Posted By Jackie Winn
Hi Malcolm,
I've just read your posting on the IOSH web-site and thought I would respond as this subject is particularly close to home for me. My Partner was in the British Army from the age of 16 to the age of 24, he was a Bombardier in the Artillery Regiment and hence did not gain any qualifications professional or academic, in anything that he could subsequently use in society unless of course you consider a career as a sniper! As a result, when he left the Army in 1994 his options were limited and he therefore went to work on the oil rigs. A great job in terms of the money he earned, but again, so specialised that none of the certificates he gained whilst working offshore, can be applied to on land. After our Daughter was born in August 2003, his priorities changed and he obviously wanted to be at home with his family, but due to his lack of 'acceptable' qualifications, his options were very limited. In the end, in March 2004, he bought into a franchise that appeared on the surface to be the answer to our prayers. Six months later, after a series of events which made it impossible for him to ever operate his business successfully (due to the Parent Company being run on part by a Disqualified Director and the whole thing basically being a big con), he and eleven of the other Franchisees had their contracts annulled by a Solicitor and we were then left with no money and Mike having no job and not much chance of getting one, not a decent one in any case. However, as luck would have it, he did manage to get a job, albeit a poorly paid one and as from September, he is going to go to night school to retrain as an Engineer. This will take him approximately five years, maybe longer if his Employer will not allow him to take day release once he is ready to start his HNC.
Sorry, I didn't mean to tell you my life story, but the crux of it is, he joined the Army straight from school, gained no academic qualifications because of the type of work he
was assigned to do and is now picking up the pieces. Needless to say, the Army have done nothing to help, once you leave they're not interested in you any more or about what happens to you. One of his friends who was in the Army with him has been left so unable to deal with life on 'Civvie Street' that he has been left homeless and lives under a bridge in Stockport. The Army have got a lot to answer for. They are happy to allow young men to die for their Country but do nothing to help them integrate into society once they leave the Army.
I also know that many employers have a 'thing' about ex forces personnel, in fact, an ex boss of mine actually once threw out a job application from an ex Soldier because he said he didn't consider him to be 'mentally suitable'. When I asked him why, he said that 'those type of people never are'. Unfortunately, I don't think this particular person is in a minority.
That's my experience anyway, I hope it provides you with an insight into what real life is like for these poor people who were prepared to die for the rest of us.