Tcm621 said:
General Leslie did nothing wrong because he simply followed the policy as it was being interpreted but this is more of closing a loophole then getting rid of a benefit.
Tcm621 said:
As for the second part of your post, that is exactly what I am saying. If one is retiring in the geographic area one is currently posted in, one should not need or require the same benefits as someone who is retiring elsewhere.
Because we are unable to dictate where we are living prior to retirement, it is fair to expect a cost move to that location. However, if we are already in that location, either through luck or through negotiations with the career manager, there is no requirement. If someone chooses to live in a pmq, while posted in their chosen retirement location, right up to his end date the CF should not be on the hook for his poor planning.
There's so much wrong with what you said that I don't know where to start.
I was posted to Ottawa in 2008 with (at the time) 23 years service. I had no intentions of getting out anytime soon. We did our HHT in Ottawa with a one year old in tow, rushing around like fools trying to find a house in the 5 days allotted for a HHT. I knew that I would be working at 101, downtown. As anyone who's ever been to Ottawa knows, parking simply isn't an option at any of the downtown sites, unless you pay through the nose. So, we chose a house based on the following criteria:
1. Met all the criteria for being able to unload it quickly when the next posting came
2. Was close to express public transit routes
3. Met all of our needs as a family.
Fast forward to 2011. I participated in a competition for a Public Service position. I'm offered the position. I submit my release from the CF with almost 26 years service to my name. I'm in a house that I chose primarily for service reasons, a house that we've already outgrown after only three years, and most definitely not the house that we would have chosen if I were moving to Ottawa to retire from the CF.
I sold my 1100 sq. ft. home on a typical city lot in Orleans last August. At the same time, I purchased the home I would have chosen had I knew I was coming here to retire, which is a 2400 sq ft home on a huge lot in rural Limoges, 33 km from my old home. Bigger house, bigger property, don't need to worry about being close to transit because I can park at work, and it only takes me 10 minutes more to drive to work than at my old house. I claimed my move to IPR on retirement just like Gen Leslie did.
Now, tell me why I'm not
entitled to have my relocation costs covered for the move to my "local" intended place of residence, when the house I chose to move to when posted here was predominantly chosen because of service reasons?