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Playtime_805
Guest
Has anyone recieved The Queen‘s Golden Jubilee Medal or knows of it. If so what do you think of this medal. eg; What it stands for. Why it is given. or Who should recieve it.
My own personal opinion is it should have been awarded to everyone with over five years of service. Government House didn‘t allocate enough medals to allow this to happen. They also wouldn‘t increase the distribution of medals to the CF eventhough the CF stated they were willing to pay for it (based on the dissatisfaction that occurred after the 125 Medal). Sadly, Government House didn‘t listen to me or the CDS.Queen‘s Golden Jubilee Medal - According to CANFORGEN 024/02 CDS 017, a total of 8,000 medals will be distributed to the Canadian Forces (Regular and Reserve). The medals will be distributed proportionately to the Army, Navy and Air Force by rank, years of service, and by military occupational code. Equitable distribution will be ensured for the Regular Force, Primary Reserve, Cadet Instructor Cadre, Rangers, and Honorary Appointees. Only Second Lieutenant and above and Privates (Trained) A-B and above who were serving as of 6 Feb 2002 can be considered. The largest single recipient group will be the Corporal rank. Working groups will be formed to review the selection of recipients. (Mar 02)
George, the point is, while the QGJM was issued by proportional representation throughout the CF, it was issued to members with no other criteria other than time served. There were many deserving members of the CF that it should have gone to (volunteers, academic achievement, and career success). As far as your comments about members not getting a medal because of their conduct sheets and jail time - you chose the action, you also chose the consequence. There are lots of deserving members that haven‘t done any jail time.Gunner...You left out some relevant parts of the CANFORGEN that you quoted that have some significance in the issue of this medal. I know many who quite rightly would have deserved this medal, but the fact that they had Conduct Sheets with charges and jail time disqualified them from receiving it. A point that disqualified a good many in the Forces, who did not have ‘spotless‘ records, but had still done twenty or more years of dedicated service to their country.
Correction, time in current trade and rank. Because of a remuster, I got passed over. Nonetheless, the guy who did get it was a very deserving troop so it was easy to swallow. I still get a paycheque twice a month and get to say I‘m a Highlander.Originally posted by Brad Sallows:
[qb] The award lists were generated by crunching service data by computer. The resulting lists were sent out for review by commanders and COs. The one I saw was rather amusing - names of members who had since released, component transferred, etc. An outside observer might have concluded it was was an award for longest time in current rank - always a positive indicator for due recognition, no? [/qb]
well said mikeget to say I‘m a Highlander.