dapaterson said:
This is an interesting example of a culture of entitlement that has evloved - "I'm entitled to a pension from the military while I work full time for the military." Methinks certain CF members could give members of Parliament and some government appointees lessons in the entitlement culture.
As opposed to drawing a pension while teaching at CFSCE under contract through Calian?
Harris said:
So some of you are saying that it's OK for someone in the military to be drawing a pension and then rejoin the military and also draw a pay cheque?
Where "rejoining the military" means the reserve, yup.
As a reservist, where can I sign up for this plan? I've got 25+ years in and would love to be able to do this too. Oh wait, I can't.
The reserve pension is a joke. 7 years in; in another 30 I can get a pension that might cover a quarter of my rent by then.
Why then should the reg force pers be allowed to do so?
They've already got their pension. They will continue to have their pension. The question is whether there's a job available for them at the reserve level. A key class B job at a reserve unit, ie Ops WO, Trg NCO, CC, is a good fit for an ex regforce member.
How many 20+ years service reservist NCOs do you know? I can count the ones I know on my fingers. How many of them are interested in working as full-time support for a unit?
Ex-regforce class A personnel are great, but they can be particularly useful in one of the previously mentioned class B roles. Coming out of regforce service, they're less invested another job when the unit needs one of its positions filled. With a family on the go and an established career already, I sure as heck wouldn't take on a class B position if I could lose it the next time class B gets shaken up.
If we take the extreme of what some of you are saying, reg force members should be able to draw a pension after 20 years and continue also drawing a pay cheque. Why even make them CT to the reserves?
Different terms of service, no guarantee of a job. There shouldn't be permanent reservists integrated into regforce units. The regforce should be filling the RSS positions of reserve units itself. At the least, a class B in an RSS position is supporting the reserve.
How is it unfair to make them cease collecting a pension while they are working again for the same organization they earned it from in the first place, continue to pay into it, and resume drawing it when they cease employment?
It's not appealing. They can go to a job of their choice, collect the pension that they've earned, and be doing better for themselves. In particular, they can go public service with hiring preference or to the RCMP and begin earning a second pension.
By failing to allow them their pension, to unit has to go with the next most competitive candidate.
There is no cost advantage to the tax payer to go with that next candidate. The pension is already being paid out whether or not the annuitant is the person in the position.
It seems to me many annuitants want to draw a pension, draw a salary form the same organization, and also avoid the reg force issues of postings and deployments. Where is the downside?
They get 85% pay, they do not have stability if the regforce are able to fill the position and remove the class B, and they don't get in on a second pension.
As for those who state Reserve Units will fail as a result of these new changes, I call BS. The majority of the annuitants I know work at a Brigade or Area HQ and don't contribute to a reserve unit at all.
And those positions should either be eliminated or replaced with regforce personnel.
Finally, I've seen it touted numerous times in this thread the valuable knowledge that is brought by annuitants to the reserve world. This somehow justifies them drawing two sources of income from the same employer. I will concede that this is happening for some people in some trades. But I don't agree that this is true in all of the cases. For example I've dealt with reg force clerks who are annuitants who don't know a thing about reserve administration. (not banging on clerks per se as I also know many who do know a lot). Guess what, many reservists bring valuable knowledge to the table as well. Yet we don't have the opportunity to "double-dip". Nor should we in my opinion.
How exactly would a reservist "double-dip"? Have 20+ years of class B at 85% pay and draw on that ridiculous pension plan? Release then re-join on another class B contract? Show me a member that has anywhere near that time without much of it being regforce time.