Jarnhamar said:I just turned my second rucksack in so maybe 3999
Halifax Tar said:I just read an article that I cannot post here that quotes a LCol as saying there are 4000 members in the CAF with 2 more ruck sacks. The 4000+ surplus to members entitlements rucks sure sound like hoarding to me.
Halifax Tar said:Hell we had crates in 12 Stores that were still labeled HMCS Hochelaga, bonus points if you know what that is/was.
Halifax Tar said:I am running a 100% SCA/SLoc verification IAW Change of Command requirements. This was previously completed in March of this year. In less than 3 complete months since the last 100% verification I still have counts coming back with massive dollar value differences. I still have SCA Holders asking why they cant see their holding balances. I have NSNs that have been counted correct for the last years as suddenly coming up as deficient.
When I first came to this unit our Log O requested a Logistics Compliance Inspection (LRI). The final report was 22 pages long and 11 of them belonged to Supply/LPO. The other 11 were split between HR, Finance, and NPF. It was not a good report, I have 17 months into fixing what is years of neglect and abuse and while we aren't perfect yet we are trending in the right direction.
Even after every member of this unit has had to read and sign the report, I continue to get static and opposition. Material management isn't sexy. Its time consuming and monotonous, there is no glory and usually the only feed back is negative. If you look at the stats of requisitions submitted V requisitions filled you will see the success rates are there.
Hoarding is a problem with clothing items. We have the ability too manipulate data in DRMIS to find out who is holding what. Anything outside of a members SOI(s) can be identified and return action requested.
Do we have a problematic procurement system, 100% yes. Its restrictive, cumbersome, not designed for a military, and has so much red tape its a bureaucrat's wet dream. But that is not the Canadian Forces Supply System (CFSS). That the procurement system. And while it feeds the CFSS they are not one in the same. The CFSS is used to managed to the material that is fed into it.
We are realizing that providing material support to 40 year old airframes is difficult, to put it nicely. My 2nd ship was HMCS Preserver, we struggled with similar problems. Hell we had crates in 12 Stores that were still labeled HMCS Hochelaga, bonus points if you know what that is/was.
We have the systems and the policies in place to successfully conduct material management for the CAF. Actual stores volumes and enforcement of said system and policies it outside the control of the CFSS itself.
Neat factoid for you, our trade name is changing in the fall. We are going from Supply Technician to Material Management Technician.
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Time for a thread split ?
Eye In The Sky said:I'd take that with a grain of salt. I had a guy who couldn't get an aircrew rescue knife because "he still had the one issued to him when he was posted to Ottawa" according to the system. I explained that the guy had never been to Ottawa let alone posted there...it was then determined to be a computer system error and I was told that this system is sometimes randomly putting things on peoples docs or that people are putting things on the wrong peoples docs. So, some of the people with 2 rucksacks, according to the system, may be people who had one, returned it and instead of it removing it from their docs, it added it (that happened to me 2 years ago and took some time to sort out as well).
Simian Turner said:Two ships - one sold in 1942 and the other paid off in 1945, or the "third HMCS Hochelaga was a large shore establishment located in Ville de La Salle, near Montréal, Québec, was commissioned October 1, 1955. Its functions were to provide training facilities for the Supply and Secretariat Branch of the Royal Canadian Navy and to be a huge storehouse for naval stores, supplying the 2 coasts and ships of the fleet. With the unification of the Canadian Forces, the base was closed and the school moved to Canadian forces Base Borden, in Ontario."
https://www.canada.ca/en/navy/services/history/ships-histories/hochelaga.html
Tcm621 said:You are right. Procurement is the problem and the problems we have with the supply system are primarily due to you guys trying to deal with procurement issues.
PuckChaser said:People hoard because they either have limited ethics or don't trust the supply system to get them replacement kit. I think you'd have a significantly reduced hoarding problem if you could get your full SOI (within reason that some items need to be shipped base to base) without having to argue against the massive whiteboard of "deployment only" items.
PuckChaser said:People hoard because they either have limited ethics or don't trust the supply system to get them replacement kit. I think you'd have a significantly reduced hoarding problem if you could get your full SOI (within reason that some items need to be shipped base to base) without having to argue against the massive whiteboard of "deployment only" items.
Halifax Tar said:I am running a 100% SCA/SLoc verification IAW Change of Command requirements. This was previously completed in March of this year. In less than 3 complete months since the last 100% verification I still have counts coming back with massive dollar value differences. I still have SCA Holders asking why they cant see their holding balances. I have NSNs that have been counted correct for the last years as suddenly coming up as deficient.
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Time for a thread split ?
Halifax Tar said:I am running a 100% SCA/SLoc verification IAW Change of Command requirements. This was previously completed in March of this year. In less than 3 complete months since the last 100% verification I still have counts coming back with massive dollar value differences. I still have SCA Holders asking why they cant see their holding balances. I have NSNs that have been counted correct for the last years as suddenly coming up as deficient.
Lumber said:Oh no! Are you implying that people at FDU did things in such a way as to avoid doing any actual work and avoid any negative image?! It can't be!
Lumber said:Oh no! Are you implying that people at FDU did things in such a way as to avoid doing any actual work and avoid any negative image?! It can't be!
Halifax Tar said:I have already recommended a thread split.
I cant comment on their volume of work, Im the Snr Sup Tech not a CD, but trying to get things done like SCA verification's is like pulling teeth at times.
But if you ask around you will find that they are busiest unit in the RCN. True or not, I have no idea. Im just supposed to make sure they are up to speed on everything Supply.
Colin P said:Back to the intent of this thread, those cans of silicone water repellent were very useful, for boots, poncho, rain gear.
Colin P said:Back to the intent of this thread, those cans of silicone water repellent were very useful, for boots, poncho, rain gear.