veterans task force greater springfield chamber

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Department of Labor America’s Heroes at Work April 9, 2010

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Initiative by the Greater Springfield Chamber of Commerce, Springfield, VA, to support veterans and military spouses starting/growing businesses and finding employment in Greater Springfield.

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Page 1: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

Department of LaborAmerica’s Heroes at WorkApril 9, 2010

Page 2: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

Ronald Drach

U.S. Department of Labor

Veterans’ Employment & Training Service

Natache Muschette

U.S. Department of Labor

Gretchen Martens

Founder and CEO, Homeward Deployed, Inc.

Chair, Veterans Task Force at the Greater Springfield Chamber of Commerce

Page 3: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

1. Introduce the Veterans Task Force at the programs designed to put America’s veterans and military spouses on the road to economic self-sustainability.

2. Explore ways to partner with the Department of Labor to put America’s veterans to work.

Page 4: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

Depression

Suicide

Unemployment

Homelessness

Violent Crimes

Divorce

Child Maltreatment

SubstanceAbuse

Page 5: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

To welcome and support veterans and their families, connecting them to the Greater Springfield Business

Community.

Page 6: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

To produce a Blueprint for Success that can be nationally replicated in any of the 3500+ community

Chambers in the U.S.

in 2011

Page 7: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

1. Supporting veterans and military spouses in starting, relocating, and/or expanding businesses in Greater Springfield

2. Educating and supporting Chamber businesses about hiring veterans, especially wounded veterans, and military spouses

Page 8: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

Supporting Veteran

Business Owners

Page 9: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

1. Educating and connecting veterans with critical resources

◦ The community Chamber is often where entrepreneurs first seek information on how to start businesses, especially in rural areas

◦ It can be daunting and time consuming to wade through the myriad websites and books to figure out the steps to starting a business

Page 10: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

2. Mentoring veteran entrepreneurs starting businesses or business owners growing their businesses.

◦ Community chambers are a safe place to get your feet wet in the business world

◦ Chamber members are well-connected and can make personal introductions to key constituencies

◦ Established business owners have a tremendous wealth of common sense knowledge to share

Page 11: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

◦ May: Recruitment of mentors

◦ June: Outreach to veteran business owners

◦ September: Brown Bag Seminar on becoming certified as a veteran-owned or service-disabled veteran owned small business (VOSB or SDVOSB)

◦ October: Follow up workshop intensive that walks veterans through the paperwork and process.

Page 12: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

Educating Community Businesses

About

Hiring Veterans

Page 13: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

“Cool, you jumped out of helicopters! But how will you help my printing business?

Overlooking

◦ Leadership

◦ Work Ethic

◦ Integrity

◦ Self-Responsibility

Page 14: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

When you can’t see past the wheelchair……you miss resilience, problem-solving,determination, and flexibility.

If you think you know what PTSD is because you’ve been to the movies…

…you miss courage, risk-taking,

loyalty, and perseverance.

Page 15: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

Providing resources for community business owners who hire a service-disabled veteran.

Coaching veterans returning to the civilian workforce, and the caregiver networks of service-disabled veterans who make that transition possible.

Page 16: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

◦ April: Outreach to Wounded Warrior Units

◦ May: Outreach to Other Chambers

◦ October: Brown Bag Seminar

◦ November: Networking Breakfast

◦ November: Luncheon Symposium

Page 17: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

A $30,000 One-time Seed Money Grant Covering

◦ 25-30% FTE Contract Consultant to administer the rollout for eight months and prepare the Blueprint for Success

◦ Extra administrative time and costs incurred by the Greater Springfield Chamber

◦ Sponsorship of our November Luncheon on Hiring America’s Heroes in the Community

Page 18: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

May: Social Media Campaign sharing our progress

July: A series of webinars or tele-conferences for other Chambers interested in starting their own Veterans Task Force

September: A series of group coaching calls for Chambers gearing up to launch a Veterans Task Force

Early 2011: Initial Open Source Blueprint for Success documenting a step-by-step plan for launching a Veterans Task Force, including all outreach strategies, marketing materials, programs, best practices,

Page 19: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

Seed money to create a Blueprint For Success that can be distributed to every community Chamber by early 2011

Endorsement of the Veterans Task Force

A Point of Contact to serve as a resource

Page 20: Veterans Task Force  Greater Springfield Chamber

Gretchen Martens, M.A.Founder and CEO, Homeward Deployedwww.HomewardDeployed.org

Chair, Veterans Task Force, Greater Springfield Chamber of Commercewww.SpringfieldChamber.org

Phone: (703) 622-0919

Email: [email protected]