Ray Kelley, IU East Alum
Ray Kelley, BS’04, served his country for nine years as a Marine and an Army reservist but, today, he serves the interests of his former comrades on Capitol Hill.
Kelley is the national legislative director for AMVETS in Lanham, Md., the fourth largest Veterans Service Organization.
“We have a membership base,” Kelley said. “The membership each year comes back with resolutions that say, ‘Here are the things that are important to us.’ I use that as a playbook for how I approach Congress.”
Today, the 40-year-old is busy urging lawmakers to fix what he calls a broken system for managing veterans’ medical claims.
“There’s a whole process that has to take place for them to get that compensation,” Kelley said. “Some veterans wait 18 months to get that compensation and get medical services that they deserve. We’re trying to get them medical services and disability benefits in a timely manner.”
Kelley said AMVETS is also actively pushing for better access to medical services and higher education.
“Forty percent of all veterans live in a rural or remote area,” Kelley explained. “That means they are several hours away from a VA medical clinic. Making sure they get the quality medical care they deserve is also an issue.
“Historically, 70 percent of veterans use some portion of their GI Bill but only 6 percent – anybody that was enlisted that didn’t have any kind of education prior to going into the military – graduate with a bachelor’s degree.”
Kelley understands the statistic better than anyone.
In 1995, Kelley enrolled in classes at IU East after serving as a military police officer in the U.S. Marine Corps from 1989 to 1995. He enlisted as soon as he graduated from Hagerstown High School. But he left IU East after one semester.
“I think part of the reason that veterans don’t transition to college campuses so well is that you’re used to working as a group; you’re used to having your buddies to go through everything with. You go to a college campus and it’s very individualized.”
Kelley eventually returned to IU East for a second try through the support of his wife, Rebecca, and after meeting Paul Kriese, an associate professor of political science.
Kelley said Kriese gave him the confidence to return and succeed in school. Conversely, Kriese says Kelley challenged him to be a better professor.
“We don’t always agree politically, but we listen to each other and we learn from each other,” Kriese said. “He’s not afraid to be involved … he’s not afraid to go against the stream if he thinks that’s important.”
Their relationship continued after Kelley graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Behavioral Sciences with a concentration in political science.
“Ray and I have become good friends,” Kriese said. “When he was getting finished and getting ready to do something else he asked if he should attend graduate school. I told him he needs to be involved. I said, ‘you have this background with the Marines and that’s probably going to be a better thing for you.”
“He said, ‘You’re more pragmatic than academic,’” Kelley said. “He said, ‘You need to go out and use what you know to help other people.’”
Kelley still enrolled in graduate-level classes at Ball State University and, eventually, Kelley returned to the U.S. Army Reserve as a psychological operations team leader. He conducted over 250 combat missions independently and in conjunction with indigenous forces and Special Forces in the North Babel Province of Iraq.
“I was a busy boy,” he said. “There were days when I would run two missions. I would be out on a mission talking to some local leaders and just trying to be nice; drinking tea with them and sitting on their couch to get to know them a little bit. Then, we would be hit with an IED (improvised explosive device).” But he eventually took his former professor’s advice, and it served him well.
‘You know, it’s growing on me,” Kelley said of his job with AMVETS. “When I first got there I didn’t know anything about veterans’ issues. It wasn’t something I was passionate about. I knew a lot about military operations, but I think I’ve found something that I’m pretty good at.”
His alma mater is proud of him, too. IU East recognized Kelley with its 2010 Distinguished Alumni Award at the campus’ May commencement, an award shared by former local politicians and business leaders, among graduates with other pedigrees.
“It was an honor to get the award,” Kelley said. “At first, I didn’t know about the exclusivity of it. I looked at some the people who received it in the past and said, ‘Holy Cow! These are really pillars of the community.’”