During his time in Afghanistan, Army Reservist Viktor Avdulov performed a crucial role: helping Afghan officials develop streets and other infrastructure.
But in the year since he came back home to Minnesota, Avdulov has found looking for work "pretty tough," he said. The 30-year-old Eagan resident, who also served in Iraq, is hoping his prospects brighten soon when he graduates from Metropolitan State University in St. Paul.
Avdulov and more than 1,000 other veterans received special attention Tuesday at the seventh annual Minnesota Veterans Career Fair held at the Earle Brown Heritage Center in Brooklyn Center, sponsored by the state Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED).
"It's a lot better than looking online, because you get to meet people face to face," Avdulov said. "A few people [recruiters] asked me to e-mail résumés."
Two years ago, Minnesota had the nation's third-highest rate of unemployment for the youngest military service members returning from Afghanistan and Iraq. For that high-risk group — vets ages 18 to 24 — it's dropped from a high of 23 percent to about 14 percent, said Jim Finley, director of DEED's veterans employment programs.
Still, that's a stubbornly high rate, given that Minnesota's overall unemployment rate of 5.3 percent is one of the lowest in the country and that over the past year the state has added more than 43,000 jobs. The jobless rate for vets of all ages is about the same as for the entire state population, Finley said.
More than 1,080 service members or vets attended the fair, which included booths staffed by 130 employers, 10 educational institutions and about 15 service providers, including Veterans Affairs counselors and state and community agencies.
DEED Commissioner Katie Clark Sieben said the state is committed to improving veterans' lives, "and that means helping them find meaningful employment."