George Wallace
Army.ca Dinosaur
- Reaction score
- 184
- Points
- 710
Reindeer Meatloaf said:Yeah...... I know. :brickwall: But at least I got that off my chest.
But you are still left with :brickwall:
Reindeer Meatloaf said:Yeah...... I know. :brickwall: But at least I got that off my chest.
Santa's Coattails said:Radop+13
Here is where your suggestions are a failure.
During Y2K planning, reserve members, their civilian job expectations and
their families were considered as part of the planning process.
While the exercise did not pan out as anticipated, it did demonstate the varied
mix that makes an effective volunteer reserve force.
RADOPSIGOPACISSOP said:Seriously? Op Abacus was probably the biggest example of what a waste the reserves can be. All I seen was people hanging out doing HF radio checks.
George Wallace said:But you are still left with :brickwall:
RADOPSIGOPACISSOP said:Wasn't it a while back they sent 4 ESR to Newfoundland after a hurricane? This was Newfoundland too, perhaps the furthest point from a superbase, and still it went to a Gagetown unit to take the lead.
PuckChaser said:Were you on OP CADENCE?
3 weeks of IBTS for a 3 day summit.
RADOPSIGOPACISSOP said:It was quoted by someone before that reserve pay is approximately $1.3B. That's a lot of money to pay for staffing parades and raising DND profile.
NFLD Sapper said:BTW 4 ESR is the IRU for the whole of Atlantic Canada.....5 RGC has Quebec, 2 CER all of Central Canada and, 1 CER Western Canada IIRC in addition to all the other bits and pieces through out the Areas.
RADOPSIGOPACISSOP said:Seriously? Op Abacus was probably the biggest example of what a waste the reserves can be. All I seen was people hanging out doing HF radio checks.
RADOPSIGOPACISSOP said:The arguement Reindeer Meatloaf made was that the super base were too far put to support in disasters, but like you said, the IRUs seemed to all be located at these bases, regardless of the proximity of the reserve units.
RADOPSIGOPACISSOP said:My view is that the reserve, for it to be more effective, ought to be integrated closer with the reg force, leveraging the equipment they have that sits idle nights and weekends. When I was in the commres it would have been so much better to have more direct access to the equipment that the HQ&Sigs had.
Reindeer Meatloaf said:Yet, during the Ice Storm it took two full days for units of 2 CMBG to make it to the affected areas of eastern Ontario. Reservists were deployed on day one and acted as liaison officers between LFCAHQ and the county and township EMOs, while assisting their own friends an neighbours until augmented - not relieved - by Regular Force units.
Now you're proposing solutions.
However, for this to work, the Regular Force has to be mandated (directed) to support the Reserve Force. Maybe then that equipment sitting idle on evenings and weekends can be used by the Reserve Force instead of being protected for exclusive use of the Regular Force. Because if Reservists use it, it may be broken and unavailable for Monday morning.
NFLD Sapper said:BTW 4 ESR is the IRU for the whole of Atlantic Canada.....5 RGC has Quebec, 2 CER all of Central Canada and, 1 CER Western Canada IIRC in addition to all the other bits and pieces through out the Areas.
They did mainly because the PRes CER's do not have all the odds and ends needed for major disaster relief....
BTW I was there and we integrated with 4 ESR seamlessly and it was a Joint Task force and was headed up by a PRes BGen too...
RADOPSIGOPACISSOP said:Perhaps it's because I no longer have a horse in that race that I can speak honestly without unfeathering my nest.
I understand why many people on this forum are made uneasy when someone comments on the problems in the organization.
pbi said:For example, during the Toronto Snowstorm, 2 CER was able to bring only a handful of pieces of hy eqpt that were at all useful in snow clearing. The City had over 800 pieces of machinery, the Province had hundreds more, and contractors hundreds beyond that. What we had was a bunch of other skills and capabilities. That's what the military does, and IMHO should do.
pbi said:2 CER did not "stay behind to help with any emergencies". We were forced to keep them in T.O. long after there was any imaginable need for them. We tried to get the entire IRU TF released to go back to Pet as there was nothing for them to do (the snow was melting) but the COS advised me that at NDHQ level there was a concern of the "optics" of "abandoning" the City. This was of course quite typical, and not the last time we dealt with NDHQ pressure to deploy troops on an unnecessary DomOp because of "optics" (Walkerton was another)
Finally, it is a moot point as to whether or not a largely unnecessary, politically-driven and wasteful deployment of soldiers and equipment is a "success".
...and bus stops (even though busses weren't running). I was RSS in TO at the time, and the troops got to spend quality snow shovel time at bus shelters. ;Dpbi said:The Reservists were used for snow shovelling around key infrastructure.....
pbi said:Finally, it is a moot point as to whether or not a largely unnecessary, politically-driven and wasteful deployment of soldiers and equipment is a "success".
pbi said:Second, prior to the IRU fiasco, LFCA had already responded to a request from the City to provide a troop of Bison ambulances, and to employ several hundred 32 CBG soldiers who were already in their armouries for a cancelled 32 CBG exercise. 32 CBG was not "called up" for the Snowstorm (in Canada we don't actually have a mechanism to "call up" Reservists short of an Act by the Governor in Council).
The Bisons were deployed in four downtown fire halls to provide mobility support to the TFD and EMS, since the snow clearance problem was mainly a downtown issue at that point.