Just picked this off the news wire.
PUBLICATION: GLOBE AND MAIL
IDN: 072080137
DATE: 2007.07.27
PAGE: A4 (ILLUS)
BYLINE: TIM SHUFELT
SECTION: National News
EDITION: Metro
DATELINE:
WORDS: 465
WORD COUNT: 425
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AIR FORCE Forces relax vision standards for new pilots Cockpit now open to those who need glasses or contacts, but critics say the move is simply to fill a recruiting shortage
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TIM SHUFELT The Canadian Air Force is lowering its minimum standards for vision, opening the cockpit to those traditionally disqualified for needing glasses or contact lenses.
The Department of National Defence said the policy change was prompted by an independent scientific study and has nothing to do with the military's personnel shortage.
Liberal foreign affairs critic Ujjal Dosanjh said he doesn't completely buy that.
"I suspect this is more related to the fact that we're finding it difficult to recruit as many new people into the military as this government promised," Mr. Dosanjh said. "Therefore, the requirements are being eased." Air Force spokesman Lieutenant Paul Finnemore, however, said the restriction on bespectacled pilots dated to the Second World War, and had no scientific grounding.
The study, commissioned by Defence Research and Development Canada, shows that pilots who need glasses or contacts for modest vision correction can safely operate military aircraft.
One military analyst said the announcement reflects a further watering down of the standards of fitness required to enlist in the Canadian Forces.
As of last October, applicants who fail the basic physical fitness test are no longer rejected, but turned over to trainers until they are whipped into shape before beginning basic training.
"So now you can get a 300-pound guy who can barely see," said Scott Taylor, publisher of the military affairs magazine Esprit de Corps.
He also predicts a deterioration of the image of the combat pilot as an elite hotshot. "That's what it's been in the past: 'Be all you can be.' Now it's: 'Be all you can muster.' " Lt. Finnemore insisted the air force is not under the same recruiting pressures as much of the Canadian Forces, and this year's target remains unchanged at 70 to 80 new pilots.
It's not clear how much the pool of aspiring aviators will increase, he said, but it is possible the new policy could open the floodgates to a rush of applicants, including many military insiders who previously accepted their near-sighted plights and settled for jobs on the ground.
Local recruiting centres across the country are prepared to deal with a surge in applications, and the increased competition will benefit the air force, Lt. Finnemore said.
Those with corrected vision already qualify as commercial pilots in Canada and the United States.
Having undergone laser-eye surgery will still disqualify hopefuls from the air force, however. But that could soon change as well once continuing studies into the procedure are completed, Lt. Finnemore said.
The U.S. Air Force, on the other hand, announced in May it would begin considering applicants who have had laser surgery to meet the minimum vision requirements.
After further research, the USAF will decide whether to revise its other vision standards.
It might be difficult to recruit, but it never has been hard to fill the pilot spots.
As for Mr Taylor's remarks, it smacks of someone who is bitter that they couldn't make the cut for the trade (Not that he ever tried. That's just what it sounds like.).