And why don't your suspicions extend to the type of person who'd apply for the gardai proper? The same vetting will apply to both, in theory you should get similar people perhaps with a different age profile.
The aim of the reserve force is a visible presence - civilian staff can't do that. Maybe instead of running 2 checkpoints with 6 gardai you run 3 with a couple reserves. Might save a couple lives.
Trainee guards are already used for visible presence. When you hear the GRA talking you'd swear 2 years is an enormous amount of training - churning out people who're crime fighting geniuses, martial art experts, superb legal brains, expert pursuit drivers - in reality the training produces none of this - just the groundwork that experience eventually fills in.
The real reason the GRA are opposed to the reserves is because it will expose to the public any inefficencies, bad work practices, slacking off etc. that can now be kept in house. There's little to stop a reservist deciding to publicize problems or going to the minister - he won't have to worry about his volunteer career or promotions, maybe the activities exposed by the Morris tribunal wouldn't have been so easy with a couple reservists around in the station.
For some gardai having volunteers around the place will be like having public inspectors keeping an eye on them, that's why the GRA are calling it Thatcherite and akin to privatization.
Any garda station I've seen could easily benefit from having people who've worked in the private sector passing on some experience, it's all logbooks, notebooks that wouldn't have been out of place in the 19th century let alone the 20th. CSI-Dublin it ain't, despite "pulse"...
The aim of the reserve force is a visible presence - civilian staff can't do that. Maybe instead of running 2 checkpoints with 6 gardai you run 3 with a couple reserves. Might save a couple lives.
Trainee guards are already used for visible presence. When you hear the GRA talking you'd swear 2 years is an enormous amount of training - churning out people who're crime fighting geniuses, martial art experts, superb legal brains, expert pursuit drivers - in reality the training produces none of this - just the groundwork that experience eventually fills in.
The real reason the GRA are opposed to the reserves is because it will expose to the public any inefficencies, bad work practices, slacking off etc. that can now be kept in house. There's little to stop a reservist deciding to publicize problems or going to the minister - he won't have to worry about his volunteer career or promotions, maybe the activities exposed by the Morris tribunal wouldn't have been so easy with a couple reservists around in the station.
For some gardai having volunteers around the place will be like having public inspectors keeping an eye on them, that's why the GRA are calling it Thatcherite and akin to privatization.
Any garda station I've seen could easily benefit from having people who've worked in the private sector passing on some experience, it's all logbooks, notebooks that wouldn't have been out of place in the 19th century let alone the 20th. CSI-Dublin it ain't, despite "pulse"...