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Hello I would like to join with reserves however I am 90 percent deaf in 1 ear and 1 eye is blurry. Am I done?
Thanks.
Thanks.

daddytoeface said:Hello I would like to join with reserves however I am 90 percent deaf in 1 ear and 1 eye is blurry. Am I done?
Thanks.
geo said:Mmmm... only thing that comes to mind is....UNIVERSALITY OF SERVICE.
I gather that your blurry eyesight cannot be corrected by eyeglasses - elswe it wouldn't be an issue
AND Having your hearing in one ear limited to 10% .... I wouldn't set my hopes too high.....
daddytoeface said:Hello I would like to join with reserves however I am 90 percent deaf in 1 ear and 1 eye is blurry. Am I done?
Thanks.
ArmyVern said:From a girl who is serving and is deaf on the left hand side.
I was already "in" when I lost my hearing due to a medical situation which occured while serving a tour in Alert - after 11 years of service and successful completion of my training - and no issues with deployments overseas.
After all that time and money spent on me and training me - a resource that was already "on" their books - ... I was deemed to not meet "Universality of Service" requirements and release action was initiated. The only reason that I'm still here today, is because I happened to be serving overseas on an international deployment when that decision came down and that I was already trained - an "investment" if you will.
Long and the short --- I was already in, and that's the only reason I'm still enjoying my job today. If you don't meet the "H" requirements (and you won't - I don't) - you will not be approved for entry
tech2002 said:Too bad they can't do hiring even if you have "issue with hearing",..
I can tell you , I used to serve before in different army long time ago about 18 years ago before I came to Canada, In my country where I am from they draft people to army, at that time I had same problem as today, I don't hear to my right ear, my left is H1, and my right ear is H3, they put us in front of commission, they look at my medical, physical and they bombard you with questions , and let you answer them,, I did answer all of them , the army medical doctor checked my hearing diagrams after that they look at trades where you can be needed, and they send me to be as Radar Technician , I had no choice to choose like here in Canadian Army, I went for my soldier training , I have passed it, I had no issues, my commanding officer passed me, and he never question about my hearing, like it never existed . I felt proud of my accomplishments, I did served. After that I came to Canada, went to school, worked, few of my friends join up, they I decided as well, I have applied for LCIS Tech, something similar, and no go because of my right ear not good, I thought I can be at least be given chance to test me during the BMQ training at which ever location I would of be sent to. If I pass it , I have accomplish something and there is a chance to serve Canada and Canadian Forces, if I fail it, then I move on to next thing. This is what I thought or expect to happen. I think from my perspective to be more logical setup, then screen you out at the first medical test , without even have chance to see if there is a issue there. There are some people can not join who happen to have real medical issues that can in danger themselves. I am still bitter by this even after a year of rejection.