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Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III takes a selfie with South Carolina State University ROTC cadet Casey Fore after visiting the university in Orangeburg, S.C.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Friday stressed the importance of public service during his commencement address to South Carolina State University, a historically Black college.

"Class of 2024, we need your service to the nation, so find ways to make change," Austin told the graduating class of about 250. "To contribute. And to be a part of something bigger than yourself."

Austin's call to service comes amid a yearslong recruiting[1] slump as the military service branches desperately try to fill the ranks. That difficulty in recruiting is due to a confluence of issues, such as young Americans struggling to meet the qualifications for service and low unemployment, but also because the military is grappling to figure out how to pitch service to Gen Z as it comes of age.

Read Next: Florida Airman Was Shot by Deputy Within Seconds of Opening Apartment Door, Body Cam Footage Shows[2]

Black Americans enlist in disproportionately high numbers, but Black troops are also less represented in the senior ranks. Austin has used his stature as the first Black defense secretary to speak directly to students about his own story and inspire them to public service, such as a similar speech he gave last year[3] to graduates at Fayetteville State University near Fort Liberty[4], North Carolina.

On Friday, Austin, who grew up in Thomasville, Georgia, during the South's Jim Crow era, said that in those "ugly days," he was among the first Black teenagers to integrate into what was a whites-only school in Georgia.

"I doubt that the people trying to keep me out of that school imagined that they were blocking the education of a future four-star general and Cabinet official. We don't have one American to spare," he said. "We don't have one citizen to squander. And that means that we need to keep working together to knock down barriers, to level the playing field, and to let everybody compete to win."

Black recruits are overrepresented in the enlisted force, making up nearly one-quarter of new Army[5] recruits in 2023, service data shows. Overall, Black Americans make up roughly 14% of the general population.

Meanwhile, only about 6% of top brass are Black officers across the military, according to data from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace[6].

That has begun to change, at least at the highest echelons of the military. Austin rose to be a four-star Army general and the head of U.S. Central Command during a four-decade military career.

Austin now serves as the civilian leader of the Pentagon alongside Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Charles "C.Q." Brown, who is also Black -- the two highest military offices outside of the president.

Meanwhile, the services have made some progress in their recruiting efforts in recent years. But the Pentagon is having trouble finding applicants qualified for service, as defense officials estimate only 23% of young Americans[7] can meet enlistment standards.

Those standards include being below a certain body fat percentage and passing the military's SAT-style entrance exam, as well as scoring high enough to qualify for specific roles.

All of the services, as well as the secretary, have worked to portray military service as appealing to the youngest generation eligible for recruitment[8].

"Now, you're graduating in challenging times. Divided times," Austin said. "But so many things still bring us together as Americans. Our Constitution. Our democracy. The rule of law. The new Beyoncé album."

Related: Austin Recounts Childhood Struggles with Racism in University Address Focused on Military Inclusion[9]

© Copyright 2024 Military.com. All rights reserved. This article may not be republished, rebroadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without written permission. To reprint or license this article or any content from Military.com, please submit your request here[10].

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Doctor prepares to make the initial incision at the start of a surgery, Feb. 26, 2019. (U.S. Ari Force photo by Heide Couch)

The Pentagon is tweaking its formula for calculating payments to U.S. service members for medical malpractice claims, a move that could put more money in the pockets of affected troops and veterans.

The Defense Department currently reduces the amount it pays for medical malpractice settlements by the amount of DoD pay or Department of Veterans Affairs[1] disability compensation the service member receives. The practice is known as an offset.

Under the new rule to be published Friday, the offset would apply only to the estimated amount of a service member's lost wages or future income and not to the amount awarded for other damages such as pain and suffering, disfigurement or other harms.

Read Next: They Took My Gift Away': In Interview, Mother of Florida Airman Killed by Police Describes Shock[2]

Pentagon officials said in the final rule that, until now, claimants who had little or no economic damages would be unable to recover any money if the pay or disability compensation they receive exceeds the total amount of potential and noneconomic damages.

Now, affected troops will be able to completely recover noneconomic damages.

"The amendments to the regulation will allow some service members to receive compensation for noneconomic damages that they would not have been able to receive under the current regulation," DoD officials wrote in the rule. "The amendments afford some service members additional compensation."

In October, the Pentagon raised the amount of money troops could receive[3] for noneconomic damages from $600,000 to $750,000. Economic damages, such as loss of wages as a result of malpractice, remain uncapped.

According to the Defense Department, offsets were applied to just four claims that were decided in 2021 and 2022. (The DoD based its rule only on the information available early in the creation of the program.) In half of the claims, the economic damages were larger than the offsets so the new rule would not have changed the payout. But it would have affected the remaining two, with $200,000 more being allotted in one case and $100,000 more to the other.

In October, Pentagon spokesman Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder said that currently pending claims affected by the rule will be adjudicated once the rule is published.

Until 2021, service members were not allowed to file claims for medical malpractice or sue the Defense Department over injuries or illnesses that occur while on active duty. Troops still aren't allowed to file lawsuits over medical malpractice under the Feres Doctrine, set by a 1950 Supreme Court decision that protected the military and its officials from liability for combat- related injuries, although family members may file claims and lawsuits in civil court under the Federal Tort Claims Act.

Legislation passed in 2019 allowed service members to file claims for injuries over malpractice at military treatment facilities. Army[4] Master Sgt. Richard Stayskal, for whom the legislation was named, was denied the claim[5] he filed against Womack Army Medical Center at Fort Liberty[6], North Carolin -- then Fort Bragg -- which did not follow up on a suspicious lump. He was later diagnosed with terminal lung cancer.

Stayskal and his wife filed claims for $20 million for pain and suffering. His subsequent appeal also was denied. His attorney, Natalie Khawam of Whistleblower Law Firm in Tampa, said Thursday that her client was told that the Army had "breached standard of care" but did not commit malpractice.

Stayskal currently has no recourse to appeal his ruling. Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., introduced a bill last year that would allow service members to take their medical malpractice claims to federal court. The bill has 27 sponsors but has not been considered by the House Judiciary Committee.

"People have the right to sue if they are victims of malpractice, except for service members. It's time to stop treating them like second-class citizens. It's got to stop," Khawam said during an interview Thursday.

Related: Soldier's Family Awarded 'Multimillion Dollar' Medical Malpractice Claim from DoD[7]

© Copyright 2024 Military.com. All rights reserved. This article may not be republished, rebroadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without written permission. To reprint or license this article or any content from Military.com, please submit your request here[8].

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A civilian stands at a lectern adorned with the Defense Department seal.When educator Kerrie Gill made her lesson plans for the 2023-2024 school year, she didn't know her efforts were going to earn her the Department of Defense Education Activity's 2024 Teacher of the Year title. It's an honor she accepted with grace and

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