I'll believe it when I see it.
Because they are fairly new to Canada, I can understand the security screening taking longer. Can't just let the automated CSIS process do its thing.
But 2 years is absurd. 2 years to get a few hundred people into uniform & starting their journey?
Agreed...no wonder we have issues...
After the basic checks are done, have the applicants swear their path all together, not individually.
Have friends & family there to clap, and staff from around the building attend if they can spare 5 minutes. The energy & positivity would be a great way to start a new career!
Have them draw kit, and start reporting to a unit while they wait for BMQ so they can be slightly less new once the course starts.
*And don't make everybody go to St. Jean! F**k that place! Run BMQ serials at Wainwright, Meaford, have local reserve units run 1 or 2 throughout the year for the are. And use St. Jean as well, just don't solely rely on it.
When their enhanced check comes back, more options will available to them.
I thought it was called ‘fat camp’? Was that a fake name?Yup when they removed the Fitness test for reg force. Warrior platoon was born at CFLRS ( trust me. There were no warrior recruit on it) which then because RFT Coy and PRETC rear it’s ugly head in…Borden?
Agreed ; let’s not try that experiment again.
I thought it was called ‘fat camp’? Was that a fake name?
Wait, so the Navy's plan to bring in more recruits, push them through the NETP after basic, then sit around waiting for their QL3 won't be a booming success?Dispersed BMQ serials are already a thing, and there is no plan to stop running them.
I'm not sure if you were around back in the early-mid '00s, but the CAF tried the "bring them all in, then sort the rest out" thing back then. It resulted in massive holding platoons at bases all over the country, which resulted in lots of trouble being caused by bored troops. Many of those bored troops went on to resent the CAF, and the wasted time they spent. It also costs a lot of money, because once someone is in, it's hard to get rid of them when they turn out to not be suited to the job.
I'm sure the system can be improved, but I don't think that is the route to take.
Unofficially; the ones I said were the CFLRS ones.
Recruit Fitness Training was abbreviated to RFT. That had a few nicknames like “Ready For Turkey!” etc at the School.
In fairness to the RCN, it might be a great way to fill the watch and station bill. You don't need to be trade qualified to be on an attack team, or stand lookout on the bridge wings. It would free qualified people to do their real jobs, and give the trainees something "real" to do while waiting.Wait, so the Navy's plan to bring in more recruits, push them through the NETP after basic, then sit around waiting for their QL3 won't be a booming success?
It's cool, they'll just go on masse to the empty bunks on ships trying to figure out how to keep things going with a skeleton crew, what could go wrong?
Skilled applicants are handled a bit differently. However, there are still challenges: Access to some foreign-procured equipment and supporting documents, for example, are restricted for some foreign nationals, precluding their employment in areas where such access is needed.I wonder how many are coming in with skills the CAF desperately needs? Like air crews, pilots, marine engineers, etc...feel like we would want to fast track those individuals. Maybe even offer expedited citizenship for those that serve?
Sure, and we've done stuff like that with the officer phase 4 course, but included course staff to handle the admin and basic supervision. But was 2 Lt(N)s to supervise/run the training for the SLts with SS support, with the ship running around 80% of max capacity.In fairness to the RCN, it might be a great way to fill the watch and station bill. You don't need to be trade qualified to be on an attack team, or stand lookout on the bridge wings. It would free qualified people to do their real jobs, and give the trainees something "real" to do while waiting.
The RCN just needs to be more imaginative... Send a crusty Met Tech PO1 to the coast to wrangle NETP trainees on a ship headed to Hawaii...Sure, and we've done stuff like that with the officer phase 4 course, but included course staff to handle the admin and basic supervision. But was 2 Lt(N)s to supervise/run the training for the SLts with SS support, with the ship running around 80% of max capacity.
Small number of NETP only is great, and you can start doing OJT for them to prepare for their QL3 when you have time.
They are talking about huge numbers that would outnumber most departments, on ships where they are at 50% capacity to start with; that's the unworkable part.
I'm a huge proponent of OJT and having trainees on board, but it requires a lot more work and supervision, and is doomed to fail if that's not part of the plan.
Tieing a few ships up and turning them into a training fleet would make more sense, but we want to do even more with even less, then act like surprised pikachus when people burn out and quit when they decide they don't like it and get out.
The top as in the CDS? MND? PM?I bet you're right actually!
Man oh man...someone come save us from the silly people at the top
DeleteBMQ at St Jean is rumoured to be so watered down, I can't see why getting masses of recruits thru "even-more-Basic-Training" is an issue.
I agree with removing BMQ a "common to all"; let the environmental command run their own Recruit/Basic/Depot. Distributed BMQs were/are already being run; Camp Aldershot NS is home to RCAF BMQs.
Isn’t more recruit schools going to require significantly more staff? We’re then taking additional qualified people off the line to bring in unqualified people.BMQ at St Jean is rumoured to be so watered down, I can't see why getting masses of recruits thru "even-more-Basic-Training" is an issue.
I agree with removing BMQ a "common to all"; let the environmental command run their own Recruit/Basic/Depot. Distributed BMQs were/are already being run; Camp Aldershot NS is home to RCAF BMQs.
The math is pretty easy. Assuming you can get them in the door, more recruits mean more instructors are needed. Put that in the plan.Isn’t more recruit schools going to require significantly more staff? We’re then taking additional qualified people off the line to bring in unqualified people.
Big advantages they have:Every summer, across Canada, wildfire management organizations hire thousands of young people - men and women - who go on to do a pretty good job under stressful conditions in the field.
Maybe we should copy them? e.g.,
Wildfire Fighters
The application process to become a wildfire fighter with the BC Wildfire Servicewww2.gov.bc.ca
unfortunately we are trying to rebuild AND be operationally ready at the same time when the CAF as a whole is combat ineffective, we need to step back and for a year just train, train and train people at the schools and nothing more. You will then get thousands of troops in OJT bringing our capabilities back up, and a year and a half later they will be completing their 5s. then we can get back to business, but when we have PAT battalions because the schools are not at max throughput, we need to change. F2025 is suppose to prioritize manning the schools, but the schools need more capacity too.Isn’t more recruit schools going to require significantly more staff? We’re then taking additional qualified people off the line to bring in unqualified people.
There is a plan to try BMQ/DP1 for Infantry, but for many other occupations that doesn't work.The math is pretty easy. Assuming you can get them in the door, more recruits mean more instructors are needed. Put that in the plan.
The solution isn't that complex either. Make every reconstituting battalion/regiment etc an individual training unit for the entire year with no other duties. Have them take recruits off the street and run them through to full DP1 and more during that year.
Then the next year get back to unit training on the road to high readiness.
There is a plan to try BMQ/DP1 for Infantry, but for many other occupations that doesn't work.
There aren't battalions of mechanics, clerks, or Met Techs that can rotate through a system like that.
Have you heard of the CAF offer? Based on the brief I received yesterday we should all be more appreciative of all that we get from the CAF compared to the PS.... Pay isn't everything don't 'cha know.Especially trades that require training anywhere close to industry standards, specifically the technical trades we're bleeding out the middle that we desperately need to fill.
I would have to crunch the numbers, but something tells me the turn around in an infantry battalion is far lower than on the flight line, tech shops, and MSE Divs. Especially in folks that are already trained and are seeing how much more even a PS equivalent job pays.
Toss another task on those folks and it will be the straw that collapses the camel corpse ( the back was broken decades ago).