Grelite
Well-Known Member
Name: Shaojie Zhang
Log ID: 160320154001
//RECORDING//
Assignment to the officer's barracks has been an interesting experience. After declaring everything I had on me before heading into interrogation, all I got back was my watch. They handed me several papers describing my assignment as the first field-officer in the project. It read I was to sleep in a section of the barracks assigned to officers. What they failed to mention, which I discovered after carrying all my assigned gear down the corridors and down a set of stairs, was that this section is still under construction.
I carried everything back to requisitions and slammed the papers on the desk in irritation.
"Officer's barracks?", I said, trying to keep my composure, "You're assigning me to a bed not yet built? Really?".
The requisitions officer didn't seem very surprised, calmly trying to explain that it was not him who assigned me there, that he was just there to hand out the papers and the gear. I distinctly remember slowly wiping my hand across my face, asking where I should go to get this fixed, trying not to jump out of my skin and smack the guy.
Leaving my stuff there, I headed to the department of troop management. This should have been the place where I could be assigned a temporary bunk until the officer's barracks were done. Alas, the system was automated. He's what I understood from the guy's explanation:
When a new recruit joins, he or she is assigned the rank of Rookie. After this, he or she is entered into the 'bunking' system, which assigns them to a bunk. Officers get assigned to the officer's barracks, but their original bunk would not expire until after the construction was completed. Now here's where things went wrong; I was entered as a Lieutenant, had no previous bunk, and was assigned a site that was under construction. Apparently the guy who designed this was told that all field-officers would have been an NCO before, meaning they would have an existing bunk before being assigned to the new set. The engineer who designed this made the system so strict I cannot be put in another bunk without being demoted first, which they won't do for such a 'minor inconvenience'.
For now, I dropped my stuff in the common room and prepared one of the couches as my bed. Let's only hope we do not have soldiers on this base who make late-hours and come stumbling through the common rooms at 3 am in the morning...
//STOP//
Log ID: 160320154001
//RECORDING//
Assignment to the officer's barracks has been an interesting experience. After declaring everything I had on me before heading into interrogation, all I got back was my watch. They handed me several papers describing my assignment as the first field-officer in the project. It read I was to sleep in a section of the barracks assigned to officers. What they failed to mention, which I discovered after carrying all my assigned gear down the corridors and down a set of stairs, was that this section is still under construction.
I carried everything back to requisitions and slammed the papers on the desk in irritation.
"Officer's barracks?", I said, trying to keep my composure, "You're assigning me to a bed not yet built? Really?".
The requisitions officer didn't seem very surprised, calmly trying to explain that it was not him who assigned me there, that he was just there to hand out the papers and the gear. I distinctly remember slowly wiping my hand across my face, asking where I should go to get this fixed, trying not to jump out of my skin and smack the guy.
Leaving my stuff there, I headed to the department of troop management. This should have been the place where I could be assigned a temporary bunk until the officer's barracks were done. Alas, the system was automated. He's what I understood from the guy's explanation:
When a new recruit joins, he or she is assigned the rank of Rookie. After this, he or she is entered into the 'bunking' system, which assigns them to a bunk. Officers get assigned to the officer's barracks, but their original bunk would not expire until after the construction was completed. Now here's where things went wrong; I was entered as a Lieutenant, had no previous bunk, and was assigned a site that was under construction. Apparently the guy who designed this was told that all field-officers would have been an NCO before, meaning they would have an existing bunk before being assigned to the new set. The engineer who designed this made the system so strict I cannot be put in another bunk without being demoted first, which they won't do for such a 'minor inconvenience'.
For now, I dropped my stuff in the common room and prepared one of the couches as my bed. Let's only hope we do not have soldiers on this base who make late-hours and come stumbling through the common rooms at 3 am in the morning...
//STOP//