Blatchford: Inept recruiting system costing Canadian Forces
As the last Canadian soldiers returned from Afghanistan this week, those who would follow them into uniform are being stymied by a woefully inept recruiting system where it takes an average of 166 days to be processed.
That’s the ludicrous length of time it takes from the moment someone first walks into a recruiting office, wanting to sign up to become a soldier, until he or she is put on the “merit list,” which means all the necessary boxes have been checked.
The stinging criticism comes in a draft report done late last year by the Defence Science Advisory Board, a private sector group which isn’t part of the Defence Department, but advises it.
The group is composed of leaders from business and academia, who work for free. Its most recent report cited “glaring weaknesses” in Canada’s ability to respond to emergencies in the Arctic.
Postmedia News has obtained a copy of the 23-page report entitled Recruiting the Millennial Generation and dated last October.
It is the result of a request from the research arm of the Defence Department to examine how well the recruiting process is working with millennials, those born after 1981.
But in its study, the board found that grotesque delay cuts across the Canadian Forces and that the attitude at the top of the CF Recruiting Group is cavalier about attracting the vaunted “best and brightest.”
The report says that when board members visited the CFRG headquarters and met the commander, “He appeared massively unconcerned with anyone who, for whatever reason, does not get accepted, repeatedly describing all unsuccessful applicants as ‘road kill’,” the report says.
Worse, it says, the commander showed no regret that the recruiting process may be passing over those who with encouragement might become “entirely desirable candidates” or that the head office attitude could undermine recruiting efforts.
It says that while the delay might be particularly frustrating to impatient millennials, it causes the Forces to lose all kinds of candidates.
For instance, top students looking for scholarships, whose first choice is one of the Royal Military Colleges in Kingston, Ont., and Saint-Jean, Que., routinely don’t get the results of their military selection boards until months after civilian universities have made their offers.
“The advice often given these distressed and conflicted families is to lie,” the report says – in other words, to accept the civilian offers, then explain they can’t attend if they get an offer from RMC or RMC Saint-Jean.
When the board told that story to the recruiting commander, he said if students didn’t follow the advice, more “road kill” would result.
“That is not the view of this board!”, the report says.
The commander isn’t named, and it’s unclear, given the regular changes of command in the military, who was in the role at the time the board saw him.
The situation is perhaps most dire for the reserves, or militia.
These are Canada’s part-time soldiers whose members made such an enormous contribution during the country’s 12-year-long mission to Afghanistan.
During visits to CF recruiting offices – a dozen of these are slated to close – board members found recruiters had little knowledge of officer training plans for reservists.
As well, it takes an average 150 days for a reserve recruit to be processed – a situation the report calls “so egregiously distant from various public pronouncements of at least one former CDS (Chief of Defence Staff) as to how long the process should take that it saps confidence in the system and invites public derision by its clients.”
Coincidentally, Reserves 2000, a lobby group formed to fight against cuts to the militia, recently told Defence Minister Rob Nicholson that 2013-14 “is shaping up to be a disaster due to recruit quotas that do not offset the rate of attrition, recruiting centre closures … and long-standing inefficiencies in the enrollment process.”
The information is contained in a brief given Nicholson Dec. 12 last year.
The paper resulted from a meeting in Toronto last November of 30 former senior reserve leaders from across Canada and supporters.
At the meeting, Reserves 2000 members identified the chief problem — recruiting quotas are set artificially low and the force’s bunged-up system can’t manage to meet even those.
John Selkirk, Reserve 2000’s executive-director, also appeared in December before the Standing Senate Committee on National Security and Defence.
There, he called the situation “a crisis” and said the CF Recruiting Group is in “some turmoil, I guess is a kind word.”
As of this fall, halfway through the fiscal year, units should have signed up about half their allotments, but were at just 21 per cent.
The best bet now is that this will mean reserve units across the country will be short 700 to 750 soldiers.
The danger is that defence planners may seize upon the unmet quotas and further scale down the numbers of new recruits units are allotted in the next year.
Selkirk appeared to warn the committee of fudged numbers.
For instance, he said when the department says reserve pay costs about $587 million, at least half of that isn’t for pure reservists – called Class As, they are mostly students who put in a night a week at their units – but rather for so-called full-time reservists, or Class Bs, who are often assigned to headquarters.
While the advisory board said the military is still attracting fine candidates, the length of time it takes to sign up “will not stand the CF in good stead with the Millennial Generation.” It also says that recruiting group is “all too often … an afterthought at best and at worst a dumping ground for lesser performers…”
The report recommends the military offer conditional acceptances to good candidates, convene selection boards so that applicants can get their answer at the same time civilian universities may offer them places, and generally change its collective attitude.
Recruiters don’t have just one customer, the board says, but also “an implicit secondary role of connecting with Canadians.”
Applicants who aren’t accepted “are not ‘road kill’ … They are Canadians with a strong interest in the CF and who may, at a future date, become serving members or simply engage in public discourse favourable to the profession of arms in Canada.”
cblatchford@postmedia.com