Foreign employers joining Reserve partner program Stars and Stripes: "Army Reserve is bringing two German-run companies into the Employer Partnership Initiative, the first foreign employers to join the program.
Lt. Gen. Jack Stultz, chief of the Army Reserve and commander of U.S. Army Reserve Command, signed an agreement Sunday in Wiesbaden with representatives of Aerotech and TEKsystems, German subsidiaries of the U.S. company Allegis Group, Army officials said.
While the U.S. law aims to protect reservists who are called to active duty — voluntarily or involuntarily — from losing their civilian jobs, no such legal protections exist for Americans who work overseas, military officials say.
Stultz said he has been told by reservists employed with foreign companies that they 'couldn’t get their job back' after their deployment. 'That’s why it’s even more critical to have these partnerships with overseas employers,' he said.
There are about 1,000 reservists assigned to 22 units in Germany and Italy. They fall under the 7th Civil Support Command based at Daenner Kaserne in Kaiserslautern. While there are no reservists currently employed with the partnering German companies, two soldiers were previously, but have since moved to the States, said Maj. Frank Suyak, a 7th Civil Support Command spokesman.
However, some of the command’s reservists are employed by other private companies in Europe, including BMW and Shell Oil, Suyak said. The Army hopes to continue to expand the Partnership Initiative overseas, Stultz said."