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Topic: Short Word (Read 272 times)
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Buzz Gomes
Veteran 400+ Member
        
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Pro Patria
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John,have a safe tour ,keep your flak jacket on at all times.I would to like to wish you and Shelley a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.Good luck,take care stay safe.PRO PATRIA.
Buzz
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1964-1968- 2 QOR Calgary, Cyprus 1968-1971- 2 CDO Edmonton 1971-1975- 3 Mech CDO Germany, A Coy Mor 1975-1983- 1 RCR London, Bn Tpt,C Coy, B Coy, Recce 1983-1985- RCR Battle School 1985-1990-1 RCR, B Coy, Dukes, Recce, Cyprus 1990-1992- OMD HQ Ottawa, G3 Trg 1992-1993- LMD HQ London, G3 Trg 1993-2007-4 RCR, RSM Retired CWO
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Mike Blais
SSM (NATO Bar), CPSM, UN-Cyp, CD
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A ROYAL CANADIAN "NEVER PASSES A FAULT"
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Stay safe, brother.... and check in once in a while and let us know how you are making out. Merry Christmas.
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1RCR 1977-79 Depot (Italy PL), B Coy, Mortars, Pioneers, D Coy (CFB London) 3RCR 1979-82 M Coy, Pipes & Drums, Sigs, Mortars. (CFB Baden-Soellingen) 1RCR 1982-88 Mortars. Dukes, Cyprus-Welfare NCO 84-85, Injured, WO&Sgts Mess, (CFB London) 1988-92 Med-remuster to HELL/ 35 DU, CFB Baden 1992 Medical release. God Bless you all!
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Gerry Connors
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Good to hear John! Frankly if I was still there, I'd be trying to do the same thing... Stay safe & wish Shelly, Kelly, Jess a Merry Christmas & a Happy New Year from your ol' neighbours, Gerry, Jackie, Michelle & Emily on St. Lawrence.
PS...God, I mis our fire-pits in the back yard and just chatting in the evening...not the same here Brother.
Keep safe & stay connected on the means!
-gerry
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1RCR Duke's Coy '82 - '87; Cyprus '84 / '85 LOTPed medic 1988; CFH Halifax '88 - '90 119 AD Bty medic, CFB Chatham '90 - '95 2RCR medic '95 - '00; SFOR Bosnia, 2RCR Roto 4 '99; 42 Hlth Svc Gagetown '00 - '02 CFRC Gagetown / Fredericton '02 - '06; 'retired' Aug '06 HMCS Jolliet, Sept-Iles QC, medical staff / 'tiffy' (reserves)
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Jim Hickson
CWO H.J. Hickson, MMM, CD. (Retd)
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Hi John
Way to go John, good advice from Buzz keep your flak jacket on at all times. Good luck and Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.
Jim
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1961-Depot San Lenorado 1962-1st Bn RCR Ex Gagetown 1962-JR NCO Course Grad 19 Oct 1962-1965 Germany B-C-D-A Coy (Revecated Nov 64) 1965-1967 Sigs Pl Cyprus Prom CPL 'til xmas and C of Drums 1967-1973 Cpl, MCpl, Sgt, Sigs, D Coy 1973-1977 CFOCS Chilliwack Prom WO 1977-1982 UEO, Sigs, Pl WO RECCE, CSM B&A Coy, 1982-1984 SIT School 1984-1988 Career Manager (Prom CWO 1986) 1988-1990 RSM 1RCR 1991-1995 CWO Adm(Per) - C Of S 1995-1999 Base CWO Wainwright 1999-Retired
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Eli Aucoin
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Tuesday » January 15 » 2008 Commissionaires report for Afghanistan tour of duty Team to screen arrivals at Kandahar Airfield David Pugliese The Ottawa Citizen
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
They're a familiar sight in federal government offices throughout Ottawa and in other locations across the country, but now members of the Canadian Corps of Commissionaires are shipping out for duty in Afghanistan.
The organization has signed a deal for six of its employees to work at Kandahar Airfield screening NATO military personnel as they arrive there.
"It's a first for our organization and it's quite exciting for us," said Doug Briscoe, executive director of Commissionaires Canada.
The organization has more than 18,000 personnel across Canada who provide security and other services at airports, commercial offices, municipal, provincial and federal government buildings, hospitals and embassies, among other sites.
The group, which employs mainly former military and RCMP personnel, has joined forces with Calgary-based ATCO Frontec. That firm has a contract to provide various air traffic-related services at the Kandahar base. The contract is part of a trial and could be expanded, Mr. Briscoe said.
The six-person team of commissionaires, four men and two women, were in Ottawa yesterday for a briefing session. They expect to be in Kandahar tomorrow. They will be involved in the issuing of security passes to NATO personnel as they arrive at the airfield, said Mr. Briscoe.
It isn't unusual for as many as 500 people to be processed through security during a four-hour period, he added.
The commissionaires won't be going outside the sprawling base, home to more than 12,000 personnel.
"The job itself I don't think will be any great hardship, as it's nothing that we haven't done before," said John Saulnier, a 60-year-old commissionaire who usually works at Canadian Forces Base Gagetown in New Brunswick.
He was one of more than 160 volunteers who applied for the positions. The selection focused on former military personnel who had served in overseas operations. They were also required to have a NATO-level security clearance.
Mr. Saulnier, a former member of the First Battalion, The Royal Canadian Regiment, served 26 years in the Canadian Forces. He has served tours in Cyprus, Egypt and Germany.
The new job was an opportunity to see a part of the world that many of the soldiers he came in contact with at CFB Gagetown talked about on a daily basis, Mr. Saulnier said.
The commissionaires, he added, will be dealing with military personnel and Afghans who are given access to the airfield. The military is still in control of who comes in and out of the base, as well as vehicle inspections.
"We're not armed and we're not the military, but if the state of emergency does go up, we have flak vests and we have helmets we can wear."
Mr. Saulnier, who has two grown daughters, acknowledges that being away from home is going to be hard on his wife. The contract is for a one-year period; the commissionaires will serve on a schedule under which they work three months and then have holidays for one month.
Mr. Briscoe said Commissionaires Canada is interested in similar work in the future.
"We'd be more than willing to help the Canadian Forces out in any way we could," he said. "This is just allowing us to explore that a little bit to see if it could work out."
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