Colin Parkinson
Army.ca Myth
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I wonder if any of the Chinooks that our troops will hitch a ride on, where one of the ones we used to own, that would be ironic wouldn't it?
Details here: http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/16987/post-273857.html#msg273857Teddy Ruxpin said:Then again, we issued a contract to Oerlikon today for the so-called "Multi-mission Effects Vehicle", a made in Canada "one of" boondoggle if I've ever seen one... :brickwall:
Red tape could put Armed Forces in 'death spiral'
The Canadian Press
Thursday, September 22, 2005
OTTAWA - Government red tape and bureaucracy have become so cumbersome that the military finds it easier to keep patching up junk than to buy new equipment, says a study from Queen's University.
The paper from the Kingston, Ont., university's school of public policy warns if government procedures aren't streamlined, the Canadian Forces will crumble away as ships, planes and vehicles decay into uselessness.
Howie Marsh, an analyst with the Conference of Defence Associations, cites as an example in the study that the military is planning to spend almost a billion dollars over the next 10 years to keep its fleet of 2,500 medium trucks running. They're already 25 years old and it costs more than $38,000 a year for the parts needed to keep each of them going.
He says replacing the fleet would be cheaper than 10 years of maintenance.
But capital costs come from another budget and a replacement project would need cabinet approval and agreement from other departments, which can take years.
Doug Bland, who holds the chair of defence management studies at Queens, says the whole administrative process must be changed to speed things up.
Bland says the problem runs through the army, navy and air force, as key systems age. If nothing is done to streamline the system, the military will begin to lose important capabilities within five years.
"The Armed Forces, by anyone's estimate, is in a death spiral."