Infanteer said:
The article seems to indicate that the CSS of the Army, specifically the Service Battalions, are going to be stretched to support elements in Latvia, Ukraine and somewhere in Africa. Is the Service Battalion model itself not able to handle multiple missions, or is the organization sound and we've simply resourced it inadequately?
The CS Bn is 100% focused on supporting the brigade, it can deploy to and move in the field, it is 100% military (less maybe the CO’s secretary that every unit seems to have), and it would be responsible to FG second line CSS to land operations. The GS Bn would be mostly focused on institutional support but it would retain some deployable capability (a Fd Sp Coy?); the deployable component would be able to deploy to but not necessarily able to move in the field, and it would be responsible to FG third line CSS (ie. the JTFSC/NSE) to land and joint operations.
Most bases have robust tech services companies as they do not host a Service Battalion. Edmonton, Valcartier and Petawawa seem to be the only ones that have this double-hatted role. How about cutting the tech services function away from the Service Battalions and "civilianizing" it. If not 100%, then perhaps 20%mil/80% civilian. Managing a garrison stores counter seems to be something suited to a civilian who isn't moving.
This would give us civilian Tech Services Companies in each garrison, tailored in size to the demand, while each Brigade has a Service Battalion dedicated to training for operations and not shuffling people to fix the base bus or issue socks.
While we are at it, move the Field Medical Coy to the Service Battalion as well and we can rid ourselves of excess units (the Field Ambulance). Last I checked, Medical was one of the four pillars of Sustainment.
OK, helmets on ... :warstory:
Back in the 1960s I had some, limited (junior officer), involvement with the EBSB (Experimental Brigade Service Battalion) in Gagetown and I observed the "stand up" of 4 Svc Bn in North Germany. Later, in the 1970s, I had some (still slight) involvement in helping to organize the "re-casting" of 1st Cdn Sig Regt, then deployed to Ismailia as the lead unit of UNEF II, into 73 Sig Sqn and 73 Svc Bn.
The initial (1960s) idea was for an organization that could support a brigade group on the West German
nuclear battlefield ~
more effectively and
more flexibly, because the brigade Ordnance Field Park, brigade S&T Coy and brigade Field Workshop were already doing good jobs. The organizational structure was fairly obvious, I think, but there were, doctrinally, some concerns about the duties of the service battalion command team and 'regimental' staff and the brigade SQ (admin and logistics) staff. My
personal observation was that things worked quite smoothly in 4 CMBG on the North German plain: the division of planning and resource control (brigade staff) and conduct of logistics operations (battalion staff) was easy to manage on the ground, but I'm told (did not observe, myself) that things fell apart, abit, when the brigade moved to CENTAG and the staff system/structure changed.
It was very, very obvious, very, very soon after deployment that UNEF II needed more than just Canadian Signals support. The CO of 1CSR (then LCol, later BGen George Simpson) had more "signals" than UNEF II really needed, but he soon found himself tasking his Sp Sqn to provide logistic support to others. He reinforced his support squadron (with Signals people hastily retrained as apprentice supply tech, etc) and then recommended, and Ottawa (DCDS, I suppose) agreed, that what was really needed was a signal squadron, rather than a regiment, and a logistics battalion, rather than a company sized unit. My memory says ~ and I'm happy to be corrected ~ that Simpson handed over to two units at the end of Roto 0: 73 Sig Sqn and 73 Svc Bn.
The point is that the basic structure of a service battalion: a supply element, transport element, maintenance element and other elements, is infinitely flexible and can provide 2nd and 3rd line support. In 1980 we concluded, in a FMC HQ study, that a Canadian division of three brigade groups, each with its own service battalion, would still need some div troops and they would need a small div troops service battalion but, in fact, we would actually need a
big div troops service battalion because it would provide
both 2nd line support to div troops and 3rd line support to the brigade group service battalions.
...
/war stories