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Provided without comment straight from the Info-machine - let the tea leaf reading begin!
Brigadier-General Kelly Woiden, Director General Land Reserve talks about maintaining a sustainable Reserve Force while achieving a work-life balance for reservists.
The Canadian Army Reserves are an essential component of the total Army force representing the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) in communities across Canada.
“The Army Reserves is an integral part of the Army; we’re at approximately 19,000 folks depending. We’re approximately 48 per cent of the total Army strength,” said BGen Woiden, a proud reservist for over 35 years.
In your community
“The beauty is they’re all across the country in small and large communities. Sometimes you don’t know who your local reservists are; it’s all citizens from different walks of life.”
Reservists make up 123 units in 117 communities across the country.
“They’re citizen soldiers; they’re active within the community, and have a tendency to give. Especially the ones who stay in the reserves, many of them are very prominent within their communities because they can handle more than one thing,” explained BGen Woiden.
Keeping the Reserves sustainable
The Army is conducting a thorough review of training that includes a detailed look at the Army Reserve. The amount of time the reservists are asked to train is being assessed in order to achieve a reasonable work-life balance
“Between civilian life and reserve or military life, it’s our challenge to find a sustainable work commitment that’s able to provide what we need on the force generation side of the house,” said BGen Woiden.
Reservists are part-time soldiers; a commitment of roughly four evenings and one weekend a month, as well as various training sessions throughout their careers.
The goal for Reserve training is to deliver it in manageable amounts, usually through courses of no more than two or three weeks in duration. Once or twice during his or her career, a reservist may have to take courses that run longer. For the reservists’ civilian employers, military training is a bonus.
“There is a benefit to the employer, they are getting a highly trained, experienced individual and those skill sets are transferable,” BGen Woiden points out.
The Canadian Forces Liaison Council (CFLC) is a group of volunteer civilian employers that looks at issues such as soldiers getting time off work for training and deployment. The CFLC works with business and industry to establish military leave policies that are clearly defined between reservists and their civilian employers. BGen Woiden depends on them to be a direct line of communication between the worlds of business and industry and the Army.
Post-Afghanistan Era
BGen Woiden says the goal is sustainability. “Retain the soldier once you’ve got them trained. Allow them to progress, be leaders, take on more responsibility, and in many cases provide that benefit back into the community.”
“We need to be viable, sustainable, and relevant as we transition from deployment on operations like Afghanistan,” said BGen Woiden. “We need to ensure the force generation base in the Army Reserve is robust and capable of providing the training and personnel required for operations: whether that’s domestic or expeditionary.”
Many reservists deployed to Afghanistan; more than 4,200 over the 12 years of the Afghan missions.
“Those that went to Afghanistan volunteered. They took time off from their civilian occupation or their families to be part of an integrated Army operation,” noted BGen Woiden. “Part of it is to keep them in, to challenge them. They’ve gone off and now we need to take that experience level they’ve gained and impart it to the Reserve Force and the Army as a whole.”
Collective Training
Sovereignty operations in the North are an important part of the current Army Reserve mission.
"The road to high readiness cycle including 12 months on, 24 months reconstitution phase, now is focused on sovereignty in the North," said BGen Woiden.
Operations NUNALIVUT and NANOOK are Regular Force sovereignty operations that take place in conjunction with Arctic Response Company Groups, which are staffed by reservists.
As well, there are many local training exercises throughout the year for Reserve units and brigades.
Collective training beyond sovereignty operations is also important. Exercise MAPLE RESOLVE is one of the largest and most intensive collective training exercises of the year. The biggest value of collective training is experience in interoperability, making Reserve soldiers familiar with operations, communications, command and control together with their Regular Force counterparts.