Eye In The Sky said:
I think A LOT of the problem with CFPAS isn't CFPAS, its the politics where people are trying to 'situate the estimate' so that the ppl they want promoted/held back are, rather than just writing people up on their performance that year and letting the chips fall where they may.
I would have to agree. I recently heard one CO offer the observation that "despite how open and transparent the PER process is supposed to be, it really is not." The CFPAS policies and directives (as laid out through the CFPAS help file and annual CANFORGEN) are routinely ignored.
CFPAS says all PER copies will be destroyed once they have been receipted by the PER processing centre in NDHQ, but I would not be surprised if every unit retains copies until at least the next year's PERs are in Ottawa (and I know examples of units with three years of PERs on file).
CFPAS says that PER potential and rankings are not to be lowered for individuals who are forecasted to component transfer or be promoted, yet I have seen the exact thing come out of unit and formation merit boards. There was even a CANFORGEN on the topic of too many pers being dropped in score for an anticipated promotion which (often for training injury TCats) does not happen and suddenly a guy is held back in rank another 2 - 3 years while waiting to regenerate the right scores to be selected again.
CFPAS says that previous years' PER scores shall not be a factor in setting the present year's PER score (and the grievance board has upheld this position by rejecting multiple grievance arguments based on prior scores), but these again are items of information that are routinely pulled into unit and formation merit boards.
Here is another one:
jollyjacktar said:
It's crap. You're over or under written rarely or never accurately written to meet the alloted immediates, ready's etc etc. If the majority of your subordinates performed outstanding, then by all means give them that rating. I have seen too many times over the years a deserving member getting screwed because there were not enough outstandings to cover everyone.
CFPAS rules expressly prohibit score controls and bell curves. If what you say is true, then every referenced
screwed member would have solid grounds for redress ... though they may have to ATI the ship's PER directions to prove their case. (That being said, I think flexible score controls are something we may need to consider. The average individual is above average, and that really dilutes the value of the performance based assessment when weighted against all the check-in-the-box factors considered at a promotion board)
Rifleman62 said:
How about being posted to a new unit and the automatic wipe out of your "good" PERs because you are in a new job and know nothing? How does that influence three immediates or whatever needed for promotion?
In theory, one's performance may suffer due to the learning curve associated with a difficult new job. Potential should not suffer that same effect, and so promotion recommendation (N, D, R, I which are directly derived from potential) should not suffer. That being said, units should not have a standing practice of punishing the new guy - if such a thing is happening and can be proven, then this is again a solid ground for redress.
RADOPSIGOPACISSOP said:
Eye In The Sky said:
Mini-boards, unit board, etc etc etc. Write people up on their performance against their initial PDR and that's that.
That works until you realize the next guy wrote his mediocre soldiers up as walking on water and now you've set your star performers back 2 or 3 years in their career because you wanted to stand on principle.
And this is why CFPAS needs to be a priority for leadership right to the top in the CAF before it will be fixed. Nobody wants to be the first guy to stop gaming the system because it will be his subordinates who, at an aggregate level, suffer.