RADOPSIGOPACISSOP said:
The units can develop, mentor, coddle and evaluate leadership potential all we want, but at the end of the day, it's the career manager's call who gets put on career courses.
But based on what? The PERs? The units have control of the PER system. The PDR/PER system is not as much broken as the leaders who are supposed to use it. All the tools are there to ensure that junk pers do not get promoted, but requires the leadership to have some
spine.
I have an example coming up this year. I have a person who is about to receive their first PER in their current rank. They haven't been pure junk, but they sure have proven that they shouldn't be in the rank they are in and they must never, EVER, be promoted again. They have 3 PDRs now, first was "good" and the last two "standard" with a 5b section that was stronger than the 5a section. Given that they are not responding at all feedback from all sources (subordinates, peers, and superiors) and have decided that the problem is really their superiors (me), I'll be surprised if they aren't on IC for performance by the time 31 March rolls around.
Their PER score just came back as an ESAAR because of the pure
weakness that exists outside of my control. I can quite confidently assure you that they will get an SND. Not because I've got it out for them, but because their shortcomings have been documented and the direct and honest feedback they have received has been documented. Although my OC is tracking his shortcomings, when I go to him to get the score changed, he will want to see what we've got, and it will be provided to him.
I didn't enjoy issuing those PDRs, I didn't enjoy the tough conversations, and I didn't enjoy having to look another person in the face and tell him he's not performing very well. It was even less enjoyable because I didn't feel like he *could* improve, because he never should be at the rank level he is at.
But I did all of those things, because it's the tough part of being a leader and I knew it was the right thing to do. The fact that all those before me passed the buck meant they put him in this position where he is in way over his head. The buck they passed landed on my desk and at some point someone has to grow a set or this person will end up as RSM of the CAF.
Having failed to do this properly last year, I've been a little wiser this year. I learned from my failure and forced myself to have the tough conversations and issue the tough PDRs. For some reason, too many people find it easier to sleep at night knowing they are passing the buck on this responsibility.
George Wallace said:
Unit Merit Boards should also be a means to control pers without the leadership qualities desired from progressing and being promoted ahead of their more deserving peers; and a means to stop inflated PERs for pers simply for the reason that their previous PER was higher. There is nothing stating that a person's PER MUST BE higher than their last one.
In my unit, its the unit merit board that causes the most problems from what I've seen... We have the scores *dictated* to us by the Bn. Last year one of my corporals was ranked #1 in the company and no one disagreed. The OC/CSM went to the unit merit board and were happy with where he placed Bn-wide. Then the scores got sent back and our #1 Corporal was now #7 within our own company! :clubinhand: