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http://www.canada.com/globaltv/maritimes/story.html?id=90cbbca3-923a-48f4-95d8-6d7ead6c4c9f&p=2
I just read in the Montreal Gazette an article on the growing attrition rates in the forces due presumably to the war in Afghanistan (first I have heard of this). As well, the above link, refers the baby boomers retiring from the services very shortly, which will no doubt leave the forces in the lurch, despite the recruiting objectives being made successfully so far.
These articles, like most articles in papers, make me wonder if they think they are fooling all or some of the people or just those people that they need to eg. the general population.
As anyone who has quit the forces and wished to rejoin, or those already in the reserves who want to go full time, this can prove to an extremely frustrating experience akin to banging ones head on a wall. It is far easier to com off the street and join than to rejoin. To wrap what I am saying in a nutshell, bullshit! I know from personal experience how long and how many flaming hoops I have had to endure since I decided a few years back that I wanted to rejoin. I wasn't taking the reserves too seriously but I did enjoy the experience immensely, unfortunately it just got in the way of my masters program, which I gave preference to. After a few years of maturing and a nice degree under my belt, I made an informed decision involving family and friends and most difficultly, my wife, to rejoin.
Well things didn't go as smoothly as I would have hoped; I flew out of the country to teach English in a very nonthreatening country security-wise, and I fell into the 'out of the country for more than 6 months in the last ten years' clause, and I was immediately brushed into the chasm of self doubt and a two year waiting time for a mysterious 'pre-sec', which I still am in the dark about -who is doing what with my file right now? And you certainly cannot phone this person up to see what's up so far. I guess they have to take security seriously, but 2 years? Really? Are they that busy that they can't make it a priority to fast-track people like me who want to join and have proven it by waiting years for the privilege to rejoin? If I can see it through the eyes of a recruiter I would see an individual who has toughed it out for a few years, spent copious amounts of time and energy in doing the steps it took to get himself to this point, and above all, a mature person who was already in the forces, and made a choice to come back a little older and a little more wise. A person who has had so many file bungles such as I had (my file had sat on some dud's desk who retired the day I gave it to him, so it say there collecting dust while I thought it was in the hands of of those we no nothing about - CSIS? That took 4 months added to my up to 2 year wait. Then the file was misfile again for 3 months but that wasn't explained to me despite my best efforts) All this in the real world would clearly show a person who would most likely stay the course, as he has been through it before and knows what awaits of him. I wouldn't let this son of a be-ach go, I would kiss his arse and do whatever it took to keep him interested and motivated to stay the course of this idiotic and overly bureaucratic jumbled mess of a mystery called the pre-security check.
But that isn't the case, and I seriously wouldn't expect it from them, but that is what you would get from a private firm who wanted you as badly as the forces needs soldiers. I guess to sum up what I am saying is that there is a lot of hot air but no real and defined effort to solve the problems that the forces are facing. I can understand the long wait for an individual who may be from a country of concern, such as Iran, but for a white-bread, born in farmtown/hockeytown Peterborough, I just don't get the intense scrutiny. The right people seem to know the problems, but are they able to do anything about them?
I just read in the Montreal Gazette an article on the growing attrition rates in the forces due presumably to the war in Afghanistan (first I have heard of this). As well, the above link, refers the baby boomers retiring from the services very shortly, which will no doubt leave the forces in the lurch, despite the recruiting objectives being made successfully so far.
These articles, like most articles in papers, make me wonder if they think they are fooling all or some of the people or just those people that they need to eg. the general population.
As anyone who has quit the forces and wished to rejoin, or those already in the reserves who want to go full time, this can prove to an extremely frustrating experience akin to banging ones head on a wall. It is far easier to com off the street and join than to rejoin. To wrap what I am saying in a nutshell, bullshit! I know from personal experience how long and how many flaming hoops I have had to endure since I decided a few years back that I wanted to rejoin. I wasn't taking the reserves too seriously but I did enjoy the experience immensely, unfortunately it just got in the way of my masters program, which I gave preference to. After a few years of maturing and a nice degree under my belt, I made an informed decision involving family and friends and most difficultly, my wife, to rejoin.
Well things didn't go as smoothly as I would have hoped; I flew out of the country to teach English in a very nonthreatening country security-wise, and I fell into the 'out of the country for more than 6 months in the last ten years' clause, and I was immediately brushed into the chasm of self doubt and a two year waiting time for a mysterious 'pre-sec', which I still am in the dark about -who is doing what with my file right now? And you certainly cannot phone this person up to see what's up so far. I guess they have to take security seriously, but 2 years? Really? Are they that busy that they can't make it a priority to fast-track people like me who want to join and have proven it by waiting years for the privilege to rejoin? If I can see it through the eyes of a recruiter I would see an individual who has toughed it out for a few years, spent copious amounts of time and energy in doing the steps it took to get himself to this point, and above all, a mature person who was already in the forces, and made a choice to come back a little older and a little more wise. A person who has had so many file bungles such as I had (my file had sat on some dud's desk who retired the day I gave it to him, so it say there collecting dust while I thought it was in the hands of of those we no nothing about - CSIS? That took 4 months added to my up to 2 year wait. Then the file was misfile again for 3 months but that wasn't explained to me despite my best efforts) All this in the real world would clearly show a person who would most likely stay the course, as he has been through it before and knows what awaits of him. I wouldn't let this son of a be-ach go, I would kiss his arse and do whatever it took to keep him interested and motivated to stay the course of this idiotic and overly bureaucratic jumbled mess of a mystery called the pre-security check.
But that isn't the case, and I seriously wouldn't expect it from them, but that is what you would get from a private firm who wanted you as badly as the forces needs soldiers. I guess to sum up what I am saying is that there is a lot of hot air but no real and defined effort to solve the problems that the forces are facing. I can understand the long wait for an individual who may be from a country of concern, such as Iran, but for a white-bread, born in farmtown/hockeytown Peterborough, I just don't get the intense scrutiny. The right people seem to know the problems, but are they able to do anything about them?