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north+carolina+department+of+military+and+veterans+affairs Latitude and Longitude:

35°47′08″N 78°38′23″W / 35.78556°N 78.63972°W / 35.78556; -78.63972
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Department of Military and Veterans Affairs
Seal of the North Carolina Department of Military and Veterans Affairs

Raleigh and Gaston / Seaboard Coast Line Building, headquarters of the NC Department of Military & Veterans Affairs
Department overview
Formed10 November 2015; 8 years ago (2015-11-10) (as State Cabinet Department)
Preceding Department
  • Division of Veterans Affairs and Military Affairs Advisor to the Governor
Type Executive Department
Headquarters Seaboard Building, Wake County, North Carolina
United States
35°47′08″N 78°38′23″W / 35.78556°N 78.63972°W / 35.78556; -78.63972
Employees100
Department executive
Child agencies
  • Division of Military Affairs
  • Division of Veterans Affairs
  • Military Affairs Commission
Website www.milvets.nc.gov

The North Carolina Department of Military and Veterans Affairs (DMVA) is a state agency designed to advocate for the relationship the state has with its military and veterans' installations and populations. It was created by the North Carolina General Assembly with the support of Governor Pat McCrory. The current head of the Department is Secretary Grier Martin, who succeeded Walter E. Gaskin in 2024. [1] Prior to the creation of the Department, the Division of Veterans Affairs was under the Department of Administration while all military-related matters fell under the Department of Commerce. [2]

History

Division of Military Affairs

Division of Veterans Affairs

Organizational structure

Office of the Secretary

Division of Veterans Affairs

Military Affairs Commission

Economic Impact

Budget

Recent Achievements

Related legislation

See also

References

  1. ^ Press release: Governor Cooper appoints Grier Martin new Secretary of Department of Military & Veterans Affairs
  2. ^ "About the Department of Military and Veterans Affairs". milvets.nc.gov. Retrieved 3 December 2019.

north+carolina+department+of+military+and+veterans+affairs Latitude and Longitude:

35°47′08″N 78°38′23″W / 35.78556°N 78.63972°W / 35.78556; -78.63972
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Department of Military and Veterans Affairs
Seal of the North Carolina Department of Military and Veterans Affairs

Raleigh and Gaston / Seaboard Coast Line Building, headquarters of the NC Department of Military & Veterans Affairs
Department overview
Formed10 November 2015; 8 years ago (2015-11-10) (as State Cabinet Department)
Preceding Department
  • Division of Veterans Affairs and Military Affairs Advisor to the Governor
Type Executive Department
Headquarters Seaboard Building, Wake County, North Carolina
United States
35°47′08″N 78°38′23″W / 35.78556°N 78.63972°W / 35.78556; -78.63972
Employees100
Department executive
Child agencies
  • Division of Military Affairs
  • Division of Veterans Affairs
  • Military Affairs Commission
Website www.milvets.nc.gov

The North Carolina Department of Military and Veterans Affairs (DMVA) is a state agency designed to advocate for the relationship the state has with its military and veterans' installations and populations. It was created by the North Carolina General Assembly with the support of Governor Pat McCrory. The current head of the Department is Secretary Grier Martin, who succeeded Walter E. Gaskin in 2024. [1] Prior to the creation of the Department, the Division of Veterans Affairs was under the Department of Administration while all military-related matters fell under the Department of Commerce. [2]

History

Division of Military Affairs

Division of Veterans Affairs

Organizational structure

Office of the Secretary

Division of Veterans Affairs

Military Affairs Commission

Economic Impact

Budget

Recent Achievements

Related legislation

See also

References

  1. ^ Press release: Governor Cooper appoints Grier Martin new Secretary of Department of Military & Veterans Affairs
  2. ^ "About the Department of Military and Veterans Affairs". milvets.nc.gov. Retrieved 3 December 2019.

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