While it only may be 3.5M, at what point are you throwing good money after bad…
we did that the day we signed the deal for the 4 subs in the first place rather than purchasing new. What should have happened and what didn't happen is history now it is time to correct that error and order what is needed for delivery soonest. In the meantime, it is essential to maintain the skills and provide for at least some level of sub-marine deterrence. imhoWhile it only may be 3.5M, at what point are you throwing good money after bad…
lol, a proper audit; everything we do is audited multiple times with numerous levels of oversight and redundant verification. You think that is free and doesn't also cause delays which cost money?I think we could. First thing we have to do is perform a proper audit of where our money goes. Then get rid of the waste and adjust where the money goes and direct it to the proper areas. We are dealing with government kickbacks on everything. we cant even build a surface fleet without major issues or even buy a darn jet that is already in service elsewhere with out wasting money lining the pockets of politicians and their friends.
It's also the most basic form of a sole source procurement; they own the IP for the design.FYI
Government spending $3.5 million on spare parts for aging submarines that rarely patrol
3.5 million!!! That's a penny under the seat cushion.
That is the issues. To many "YES MEN" not enough people doing what's right.lol, a proper audit; everything we do is audited multiple times with numerous levels of oversight and redundant verification. You think that is free and doesn't also cause delays which cost money?
No contractor is going to come in and tell the customer their processes are stupid; they repeatedly instead recommend MORE processes on top of existing processes to 'streamline' things.
Every single audit, program review, process overhaul has only ever resulted in things taking more effort and time.
None of what you see in small industries scale up to government. A better example would be a large multinational, where branches dictate requirements for other branches for reporting/processes.That is the issues. To many "YES MEN" not enough people doing what's right.
The whole point of QC (quality control) is to tell it like it is. That has to do not only with the actual building of the equipment but the process leading up to and after.
This happens in industry outside of government procurement every day. They pay men and women to make the tough calls even if it goes agaisnt the word of the day.
We have offices across the country full with yes men and women. Looking for their next promotion, next gig. Not enough willing to say STOP thats not going to work and this is why.
It really is sad.
It would save projects and bring them back on budget and timings if we just had the fortitude to do the right thing.
One company thought they could save a million by buying fasteners from china while building new powerline towers. Halfway through the project a new tower collapsed, turns out the fasteners were not up to spec and needed replacing, millions of dollars later....
You rarely hear about major private f*ckups as don't like to talk about them. Public stuff is almost always public.
I call bs on this, lots of "small scale companies" who earn Billions of Dollars perform well above the Canadian Government procurement every day. If they did not they would not be in business, except Bombardier and Irving. Lots of smaller companies do the same. If they ran the way the government did they would shut the doors before they even opened.None of what you see in small industries scale up to government. A better example would be a large multinational, where branches dictate requirements for other branches for reporting/processes.
Those audits often are done by internal and external "friends" of the kickback kind. Lots of papers have talked about the issues.The various requirements were imposed by TBS, Cabinet, PBO, Finance etc etc over the years, and usually based on.... audits and reviews done by 3rd parties.
System is broken, and not going to be fixed, the PMO, TBD etc surround themselves with yes men. Usually to protect their jobs.Usually the GoC processes is even in the project risk registers as a big potential roadblock, but when it's coming down from PMO/Cabinet, TBS, complaining about it doesn't get projects approved and things moving. You raise it as a fact, then do what you have to do to try and deliver things despite the system.
I never said any of that..........But you did so must be a feeling in the air. The CAF and some of the PS do the best they can with what they have.If PS and CAF members were as useless, undedicated and lazy as what you seem to think, absolutely nothing would ever happen.
Stress leave across Government services is abnormally higher then private industry. That's tells a story in itself. Which more then likely explains the issues with procurement and services provided. Morale injuries seem to be on the rise.The rates of stress leave are abnormally high because people really do care, and the constant hurdles and delays with knowledge of what that actually means on the front lines breaks people with stress.
Never said your all "yes men" I said TO MANY are yes men, often those are the ones in more positions of influence.But sure, we're all yes men and no one has reported that all this creates delays, extra work, etc. Thanks for your insight.
They obviously had no QC inspections, which concerns me that a company who builds power lines either ignored QC procedures, don't have QC procedures or said Screw it we don't care. More then likely a public Contractor who paid a kickback for the inspector to turn a blind eye.One company thought they could save a million by buying fasteners from china while building new powerline towers. Halfway through the project a new tower collapsed, turns out the fasteners were not up to spec and needed replacing, millions of dollars later....
I hear about private company screwups all the time. Often when they cost millions of dollar's so does the public. The smart ones figure out the problem, fix the problem and carry on.You rarely hear about major private f*ckups as don't like to talk about them. Public stuff is almost always public.
I watched a company throw $28,000,000 down the drain when they were told it would not work. They followed the bad advice of their "expert" who turned out was way in over his head, but had a speech that would inspire jt to vote for PP.I used to be a regulator on major projects, the amount of waste and spending could be eye watering.
They might need to buy half a dozen diesel subs as well even with the Collins Class life extensionThis is an excellent video about the challenges that Australia has (will have) when it embarks on its journey towards the purchase of a nuclear powered submarine. This video also provides a good idea of what obstacles Canada will also face if it ever decides to buy nuclear powered submarines to replace the Victoria Class. Probably the two major differences are that: (1) unlike Australia, Canada already has substantial nuclear power expertise; and (2) Canada will most likely not build nuclear powered submarines.
On the big hand, the Australian plan is as follows:
Phase 1. Training with US and UK submariners
Phase 2. Receiving Virginia Class submarines in the 2030s
Phase 3. First AUKUS designed submarine will delivered in the 2050s.
Challenges:
1. Building up the number of the submariners to accommodate the nuclear submarines. Need 3,000 trained pers.
2. Infrastructure for the new fleet
3. Cost. $368B or $32M/per for 30 yrs will mean the other Services (Army, Air Force, surface Navy) will suffer cuts. Degradation of overall defence capability and capacity to react?
4. Build up of technical expertise, especially trained engineers, for this program.
5. Significant risk in acceptance and building of a newly designed nuclear powered submarine
6. Significant risk of the Collins Class submarines aging out before 2030s plus the need for $6B to maintain them up to the 2030s.
In brief: Unlike Canada, Australia has big balls to do this despite the challenges and risks.
We can make major brownie points by buying the KS-III now, then handing over our Victoria Class to the Aussies to help them maintain a sub fleet till their first nukes arrive.They might need to buy half a dozen diesel subs as well even with the Collins Class life extension
I think you're forgetting which end of the transaction Canada takes in the pawning off of old, end-of-life crap "deals".We can make major brownie points by buying the KS-III now, then handing over our Victoria Class to the Aussies to help them maintain a sub fleet till their first nukes arrive.
Well for once it would be nice. Plus we can contract to help keep them going. Out of the ten subs they should get 3 going...I think you're forgetting which end of the transaction Canada takes in the pawning off of old, end-of-life crap "deals".