Auditor finds military maintenance, recruiting less than ship shape
OTTAWA — The Canadian military risks becoming hamstrung if it doesn’t clean up its recruiting system and the way critical hardware such as planes, ships and armoured vehicles are supported, the federal auditor general warned Tuesday.
In his latest series of reports, Michael Ferguson painted a picture of a military recruiting system that is simultaneously struggling with red tape and deep spending cuts by the previous Conservative government.
The military is supposed to have 60,500 trained military personnel, but the audit said the actual number had fallen from 58,000 in 2011-12 to 56,300 last year — a shortfall of 4,200 members.
In real terms, that meant not having enough staff to fly or maintain the air force’s Chinook transport helicopters or its Hercules transport planes.


