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Applying for the Red Arrows Post
Right from the outset
there was considerable confusion about what the job at Scampton actually
entailed
On 6 May 1989, exactly 24 years to the day after
the very first Red Arrows’ display and my dinner engagement with a
BOAC air hostess in Singapore (for that story click
here), I went for an interview for what I
thought was to be the newly-created post of Public Relations Officer for
the Red Arrows. I was in for a surprise.
I had to take a day out from my job at RAF Sealand near Chester to
attend the interview. For three years since leaving the intelligence
world I had been Staff Officer for the North and West Region of the Air
Training Corps: ‘North and West – Biggest and Best’ my Boss there, Group
Captain John McMinn, always proclaimed proudly to anyone who would
listen. Sadly, a few years later the biggest and best was disbanded in a
cost-cutting exercise and the 180-plus cadet squadrons were transferred
to other regions and the region itself was no more. Thankfully the
disbandment was not put into effect until John McMinn had reached
retiring age.
John and I were both RAF Retired Officers. Unlike officers in the Royal
Air Force Volunteer Reserve and Royal Auxiliary Air Force, retired
officers wore normal RAF uniform with no special insignia. Apart perhaps
from the visible signs of advancing years, I was indistinguishable from
any active service squadron leader. One of the real perks of being an
RO, although not everyone would see it as a perk, was that once
appointed the individual could remain in service, should he or she so
wish, until the age of 65. This always irked the Civil Service whose own
servants were required to hang up their equivalent of flying boots at
age 60. The Ministry of Defence branch of the Civil Service probably
eyed the RO corps with a certain degree of jealousy because we were seen
as officers who had passed their sell-by date and who, by hanging on to
rank, power and privilege, were depriving real civil servants of jobs
where they could hang on to rank, power and privilege. To counter that
the Department of the MoD responsible for RO recruitment and careers
always aimed to have the job specification for retired officer posts
written in such a way that only retired officers were qualified to fill
them. I changed that when I came to retire.
From early 1989 I had been on the MoD mailing list of job vacancies. I
was looking out for interesting jobs on the eastern side of the
Pennines. Not that I was dissatisfied with my job at Sealand; far from
it. I was, however, getting homesick for Yorkshire. I believe that all
exiled Yorkshire folk sooner or later want to return to God’s own
county, and if they don't then they should! It would have been polite,
not to say proper, for me to have told John McMinn what I was about but
I couldn't bring myself to tell him that I was considering a move. He
was a thoroughly nice man and, apart from his habit of chain smoking
which subjected me, his driver and the rest of his administrative staff
to the unpleasant effects of secondary smoking, we got on extremely well
together. Even John, however, would admit that he was rather possessive.
Two years earlier he had moved me, with my willing connivance it has to
be said, onto his Headquarters’ staff from a lesser post within his
command and I knew that he would try to persuade me not to leave
Sealand.
Right from the outset there was considerable confusion about what the
job at Scampton actually entailed. The paper shufflers had sent me two
job specifications for what they presumably thought were two quite
different posts at Scampton. I learned much later that there was only
ever one job on offer. One of the job descriptions was for a Community
Relations Officer, a retired officer post in the rank of flight
lieutenant. A number of CRO posts had been created in early 1989 at
major RAF flying stations dotted around the country to counter the
increasing number of complaints from the general public about low flying
aircraft and the noise they generated. The complainants in some parts of
the country had been getting more and more vociferous; it seemed almost
as though the writers were being orchestrated by some pressure group
but, as far as I know, there was never any evidence to substantiate
that. The RAF had decided that a group of strategically based CROs might
be the answer. These officers would get to know their local communities
and would visit some complainants at their homes to try and pacify them
and explain why the RAF needed to fly at low level. I had read that job
description with only passing interest because I was not at all
interested in a flight lieutenant post, nor did that type of work appeal
to me.
The other job specification was for a retired squadron leader to be
appointed as the Red Arrows’ PRO. That sounded much more appealing. The
essential and desirable criteria listed for the post seemed to fit my
qualifications exactly: I was a retired squadron leader pilot with media
experience; I was, or rather had been, an A2 qualified flying
instructor, although it was by no means clear why that was important;
and I had graduated from various staff college courses. It seemed to me
that a job which involved working with and writing about the Red Arrows
was just my cup of tea. I was surely just the sort of person they needed
and I put in my application forthwith. So that there could be no
misunderstanding about which post I was applying for, I included with my
formal application a covering letter in which I expressed my total
disinterest in the Community Relations job and gave my reasons. To my
great surprise an invitation to attend for an interview at RAF Scampton
arrived on my desk at Sealand only a few days later, almost indecent
haste I thought at the time because things do not normally move very
quickly in the retired officers’ world. Clearly Scampton was very
anxious to fill the Red Arrows’ post.
While I was in a downstairs office in the Station Headquarters building
at Scampton waiting to be summoned for the interview, I was handed
another copy of the job description. Scrawled on the top of the form a
handwritten note said, ‘Mr Cunnane: for your information before the
interview’. Those were the days before word processors were widely used.
Reading through the form, it quickly became obvious to me that the
typist at Scampton had been told to copy selected elements from the two
job descriptions I had seen earlier and type them onto a new form, but
the result was a botched job. There were some new items and some old
ones and some that had later been crudely altered by hand without the
original being sno-paked out. Furthermore, the typist had included the
date, May 1988, that had appeared at the bottom of the two original job
specifications. The post described in this new document bore only a
passing resemblance to the one I had applied for. It was clearly a rush
job but at least there was no mention of low flying complaints.
Apparently I was wanted – but by whom and to do what?
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