British Armed Forces Federation

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British Armed Forces Federation
BAFFlogo.jpg
BAFF Logo
Formation2006
TypeStaff Association
HeadquartersWiltshire, United Kingdom
Websitebaff.org.uk

The British Armed Forces Federation (BAFF) is an independent non-statutory professional staff association for members of the British Armed Forces. It is politically non-partisan. Founded in late 2006 as a not-for-profit company limited by guarantee, BAFF has so far no full-time staff and no formal regional network. It operates collaboratively, using the Internet as the primary means of communication amongst its members worldwide. Membership is open to anyone who is serving or has served in the Royal Navy/Royal Marines, British Army, or Royal Air Force, irrespective of rank or type of engagement (Regular or Reserves).

Status and governance[]

As it exists primarily for the benefit of the members of a profession, BAFF is not a registered charity. The Steering Group which took BAFF to formation stated that the Federation would "not seek to supplant the role of any existing charity or other agency involved in service welfare."[1]

Neither is BAFF a trade union. The Steering Group seemed at pains to stress that the organisation would not be a trade union. In any case, although Regular service personnel are permitted by Queen's Regulations to join civilian trade unions or professional associations in order to enhance their trade skills and professional knowledge and as an aid to resettlement, armed forces personnel are specifically excluded from the definition of "workers" for the purposes of British trade union legislation. A body set up to represent such personnel cannot, therefore, register as a trade union under the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992.[2]

BAFF is registered with the Information Commissioner as a data controller, under its Company name BAFF (2006) Ltd and the operating name "British Armed Forces Federation". BAFF is regulated by the UK Ministry of Justice in respect of regulated claims management activities.

BAFF is managed by an elected Executive Council of 15 members.[3]

Services and campaigns[]

According to statements on the BAFF website, the current offering of services to members of the Federation includes:

  • An independent voice, including media relations, parliamentary lobbying and representations to Central and Local Government. The Federation campaigns on issues such as:
    • improvements to single living accommodation
    • improvements to service family accommodation
    • armed forces compensation scheme limits
    • medical care for forces personnel and families
    • medical care for veterans
    • social housing entitlements for ex-service personnel and families
  • A free legal advice helpline which does not, however, cover "employment-related matters".
  • A free personal accident claim line.
  • A restricted members-only internet forum, which BAFF regards as a key means of consultation and the identification of collective issues.

Organisational models[]

According to statements on its website, the BAFF Constitution was drawn up in consultation with some fifty serving personnel from all three branches of HM Forces. A "specifically British solution for the British armed forces",[1] BAFF claims not to be modelled on any other single organisation, but that its Steering Group took into account (and in certain cases, visited) a wide range of organisations representing operational public service staff, including:

Military staff associations may be configured to represent

  • Specific rank ranges within the military hierarchy;
  • Specific sections of the armed forces - Navy, Army, Air Force, or (where applicable) Gendarmerie; or
  • Specific categories of personnel - regulars, reservists, conscripts (where applicable) or retirees.

In accordance with the principle "All of one company", BAFF recruits from all such categories, but with a reduced subscription for junior serving personnel.

English language examples of military staff association[]

Dates of establishment are shown in brackets.

 Australia

 Ireland

 United States

International contacts[]

BAFF liaises with EUROMIL, the European Organisation of Military Associations, but is not formally affiliated to that organisation. BAFF also has informal bilateral contacts with a number of EUROMIL-affiliated associations. As a member of a EUROMIL observer delegation, a BAFF representative has been participating in a Council of Europe working group on Human Rights of Members of the Armed Forces.[7][8]

Criticisms and controversies[]

In the course of evidence to a House of Commons Committee[9] in February 2006 the Chief of Defence Staff of the time, General Sir Michael Walker (now Lord Walker of Aldringham) argued that

If we had a set of Armed Services that reacted to every whim of every influential group in it, we would get nowhere in delivering military capability for this country, so I believe that the chain of command must do that business. The Armed Forces Pay Review Body does look after the conditions and pay concerns and we would certainly lose the AFPRB and I am not sure we would get as much attention from the Government in terms of rewarding people.[10]

Sir Michael went on to give the example of an unspecified national contingent which, while he was in command in Bosnia, had (he told the Committee)

laid down its arms because, it said, the pay deal was not right, so they put their arms down. Do you really see British Armed Services doing that? That is the sort of trouble you get into when there is a representative body who are fighting back at home, your soldiers are at the front and they do not appear to be achieving.[10]

Speaking in an Armed Forces debate in the House of Lords in June 2006, Field Marshal Lord Inge acknowledged a "growing demand for a military federation or union", but went on to pose the rhetorical question "whether those [armed forces] who have federations and unions have ever won".[11]

A report[12] published in November 2007 by the British think tank Demos commented that

Perhaps the most distinctive development over the last decade has been the launch of the British Armed Forces Federation (BAFF) as an independent campaigning professional association for serving and retired service personnel... The response of senior commanders to the creation of BAFF and their criticism set out for the House of Commons Select Committee has been mixed. While some senior commanders have argued that any independent organisation designed to ‘fight for the rights’ of British troops is completely unnecessary and threatens a dangerous breakdown of military discipline, others, such as the late Lord Garden, a former RAF Air Marshal..., have been ‘surprised talking to retired senior military people who are prepared to think about it, saying there might be a case for it’.[13]

External links[]

  • BAFF official website
  • "Managing People in Tomorrow's Armed Forces" - Independent Review of the Armed Forces' Manpower, Career and Remuneration Structures (Chairman Michael Bett QC): Report to the Secretary of State for Defence, HMSO 1995; ISBN 978-0-11-772693-2 (hardback edition); paras 7.36-7 "Representation"
  • "New People Strategies for the British Armed Forces", ed Alexandrou, Bartle & Holmes, London 2001, ISBN 0-7146-5212-1 (cloth), ISBN 0-7146-8202-0 (paper), c.10 - "Independent Representation - The Time Is Right"
  • "British Armed Forces Federation: An Independent Voice"[permanent dead link], The House Parliamentary Magazine, 2 April 2007 (accessed Nov 2007)
  • "Federation X"[permanent dead link], Membership Today Magazine, May 2007 (accessed Oct 2007)
  • House of Commons Defence Committee, Report of Inquiry into Medical Care for the Armed Forces, Written Evidence, Memorandum from the British Armed Forces Federation (BAFF) (accessed Feb 2008)
  • "Fighting for Soldiers on the Front Line", The Inverness Courier, 14 March 2008 (accessed Mar 2008)
  • House of Commons debates: Tuesday, 13 May 2008: Kevan Jones: Bill to make provision for the establishment of a Federation for the Armed Forces
  • https://web.archive.org/web/20061116065914/http://timesonline.typepad.com/mick_smith/2006/05/would_baff_work.html

Footnotes[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b House of Commons Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill - Written Evidence - Memorandum from the Steering Group for a British Armed Forces Federation ("Ten Point Plan") (accessed Oct 2007)
  2. ^ Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992, s.296 (accessed Oct 2007) Archived October 30, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ BAFF Constitution - Memorandum and Articles of Association of BAFF (2006) Ltd (accessed Nov 2007)[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ Web Source - Australia Defence Association (accessed Oct 2007) Archived October 1, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ "CDF Statement on the RDFA" (accessed Oct 2007) Archived August 29, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Web page on official GCHQ site - "Union representation" (accessed Oct 2007) Archived May 9, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ EUROMIL news - "Strasbourg: EUROMIL delegation at the Council of Europe 14-15 June 2007" (accessed Oct 2007) Archived April 20, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Council of Europe: DH-DEV Group on Human Rights of Members of the Armed Forces (DH-DEV-FA) (accessed Dec 2007) Archived November 17, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ House of Commons Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill - Report ordered to be printed 25 April 2006 - see paras 134-8 "Armed Forces Federation" (accessed Nov 2007)
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b House of Commons Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill - Examination of Witnesses - 16 February 2006 - General Sir Michael Walker (accessed Oct 2007)
  11. ^ House of Lords Debates - 29 June 2006 - Armed Forces (accessed Nov 2007)
  12. ^ T Edmonds & A Foster, "Out of Step, The case for change in the British Armed Forces", pub. Demos, London 2007. ISBN 978-1-84180-189-6. Creative Commons licence. (accessed Nov 2007)
  13. ^ A Gillan and R Norton-Taylor, ‘Angry soldiers demand “trade” federation’, Guardian, 26 Jan 2006. (accessed Nov 2007)
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