you will have to contact an education center to find out.
Only retired, reserve or national guard soldiers have ID cards.SSG C. HernandezUS ArmyIf you are not in the reserves, active, national guard or retired, you can not obtain an ID card.
Signifies an Honorable Discharge from Active Service, Given along with a DD-form 214
An honorable discharge is the highest form of departure from military service. You get everything. (Did you mean dishonorable?)
You must serve at least 180 of active service to receive any benefits.
Yes, both OTH (Other Than Honorable) and Admin (Administrative) discharges from the Army receive paperwork showing their discharge. This paperwork is known as a Certificate of Release or Discharge from Active Duty (DD Form 214) and it includes information about the type of discharge and the reason for it.
According to the Veterans Benefits website any veteran who served active duty for 90 days consecutively, had an honorable discharge and has their DD214 discharge card qualifies for military discounts. The discharge card is necessary in order to receive one.
You can be called to active duty.
To qualify for a VA loan, a person must be have either 4 years of active duty or 6 years of Reserve military service and have an honorable discharge. A DD 214 is required.
The National Guard and Reserves are branches of the active duty military.
Only if you retire from the service, or are a disabled Vet, and even then you get a different type of ID than your active duty ID. As far as current ID's, they're turned in and destroyed when you process out.
It depends on the discharge type, but in general, no. You can get a job if they'll hire you, but the fact is that if it's a government contractor that requires you to have an active security clearance (which is pretty much anything these days) there's no way they can hire you due to clearance restrictions for working on contracts.
No.