TCBF said:
- My recommendation once was too send the new CO the new soldiers Pers File, the CO's MO gets his Med File and the MP Sgt of the Regt gets to see the 'MP File. The three of them confirm to see if the soldier will be a good fit. This would work in theory, but eventually some bureaucrat will tell his respective chain to approve all postings and we would be back to square one.
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Recommendation 1 already exists for promotion. A CO has to sign off on all promotions. Whether in the case of a posting/promotion that should be gaining unit or losing unit is a philosophical question, and is open to debate, but I think that particular tool for denial of promotion should only be used in exceptional circumstances -- after all, should a CO normally be second-guessing a merit board? If a member is completely and egregiously unsuitable for promotion, didn't the CO have a chance to say so at the bottom of the PER? I accept that if a member has had a complete meltdown of his performance in recent months, then the CO needs that power, since a Promotion Board only sees the past three years.
I have huge issues with proposed recommendation 2 and 3. If a member is physically screwed up, the MO should have him on MEL's, TCAT or PCAT. If he's a criminal, call the NIS, lay charges and let him have his day in court-martial.
Or are you recommending that CO's be able to veto all postings in to a unit? Most of the time, I'm seeing CO's that are way too desperate for manpower to be choosy. Their calls to the Career Managers and Branch Chiefs are more like "get me some more guys" and "all my warrants have retired" and "I just lost more guys to CANSOF". They are not usually in a position to be saying that they need three jump qualified hockey players, two bilingual AOC grads and an MWO with nine medals so he looks really cool on parade.
Although there are a few units that are screening postings in -- OUTCAN, CANSOF, JTFN, 440 Squadron, (and I think that 1 Cdn Div is back to doing screening, it wasn't when I was there) -- it is very much the exception, not the rule.