lenaitch
Senior Member
Am military. Our recruiting shortages have nothing to do with this political nonsense (though that impacts people who are already in and isn’t well captured in that article). And everything to do with the end of Afghanistan. Nobody wants to join when it’s not “exciting”. Add to this, the decisions made in the 90s to close all our urban bases and retain the ones in rural shitholes. The Air Force is particularly bad, with new aircrew trained in Moose Jaw, and our largest fighter base and home of all the test pilots in .... Cold Lake, Alberta. This is biting them in the ass as more and more of our national population gets concentrated in a handful of large metros. We’re already at the point where 50% of Canadians live in just 6 large metros (Vancouver, Edmonton, Calgary, Ottawa, Montreal and Toronto).
Try convincing a talented 20 year old from Toronto that they should join the military only to spend years of their 20s sitting in Shilo or Cold Lake. All for no real action and excitement. Heck, I need approval from an associate deputy minister just to attend a NATO conference overseas. That’s how ridiculous the bureaucracy and stinginess is these days. I don’t blame talented young people for choosing tech over military or public service.
Exactly. There has been much chatter on other forums that the government should turn one or two of the arctic Forward Operating Locations into actual bases to address the combat radius of the competing new fighter aircraft.. Not even considering the cost and logistics of maintenance, can you image what that would do to air force recruiting? 'Congratulations - here's your wings; now you and your family are posted to a remote village of a few hundred'. Same with SAR. Yes, it's our territory to service, but that is highly specialized assets expended for maybe a handful of calls a year. Russia seems to be doing it. Perhaps they are less of an urban and more northern populace, less concerned about what their troops think, or the personnel don't care because it's a steady job.
The absence of bases anywhere near most urban areas has removed the military from the consciousness of most of the Canadian population, not that it was high on the list in the first place.