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GI Bill changes may challenge student veterans

When Andres Martinez-Alegria graduated from high school, he decided he didn’t want to go to college. Even though he had applied and been accepted by schools like the University of Miami and Florida Atlantic University, he didn’t really know what he wanted to do.

So he joined the Marines.

Twelve years later – after nine years of service and tours in Korea, Somalia and the Middle East – Martinez-Alegria is in his second year of graduate school, pursuing his MBA.

He is among more than 750 veterans studying at UF and benefiting from the Post-9/11 GI Bill.

The bill went into effect in August 2009 and pays tuition, fees and living expenses for disabled veterans and veterans who served for at least 90 days from Sept. 11, 2001, and on, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs website.

This was a change from the earlier Montgomery GI Bill that gave veterans a lump sum of about $1,300 a month.

But recent changes to the bill have put aid recipients at a disadvantage, said Young-Ki Chang, president of UF’s Collegiate Veterans Society.

As of Aug. 1, the GI Bill only covers the cost of in-state tuition and fees, putting any out-of-state veterans at UF at a significant disadvantage. Also, veterans no longer receive their monthly housing allowances during breaks.

Read the full story at the Independent Alligator.

Photo credit: U.S. Army Flickr Photostream

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