A National Model for Efficient Workforce Development, Reduced Government Burden, and Stronger Economic Outcomes
ATLANTA, Jan. 5, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — The Veterans Training Empowerment Center (VTEC) , a 501(c)(3) nonprofit dedicated to military workforce development and an approved U.S. Army Career Skills Program (CSP) provider delivering on-base training at Fort Benning, Georgia, and recognized with Guidestar’s Platinum Seal of Transparency, today announced the expansion of the VTEC Fort Gillem National Training Center. This centralized, military-focused workforce hub is designed to support soldiers, veterans, military families, and civilian learners while providing direct, measurable benefits to federal and state agencies.
The Fort Gillem center will provide a unified system for training, credentialing, and placing transitioning service members into high-demand civilian careers. While the existing Fort Benning Command Training Center has successfully supported soldiers, increasing demand from both participants and hiring partners requires expansion. The new Fort Gillem National Training Center will scale training capacity, centralize employer access, reduce government costs, and strengthen national workforce participation, supporting economic and readiness objectives across multiple agencies.
Government agencies at the federal, state, and local levels are invited to visit https://www.100partnersportal.org to learn how they can partner with VTEC, support military workforce development, and access trained, job-ready personnel for their programs and operations.
Unique Insights & Data (Projected Program Outcomes)
The VTEC Fort Gillem National Training Center is structured around outcome-driven workforce targets designed to deliver measurable public value at scale.
Five-Year Workforce & Economic Projections:
These projections are based on VTEC’s existing operational model, employer partnerships, and U.S. Army CSP delivery experience, and are designed to scale proven transition pathways while reducing duplicative government workforce and unemployment costs.
Why the VTEC Fort Gillem National Training Center Benefits Government Agencies
1. U.S. Department of Labor (DOL)
Reduced Unemployment Claims and Lower Federal Payouts
When transitioning soldiers move directly into civilian employment, they avoid the unemployment gap that often follows separation. This reduces:
Every soldier who transitions into a job instead of unemployment represents direct savings for DOL and state workforce systems.
Strengthened Workforce Participation in Critical Sectors
VTEC produces job-ready workers in industries where the U.S. faces urgent shortages:
This supports DOL’s national workforce development priorities.
2. U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
Reduced Demand on VA Employment and Transition Programs
By providing training, credentialing, and job placement, VTEC reduces:
Improved Veteran Stability and Lower Crisis Risk
Stable employment is one of the strongest predictors of:
This directly supports VA’s mission and reduces long-term federal costs.
3. U.S. Department of Defense (DoD)
Stronger Recruitment and Retention Messaging
A guaranteed civilian pathway strengthens DoD’s ability to recruit and retain talent. Service members are more confident entering the military when they know:
Reduced Transition Burden on Commands
VTEC absorbs responsibilities that often fall on unit leadership, including:
This allows commands to stay focused on readiness.
4. U.S. Department of Commerce and Economic Development Agencies
A Pipeline of Skilled Workers for High-Growth Industries
VTEC produces job-ready workers in sectors that drive national competitiveness:
This strengthens regional economies and supports federal economic development goals.
5. State Workforce Agencies (Including Georgia DOL)
Lower State Unemployment Burden
When soldiers and veterans move directly into jobs:
Higher State and Local Tax Revenue
Employed veterans contribute immediately to:
This strengthens state budgets without raising taxes.
6. Federal and State Legislators
A HighROI Investment for Constituents
Fort Gillem becomes a national model for:
It gives legislators a measurable, bipartisan success story tied to jobs, families, and national readiness.
A National Workforce Engine Built by the Military Community
The VTEC Fort Gillem National Training Center is designed to:
This is a system built by the military community, for the military community , with benefits that extend far beyond the installation gates.
From Leadership
“Government agencies carry enormous responsibility for workforce development, economic stability, and veteran support,” said David W. Gallemore , CEO of the Veterans Training Empowerment Center. “The VTEC Fort Gillem National Training Center strengthens every one of those missions. When soldiers transition directly into good jobs, everyone wins — the servicemember, the family, the employer, and the taxpayer.”
About the Veterans Training Empowerment Center (VTEC)The Veterans Training Empowerment Center (VTEC) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization providing no cost workforce training and direct job pathways for transitioning soldiers, veterans, National Guard, Reserve members, and their immediate family members. VTEC is also an approved U.S. Army Career Skills Program (CSP) provider, currently delivering on base training at Fort Benning Army Base in Columbus, Georgia. VTEC partners with employers nationwide to deliver scalable workforce solutions built by the military community, for the military community.
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SOURCE Veterans Training Empowerment Center


