- Reaction score
- 5,818
- Points
- 1,260
You'd think this would make sense, but funny how a pretty-high-up element of this story is how it was quickly sole sourced -- anything to accentuate the negative, I guess. Shared in accordance with the "fair dealing" provisions, Section 29, of the Copyright Act.
Government orders psychological testing for trainers of armed border guards
Bruce Cheadle, Canadian Press, 2 Jan 07
Article Link - MERX notice
Canadian border guards who want to train their colleagues in the use of weapons will have to pass a test of their own later this month - to see if they're psychologically fit to handle a gun.
A hurried contract tender worth $74,000 was posted this week with a sole-source provider in mind due to what the tender calls "tight timeframes" for getting the Conservative government policy underway by July.
The contract's objective: "to evaluate psychological readiness to carry a side arm of candidates who have applied for a . . . Use of Force Trainer position."
Up to 110 such candidates, spread across Canada, are to be tested for medical and personality disorders Jan. 15-31, with followup interviews and evaluations completed by Feb. 15.
"In order to meet the tight timeframes required to staff trainers and commence implementation of the training and arming of CBSA (Canada Border Services Agency) employees by July 2007, there is a requirement to engage highly knowledgeable and experienced psychologists," says the tender notice.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced last August that Canada's border guards would be armed for the first time, starting this year.
"We're going to take action and get things done," Harper said at border crossing photo opportunity in Surrey, B.C.
The government hopes to have at least 150 border guards armed and on the job by March 2008, with hundreds more added in each of the following years.
But the guards must first be trained in how to handle weapons and when to use them, so creating an in-house staff capable of providing that training is a priority.
The potential trainers are being screened for psychological problems. The tests are to include the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory and Sixteen Personality Factor, along with stress and clinical interviews.
The government notice says it intends to award the contract to Wilson Banwell Human Solutions of Calgary, because it says the company is the only firm capable of doing the work.
Government orders psychological testing for trainers of armed border guards
Bruce Cheadle, Canadian Press, 2 Jan 07
Article Link - MERX notice
Canadian border guards who want to train their colleagues in the use of weapons will have to pass a test of their own later this month - to see if they're psychologically fit to handle a gun.
A hurried contract tender worth $74,000 was posted this week with a sole-source provider in mind due to what the tender calls "tight timeframes" for getting the Conservative government policy underway by July.
The contract's objective: "to evaluate psychological readiness to carry a side arm of candidates who have applied for a . . . Use of Force Trainer position."
Up to 110 such candidates, spread across Canada, are to be tested for medical and personality disorders Jan. 15-31, with followup interviews and evaluations completed by Feb. 15.
"In order to meet the tight timeframes required to staff trainers and commence implementation of the training and arming of CBSA (Canada Border Services Agency) employees by July 2007, there is a requirement to engage highly knowledgeable and experienced psychologists," says the tender notice.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced last August that Canada's border guards would be armed for the first time, starting this year.
"We're going to take action and get things done," Harper said at border crossing photo opportunity in Surrey, B.C.
The government hopes to have at least 150 border guards armed and on the job by March 2008, with hundreds more added in each of the following years.
But the guards must first be trained in how to handle weapons and when to use them, so creating an in-house staff capable of providing that training is a priority.
The potential trainers are being screened for psychological problems. The tests are to include the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory and Sixteen Personality Factor, along with stress and clinical interviews.
The government notice says it intends to award the contract to Wilson Banwell Human Solutions of Calgary, because it says the company is the only firm capable of doing the work.