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And, if we look at Hockey Canada’s issues, still are.I keep hearing this. But where I grew up, the athletes were the worst perpetrators of all four activities!
And, if we look at Hockey Canada’s issues, still are.I keep hearing this. But where I grew up, the athletes were the worst perpetrators of all four activities!
Vitriol aside, I agree. I'd go further in fact. There is no need for a common BMQ. It wastes time and increases costs. IMHO recruits should be funneled directly into Army, Navy and Air Force streams and start training within their services environment. If that means three separate recruit schools, then so be it.
My BMOQ was done at CFOCS Venture in Victoria and it impressed me with what the Navy was. A young sailor shouldn't spend the better part of their first year inland in classes having nothing to do with the Navy. BMQ and even language training should be given in a Navy environment, and, if possible, blended with Navy specific skill training so that they are properly developed in their formative year with a sense of belonging to the Navy. The same for the Air Force and the Army. Have sailors train sailors, soldiers train soldiers and aviators train aviators from the get go.
The residual problem is the purple trades. That said, we already have them select uniforms so let's make that stick by having them actually take their initial training in that environment. Let the cooks and the like do their BMQ and language training within their chosen environment and then come together at Borden for trades training but then return them to their environment for the bulk of their service. That might be complicated in some cases but it will work for the vast majority.
I think we all agree here that BMQ should be an element-specific thing. Haven't seen anyone put forward a good reason not to.Vitriol aside, I agree. I'd go further in fact. There is no need for a common BMQ. It wastes time and increases costs. IMHO recruits should be funneled directly into Army, Navy and Air Force streams and start training within their services environment. If that means three separate recruit schools, then so be it.
Wholeheartedly agree. It's a hangover from the JArmy mentality that resides in Ottawa for some reason.Making everyone come through a combat arms trade is a absolutely ridiculous idea.
Even the Army has seen this schism between Combat Arms trades, Combat Support, Combat Service Support, and HQ Support. We all have a role to play, and each trade and corps provides different effects.Every time this comes up I roll my eyes. Just more examples of how the CAF needs to break away from this constant Army spin on things.
We don't. Honestly.If the Army to wants to do that, fill yer boots. But the rest of CAF shouldnt have to do something because one element has an overwhelming inferiority complex.
How many "hardship" postings are there really?
I get sea duty for the Navy. For the Air Force? I keep hearing about Cold Lake and Bagotville.
Do you really need a uniformed tech for those jobs at all?
I've had people fixing control systems by modems for over 30 years. Loggies? Do they need to be military at all? Those people in "managerial" roles - could we strike them from the 60 or 70,000 reg force PYs and add them to the civvy rolls at NDHQ, or even as consultants.
And, as you note, spare the uniforms for the short term youngsters.
Vitriol aside, I agree. I'd go further in fact. There is no need for a common BMQ. It wastes time and increases costs. IMHO recruits should be funneled directly into Army, Navy and Air Force streams and start training within their services environment. If that means three separate recruit schools, then so be it.
My BMOQ was done at CFOCS Venture in Victoria and it impressed me with what the Navy was. A young sailor shouldn't spend the better part of their first year inland in classes having nothing to do with the Navy. BMQ and even language training should be given in a Navy environment, and, if possible, blended with Navy specific skill training so that they are properly developed in their formative year with a sense of belonging to the Navy. The same for the Air Force and the Army. Have sailors train sailors, soldiers train soldiers and aviators train aviators from the get go.
The residual problem is the purple trades. That said, we already have them select uniforms so let's make that stick by having them actually take their initial training in that environment. Let the cooks and the like do their BMQ and language training within their chosen environment and then come together at Borden for trades training but then return them to their environment for the bulk of their service. That might be complicated in some cases but it will work for the vast majority.
Hoo-Boy. Where to start.
After growing up in Toronto but spending almost all of my adult life in Manitoba (where I met my wife) we moved back to Ontario around 15 years ago. I think I can say that with a kid in Ontario and one lived in Alberta and now in BC I can fairly say I've got my foot in both places and can honestly say that each has their pluses and minuses.
My point is that most young people these days do not start off with the idea that they want to live elsewhere. They want a job, they want opportunities, they want to stay connected with family, they want some stability and if there is a chance to visit new places and do new things then so much the better.
I can't help but believe that if we can offer a person from Winnipeg a career which let's him remain in Manitoba lets say for 10 years, or a person from Vancouver a chance to stay in BC then we'll do better in recruiting. Currently only people from Quebec, while not having such a promise, have the odds in their favour of a career in their home province.
Do we even have statistics on what today's youth really want?
While I haven’t seen a RCAF one myself, it’s been referred to for quite a while and we’ve changed some of the ways we do business and think. I’m on leave but will check to see if there is an official RCAF or Air Div document.Does anyone know if the RCN or RCAF have released a plan yet?
Don't really expect anything, on the RCN side, but unless we tie up and retire some ships, while slowing down the ops tempo (including random fleet exercises) we don't have a hope in hell, and ships will 'self retire'. Believe we're still pulling instructors to fill at sea billets, and we've broken the schools anyway.
Vitriol aside, I agree. I'd go further in fact. There is no need for a common BMQ. It wastes time and increases costs. IMHO recruits should be funneled directly into Army, Navy and Air Force streams and start training within their services environment. If that means three separate recruit schools, then so be it.
My BMOQ was done at CFOCS Venture in Victoria and it impressed me with what the Navy was. A young sailor shouldn't spend the better part of their first year inland in classes having nothing to do with the Navy. BMQ and even language training should be given in a Navy environment, and, if possible, blended with Navy specific skill training so that they are properly developed in their formative year with a sense of belonging to the Navy. The same for the Air Force and the Army. Have sailors train sailors, soldiers train soldiers and aviators train aviators from the get go.
The residual problem is the purple trades. That said, we already have them select uniforms so let's make that stick by having them actually take their initial training in that environment. Let the cooks and the like do their BMQ and language training within their chosen environment and then come together at Borden for trades training but then return them to their environment for the bulk of their service.
Agree, but as long as the CAF is one service we will continue down this bumpy, meandering side road we are on now as a military.
We need to change the piece below, but I don’t believe it will happen.
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Honestly IMHO the Purple trades need to be eliminated with extreme prejudice - one can have a "One CAF" and still have the different elements with their own personnel. Some of those separate things may intertwine, and share common courses, but I would suspect that a Supply Tech in the Army, has vastly different materials to be familiar with than the Navy or AirForce, and while the process may be common - the items are not.Yup I agree. But we don’t have “services” right now we have a single service. People don’t “join the RCN/RCAF”, they join the CAF.
I’d change that, despite how small our Armed Forces are.
Wholeheartedly agree. It's a hangover from the JArmy mentality that resides in Ottawa for some reason.
Even the Army has seen this schism between Combat Arms trades, Combat Support, Combat Service Support, and HQ Support. We all have a role to play, and each trade and corps provides different effects.
The CO of 3 RCR told me point blank he didn't need another infantryman with a different cap badge; he needed a skilled tradesman that could make sure he had C2 to get his people killing bad guys efficiently. If I couldn't be that skilled tradesman, I was useless to him.
I couldve been thebhardeat charging airborne Pronto in the Army, but if I didnt know my stuff.... no Bueno.
We don't. Honestly.
A lot of times it's foisted down on the Corps because a lot of the L2/3 positions that make those decisions lose sight of what support enablers bring to the fight. Its less inferiority complex than it is "these soldiers dont look soldiery enough for me... fix it."
"Soldier first" is slowly dying and good riddance. We train folks to a degree that is unwarranted for the realities they face on Day One of OFP. Me learning how to muddle my way through a section attack isn't going to save anyone's life in the real world. Our TTP in Afghan for us in the Column? "Stay in the truck, leave if things get too dicey, let the FP elements deal with it."
We don't train as we fight, mainly because we train poorly to perform tasks we never will in real life. But ..."hooray.. Army.... close with and destroy.....blah blah."
Yup I agree. But we don’t have “services” right now we have a single service. People don’t “join the RCN/RCAF”, they join the CAF.
I’d change that, despite how small our Armed Forces are.
Honestly IMHO the Purple trades need to be eliminated with extreme prejudice - one can have a "One CAF" and still have the different elements with their own personnel. Some of those separate things may intertwine, and share common courses, but I would suspect that a Supply Tech in the Army, has vastly different materials to be familiar with than the Navy or AirForce, and while the process may be common - the items are not.
When one looks at the USMC, and their "Every Marine, a rifleman" concept, it isn't suggesting that all trades be a blood lusting death tech of extreme skill - it just means that everyone has some common understanding of land warfare - they can shoot, move and communicate.
Realistically it should not inhibit anyones primary role to also be familiar with that, the biggest issue occurs more when certain trades or pipelines do a left turn and think they are a gunfighter first, and there is no one doing their primary role, that is when the wheels truly fall off the cart.
Unification was never supposed to see this happen. Personnel Branches were an afterthought along with CF Greens and unified ranks.Honestly IMHO the Purple trades need to be eliminated with extreme prejudice - one can have a "One CAF" and still have the different elements with their own personnel. Some of those separate things may intertwine, and share common courses, but I would suspect that a Supply Tech in the Army, has vastly different materials to be familiar with than the Navy or AirForce, and while the process may be common - the items are not.
Right, but when a Boatswain, Infanteer or AVN Tech joins they are managed within their element. Simply do the same for everyone.
Right now I am fall under CMP. Take away CMP and insert RCN. Just like the rest of the anchor wearing Navy folks.
It would be easier and quicker to change at that level, but also easier and quicker to reserve when the next CDS doesn’t like it. Change the legislation and that would be harder for future good idea technicians to reserve.
I think it needs to go beyond Gate Guard, as anyone should be able to conduct (or be a useful contributor to) an effective defense. Most should be able also to conduct a limited attack with suppression, fire and movement.Small arms competency should be an everyone job. But for most that should be simple and safe operation of the fire arm.
Anyone should be able to stand gate guard.