Brad Sallows
Army.ca Legend
- Reaction score
- 8,740
- Points
- 1,040
The establishment I was using for planning and other purposes for several months is still (last I heard) a "draft"; it lists 135 (might be off by one or two) unrestricted positions (ie. available assuming full funding). Funding constraints will of course cause that number to be reduced. I would expect each unit to have a different target strength set which weighs factors including: current strength, available funding, historic attrition, availability of indiv training courses.
It is sometimes worth doing the arithmetic to find out if your higher- or self-assigned goals are achievable. There is no point shooting for an all-rank strength of 100 if your annual attrition is 15% and you are limited to 10 course vacancies annually for, say, QL3 and BCT. (Caveats: you can work on reducing attrition, or hope that people will stick around long enough until you get some extra vacancies one year.) Over-recruiting just aggravates attrition in two ways. New people leave in disappointment if they don't get courses within a reasonable time window. Other people leave because the resources which might be used to further their training (and interest) are wasted to recruit and train other people up to the bottleneck course level.
(Number of critical course vacancies) divided by (attrition rate) = sustainable steady-state strength.
By critical courses, I mean the ones required to get a soldier / officer trained to an employable level: BMQ(R), SQ(R), MOC (QL3); BOTP(R), CAP(R), BCT.
For example (just pulling some figures which may be close to reality), if there are 7 serials of QL3 offered annually with a maximum course load of 24 each, the total number of reserve medics nationally should be about 930, or about 65 per reserve field amb.
It is sometimes worth doing the arithmetic to find out if your higher- or self-assigned goals are achievable. There is no point shooting for an all-rank strength of 100 if your annual attrition is 15% and you are limited to 10 course vacancies annually for, say, QL3 and BCT. (Caveats: you can work on reducing attrition, or hope that people will stick around long enough until you get some extra vacancies one year.) Over-recruiting just aggravates attrition in two ways. New people leave in disappointment if they don't get courses within a reasonable time window. Other people leave because the resources which might be used to further their training (and interest) are wasted to recruit and train other people up to the bottleneck course level.
(Number of critical course vacancies) divided by (attrition rate) = sustainable steady-state strength.
By critical courses, I mean the ones required to get a soldier / officer trained to an employable level: BMQ(R), SQ(R), MOC (QL3); BOTP(R), CAP(R), BCT.
For example (just pulling some figures which may be close to reality), if there are 7 serials of QL3 offered annually with a maximum course load of 24 each, the total number of reserve medics nationally should be about 930, or about 65 per reserve field amb.