SPRINGFIELD, IL (12/03/2013)(readMedia)-- The Illinois National Guard's Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve (ESGR) office is experiencing greater success with a smaller approach to helping Illinois Soldiers and Airmen find civilian jobs.

"We have found that smaller job fairs, featuring one or two major Illinois employers and focusing on specific skill sets is where we've had success getting Soldiers and Airmen civilian employment," said Lt. Col. Tim Franklin of Springfield, Ill., the Illinois ESGR program director.

The Illinois ESGR program, in conjunction with the Hero2Hired program, and the Illinois Department of Employment Security will hold a job fair Dec. 12 at the Decatur armory, 5550 Ocean Trail, where Archer Daniels Midland Company (ADM) will be the only employer recruiting Illinois Guardsmen and Illinois veterans.

"Hiring veterans is good for ADM and good for America," said Mike D'Ambrose, SVP and CHRO of ADM. Veterans bring a set of unique skills and attributes that make them great employees; Veterans are reliable, dedicated, hardworking, quick learners and strong leaders, providing companies with the competitive advantage to succeed."

ADM representatives will meet with individuals interested in working as truck drivers, maintenance workers and general laborers for ADM at the Dec. 12 event.

"By holding a single-company employment event as opposed to a job fair with dozens of potential employers, we can target unemployed and underemployed Soldiers and Airmen with specific skills in specific areas of the state and match them with employers like ADM," said Darrell Melrose of Washington, Ill., the Employment Transition Coordinator for Hero2Hired.

While the large-scale, multiple employer job fairs will continue, Melrose said it is likely there will be more small-scale, targeted hiring events in the future.

"Matching the right Soldier or Airmen with the right skills to the right job is our focus and if narrowing our target rather than casting a large net is successful, we'll keep doing it until everyone has a civilian job," said Melrose.

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SPRINGFIELD, IL (09/13/2013)(readMedia)-- The Illinois National Guard's 129th Regional Training Institute (RTI) will host the state's first Modern Army Combatives Program (MACP) Instructor Summit in conjunction with the Adjutant General's Combatives Championships Sept. 14 and 15 at Camp Lincoln in Springfield.

Chief combatives trainer with the RTI, Staff Sgt. Nicholas Grant of Caseyville, Ill., planned the Instructor Summit and said MACP has evolved over the last few years to include new training to meet the tactical needs of forces on the ground.

"Many of the techniques and training methods we will cover during the summit were adopted from the Special Operations Combatives Program," said Grant. "We will train on how to fight with weapons, weapon retention and transition during hand-to-hand combat, hand cuffing and vehicle extraction techniques, and most importantly, how to conduct MACP training at the unit level in a safe yet realistic manner."

Grant attended the three-day Army-wide national summit at Fort Benning, GA., in 2012.

"That sparked the idea to create a summit for our combatives instructors here in Illinois," said Grant. "Our intent is to make this an annual event to coincide with the TAG Combatives Championships each year."

He said combatives instructors at the unit level are spread throughout the state and it is difficult to get them all together to update the training after their initial MACP instructor certification.

"This summit will provide a priceless opportunity to bring dozens of our MACP instructors all together at one time to train on the latest and greatest that MACP has to offer and provide a rare opportunity to network with other instructors to share ideas on training methods and unit-level combatives program development," said Grant.

With the idea in place, Grant said it was a considerable challenge to prioritize the vast amount of material and squeeze it into one day of training.

"The combatives program has progressed so much in the past few years we could easily spend several days training on new stuff and hopefully next year we will," said Grant.

He hopes the instructors will return from the summit to their units with more tools to conduct safe and realistic combatives training.

"Plain and simple, combatives saves lives. Whether directly by providing the tools needed to dominate an enemy in close-quarter-combat or indirectly by providing the courage, confidence, resiliency and warrior ethos needed to survive in a combat environment," said Grant.

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