All that to say that the RCN’s priority now should be generating forces, including planning ships at sea. Admirals need to stop measuring their success as how many deployments they oversaw, but how many qualified sailors they created.
And there is a way to do that with the naval reserve so it truly becomes a "break glass in case of emergency" manning pool: Close all 24 N.R.U.'s.
The last thing we need is to maintain and use 24 buildings, with 24 CO's, XO's etc. etc. down the line and thus wasting half the Naval Reservist's careers doing administration.
Create five regional training centers : Atlantic (likely Halifax, but separate from the main base); Quebec (Quebec city - facility is already there), Ontario (current location of Star in Hamilton - and kick the Army out of there), Prairies (Winnipeg would be my choice) and, Pacific/Mountain (Vancouver).
These centers would be manned, operated and administered (including the reservists' administration and standards) by the Reg Force and have classrooms, shops, simulators and part task trainers for all trades and MOC.
A reservist's service cycle would entail recruiting and charge taking at any recruiting center, followed by GMT or BOTC at St-Jean (or any other facility specifically designated for such basic training - but please, not in tents or shacks in Valcartier -( we are trying to retain those sailors not discourage them with Army mentality). At this point, the reservists would be sufficiently indoctrinated and trained to follow orders and be trusted to show up wherever we tell them to go. They would be given a schedule of week-end training to attend at one of the regional centers and means to travel there and would be expected to attend six week ends before Christmas break and six more after, followed by summer courses of two weeks duration plus any OJT time in the summer they can handle. The coursing (24 week-end days + 10 days in the summer, totaling 34 days) gives a reasonable amount of time to progress through the various levels.
In my system, no reservist would have to do any administration. Regardless of rank and time in, they would spend all their available time either on course, in refresher training or at sea in OJT.
Even if the reserves were halved in number by this system, it would generate more personnel ready to go to sea if needed than the current system.
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And I am willing to bet we would have greater retention after the first two to three years current average service before quitting.