Royal Military College classes, base training courses still on, despite COVID-19 - Action News
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Royal Military College classes, base training courses still on, despite COVID-19

Training coursesat Canadian Armed Forcesbases and classes at the country's two principal military colleges will continue, despite the cascade of COVID-19 closures and public health warnings in the civilian world.

Civilian staffers questioning military's decision to continue training in a pandemic

Chief of Defence Staff General Jonathan Vance arrives for the graduation ceremony at the Royal Military College of Canada in in Kingston, Ont. on Friday May 17, 2019. The Department of National Defence has decided to carry on with classes, despite the COVID-19 pandemic. (Lars Hagberg/Canadian Press)

Training coursesat Canadian Armed Forcesbases and classes at the country's two principal military colleges will continue, despite the cascade of COVID-19 closures and public health warnings in the civilian world.

The major union of defence employees has questioned the wisdom of the Department of National Defence's determination to keep the doors open with online instruction at the Royal Military College of Canadain Kingston, Ont., and the Royal Military College in St-Jean, Que.

"RMC remains open and continues operating to provide the necessary training to new candidates, with health protection measures in place,"department spokespersonJessica Lamirande toldCBC News.

The graduating class of officer cadets stand in the square at the Royal Military College of Canada during a graduating ceremony in Kingston, Ont., Friday, May 20, 2016. (Lars Hagberg/The Canadian Press)

The military offers a vast menu of small-scale professional, technical and leaderships courses for existing personnel at bases across the country as part of career advancement.

On Monday, some members at Canadian Forces Base Borden, Ont., were being told to prepare for one such course.

The Department of National Defence's (DND)reluctance to suspend classes across the system stands in contrast to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's insistence Monday that "everyone go home and stay home" in order to slow the spread of the novelcoronavirus enough to keep hospitals from becoming overwhelmed.

What's 'critical' in a crisis?

The department'sstancehas touched off a debatewithin DND and the wider federal government overwhat qualifies asa "critical function" in a national emergency.

The military has elected to cancel its major annual trainingexercise, known as Maple Resolve, and postpone other large scale manoeuvresbut theintense training courses remain operationalin many cases.

The Union of National Defence Employees, with 14,000 members across the country, has received several complaints from workers atbaseswheretraining courses have not been suspended.

Lamirande insisted training is being limited to "essential core activities" within the military for the time being.

"Training at entry-level institutions such as the Royal Military College of Canada (RMC), which are core functions for the [Canadian Armed Forces], will continue to operate in order to minimize the long-term impact on our force strength and to our key defence functions," Lamirande said, adding RMCgraduates go to become junior officers.

In the view of the military's leaders, it's importantfor RMC cadets in particular to finish theiracademic year, and for those graduating to be prepared to serve, she added.

The Canadian military has cancelled one large-scale training exercise Maple Resolve in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. (Brent Roy/CBC)

COVID-19 cases have not been reported on the campuses or the nearby base, which is closed to outside visitors.

There are still some in-person "engineering labs" taking place with the appropriate precautions,Lamirande said.

Professors whose discipline requires such in-person instruction have been told to limit contact with students. They and civilian support staff are being "encouraged to self-isolate while not on campus," she said.

'Members are scared'

Defence employees have asked why the courses cannot be suspended for the duration of the crisis.

"Members are scared, you know?" June Winger, president of the National Union of Defence Employees, told CBC News.

"On the one hand, they want to help Canadians. They want to be able to support the troops. They want to make sure everybody is safe. At the same time, they don't want to be at-risk themselves."

Winger has brought her concerns forward to senior officials at DND, who are standing by the decision to carry on.

"They feel the training is justified, it's necessary to be able to maintain those critical functions, where in my humble opinionit's not necessary at this time," she said.

The federal Treasury Board has issued instructions on what it considers to be a "critical function" but the Department of National Defence, given its national security role,has its own views on the subject. The department considers a function to be "critical"if it supports operations.

All of the commanders army, navy, air force and special operations wereasked bysenior leadershipearlier this month to define, within their jurisdictions, what their core functions should be.

The answers varied depending upon the service, andeven between one base and another.That has led to confusion among civilian staff, said Winger.

"They want to support Canada, support the military and then come home and be safe and sound with their families," said Winger. "They're finding it a struggle. And with the information they have, they are finding they have to choose."

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