- Reaction score
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CFHA, since 2021, has increased the stock of RHUs, nationwide by….
41.
41.
CFHA, since 2021, has increased the stock of RHUs, nationwide by….
41.
This camp will be up for sale soonFor step one to work you need people to teach those courses, which means you need to retain experience (or leverage the local economy for ex-military civilian instructors). There are huge wait times for courses because your schools are in places like Borden, which are overwhelmingly expensive places to live for instructors who are typically in their 30's-40's with families. For step one to work you need to build more housing, and provide free daycare for military families so their spouses can work, on these training bases first. How many PMQs has Borden, for example, built in the last 10 years? Canada can easily hit the 2% target with infrastructure projects across the CAF alone.
edit: off-topic again damn it.
Great for the students on course. Or single members just posted into bases where they can save major $$ for property down payments. My first year at my first posting I lived in shacks paying $78/month, no rations. This gave me a jump start into the local housing market the following summer, even with a modest and reliable car payment.This camp will be up for sale soon
Quirky is on to something. The CAF should provide very low cost housing (paying for utilities only) for new members to help them get a start. Since nothing the government is going to do will bring down actual housing costs, the CAF could provide that. It would be a great recruiting tool.Great for the students on course. Or single members just posted into bases where they can save major $$ for property down payments. My first year at my first posting I lived in shacks paying $78/month, no rations. This gave me a jump start into the local housing market the following summer, even with a modest and reliable car payment.
"Tired of living in the field? Tired of infantry leadership? Try being a base guard instead! Same pay, live in real buildings, and get treated like an adult!"The new Special Airfield Security (SAS) trade recruiting video should be a wild one.
Didn't landlords take DND to court over the low cost of PMQs a few years back which they argued negatively impacted their livelihood blah blah which resulted in the prices of PMQs getting raised?Quirky is on to something. The CAF should provide very low cost housing (paying for utilities only) for new members to help them get a start. Since nothing the government is going to do will bring down actual housing costs, the CAF could provide that. It would be a great recruiting tool.
Why? A Cpl Basic non spec gets paid above the average Canadian income.Quirky is on to something. The CAF should provide very low cost housing (paying for utilities only) for new members to help them get a start. Since nothing the government is going to do will bring down actual housing costs, the CAF could provide that. It would be a great recruiting tool.
Don’t know. But I was thinking about singles quarters… the shacks.Didn't landlords take DND to court over the low cost of PMQs a few years back which they argued negatively impacted their livelihood blah blah which resulted in the prices of PMQs getting raised?
Why? A Cpl Basic non spec gets paid above the average Canadian income.
A single room in Petawawa will run someone $200ish a month which isn't terrible. Lack of kitchen (usually) means live in members are reliant on ration strength which i believe is still pretty pricy.Don’t know. But I was thinking about singles quarters… the shacks.
Why? A Cpl Basic non spec gets paid above the average Canadian income.
You mean they don’t have Commissionaires that would wave in a VW van load of Libyan terrorists?Most other countries don’t let people just walk onto their bases as a default.
Or maybe people armed with....You mean they don’t have Commissionaires that would wave in a VW van load of Libyan terrorists?
Isn’t that the way here though? Race to the bottom to match the suffering level of Canadians?So? You’re going to jack up living costs to match the suffering of the Canadian public instead of making CAF employment more attractive for junior members?
I wonder how many of those landlords were serving or former caf members…Didn't landlords take DND to court over the low cost of PMQs a few years back which they argued negatively impacted their livelihood blah blah which resulted in the prices of PMQs getting raised?
both. At least at the NCM level in most jobsSingles quarters only, for first 3-5 years of employment… provide a unique incentive to join.
Is that above average of all income classes (including those working min wage jobs) or above average of all full time career jobs that involve some level of training?
taxable benefit. Sorry.Quirky is on to something. The CAF should provide very low cost housing (paying for utilities only) for new members to help them get a start. Since nothing the government is going to do will bring down actual housing costs, the CAF could provide that. It would be a great recruiting tool.
Until it's legislated that it's not. Parliament sets CRA rules and tax code, not random public servants.taxable benefit. Sorry.