chi-robinwebb (5) CHICAGO— CCIM Institute , an expert in commercial real estate education, has just joined forces with the US Department of Veterans Affairs and several of the most influential companies in the industry to bring more military veterans into commercial real estate. The most important development is that for the first time veterans can now get funding through the GI Bill to pay for the Chicago-based institute's professional education course. “Veterans are a proven quality who have served their country,” Robin L. Webb , president-elect of CCIM, tells GlobeSt.com. And although there is no real relationship between military training and working in world of real estate, military experience “gives them a leg up on the discipline required.” M arcus & Millichap , Ten-X , and Colliers International , all members of the CCIM Institute Advisory Council , have all agreed to develop a bona fide path to employment for CCIM-educated vets in the profession. “We are all out there trying to help veterans as they return to civilian life.” That return can present challenges. While the US unemployment rate in March was 5% overall, unemployment for vets rose to 6.3%. The executive office of President Barack Obama reported in 2014 that between 240,000 to 360,000 men and women leave the US military annually. US Census Bureau . “At Ten-X, we are always looking for ways to invest in strategic talent pipelines, and we view our nation's veterans and their loved ones as one such talent channel,” says Chris Galy , chief people officer at Ten-X in Belmont, CA. “Partnering with CCIM Institute to build a deeper bench of self-motivated, highly dependable, and dedicated service members is a huge opportunity to fuel our future growth. This just isn't about supporting veterans. It's great business.” chi-robinwebb (5) CHICAGO— CCIM Institute , an expert in commercial real estate education, has just joined forces with the US Department of Veterans Affairs and several of the most influential companies in the industry to bring more military veterans into commercial real estate. The most important development is that for the first time veterans can now get funding through the GI Bill to pay for the Chicago-based institute's professional education course. “Veterans are a proven quality who have served their country,” Robin L. Webb , president-elect of CCIM, tells GlobeSt.com. And although there is no real relationship between military training and working in world of real estate, military experience “gives them a leg up on the discipline required.” M arcus & Millichap , Ten-X , and Colliers International , all members of the CCIM Institute Advisory Council , have all agreed to develop a bona fide path to employment for CCIM-educated vets in the profession. “We are all out there trying to help veterans as they return to civilian life.” That return can present challenges. While the US unemployment rate in March was 5% overall, unemployment for vets rose to 6.3%. The executive office of President Barack Obama reported in 2014 that between 240,000 to 360,000 men and women leave the US military annually. US Census Bureau . “At Ten-X, we are always looking for ways to invest in strategic talent pipelines, and we view our nation's veterans and their loved ones as one such talent channel,” says Chris Galy , chief people officer at Ten-X in Belmont, CA. “Partnering with CCIM Institute to build a deeper bench of self-motivated, highly dependable, and dedicated service members is a huge opportunity to fuel our future growth. This just isn't about supporting veterans. It's great business.”

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Brian J. Rogal

Brian J. Rogal is a Chicago-based freelance writer with years of experience as an investigative reporter and editor, most notably at The Chicago Reporter, where he concentrated on housing issues. He also has written extensively on alternative energy and the payments card industry for national trade publications.

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