E.R. Campbell said:Officers shouldn't run ... it make the troops nervous.
It all depends on what direction they are running......
E.R. Campbell said:Officers shouldn't run ... it make the troops nervous.
ObedientiaZelum said:I'm pretty sure the biggest problems are coming out of the NCR.
Nostix said:"The workday is not 0800 to 1600. If you have to come in at 0700 and stay until 1800 to meet our objectives, I expect you to do that. You're being paid 24/7."[/i]
... Enough said.
DVC185 said:The item I wish to address and haven't seen discussed yet in this topic is compulsory service in the combat arms and associated supporting arms for a minimum period of time prior to moving on to other occupations. I have been a strong proponent of that as I believe it builds character, teaches tolerance and has the added bonus of providing sound soldiering skills to all.
RoyalDrew said:Thanks to the last few posts from Cupper and EO Tech I have a greater appreciation of what you guys do during your day to day and maybe I was seeing this problem through my Infantry Officer lenses and not being objective enough.
-Skeletor- said:So service in a non Combat Arms MOSID doesn't build character, tolerance, etc ?
Not everyone is cut out physically, or mentally, etc for the Combat Arms so why force everyone into that? In my mind, that would turn some people who could be great Techs, Clerks, Mechanics, etc away from the military. Plus, you are delaying the CF from getting new people into those support trades, and you get a number of people in the Combat Arms that don't want to be there, and other problems.
cupper said:Umm... That was all EO Tech. I haven't posted in this thread.
But I've always thought BMI was crap, just to throw in my :2c:
BUT now dealing with the results of some poor lifestyle choices (damn you fried food and beer!) I do agree that BMI can be an indicator of potential health issues.
As for PT on the PER, why put it on a sliding scale. Just make it Pass / Fail, and if the member exceeds the standard but a certain set level (say top 10% of that unit / trade group or what have you), they get a bonus point. No more, no less regardless of how much more they may go beyond the bonus level.
DVC185 said:<SNIP>
The item I wish to address and haven't seen discussed yet in this topic is compulsory service in the combat arms and associated supporting arms for a minimum period of time prior to moving on to other occupations. I have been a strong proponent of that as I believe it builds character, teaches tolerance and has the added bonus of providing sound soldiering skills to all.<SNIP>
2, 3 or 4 years spent on the service end of the dirt and all the physical and mental hours that goes on there may be what we need to establish a higher level of readiness.
dapaterson said:There is a difference between Cbt Arms in garrison, who train to maintain their skills, and CSS soldiers in garrison, who actively employ their skills in garrison.
CSS soldiers have clear deliverables and tasks in garrison. For example, if vehicles are not maintained, the unit VOR goes up and operational readiness is clearly, quantifiably diminished. If an infantry platoon doesn't do a periodic refresher on MGs, the impact isn't visible or quantifiable, and a commander can't see it.
So a commander will order his support soldiers to lower his VOR. Since we aren't issued more than 24 hours in a day, leaders have to prioritize tasks within that time. And if soldiers have to work 10 hours a day in garrison they'll do so, plus add in a few Saturdays. So PT may get pushed to the right - because their commanders have given higher priorities to their troops.
Commanders have three COAs:
(1) Request additional resources;
(2) Accept a higher VOR;
(3) Accept less PT.
COA (4), more PT and lower VOR, results in burnt out CSS soldiers - particularly when they see their Cbt Arms brethren and sistren sliding out at 15h00, when they've still got another 3 hours of work ahead of them.
This is a bad idea. The threshold for gaining PER points for higher fitness would fluctuate from unit to unit based on average local level of fitness. People would be penalized or rewarded as much for who they work with as what their level of fitness is.cupper said:As for PT on the PER, why put it on a sliding scale. Just make it Pass / Fail, and if the member exceeds the standard but a certain set level (say top 10% of that unit / trade group or what have you), they get a bonus point. No more, no less regardless of how much more they may go beyond the bonus level.
Does anyone have any evidence to suggest that there actually is a problem? This thread was started because of a tabloid article about something a media "expert" said.* We all know that people occasionally fail the EXPRES/FORCE test, and that we could do a better job of pinning down the chronic malingerers, and we've all heard stories about the waste of money spent in Warrior Platoon programs at BMQ. But can anyone point to an instance on deployment where a mission was compromised or failed because of the lack of physical fitness of someone in an operational or support trade? It's easy to make a fetish of flat tummies and sharp jaws, but if there's no impact on the oft-referred-to pointy end, maybe we shouldn't be throwing money and effort at a problem that doesn't really exist.RoyalDrew said:So I throw it out there again, what can be done to improve physical fitness across the CF?
hamiltongs said:Does anyone have any evidence to suggest that there actually is a problem? This thread was started because of a tabloid article about something a media "expert" said.* We all know that people occasionally fail the EXPRES/FORCE test, and that we could do a better job of pinning down the chronic malingerers, and we've all heard stories about the waste of money spent in Warrior Platoon programs at BMQ. But can anyone point to an instance on deployment where a mission was compromised or failed because of the lack of physical fitness of someone in an operational or support trade? It's easy to make a fetish of flat tummies and sharp jaws, but if there's no impact on the oft-referred-to pointy end, maybe we shouldn't be throwing money and effort at a problem that doesn't really exist.
* Incidentally, the partial quote of the self-described "expert" sounds a lot like something said a couple of years ago by a US general, but the actual context was that the lack of physical fitness of the general population (not of the military) was a strategic threat to their forces' ability to sustain recruiting.
RoyalDrew said:LOL I must have been reading a little too quickly, ok 100% credit to EO Tech ;D