this makes It seems very difficult to get a new member to any form of operational capacity if you even need training to direct traffic? is this a problem in SES keeping members interested until they have done 2 or 3 courses?
YEP....it is a hard line to keep volunteers safe when SES get tasked to many different types of taskings. This is part of an ongoing debate within SES on what minimum training requirements are for a member. It is a balance between getting a crew to do the job and then for the crew members to have the skills to do the job safely.
If the job is a specialised rescue (eg vertical, RCR, confined space, marine, etc), then only the people with the training will respond.
The same as CFS HAZMAT, BA, strike team, RCR, etc taskings. I assume the crew need more than BFF1 training.
Other types of taskings (eg storm (tree or flood), shoring, hauling crew) then as long as enough experienced crew are on the truck, the OIC sometimes allow inexperienced crew on. Someone lugging sandbags, moving branches or just needs to be the runner/storeman.
Generally this is when a second vehicle with extra crew is sent.
So I have seen SES volunteers at taskings who have Basic Rescue training only.
As I said this is an ongoing debate within SES. Chook is from a country SES Unit & I am from a metropolitan SES Unit. So the requirement on volunteers is different.
Also, metropolitan Adelaide SES membership is different. Currently Central Region SES has 513 volunteers registered over 14 SES Units. So metro has the luxury of more experienced volunteers to assist/supervise the inexperienced volunteer.