MCG said:
The ExPress test being a measure of physical fitness, I don't think it should be the yard stick to keep medically unfit personnel. Not only can pers have medical limitations which are unrelated to anything measured by the test, but the test itself is not a direct measurement of fitness to serve - it is a statistically valid predictor of fitness to serve for a sample population that is known to be medically fit. For personnel missing limbs, it would be neccessary to either prove the ExPress to still be a statistically relevant predictor or have the members complete the Common Military Task Fitness Evaluation.
I agree. There are several impediments to "universal" service that are not physical.
I try to avoid these debates because, for the last few years of my service, I was medically restricted. I was sufficiently physically fit for
most (almost all?) of the activities one might have expected for an officer of my age, rank and classification - there
might, somewhere in as parallel universe, have been a requirement for me to mount a J.K. Lawson type
defence of an office building or a five star hotel, but I'm guessing that the Career Medical Review Board decided that my experience, specialized training and the nature of my (then) current assigned argued for my retention on "restricted" service - no move (although extensive travel was permitted) and no further promotion. It was, essentially, a practical/economic decision - I was, at that time, the 'right guy' for a certain job - one which was considered to be quite important; there were no properly qualified alternatives at hand; the CF had invested an awful lot of money in my education and training; and so on.
In today's environment, fewer people doing more and more than we did 25 years ago, I would hope that retaining someone like me would be very rare, indeed. My
impression is that there is not a severe shortage of skilled, knowledgeable officers and warrant officers. I
guess there are enough trim, fit majors to replace the small handful of overweight lieutenant colonels I see waddling around Ottawa and, equally, some fit captains to replace the tubby majors, too.
But it's not just about physical fitness: we (Canada) need soldiers who are sufficiently "robust," as Field Marshall Wavell put it, and "able to withstand [all] the shocks of war" - physical and emotional.
Edit: typo