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Does anybody know whether DART deployments were previously funded out of the DND budget or the DFAIT budget?
Does this possibly represent a change in the way Ottawa apportions costs? Because if so it means that DND could end up with a LOT more dollars to spend on manpower, training and capital. Other candidates for cost transference are pension plans, compliance with legislation, governance, grants, research and development.....all mentioned by Col Marsh (ret'd) and others in various articles.
That allows Liberals to spend more on Defence without greatly increasing the Defence budget. A Billion or 2 more in annual funds, a Billion or 2 less in costs, a revision to the bureaucracy (major/minor, civil/military according to your taste) and pretty soon you are talking about real money.
Heck, maybe they can start inducting and training all of those interested citizens lining up at the door.
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_PrintFriendly&c=Article&cid=1096409411170&call_pageid=968332188774
Does this possibly represent a change in the way Ottawa apportions costs? Because if so it means that DND could end up with a LOT more dollars to spend on manpower, training and capital. Other candidates for cost transference are pension plans, compliance with legislation, governance, grants, research and development.....all mentioned by Col Marsh (ret'd) and others in various articles.
That allows Liberals to spend more on Defence without greatly increasing the Defence budget. A Billion or 2 more in annual funds, a Billion or 2 less in costs, a revision to the bureaucracy (major/minor, civil/military according to your taste) and pretty soon you are talking about real money.
Heck, maybe they can start inducting and training all of those interested citizens lining up at the door.
DART aid for Haiti may be too costly: Pettigrew
FROM CANADIAN PRESS
Foreign Affairs Minister Pierre Pettigrew says it may be too expensive to send the Canadian Forces' Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) to Haiti, CBC's The National reported today.
DART provides medical care and clean drinking water in disaster areas, both of which are needed in Haiti in the wake of tropical storm Jeanne.
Pettigrew headed for Port-au-Prince on Tuesday to survey the damage left by Jeanne. Canada has already pledged about $3 million in relief aid to Haiti, but so far the government has not offered to send in the DART team, but neither has Haiti or the UN asked, the CBC said.
"It's not something that you offer or whatever," said Pettigrew. "We look at the needs in the country. DART is a very expensive thing. I mean, it's all very nice to say DART, but it represents several million dollars."
Still, Foreign Affairs officials say use of the team hasn't been ruled out.
Pettigrew promises Canada's involvement in Haiti is long-term. Last year Ottawa pledged $150 million over several years to the country, as part of a reconstruction and development program.
The opposition says the government should not worry about money in a midst of a humanitarian crisis.
Peter Goldring, the Conservative foreign affairs critic for the Caribbean, has just returned from Grenada, which also suffered severe storm damage. He says the DART should be sent to the region immediately. "You know they're needed. Why are they holding back? Send them."
The military hasn't deployed the DART since 1999 when it went to Turkey after a massive earthquake. The five-week mission cost almost $8 million.
The military says a reconnaissance team could be on the ground in 12 hours, with the rest of the 200-member emergency team ready to go anywhere on 48 hours notice. The government just has to give the order.
The estimated death toll from flooding and mudslides stands at 1,500, with 900 missing, most in the city of Gonaives, where aid workers continued to face desperate crowds clamouring for, and sometimes attempting to loot, emergency supplies.
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_PrintFriendly&c=Article&cid=1096409411170&call_pageid=968332188774

