Loachman said:And don't make any more silly polls.
mld said:I made the poll simply for fun, not to base my hopes on its outcome. I know whatever tomorrow brings, life will go on. I am not freaking out, or anything. Simply did this for the entertainment value, sorry if it annoyed or offended you in anyway. Thanks for the wishes of luck though, even though I am a woman, the intent is the same
Loachman said:Life was so much easier in the days before people had an internet to stoke them almost to seizure levels.
mld said:I made the poll simply for fun, not to base my hopes on its outcome.
mld said:So I got my news. It is not good, but it is not bad either.
The recruiting officer called this morning to profusely apologize to me. He made a mistake when he interviewed me for the medic position (I had originally been applying for ROTP). He told me there were 8 positions available, and due to my scores and education I am extremely competitive, and will almost definitely be offered a position. He apologized because he failed to realize that although there were 8 positions available nationally, my province (Quebec) had already reached its quota for med techs. So as of today there are 7 positions still available nationally. He told me that if those positions are not offered to anyone in the provinces that still have spots they will be opened up to the national pool of applicants (including me) on Dec 17. If I am not selected I can still go ahead with my ROTP application if I wish.
I am not sure if this is a normal situation, or what to think about all of this. If someone who has experience in recruiting could comment on this situation, it would help me out a lot. My biggest question is: is it reasonable to believe that there will be positions available on Dec 17? Do positions move so fast that 7 can disappear in 9 working days? Opinions welcome!
Brihard said:Perfectly normal. For many trades, recruiting targets are divided out nationally for the first three quarters of the fiscal year. Each recruiting centre will try to hit its target with qualified applicants who have been merit listed. And yes, this means that if there are 9 high meriting applicants in Calgary, but Calgary only has 8 positions, then #9 could well end up stuck, and someone recruiting out of another part of the country, despite being lower on the national merit list, will get first kick at filling that recruiting centre's targets. In the last quarter, any residual positions that remain unfilled get pooled nationally, and they go top down on the merit list.
As for whether positions will remain, I can't say. There may be a recruiting centre somewhere with 5 positions still to fill, and they've been working on other stuff and will do all of their offers for medic a week before the deadline. Or those positions may remain vacant. All you can do is wait for word.
curious george said:If I may interject respectfully, suppose you apply ROTP nursing, wouldn't it be a waste of spot if there was another applicant who truly wanted to become a nursing officer for the sake of becoming a nursing officer? And wouldn't it be a waste of military training money?