Someone answered that to my last post.. I though it would be useful to other too.
Different units have different characteristics. Air Force units attached to operational
air bases like Bagotville, Trenton, Comox, Cold Lake, are generally trained to be
deployable. Other units in Ottawa, AETE, as examples, are not deployable and do
not receive the same level of combat training as deployables. Also, Bagotville and
Cold Lake (CF-18s) share vanguard duty six months of the year and associated units are
trained to be deployable almost immediately. Trenton's Hercs also share
high deployability status.
As an ATIS tech posted to a deployable unit, the member would receive annual
weapons training, NBCD (nuclear, biological, chemical protection training), and
combat skills as well as other non-MOC related courses. With this training, an
ATIS tech could be deployed with the unit or individually anywhere and have
the skills to be useful in an Army, Navy, or Air Force environment.
Generally, the ATIS tech is posted to a TIS unit on an air base. Given the ATIS
tech supports the telecommunications, data communications, airfield systems,
radars, audio/visual, PCs, and other technical hardware, the tech could be posted
anywhere to embassies, NATO AWACs, Army units, Navy units, Air Force units,
network control centres, communication/radar stations, and any field deployments.
Primariy is Air Force related. If anything, its one of the most diverse MOCs for
postings. If one becomes a 500 series aircraft technician like for the CF-18, the
posting possibilites are limited because only Cold Lake and Bagotville base
CF-18s as an example.
Deployments and taskings are common, especially for deployable units. Some
bases take care of remote stations or locations and support actiivities of other units.
In the last six months, I participated in OP Northern Denial, OP Wolf Safari, which takes
you out of the base into a field deployment situatioin. There were a number of short
taskings that may put ATIS out in the field supporting or repairing equipment in locations
under the jurisdiction of the base. In the past six months, I've been away from the base
for about 2 months including a few short courses.
In general, the ATIS tech supports activities on the base and in the capacity similar to
a field service technican. You may go from place to place, installing, repairing, or troublshooting
equipment on the base, on a deployment, or at a station.
Once an ATIS tech has completed OJT (on the job training) and section rotation, the
member can qualify for individual deployments to CF commitments anywhere in the world.
In a few cases, the unit may move toward deployment as well. I've had two deployment
opportunites of that nature in the last six months. Of the cases, more senior members
had volunteered and were chosen.
In a deployable unit, the opportunities for deployments and taskings are good. Most
cases its something you volunteer for.