Mike Rowe urges business owners to hire veterans: 'There's no good reason not to'
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"Returning the Favor" host Mike Rowe has a message for business owners on National Hire A Veteran Day.
The 57-year-old told Fox News in an exclusive statement Thursday that business owners have one "simple question" to ask themselves today.
"If you own a business that employs human beings, you need to ask yourself a simple question – have I built a vet-friendly on-ramp into my organization, or not?
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"If the answer is 'yes,' congratulations! You've done a good thing. If the answer is 'no,' you've got to ask yourself, 'why?'"
He concluded, "And then, you have to build a vet-friendly on-ramp into your organization! Because the truth is, there's no good reason not to."
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The former "Dirty Jobs" star has long been outspoken about ensuring young Americans are equipped with the necessary skills and trades to help them land more employment opportunities.
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Last August, Rowe spoke about the "disconnect" that is happening in the education system that is allowing for confusion among recent grads who matriculate from four-year institutions and enter the workforce with false expectations.
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"The expectation is real and the expectation is this: 'I want a job in my chosen field. I want that job to pay not just fairly but well. And, most interestingly, I would like that job to be in my zip code. Like, right now. I'm not really into this whole moving to where the work is,'" Rowe said at the time.
Rowe, who in 2017 said his college degree has served him well, said he "strongly support[s] education in all of its forms." He added he just opposes pushing a four-year college degree on everyone.
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"What I’ve opposed – consistently - is not the importance of higher education, but rather, the relentless drumbeat of 'college for everyone,'" he explained. "Because this cookie-cutter approach to education presupposes that all worthwhile knowledge can only be attained from a college or a university. That’s the most dangerous myth of all."
He suggested pushing four-year colleges on high school students has led schools to stop offering shop class and vocational skills and left "6 million vacant jobs that no one is trained to do."
"That’s the skills gap. It's real, and it's a massive problem for anyone who shares my addiction to smooth roads, cool air, and indoor plumbing," he wrote on social media.
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He concluded, "I'll continue to challenge the idea that college is the only place to get a worthwhile education."