, such as yoga, which experts say can help vets re-acclimate to civilian life.

The goal is to avoid delaying mental health treatment—something that happened to many veterans of past wars, and thus, made it that much more difficult for them to adjust.

“We have group therapy, individual therapy, we do evidence-based treatment with prolonged exposure therapy and cognitive processing therapy,” says Dr. Robert Galak, PTSD unit manager at the Northport Veterans Affairs Medical Center, of the options currently available at the center. “We’re also bringing in some of the alternative medicine strategies that have been very successful. We try to incorporate as many different modalities into the treatment of PTSD as we can.”

“We’re looking at virtual reality exposure therapy,” he adds.

DIGITAL WAR ZONE

Used at veterans hospitals since 2009, computer-based virtual reality exposure therapy, or VR therapy, has its origins at the University of Southern California Institute for Creative Technologies (ICT).

Albert “Skip” Rizzo, associate director for medical virtual reality at ICT, tells the Press he got his inspiration for a VR therapy prototype in 2003, after watching a clip for an upcoming video game called Full Spectrum Warrior released for the Xbox gaming console. This early precursor was originally funded by the Army as a combat tactical simulation.

Adopting game elements and art assets from the Xbox video game, Rizzo’s prototype received glowing feedback, and in 2005, his team was given government funding to create better VR simulation programs for use as treatment tools for returning soldiers.

Rizzo’s programs, dubbed “Virtual Iraq” and “Virtual Afghanistan” use “virtual scenarios specifically designed to represent relevant contexts for VR exposure therapy, including Middle Eastern-themed cities and desert road environments,” he explains.

Vets suffering from PTSD navigate these digital virtual environments and relive the experiences they endured while on the real front lines, helping them deal with the disorder’s triggers head-on, and ultimately, alleviate any related symptoms.

Hospitals are implementing computer-based virtual reality therapy to help soldiers suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder re-acclimate to civilian life. The treatment allows soldiers to relive the experiences they went through in Iraq and Afghanistan. (Courtesy of University of Southern California Institute for Creative Technologies)

“What we’re doing is basically taking an already evidence-based treatment for PTSD exposure therapy, or prolonged exposure, and we’re delivering it with a virtual reality simulation that allows the clinician to control everything that goes on in the simulation as a way to pace the exposure in a very systematic and controlled way,” says Rizzo.

Patients who were treated with his team’s VR exposure programs in 2006 at a naval medical center at Camp Pendleton in San Diego received good results in their initial open clinical trial.

“Other groups got interested in it and we kept expanding the system and tried to make it better,” he says. “That version that we built there ended up getting distributed out to about 55 sites [across the country].”

Among those to begin using the VR software Rizzo helped pioneer is the Phobia and Trauma Clinic at Hofstra University’s Joan and Arnold Saltzman Community Services Center.

According to the clinic’s director, Dr. Mitchell Schare, research in this treatment area initially began at Hofstra in 1998 and has been used with patients struggling with phobias ranging from fear of flying to public speaking. Once implemented, Schare is confident that VR exposure treatment for use with veterans struggling with PTSD will enjoy the same success as the other VR programs already in use at the college.

“I’ve been having various people come and speak to my students, veterans themselves [and] people who treat veterans,” says Schare. “We’ve been watching all kinds of materials, some issued by the government, documentaries on Afghanistan and Iraq, so I’ve been training students and preparing them.”

“We will be absolutely offering [VR exposure therapy] as part of treatment,” he adds.

Levi was among many wounded veterans who underwent VR exposure therapy at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., before it closed its doors in 2011 and merged with the National Naval Medical Center to form the present-day Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

He is living, breathing proof of its success in combating PTSD.

“There was a person I know that was afraid for his life sitting in any vehicle,” he tells the Press. “They put this apparatus on his head and he was using it to watch himself walk up to a vehicle and then he would sit in [it] and would be able to stop if he wanted to without being in a [real] vehicle.”

Levi credits the program with helping him learn how to drive again after his injuries left him unable to operate a car without special hand controls.

“They had screens on all of the walls in the room that you’re in, and there’s the cab of this little pickup truck, and there’s no back on it and there’s no front on it,” he says, recalling his turn in the VR machine.

“It’s just the cab of the pickup truck and you have the seat and the hand control,” he continues. “You go on a highway, you go into the town, and you learn how to drive—it’s all virtual and it’s replicating reality.”

DOWNWARD DOG

There are approximately 138,000 veterans living on the Island, second only to San Diego in the percentage of vets among citizens, according to local veterans advocates. Roughly 5,000 LI residents served in Iraq and in Afghanistan.

With U.S. troop withdrawal from Iraq last year, LI is now undergoing an influx of Afghanistan vets, with complete drawdown expected next year.

With such a significant sea change in LI’s veteran population, the Northport VA has not only been researching newer technology, such as VR therapy, in treating newly returning vets, but also New Age treatments, such as yoga, for both new and old.

“People are looking for this [treatment], so the veterans are very welcoming of it,” says Richelle Rapaport, a clinical nurse specialist in psych mental health and a board-certified advanced practice holistic nurse at the VA.

Rapaport, who’s been with the VA since 1988, received grant funding that trained 200 VA staff members in Tai Chi, Reiki Relaxation, yoga, guided imagery, reflexology, clinical meditation and aroma therapy two years ago.

Despite their tough and combat-hardened perception, Rapaport says it’s the young vets, especially the men, who do better with these physical modalities combined with elements of meditation and Tai Chi. Overall, it helps both servicemen and women “settle down, focus their brains and reduce their reactivity,” she explains.

“You can be the toughest person in the world, but yoga could still knock you out, man,” admits Levi. “It’s not the easiest thing in the world and a lot of these guys…have no range of motion at all, and then they get injured, and they have a bad back or they have a prosthetic on one of their legs. [Their] range of motion is what’s stopping them from being able to maneuver that prosthetic properly. With yoga, you can control your body and do stretches and breathing. It’s relaxing and it’s fulfilling.”

THE WAR WITHIN

Even with this new wave of treatment options, however, experts agree that returning veterans may still find difficulty adjusting to civilian life, whether because of trouble at home or school, unemployment, or drug and alcohol abuse.

In the same high-tech vein as the VR therapy, VA officials are now also using online and texting services as a means of connecting with soldiers who served during Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan.

“More and more younger service members are coming home and our texting program is…becoming much more popular,” says Dr. Caitlin Thompson, deputy director of the Canandaigua VA’s Suicide Prevention Program in upstate New York. “So, the use of new technology is essential, and developing ways to both reach people and to intervene with folks with using this new technology is absolutely huge.”

She says suicide remains an unfortunate reality among PTSD patients. Of the approximately 32,000 suicides per year in the United States, 20 percent are veterans, and each day 18 suicide-related deaths are committed by veterans, according to the VA National Mental Health Service.

The veterans’ crisis line is one of the last lines of defense in helping to subdue this dark trend gripping veterans.

“That’s kind of the linchpin for suicide prevention efforts with the VA,” says Thompson. “In general, it’s known you need to get people out of the immediate crisis, and then you need to follow up with them over time so that they can get the treatment that they need and they can get the support that they need because [it] works.

“We get calls from people who are waking up from nightmares in the middle of the night and just need to talk with somebody, and that runs to people who are standing on the bridge and are ready to jump.”

MODERN WARFARE

PTSD is hardly a new phenomenon, but it wasn’t until 1980 that the disorder was even recognized as a medical condition.

Older veterans had therefore potentially suffered for several decades without getting the help they so desperately needed, according to John Javis, chairperson of Veterans Health Alliance of Long Island, a nonprofit that works with veterans, their families and collaborates with other vet groups, including the Northport VA.

“In World War I we called [PTSD] ‘shell shock’—some of the old black and white footage of soldiers after the war show people walking around these mental hospitals just shaking because of being exposed to artillery and being in trenches,” he says. “In World War Two it was known as ‘combat fatigue.’ In other words, a Vietnam veteran [who], let’s say, came home in 1968 with PTSD, well, the field didn’t even really start to name it until 1980.”

Joe Messana understands the difficulties Vietnam veterans faced firsthand. The Hicksville resident enlisted into the military during the fall of 1967 and received orders to deploy to Vietnam the following year with the 90th Replacement Battalion, stationed in Long Binh Post—the U.S. Army’s headquarters.

“These poor guys from World War II, Vietnam and Korea who came home, they didn’t get [treatment for] PTSD,” he explains. “There was no understanding, and they were probably put in a mental institute immediately because they weren’t getting used to civilian life. And this is what happens: you can’t get a guy that’s been in combat in 100-degree weather in the jungles of Vietnam and all of a sudden have him go to New York City on 42nd Street.”

He suggests the same holds true for the younger generation of combat veterans returning home from Iraq and Afghanistan.

“When we were in the service you’d hear about constant combat, the sounds of the jets and the sounding of war,” he says. “When we were there it was one year that we were in combat duty and when we came home there was no such thing as an [off] switch. These kids are coming home and they’re confused, and don’t forget…they’re coming back from a war and some [served multiple tours], there’s no such thing as an [off] switch.”

While the nature of conflict in current wars and those of years past may differ, Galak says the harsh reality of modern combat still takes its toll.

“The changes take place with the change in warfare in Vietnam and Iraq and Afghanistan,” says Galak. “There are no front lines and no rear lines, so you’re constantly under threat of sniper fire and improvised explosive devices. It’s very difficult to tell friendlies from the enemy—they’re under the constant threat of combat 100 percent [of the time].”

There are endless examples of such scenarios leaving permanent, invisible scars.

Levi, the corporal, recalls a flatbed truck carrying eight pipes—each containing a powerful Katyusha rocket—exploding in Eastern Baghdad outside one of the four largest forward-operating bases.

“It was probably booby-trapped, and when the people jumped on they initiated the explosives,” he says. “The amount of damage they did in that confined area was severely intense so…the 80 Iraqi soldiers that were standing around watching this go on were injured by random pieces of shrapnel. Fifteen people were vaporized.”

Levi recalls the only person in the vicinity who was capable of treating the injured was an 18-year-old medic who was new to combat.

“This medic had to [decide] if certain soldiers’ injuries were severe enough where they wouldn’t make it…to the Iraqi hospital, which was about one kilometer away,” he continues.

“In those moments he had to decide how to ration supplies among the injured, and who was going to live or die,” adds Levi. “Their lives were in his hands, and afterwards he was covered in blood and we had to hose him off with water and soap.”

Christopher Levi, a 29-year-old U.S. Army Ranger from Holbrook, stands with the help of prosthetic legs in front of his Lexus SUV that he re-learned how to drive with the help of virtual reality exposure therapy.

THE HOMEFRONT PTSD_Soldier

Even with all of the outreach, medical advancements and new treatment options for patients suffering PTSD, the stigma associated with seeking mental health treatment can still dissuade veterans from getting the help that they need.

“There’s still the concern about stigma, and the VA is trying to work to eliminate the stigma of mental health,” says Joe Sledge, Northport VA spokesman.

“Everyone who goes to war comes back affected by that experience,” he says. “They could potentially save themselves years of unhappiness by getting the treatment early. The earlier that they come in, the better off they’ll be.”

 Tom Ronayne, director of Suffolk County Veterans’ Services, an organization that among other things, assists veterans with processing claims for benefits, also recognizes the challenges this stigma poses to mental health treatment. Ultimately, he says, veterans are doing themselves a disservice by not seeking help for fear of being ostracized.

“The de-stigmatization of these mental health issues is going to be a game-changer,” says Ronayne. “When we sent them away, they were okay. When they came home, they’re broken.

“We have an obligation to make sure that they’re not only well cared for, but that we support them in any way possible, so that we can ensure that their prognosis going forward is that they’ll be able to move beyond their PTSD,” he adds.

Refusing to allow his injuries to get in the way of his career goals, Levi began working at American Portfolios Financial Services less than a year ago. This past June, he enrolled at Long Island University, where he’s studying business with plans to continue his education during the fall semester.

“I’d like to be a financial advisor,” says Levi. “I’ve already learned a lot [at American Portfolios] and I’ll learn even more at LIU Post.

“Despite all I’ve been through, I know that I can make it if I just go for it.”

See the original article here.

Sandy Damaged Photo Fixing Event Sunday

Al & Terry Fabiano

(A before and after of one family’s Sandy flooded photo.)

While many Long Islanders are still rebuilding after Sandy, some of the superstorm’s survivors are getting some extra help repairing their most cherished possessions—photographs of loved ones and friends damaged in the historic floodwaters.

CARE for Sandy, short for “Cherished Albums Restoration Effort,” is a grassroots Brooklyn-based volunteer organization comprised of professional photographers and amateurs with creative backgrounds, who retouch and digitally restore photographs damaged during the superstorm.

“Our standards are very high…it’s very important that every photograph retain the character and integrity of the original,” said Lee Kelly, who founded the group shortly after the Oct. 29 storm. “I’m treating each and every [photo] as if it’s the only one that that family has; they’re all incredibly precious.”

The group will be hosting a free event from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday at Nassau Community College in Building G, where families who wish to have their photos scanned and later restored.

Each family can submit up to 50 damaged photographs, which are digitally scanned and later uploaded online and put up for “adoption,” process that calls for volunteers to “adopt” a photo based on their skill level and completely restore it within a three-month window.

At NCC, students with backgrounds in photography and graphic design will help with scanning and retouching photos. About a dozen students from Studio Photography class will be on site to take family portraits of those guests who attend, while they wait for their photographs to be scanned, labeled and backed up.

“I am thrilled that the Art Department’s students, faculty and staff are teaming up with CARE for Sandy in providing this critical first step to helping families get their precious photos restored,” said NCC Photography Professor Carolyn Monastra. “It’s also a wonderful opportunity for our students to gain professional experience while giving back to the community.”

One of the many families burdened by Sandy were the Fabianos, Oceanside residents who had the basement of their home submerged under floodwater with damage done to their hot water heater, gas burner, washing machine and much of their personal property—including the couple’s wedding album, which Al Fabiano said was spotted dripping wet.

“I brought the album upstairs and saw the look on my wife’s face,” said Fabiano. “It broke my heart to see the tears well up in here eyes.”

Fabiano read an article written about CARE for Sandy, detailing how the group could restore water-damaged photos. After reaching out to them through their website, Fabiano spoke to a representative that told him their was hope in restoring his photos, eventually he was contacted by Kelly.

“The Fabiano family is very fortunate as they’ve had all [of their] 24 images ‘adopted’,” said Kelly, whose volunteers come from far and wide. “And have received 17 restorations [from] volunteers from Texas, Oregon, Illinois, New York and the Netherlands.”

For families like the Fabianos whose photographs were all but lost in the storm, there’s still hope to reclaim some of those old memories.

“Lee was an angel sent from heaven,” said Fabiano. “Her organization, CARE, are a dedicated group of people who want to help their fellow man by bringing their expertise in photography to restore what would be lost pictures of loved ones.”

See the original article here.

Gun Control Debate Ricochets on Long Island

Hungerford 2

(Gary Hungerford of the Suffolk Alliance of Sportsmen firing a Colt Python .357 Magnum revolver.)

The gun control debate has been ricocheting on Long Island since a proposal requiring background checks for gun sales nationwide was defeated in Congress last month, leaving Americans divided on the issue of reforming the nation’s gun laws.

Despite the motion being in their favor, proponents of gun rights continue to express concern that their right to bear arms and ability to purchase and keep certain kinds of firearms are still being threatened. Meanwhile, gun control advocates remain hopeful that future reform will eventually come to pass.

“At that moment I was shocked, heartbroken, and angry, but there are a lot of silver linings to that vote,” Rep. Carolyn McCarthy (D-Mineola), a staunch supporter of gun control, said recalling her dismay at the recent failure to pass comprehensive federal background checks in the Senate.

Among these silver linings, is the certainty that the bill received votes from the majority of senators–54–and that a number of Republicans as well as moderate Democrats voted in favor of the bill at the risk of a slip in their approval ratings, according to McCarthy. But, the bill needed 60 votes to pass.

McCarthy came to Congress in 1996 with the position to enact tougher gun control legislation after her husband was killed and her son was permanently injured in a mass shooting on the Long Island Rail Road three years prior. Despite such cases like that and the more recent Newtown massacre, others view increased gun regulation as an endangerment to the rights afforded to Americans under the Second Amendment and that law-abiding gun owners are being done a huge disservice.

Steven Blair heads the Long Island Second Amendment Preservation Association and spoke openly about firearm laws and the misconceptions surrounding gun owners.

“There are so many laws in existence now that really should be enforced. If you stop and see all these laws, you can understand why gun owners are already in an uproar,” said Blair.

His comment comes after a measure was passed in New York and enacted just one month after the Newtown school massacre that bans the sale of assault-style weapons and demands federal background checks for private gun sales. While Blair believes that people should be required to comply with background checks, he was quick to also point out that such laws already exist in New York State.

“People who never held a firearm think and feel that firearms are evil weapons that only the police should carry,” said Blair. “They [the police] cannot be in the shadows of every Long Islander and yes, there are crazy people out there that are here to harm you and your family. No laws or political party can stop that.”

McCarthy does not mince words when it comes to the prospect of introducing new gun control legislation.

“The language of this debate is important, it’s not about ‘stricter gun control’ it’s about reducing gun violence, and increasing gun safety,” she said. “Right now, my colleagues and I have a range of bills that we’ve worked on for years and are the result of countless hours of negotiation and research with stakeholders.”

In the past, McCarthy has introduced bills to “strengthen our background check system, improve school safety, and restrict civilian access to high-capacity magazines and assault weapons.” She says that it’s these bills she’s ultimately focused on supporting.

Another local voice for gun rights advocacy is Gary Hungerford who helps manage the Suffolk Alliance of Sportsmen, Inc. (SASI), as a member of its Board of Directors. SASI works to “educate firearms owners and the general public about the opportunities available to them should they wish to learn more or engage in…activities, such as hunting, target shooting [and] personal protection.”

SASI’s members are affiliated with the National Rifle Association, whose outspoken executive vice president, Wayne LaPierre, who has been recognized for his sharp criticism of gun control proponents. The group continues to gain support from its members from across the country including Long Island, where the NRA originally broke ground and created their first practice space for the purpose of building a rifle range back in 1872, according to the NRA.

When asked about gun violence and gun control being at the forefront of American politics in recent months and how the general public is likely to view gun owners, Hungerford was not reluctant to speak his mind.

“I often laugh when I hear the phrase ‘gun violence.’ It’s one of those ‘mass media’ phrases with which they are so happy, because it helps to make gun owners seem like outcasts and extremists,” said Hungerford. “I’ve never known a gun, which is an inanimate object, to do anything, of its own volition. Violence, of any type is brought about by people, not inanimate objects.”

Beyond the halls of Congress and gun clubs countrywide, it’s of little surprise that the world of academia is also buzzing with chatter about the gun control debate.

“I think the existing system where background checks apply only to sales by dealers and not by private parties, is not particularly effective at serving its goal of trying to deny guns to criminals,” says Eugene Volokh, the Gary T. Schwartz Professor of Law at the UCLA School of Law.

Volokh, noted for his expertise on Second Amendment Law, wrote three articles that were cited by the US Supreme Court in the District of Columbia v. Heller case, which said that there is an individual right to keep and bear arms and that therefore handgun bans are unconstitutional.

He believes that in order for gun reform to be effective, extending background checks to private gun sales is crucial. According to Volokh, private sellers would have to sell guns through a professional dealer who would run those sellers through the background check system, of which this dealer would have access, and that this practice wouldn’t interfere with law-abiding citizens’ ability to own guns and to sell guns.

“In principle, if you craft this right, if you present it in a context where the other side thinks, ‘Look, this really is a relatively modest step, we might not like it much, but it’s not a big deal.’ I think it could pass,” says Volokh.

While the law professor sees a chance for real reform, he makes it a point to address the fears that gun owners have, stressing that they are worried about the future and they have reason to be worried.

“Gun rights supporters [and] supporters of all sorts of rights think about the future and they say, ‘Well, wait a minute, what’s going to happen in five or ten years? What’s going to happen if the democrats recapture the House in 2014?’” says Volokh.

What gun rights advocates fear might happen to them in the coming years leads Volokh to believe that these supporters need to do everything they can in order to minimize any future risk.

“Better do everything we can right now in order to minimize that risk,” says Volokh, speaking from the perspective of a gun rights advocate. “Better win every fight…so that the momentum is on our side, better avoid anything that might be a [national gun] registry that could end up being used to confiscate [our] guns.”

In the end, the gun debate in this country is far from over, with both sides vying for control over the discussion.

“As long as there’s gun violence in America,” said McCarthy, “and as long as we see avoidable tragedies that make good people ask, ‘What can we do to save innocent lives in our country,” and until we do everything we possibly can to reduce gun violence in America, this issue will always be important.”

See the original article here.

LI Pol’s Bill Aims to Cut VA Backlog

Israel-Presser

(Rep. Steve Israel (D-Dix Hills) at a news conference in Hicksville on Monday, April 29, 2013.)

A Long Island congressman is proposing legislation to help reduce a massive backlog of claims in the Department of Veterans Affairs, where vets are waiting an average of 273 days.

Rep. Steve Israel (D-Dix Hills) said his proposed End the VA Claims Backlog Now Act will help about 890,000 veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, including some veterans making first-time claims who wait an average of 327 days.

“It’s unfathomable that the average wait time for veterans to start receiving benefits is 273 days,” Israel said Monday during a news conference at the VFW Hall in Hicksville. “The VA must do better, and that’s why I’m introducing legislation that would greatly reduce this backlog.”

Israel, a member of the House Appropriations Committee, added that for veterans living in a metropolitan area, the average wait for disability compensation is a staggering 642 days—a statistic that evoked gasps from the crowd of veterans in attendance.

This bill would give provisional benefits to those veterans filing for disability if their claims aren’t processed within 125 days. “If it is not adjudicated within 125 days [the affected veteran] automatically gets a 40 percent disability rating, no matter what,” said Israel.

Veterans disability ratings are assigned in 10 percent increments, ranging from 10 percent to 100 percent disabled—the higher the rating the more severe the disability, and the higher the monthly compensation, according to NOLO Network, a legal advice website.

Tireak Tulloch, a Brooklyn native who was deployed to Iraq twice and served a combined eight years in the Marine Corps reserve, credited Israel with signing a petition by the nonprofit Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America calling on President Barack Obama to end the backlog.

Tulloch, a leadership fellow with that nonpartisan veterans’ organization, recalled that Obama has said that it was necessary to shoulder some of the burden that veterans are made to bare and to continue to honor them, bringing strength to both the service men and women and to our nation as a whole.

“We need the president to stay true to these words,” said Tulloch. “As of last week we have over 880,000 veterans with pending claims in the VA system, and of that, over 610,000 [are] in the backlog. This is completely unacceptable and we must do more.”

Israel emphasized that there’s no reason why the bill shouldn’t be met with overwhelming bipartisan support.

“In a few weeks all of my colleagues will be marching in the Memorial Day parades, waving flags and talking about our obligation to veterans,” said Israel. “It’s time to put their money where their mouths are. It’s time to pass this bill.”

See the original article here.

What Every High School and College Grad Needs to Know

For seniors in high school and college, graduation is quickly approaching. Soon they’ll have to choose whether to pursue more schooling or jump directly into the workforce when the nation is still reeling from the Great Recession. Having a college degree may ease their way into the work force, some experts say.

At Stony Brook University, the Student Activities Center was bustling with activity on a night dedicated to seniors graduating this May. The SBU Graduation Fair, held on March 26, gave students the opportunity to speak with career counselors as well as inquire about class rings and cap and gown sizes.

One of those in attendance was Matthew Ivins, a Shoreham resident who has spent his time at Stony Brook studying English and Environmental Studies.

When asked whether he would pursue a graduate degree or start his search for work, Ivins said that he plans to look into both alternatives.

Asked about finding a job in this tough economy, Ivins admits that “it’s terrifying and daunting,” but he remains optimistic.

“Still, if you work hard enough, I think you’ll find something,” he says. “It might not be what you want right away, but if you follow through, I think that you can eventually get to where you want to be.”

Ivins already has something to look forward to: his planned summer internship with a sports management company working with the U.S. Woman’s Open in South Hampton this June. He credits his previous internship with the University’s athletics department for making it possible.

Internships and extracurricular accomplishments used to be nice things for students to have on their record, but now they’ve become a necessity, according to Andrea Lipack, the associate director of employer relations at Stony Brook University.

“Are there students who still graduate without them and find employment? I’m sure,” said Lipack. “But the opportunities that are presented to them are far fewer.”

Lipack, who works with more than a dozen other colleagues at the SBU career counseling center, estimates that only 30 to 40 percent of the 24,000 Stony Brook students on campus likely use the center, whose services range from engaging employers to organizing job fairs and securing internships.

“My biggest piece of advice is to be open and flexible and not stereotype opportunities,” said Lipack. “We encourage [students] to be well-rounded and to get involved outside the classroom, through experiential experiences or through those extracurricular activities.”

Whether high school graduates should attend college or join the workforce is up to them, Lipack says.

“There’s fields out there that are more vocational where a college degree might not be necessary for what they want to do and that’s fine,” says Lipack. “I think starting high school students with work experiences early is a good idea for that reason.”

According Shital Patel, an associate economist at the New York State Department of Labor, Long Island has had a high level of unemployment for several years.

But in 2012, Long Island showed a 2 percent job growth in low-wage jobs such as restaurant work or retail.

In Nassau County the unemployment rate was 8 percent for those without high school diplomas, and a bit lower, 7.8 percent, for high school graduates. For those with a bachelor’s degree, the unemployment rate is 4.9 percent. Roughly the same figures apply to Suffolk County.

“Your job prospects are better by having a degree,” said Patel. “Pursue something that you enjoy and also look at what other skills are necessary to gain jobs in that industry.”

See the original article here.