recceguy said:
Where does the time, expertise and money come from?
You've got lots of grandiose ideas, but haven't said how you're going to pay for it and get everyone up to speed in their new 'tasks'.
Typically and idea is thought of first and debated before a full business plan and white paper is drafted. Brainstorming is the word.
1) Time - As far as time, I see it as saving time more than anything. If the goal is for the reserves to be 90% of the Dom ops and only 10% of the expeditionary ops then we ought to reorient our focus on that basis. My thoughts would be to strip the unnecessary parts out of the general training. Perhaps take those part of the training and create a supplementary course for people heading on expeditionary missions or for those who wish to in the future.
An example of this might be engineer (now this is based on my limited understanding of the engineer trade) might focus much more on the bridge construction, berm construction, earth moving and excavation, and destruction of buildings (like partially collapsed structures). The more expeditionary op focused parts of the trade (IEDs, mine clearing, and all the above domestic stuff while tactical), would be part of an expeditionary supplement that the person would take prior to deploying, or electively if they intended to go on expeditionary tasks in the future. Keep in mind, this is just an example of how this may work.
2) Expertise - Same as now, the reserves are trained by the individual training facilities, however the training be focused more on the essential information required for domestic operations. Some trades might be phased out entirely (ACCIS might be one of them). Some trades, such as Powerline might require a whole new trade startup and require hiring civilian contractors to instruct in the beginning stages. Search and Rescue lite might come from serving or retired SAR techs, civilian ground search specialists. Trade might also include urban search and rescue (like post earthquake collapsed building searches).
3) Money - May not cost more than what things currently cost. If it does, I would argue the money is better spent.
As far as the organization, moving away from the Bde setup (with more layers of CoC than an onion before you get to the few actual worker bees) and to more of a DART or even the original Domestic Response Company (DRC) plan they had 5ish years ago, before it got watered down.