What Has NGAUS Done for You?

Anonymous
National Guard

Mar 31, 2007 20:00 EDT

IN THE BEGINNING

1878

Concerned about antiquated federal laws and paltry funding, militia leaders from the North and South meet for the first time in Richmond, Va., to develop collective solutions to their common problems. One outcome is the formation of NGAUS.

Several states already have militia associations, but this new organization will be national in its orientation and the country's first military lobbying group.

1879

The fledgling association holds its first convention in St. Louis. Two issues dominate the proceedings: low federal subsidies and the Militia Act of 1792, which had never been updated to reflect the evolving nation and its state militias.

1887

NGAUS efforts bear their initial fruit when Congress doubles total militia appropriations to $400,000. The figure had been $200,000 every year since 1808. But states, private donors (including corporations) and unit members still cover most militia costs.

THE 20TH CENTURY

1900

NGAUS convinces Congress to increase total militia appropriations from $400,000 to $1 million annually.

1903

President Teddy Roosevelt signs the first of two Dick Acts. It replaces the Militia Act of 1792 and transforms all militia units into organized regiments of the National Guard. These units receive more funding and equipment, but in return must conform to federal standards for training and organization as the recognized reserve of the Regular Army.

Named for its architect, Maj. Gen. Charles Dick of Ohio, NGAUS president and a member of the U.S. House of Representatives, the act's impact on the force is eventually so significant that General Dick becomes known as the father of the modern Guard.

1908

Congress enacts the second Dick Act. It removes time and geographic limits to service and specifies that Guardsmen will go to war as units, not replacements. It also creates the Division of Militia Affairs (today the National Guard Bureau) within the War Department.

In addition, Congress provides $4 million in appropriations-10 times the amount allotted just a decade earlier.

1915

The Continental Army Plan is defeated largely as a result of NGAUS opposition. It would have eliminated the Guard as a part of the federal military structure, leaving in its place an expandable Army based on federal reservists or volunteers.

1916

The National Defense Act guarantees the state militias' status as the Army's primary reserve force. It also mandates use of the term "National Guard."

In addition, the act gives the president authority, in the case of war or national emergency, to mobilize the Guard for the duration of the crisis. Drills increase from 24 to 48 each year, and annual training extends from five to 15 days.

Finally, the act authorizes drill pay for the first time, culminating NGAUS lobbying efforts that began in 1910.

BETWEEN WORLD WARS

1920

The National Defense Act stipulates that a Guard officer would now head the Militia Bureau and that Guardsmen discharged from active duty would automatically revert to their previous state status, something that didn't occur after World War I.

It also reaffirms, against War Department wishes, the Guard's role as the nation's principal combat reserve.

In addition, the War Department and Army Air Service reverse earlier positions and agree to organize Guard air units in the postWorld War I military. The action is another NGAUS victory and places Guard aviation on a permanent footing.

1922

The Pay Readjustment Act provides Guardsmen with increased pay and quarters and subsistence allowances.

1933

A NGAUS-drafted amendment to the National Defense Act streamlines the Guard's transition back and forth between state and federal status by creating the National Guard of the United States (NGUS). Guardsmen are now simultaneously members of two separate but overlapping organizations: the Guard of their state and the NGUS.

The amendment also makes the Guard an Army component at all times, which means access to additional resources and easier wartime mobilization.

The same legislation also renames the Militia Bureau the National Guard Bureau.

1939

Public Law 96 provides retirement benefits for Guardsmen disabled or killed while on 30 or more days of active duty.

1940

The Selective Training and Service Act provides for the maintenance and integrity of Guard units and their use during national emergencies, prioritizing them over other reserve-component units.

WORLD WAR II

Maj. Gen. Ellard A. Walsh, NGAUS president, helps defeat Army and War Department plans to relegate the Guard to a state-only role after the war with no pan in plans for a separate air force. His speeches, articles and letters to major newspapers and magazines expose the effort, which is undertaken while 18 Guard divisions fight overseas.

With a battle in Congress looming, the War Department and the Army-now with Guard input-dramatically alter earlier plans for the postwar military. The Army retains the dual-role Guard, and an extremely reluctant Army Air Force includes the Guard in its design of a separate service.

A chief architect of these new plans is Maj. Gen. Milton A. Reckord, a Maryland adjutant general active in NGAUS business who also served as provost marshal general in Europe in 1943.

The Walsh-Reckord Hall of States in The National Guard Memorial is later named after the two generals.

POST-WAR YEARS

1945-49

A substantial amount of Guard-related legislation, much of it of great importance and all of it NGAUS influenced, passes in the wake of World War II.

Of special interest is Public Law 678, which provides for care and treatment of Guardsmen suffering injury or illness during training, and the Selective Service Act (1948), which exempts Guardsmen from the draft.

Congress enacts the law in lieu of universal military training (UMT), which has wide support from NGAUS and the War and Navy Departments.

UMT requires all physically fit 18-year-old men to serve eight years in the Guard or Reserve after a six-month active-duty training period. It would boost the Guard's end strength to 655,000 personnel. However, a nation tired of war rejects the concept.

In addition, Public Law 810 provides Guardsmen and Reservists their first comprehensive retirement benefits in 1948. The action stems from efforts initiated by NGAUS at the 66th General Conference in Baltimore four years earlier.

Guardsmen also receive death and disability benefits for incidents occurring during active-duty training periods of less than 30 days or while on inactive training status.

In addition, NGAUS, with the help of supporters in Congress and the governors, beats back a proposal from the newly established Defense Department to fold the Army Guard into the Army Reserve.

1950

Congress approves the first armory construction bill. It provides federal funds amounting to 75 percent of the cost of new armories and 100 percent of the cost of changes to federal forcestructure changes. (States would acquire the land and pay the remaining 25 percent of construction costs.)

1954

Public Law 477 culminates a long fight to obtain official activeduty status for U.S. Property and Fiscal Officers in every state.

1956

Title III of Public Law 810 provides medical care to retired Guardsmen and their family members. Public Law 845 authorizes female officers in the Guard. And Public Law 881 generally increases benefits for survivors of deceased Guardsmen.

1959

NGAUS helps defeat a major Pentagon plan to reduce and reorganize the Army Guard. The issue ends in a compromise: The Army Guard loses nearly 900 company-sized units, but Congress firmly fixes end strength at 400,000 personnel.

Lawmakers also grant national cemetery burial rights to Guardsmen who die during training, during travel to and from training or while under treatment for injuries and illnesses contracted while training or traveling to or from training.

THE SIXTIES

1960

Public Law 86-632 clarifies re-employment rights and job protection for Guardsmen performing an initial period of active duty for training for up to six months.

1961-65

NGAUS neutralizes another Defense Department effort to reduce Army Guard end strength and eliminate four combat divisions. The result is a standoff favoring the Guard: Fbur divisions are deactivated, but other units are provided. Congress maintains overall Army Guard end strength at 400,000 troops.

Merging the Army Guard and Reserve is a major part of the overall Pentagon plan. Defense Secretary Robert McNamara believes the only way to really reduce reserve-component end strength is to eliminate the Army Reserve.

The association maintains a low profile on the merger proposal and only opposes it in its final stages. Maj. Gen. James Cantwell, NGAUS president, supports the merger, although other Guard leaders are divided on the issue, which ultimately fails.

NGAUS also helps defeat a DoD proposal to reduce defense spending by cutting Guard and Reserve pay tables to 75 percent of the active component's.

1968

Congress passes and the president signs the National Guard Technician Act. This closes a 10-year NGAUS effort to bring more than 40,000 Guard full-time technicians into civil-service status, where they will receive federal employment benefits.

THE SEVENTIES AND EIGHTIES

1970-1975

NGAUS efforts focus on bolstering National Guard benefits to improve recruiting and retention in the new era of the all-volunteer force.

Among the achievements are quarters' allowances for new Guardsmen under the Reserve Enlisted Program, expanded postexchange privileges, full-time group life insurance coverage, authority to withhold premiums from drill pay for state-sponsored insurance, burial flags and access to space-available travel.

The association also defeats two DoD proposals to cut end strength and force structure of both the Army and Air Guard. The fight leads Congress to mandate the conversion of outmoded Air Guard flying units to new and essential missions.

1976

Congress passes legislation to allow the presidential call-up of 50,000 Guardsmen and Reservists without declaration of a national emergency.

1978

Congress approves a test of full-time military manning in Active Guard and Reserve (AGR) status in addition to military technicians.

Other victories include passage of a Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) and re-enlistment bonuses. In addition, the Air Guard receives its first C-130 transport plane.

1979

Congress authorizes pay for simultaneous membership in the Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) and the Army Guard.

1980

NGAUS helps defeat a proposal to eliminate military leave pay for federal employees and win additional administrative assemblies to compensate for a loss of administrative pay and a reduction in the Social Security offset from the SBP annuity.

Congress also doubles to 100,000 the number of Guardsmen and Reservists the president can mobilize without the declaration of a national emergency.

1981

Congress requires DoD to submit an annual report on service plans to equip the Guard and Reserve and rejects a proposal to cut military retirement pay for federal employees.

1982

NGAUS wins passage of a law to provide civil-service retirement disability pay to Guard technicians separated from their jobs upon being found physically unable to maintain drilling Guard membership.

Congress also clarifies its intent to have Guard AGR personnel under state control.

1983

The defense appropriations act, for the first time, provides dedicated funding for the procurement of miscellaneous equipment for Army Guard support units.

Congress also directs DoD to test year-round commissary access for the Guard and Reserve.

1984

The Montgomery GI Bill provides, for the first time, federal financial support to Guardsmen working toward a baccalaureate degree or equivalent. It's named after principal Capitol Hill sponsor, Rep. G.V "Sonny" Montgomery, a retired Mississippi National Guard major general.

NGAUS also helps establish the position of assistant secretary of defense for reserve affairs.

1986

Congress passes the Montgomery Amendment to protect the Guard's overseas training program.

1987

NGAUS persuades Congress to make permanent the Montgomery GI Bill and 12 commissary visits a year for Guardsmen and Reservists.

1988

NGAUS helps defeat attempts to alter the Montgomery Amendment on Guard overseas training.

POST-COLD WAR ERA

1990

The Supreme Court upholds the constitutionality of the Montgomery Amendment preserving the federal authority to direct Guard overseas training.

Spurred by NGAUS, Congress restores DoD-proposed Army and Air Guard force structure cuts. Lawmakers also grant gray-area retirees (retired Guardsmen and Reservists who have not yet reached 60 years of age) 12 days of commissary benefits and unlimited exchange use.

1991

Congress establishes an Army Guard force structure "floor" of 450,000 slots and restores 21,100 of the 38,400 Army Guard troop cuts DoD proposed.

Lawmakers also reject the Pentagon's review of the Total Force policy, active/Guard/Reserve force mix and military structure and direct an independent study of those issues.

Operations Desert Shield/Storm move Congress to authorize several personnel benefits for Guardsmen. These include basic allowance for quarters for single members without dependents, payment of medical special pay at active-duty rates, variable housing allowance upon mobilization and an exception to limits on accrued leave for payment.

1992

NGAUS battles the Pentagon and convinces Congress to restore cuts to the Army Guard of 48,100 personnel and 39,625 force structure slots.

Lawmakers also provide funds for a Guard pilot program to work with at-risk youth in 12 states; it becomes known as ChalleNGe. They also allocate $10 million for Guard drug-demand reduction programs aimed at young people.

Congress also authorizes a seven-year program to provide Veterans Administration home loans to Guardsmen and Reservists who have completed at least six years of service.

1993

As the military draws down after the Cold War, Congress establishes a lower force structure allowance of 420,000 and an end strength of 410,000 for the Army Guard for fiscal year 1994.

But lawmakers also direct the restoration of reserve-component special operations forces units DoD wants to reduce.

In addition, Congress expands the Montgomery GI Bill to include AGRs and to provide benefits for graduate studies.

1994

NGAUS turns away efforts to apply across-the-board civilian cuts to the Guard's full-time force as well as Pentagon proposals to reduce funding for new equipment and personnel benefits.

Congress promulgates the Reserve Officer Personnel Management Act and authorizes burial of retired Guardsmen and Reservists at any VA-funded cemetery.

It also approves the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act, which overhauls, clarifies and improves the 1940 veteran's re-employment rights law.

1995

NGAUS efforts lead to the defeat of Guard military technician cuts under President Bill Clinton's "reinventing government" proposal. The reductions would have severely impacted Guard readiness. Congress directs that future military technician cuts be based on force structure.

Lawmakers also establish a mobilization insurance income plan and a shared-cost dental plan for Guardsmen and Reservists.

1996

Congress, at the request of NGAUS, thwarts cuts to Army Guard divisions and a proposal to reduce aircraft authorized from 15 to 12 in the Air Guard's general-purpose flying units.

The association is also successful in convincing Congress to add funds to the president's budget request for Army and Air Guard modernization. In all, lawmakers add nearly $1 billion for new Guard equipment.

Personnel successes include increases in available retirement points for all Guardsmen and retired credit for time served in the ROTC as part of the simultaneous membership program.

1997

The association mobilizes its members behind an effort led by Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, to elevate the NGB chief to a four-star general with a seat on the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS).

It all comes in the wake of a Quadrennial Defense Review proposal to cut 45,000 Army Guard troops. Guard leaders have no input into the plan. Mr. Stevens believes only a JCS seat ensures the Guard has a voice in its future.

The four-star legislation doesn't pass, but it bears fruit. Army leaders compromise on the cut and promise more resources and integration. And Congress provides the Guard a permanent two-star advisory position to the JCS chairman.

1998

Congress doubles Guard commissary privileges to 24 visits a year and, for the first time, provides imminent danger pay comparable to the active component.

Lawmakers, also at NGAUS request, ensure that all Army Guard units are able to train in 1999 by restoring two-thirds of the operational readiness shortfall of $634 million in the president's budget request.

1999

At the association's behest, Congress adds nearly $1.5 billion above the president's budget request for equipment, full-time manning, military construction and force sustainment.

Congress also creates a Thrift Savings Plan for the Guard and Reserve, opens the Tricare Dental Program to family members and waives Tricare deductibles for those called to active duty for less than a year.

THE 21ST CENTURY

2000

Congress increases the maximum number of retirement points per year from 75 to 90 and extends several special pays, bonuses and benefits, including VA home loans-all at NGAUS' urging.

The association is also among several military and veterans' service organizations that convince lawmakers to provide Tricare for Life eligibility to all Medicare-eligible retirees of the uniformed services and their family members.

Congress also provides more than $1 billion over the president's budget request for Guard equipment, training and military construction.

In addition, lawmakers provide funds for five new weapons of mass destruction civil support teams. DoD originally wanted only 10 teams scattered nationwide, but Congress shares the NGAUS view that every state needs one.

2001

The association convinces Congress to provide disability coverage to Guardsmen injured overnight within normal commuting distance to their homes and extends VA home loans through 2011.

Lawmakers also add nearly $2 billion to the president's budget for the Guard. It includes a record $659 million for military construction, $213 million for new UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters and $33 million for counterdrug activities.

2002

With the Global War on Terror dramatically increasing Guard operations tempo, NGAUS and Congress look to help Guardsmen on the frontlines and their families.

Lawmakers expand the Soldiers and Sailors Civil Relief Act protections to Guardsmen mobilized under Title 32 for more than 30 days. They also extend Montgomery GI Bill eligibility from 10 to 14 years and provide commissary benefits to Guardsmen called to state duty in support of a federal emergency.

In addition, Congress authorizes federal agencies to pay their Guard employees' federal health insurance premiums when activated for 30 or more days and provides Tricare Prime Access for activated Guardsmen without access to a military medical facility.

2003

NGAUS convinces Congress to overcome strenuous Pentagon objections and provide the first major expansion of Tricare health care coverage to the Guard and Reserve.

While only temporary, the measure gives Guardsmen access to coverage 60 days before mobilization and 180 days after release from active duty. It also provides medical coverage on a cost-share basis to the one in five traditional Guardsmen and Reservists without employer-provided health coverage.

The association also wins special pay for civil support team members, re-enlistment bonuses for mobilized Guardsmen and helps get concurrent receipt for those with disabilities of 50 percent or more.

Congress also adds $1.3 billion more than the president's budget request for such unfunded requirements as engine upgrades and targeting pods for Air Guard fighter aircraft.

2004

NGAUS and Congress again overcome DoD opposition and make additional progress on Tricare. The new language permanently provides Guardsmen and Reservists access to Tricare 90 days prior to mobilization and 180 days after separation.

Guardsmen and Reservists also become eligible to purchase one year of Tricare for every 90 days of continuous active duty as long as they extend their service agreements.

Congress also approves new educational benefits for the Guard and increased enlistment and re-enlistment bonuses.

Armor tops the equipment list Congress approves for the Guard. Included are $572 million for up-armored Humvees, $100 million for wheeled-vehicle ballistic bolt-on armor and $17.5 million for reactive armor for the Bradley Fighting Vehicle.

Lawmakers also approve a measure that allows the defense secretary to provide states with money to employ Guardsmen for homeland security under Title 32 for up to 180 days.

2005

Congress expands Tricare to all Guardsmen and Reservists in a three-tier system. The new program isn't everything NGAUS wants or the Guard needs but is another step in the right direction.

Lawmakers also lower the basic housing allowance threshold from 140 days to 30 days for members of the Guard and Reserve and improves a variety of enlistment and officer bonuses.

They also create the Every Soldier a Recruiter program that combines with other efforts to stimulate an Army Guard recruiting surge that will continue into 2007.

NGAUS also helps win more than $1 billion in congressional add-ons. Included in the overall budget are funds for 15 C-17s, and eight C-DOJs.

In addition, the association becomes the focal point for opposition to the Pentagon's Base Realignment and Closure recommendation to ground 29 Air Guard flying units.

2006

At the urging of NGAUS, Congress streamlines Tricare to a single, low-cost program for all Guardsmen and Reservists, regardless of their mobilization status or history or current access to health care.

The victory culminates a sever-year effort to improve the Guard's medical readiness while providing an important new recruiting and retention benefit. The program is set to begin Oct. 1, 2007.

The association also leads the successful fight against an Army plan to cut more than 17,000 soldiers from the Army Guard's end strength.

In addition, NGAUS mobilizes its members behind empowerment legislation designed to give the Guard more input into final Pentagon deliberations. A version of the bill wins Senate approval, but it's eventually referred to the Commission on the National Guard and Reserves for study.

Compiled from official NGAUS conference proceedings dating back to 1879 and other reference materials available in the library at The National Guard Memorial in Washington, D.C

© 2007 National Guard Association of the United States Provided by ProQuest LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Source: National Guard

 

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