ARMY_101 said:
"The responsibilities of a Logistics Officers include:
Procurement
Warehousing items and material control
Distribution and disposal of military material, equipment, and ammunition
Coordination of food services, postal services, human resource or financial services"
I won't pretend to understand the procurement system, but why are our LogOs supposedly competent enough to do procurement as part of their trade, but not competent enough to do it without civilian employee oversight? If procurement is as hard and difficult as we're assuming, then we're either not training LogOs properly or not giving them the support and authority they deserve.
First of all, procurement, at an
industrial level, (which covers things like e.g. GM Canada, DND or, say Bell Canada) is the business of accountants and engineers - it is vastly different from types of local procurement done by our excellent LogOs and NCOs. Consider "procuring" a ship or an aircraft - not a warship or a combat aircraft, but an ocean going ferry or a new cargo aircraft for commercial use: you can go to Irving's
Halifax Shipyard, haul out your cheque book and say one 200 passenger car ferry suitable for the Nova Scotia to/from Newfoundland service, please ... they'll be really glad to see you; ditto going to e.g.
Lockheed Martin and just asking for, say, a new L100
Hercules. But that's not how
Marine Atlantic buys ships. They have teams of accountants and engineers who work out the future requirements and work closely with the builders to design and delivers ships that will meet their long term requirements - for a profit making service. Ditto e.g.
First Air: they don't just walk into Lockheed Martin and say "another
Herc, please.
Second, government procurement has a HUGE political aspect. It is the
people's cheque book that is being opened ~ your tax dollars and mine. The "business case" is much more complex than, say
First Air's - the procurement staff needs to satisfy the end user's
operational requirement within the allocated budget while, simultaneously, satisfying Canadians'
requirements for jobs and "benefits." It's another dimension, bigger than just accounting or engineering.