Eye In The Sky said:
There are courses, namely BAEQ, PAEQ and IAEQ, which are ran out of the Air Command Academy in Borden.
Interesting. On the recruiting site, SQ and NETP are respectively mentioned in the basic training program for hard Army and Navy MOS. There is no mention of BAEQ. Then again, the banner across the top of the Army jobs page is a Romanian TAB APC so, I will not be accusing the site of being the most accurate source of information. For now, because it does not really affect the larger argument, we can assume that BAEQ does impart some essential knowledge for operating in an Air Force setting (but we can leave it to
other threads to flesh that out for certain).
Neill McKay said:
I wonder if now's the time to reconsider having the "purple trade" concept at all. Would it make more sense to enrol and train X number of army supply techs (e.g.) to meet the needs of the army, Y number of navy supply techs to meet the needs of the navy, etc.? In other words, would the reduced training cost (because of more focused training) outweigh the loss of flexibility of the current purple system?
TCBF said:
The return of The Royal Canadian Ordnance Corps?
Not to that extreme. Environmental sub-MOS would be the way to go in my opinion. Some jobs require an Army Sup Tech, some jobs require a Navy Sup Tech, and some jobs just require a Sup Tech. Sub-MOS would allow a mechanism for individuals to be trained in the occupation and trained in a single environment. Training would be reduced (as pers are only trained in one environment) and competency would increase (as pers would be employed in the environment of their training & practice/gain experience in that environment) but we would not loose all the flexibility that would occur in a complete split of an occupation.
Eye In The Sky said:
.... Qualified and competent do not necessarily go hand in hand but better qualified than not.
I do not, however, think that sending someone on an SQ course, then posting them to a Wing or a navy base for 4 years, and then posting them to a field unit with the 'tick in the box' for SQ is the right answer either. ...
Exactly. Environmental specific sub-MOS (which is the effective if not formal result of the CANFORGEN) is a means to resolving this problem.
CDN Aviator said:
Some AES Ops are indeed headed for the sandbox to operate the new UAV. Should we now add SQ to the trade ?
There is probably no requirement for such a move, and I suspect a trg needs analysis would identify that for such a move there are too few AES Ops that will require the training. However, SQ should required training for the formation of and later postings into a TUAV Flt (and a PLQ-L conversion for junior leaders too).
OldSolduer said:
Now as for loading everyone on naval or air course, you know that is blatantly ridiculous. We were only talking "purple" trades. We aren't talking bosuns and AESOPs going on a recce with the infantry, so SQ for them isn't going to happen, UNLESS there are positions in Afghanistan. ... And its very unlikely that an infantry officer will ever serve aboard the HMCS Winnipeg.
The TF HQ during Somalia was off shore on a ship, and the next generation of ship will include a multi-purpose room (I forget the appropriate technical name) that will have as one of its roles to serve as a joint or land operations centre. Therefore, we will always require the ability to indoctrinate members of one environment to the operational essential skills of another environment. If you work on the ground, you must know how to fight on the ground; if you work in the air, you must know how to fight in the air; if you work at sea, you must know how to fight at sea. Individual soldier skills will do an infantryman no good when he is in an off-shore CP that's under attack.
There has been a lot of focus in this thread on the environmental specific individual skills. These are vital. However, equally if not more vital is the environmentally specific junior leadership. Now, somebody can pipe in and tell me that in ships & aircraft there will always be a hard trade of that environment close enough that this is a non-issue. In land warfare, where there is plenty of room for dispersion, this is essential for all the participating leaders to know how to lead the fight at the very least with a small team.