Nevada vet services Director Kat Miller honored at retirement

During her tenure, Kat Miller, retired director of the Nevada Department of Veterans Services, presided at a number of Veterans of the Month ceremonies. She honored the late Richard “Dick” Whiston in December 2018.

During her tenure, Kat Miller, retired director of the Nevada Department of Veterans Services, presided at a number of Veterans of the Month ceremonies. She honored the late Richard “Dick” Whiston in December 2018.
Steve Ranson/Nevada News Group, file

  • Discuss Comment, Blog about
  • Print Friendly and PDF
Before the friendly bantering between the retiring director of the Nevada Department of Veterans Services and those in attendance at her retirement party ended, Katherine “Kat” Miller said she will miss those who are wearing or have worn the uniform to serve their country.
Miller officially retired April 30 after spending 10 years as the NDVS director.
“It’s really hard to leave,” she said at her April 28 retirement party that was held at the Governor’s Mansion in Carson City.
Miller said the transition was made easier with those who both attended her retirement and made her decade-old tenure possible. She also thanked current Gov. Steve Sisolak and his predecessor, Brian Sandoval, for their support.
“I could not have asked to work for two finer men and two more inspirational leaders,” she said.
The Reno native said she will miss many of the veterans with whom she worked, but she also looks forward to more family time. June marks her 40th wedding anniversary to her husband, Bill, a retired Army colonel.
“Kat has served our state and our nation with great honor and distinction,” Sisolak said, adding she led NDVS during good and bad times.
The first-term governor said many major accomplishments have occurred during the last decade which resulted in a better quality of life for Nevada’s veterans. They included the construction and opening of the Northern Nevada State Veterans Home in Sparks, which had its ribbon-cutting in December 2018. Before the veterans’ home opened, the only state facility was in Boulder City, which opened in 2002.
Sisolak said both veterans’ homes have received the highest ratings for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Only the top 10% of nursing homes receive this rating, a testament to Miller’s leadership, Sisolak said.
Sisolak also noted Miller’s work and commitment with the two state veterans’ cemeteries in Fernley and Boulder City, the Battle Born Memorial in Carson City and the suicide prevention program.
The state’s first NDVS began during World War II, and 15 directors have guided the department.
“The NDVS has come a long way since the first office was established in 1943,” Sisolak said. “The Nevada Department of Veterans Services has evolved into the kind of state agency that Nevada veterans and their families truly deserve.”
Sisolak said Miller will always be remembered with the number of lives she touched. With her military and state service, colleagues noted Miller’s combined 44 years of service with the military and NDVS.
“In the next chapter of your life, we wish you well and nothing but the best,” Sisolak said. “Your legacy of service will remain forever.”
The governor presented a proclamation to Miller and also a Nevada flag that flew over the Capitol.
The number of veterans has grown in Nevada during the past decade. According to the NDVS, more than 80,000 veterans live in Northern Nevada, and more than 300,000 reside in the state.
Miller, who grew up in Reno and graduated from Reno High School, retired from the U.S. Army with the rank of colonel after a 34-year career that included two years in the Nevada National Guard. She first enlisted and after attaining the rank of staff sergeant, she attended the U.S. Army Officer Candidate School. Her assignments included serving as military police brigade commander in the United States and in Afghanistan and as commander of the Department of Defense’s largest correctional organization.
Miller’s last assignment was the Army’s deputy provost marshal general and commander of the Army Corrections Command.
Miller said her father was a sailor, her sister a Marine, and her brother an airman. According to Miller, she also served in South America, Europe and Southwest Asia. Deployments included tours in Bosnia, Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan.
Miller taught at the University of Maryland and the University of Nevada, Reno. She has a master’s degree in science from the U.S. Army War College and earned a Master of Public Administration from Roosevelt University in Chicago.
New NDVS Director Fred Wagar, deputy director since 2017, showed a lighter side to the night’s serious comments. He said others see Miller at many events, but they don’t know the behind-the-scenes person. Humorous photos accompanied many of Wagar’s comments.
Wagar said Miller had a thirst for knowledge and an insatiable appetite “to know stuff.”
Abigail Mayorga from U.S. Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto’s Reno office along with Louis Carrillo of U.S. Sen. Jacky Rosen’s office and Debbie Balsinger with U.S. Rep. Mark Amodei’s office praised Miller and her accomplishments for Nevada’s veterans. Mayorga said under Miller’s leadership, the NDVS director procured more than $7 million in federal grants for veterans’ projects and support programs. Carrillo said Miller changed veterans’ lives during her career.
Balsinger said Miller worked with veterans and their struggles.
“Thank you for your service; thank you for your selfless sacrifice,” Balsinger said.

Comments

Use the comment form below to begin a discussion about this content.

Sign in to comment