skip navigational linksDOL Seal - Link to DOL Home Page
Photos representing the workforce - Digital ImageryŠ copyright 2001 PhotoDisc, Inc.
www.dol.gov
July 25, 2008    DOL Home > News Release Archives > WB 1999   

Printer-Friendly Version

Archived News Release--Caution: information may be out of date.

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

Women's Bureau

WB Press Release: Poster Art Will Tell Women Veterans to Take Advantage of Their Opportunities [11/10/1999]

For more information call: (202) 219-6611

 
	 

The U.S. Department of Labor plans to use art to encourage women veterans to take advantage of the opportunities they have as veterans. Cpl. Sharon Huber, U. S. Marine Corps, has won the National Women Veterans Original Art Design Search sponsored by the department's Women's Bureau, U.S. Employment Services and Veterans' Employment and Training Service.

The goal of the contest was to obtain art work which will be used for posters depicting the theme, "Hire a Vet; A Model of Success," focusing on women. Ms. Huber's art work was chosen from entries of outstanding and talented veteran artists from across the country. The art work will be used on posters to be exhibited in offices where women veterans seek employment and retraining opportunities.

"This is a work of art that relays the art of service," Secretary of Labor Alexis M. Herman said in unveiling the poster. "Our women veterans served their country and they should have every opportunity to succeed in new jobs. They earned the tribute implicit in Cpl. Huber's stunning design."

In 1996, women veterans represented 5 percent, or 1.2 million, of the 23.8 million veterans in the United States. Their unemployment rate of 5.9 percent was just slightly higher than the 4.8 percent for female non-veterans,

Many women veterans are unaware of their benefits so they don't take advantage of them, especially if they have not been in combat. The posters are intended to remind all women veterans to identify themselves as military veterans when seeking employment. U.S. military veterans are eligible for employment benefits and preferences in hiring in government agencies and in many private sector organizations that place a premium on military service.

Military experience has given women veterans unique learning experiences in preparing them for the labor force. They have the education, training, motivation and skills that are in demand by employers. They have flown sophisticated aircraft, developed and maintained complicated machinery, created new technology and kept track of and operated millions of dollars of sophisticated systems around the world.

Huber's art work was unveiled during the Labor Department's annual salute to veterans today. Huber, who is from Citrus Heights, Calif., attended the ceremony. Her winning poster may be seen at www.dol.gov/dol/wb.


Archived News Release--Caution: information may be out of date.




Phone Numbers