Dissident said:
This as led to some troops being sub par in training, and that is why I believe that perticular res MP was stopped from going to Bosnia. We didnt want to send someone else overseas that was going to make us look bad. This goes towards my raising the standard and weeding out or training up the weaker elements.
Sorry if I sound confused and slightly astonished here but are you admitting that when your Coy ran it's own QL3 that they passed people who did not meet the standard? Also, I'm really, really unsure of how this person was going to make the Res MP look bad, even if their ability to perform certain MP specific tasks were considered below par. There was one criteria required for this position, and that was fluency in Serbo-Croat and that person fit the bill. This was a win-win situation for everyone involved as it was an opportunity to get a Res MP into contact with the CI world which is probably never going to come along again and it would have given the CI guys the opportunity to "showcase" another part of our trade to the Res world. I can only guess what the real reason was but the end result was an Infantryman was used instead and a golden opportunity was lost.
Can anybody deny that the curent QL3 leaves recruits sitting idle to much?
I don't know to be honest, how long were they actually sitting around with a bit more precision than "lots"? I have some ideas on why this might have been occuring but until I know more I won't speculate.
How about adding in total time of training before actually being accepted and badge? BMQ\SQ, QL3 and then the probationnary period.
How is this time spent on BMQ and SQ relevant to this?
My point is, the standard is not the lenght of time that you're on course. The standard is being able to demonstrate retention of the knowledge necessary to accomplish the job. All you have to accept is that it is possible to do this without going through the 6 month long QL3.
From the Oxford Dictionary: "Standard - A definite level of excellence, attainment, wealth, or the like, or a definite degree of any quality, viewed as a prescribed object of endeavour or as the measure of what is adequate for some purpose." In this instance the standard IS the 6 month long QL3.
Like you pointed out yourself, different municipalities have different ways of attaining that. Not everyone has the same formula.
But I gurantee you that any recruit they accept within a given period of time will complete the training to the same standard.
Why is it so hard to accept that the reserve can be just as proficient without going throught the exact same course?
If this was true, don't you think we would have shortened our QL3 by half? Especially back when we were so far below the PML we were paying people to get back in? You might be interested to know that unlike most Police forces, our training was subject to extensive independent scrutiny via the Dickson and Belzile reviews.
Dissident said:
But we wear the same red beret, we are just as big a target/representative.
This is a subject for a conversation all it's own.
The probationnary period is another matter. but then, what about the ones that don't make it through PEP , or the ones that are sent to field platoons for extended periods? Do they get less of a status when they go overseas? Are they just not sent overseas? No they don't, not the field platoon people anyway. How can you be so sure of their professionnal competence.
Woah...you lost me here, what's the question(s) or point(s)?
Dissident said:
The bone of contention is that the army reserve is not willing to put its member through the 6 month long QL3, for various reasons. One of which is, even after doing the course, a reg force member still has to go through a 1 year in PEP. Something that would be impractical for reserve and unwelcome by reg force. Without the year in PEP, it is no yet possible to get credential and status as either a peace officer or a MP uder 156.
Actually, your doing so would be more than welcomed by me at least. By the way, you are normally appointed "Military Police" and receive your credentials immediately upon completion of the QL3.
And members with MP and peace officer status seem to be the only thing acceptable to reg force MP's to serve along side them. Nothing else is respected or even accepted.
Only when you desire to fulfil the Police Ops function. You want to come out Rte signing, doing some TC and sitting at Gate W7A doing access control I'm more than happy to have you along.
In my world, a reserve MP should be able to assist seemlessly a reg force MP enforcing his authority. While not allowed to arrest someone, we should be able to effect the arrest, ie handcuffing, searches, handling etc.
And who then is legally responsible if something goes wrong while doing said handcuffing, searching and "handling"? Please do some research on this one before answering.
In the end, I want to be trusted. If you can't trust your (fire/jeep)team partner, who can you trust? Thats why I want the training, but could care less about the credentials.
Who says we don't trust you? I'll be quite frank, I would be more wary of a partially trained Reservist than one who had no training at all.
MILPO said:
Personally, I had no idea that there was this much debate over this subject before coming to this forum.
Unfortunately on this specific topic what you're seeing here is an anomoly. It does remind me of the ol' days in the T-Bird though.
Law811 said:
I then talk with some people at the school when I go down for courses and I'm told that every course has a billet for at least 1 Res MP but we never fill them. Why don't we start filling these spots?
If I'm not mistaken, these may be ARAF spots.
While the idea of an "auxiliary MP" may seem appealing and may be workable in some situations in Canada, it doesn't solve the issue of what to do with Reserve MPs who go overseas. As I stated before, there are some specific instances when they are employable without impacting on the Reg Force MPs but once you push them into positions other than those, it becomes a problem. As soon as the position becomes one where Police Ops are conducted you need someone with Sec 156 and in case you're wondering, NDHQ doesn't look at it and go "OK, we need 15 MPs to do these tasks but we'll bump that number up to 18-19 so they can add 3-4 reservists to meet the 20-25% quota". Each tour has a strictly controlled maximum manning level which cannot be exceeded and these positions are fought over quite intensely so even if the desire was there to add some â Å“freebieâ ? MP positions it's just not going to happen. So now I'm wondering, how are these 3-4 Res MPs â Å“helping us outâ ??
EDIT: Deleted a bunch of bumf that I was using to illustrate the a/m but which, in hindsight, didn't really contribute to the discussion at hand.