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News JULY 2003
ÂŁ1.20
From Gemma (P20) From Emma (P2) And from Liverpool's Tokyo girls (p14) SENIOR Fleet officers are looking at ways to improve life in the Royal Navy and everyone has a part to play in ensuring changes are implemented. The man at the centre of the initiative to drive through improvements to the work-life balance is Capt Simon Ancona, who has taken on the title of Captain Rebalancing Lives (or 'Captain RebaF to his friends). Capt Ancona told Navy News he was targeting 'enemies' including disruption, uncertainty, drudgery and boredom, wasteful working and unreasonable pace or weight of work. The initiative is closely linked to Second Sea Lord Rear Admiral James Burnell-Nugent's focus on the individual, which is itself designed to boost retention and make the Navy more attractive to recruits. 2SL, as the Navy's top personnel manager, takes the lead in all such matters, and although the Fleet initiative is its own response to the retention challenge, it is designed to compliment the 2SL campaign; indeed, Capt Ancona's work represents one of 2SL's 'pillars of activity'. Capt Ancona has the authority and the budget to act as a catalyst for change, fielding ideas and reports from working groups and ensuring that working practices and mindsets are as favourable as possible to the men and women on the front line, without compromising operational requirements. "There is a lot of work being done out there already - studies into work routines, that kind of thing. There arc a great many small, bright lights of activity - my job is to bring them all together into one large bonfire. "The Fleet does studies into IT and the core working week, there are people trialing remote watchkeeping systems for minor vessels - lots and lots of things. I have got • Turn to back page
HMS Edinburgh is reflected in the gaze of Catherine Murray of Widnes, who travelled down to Portsmouth to welcome home LOMAW David Dutton as the Type 42 destroyer returned after service in the war against Saddam Hussein. See also p2,3 Picture: LA(PHOT) Wheelie Barrow
ROYAL MARINES TAKE THE HIGH GROUND - p12