From CBC:
“After years of broken promises,
vets struggle with which party to support”
Jay Jorgensen is unequivocal
about much he trusts the Liberals and Conservatives to help disabled veterans
like him. "Zero," says the retired sergeant, who served 17 years in
uniform before leaving the military in 2013 because of a back injury and
post-traumatic stress disorder. "Both are burned to me." It's a
popular sentiment in parts of Canada's veteran community — veterans themselves,
their spouses and families and people who provide them services — and a reality
both parties face as they seek to court a segment of the population that feels
betrayed by successive governments over the past decade. Canada's veterans'
community is far from united, but it is large, with roughly 700,000 Canadians
having served in uniform. "This number of potential voters is not without
significance," Brian Forbes, chair of the National Council of Veteran
Associations, wrote recently, "particularly in an election year which
will, in all probability, result in a minority government." MPs across
party lines call for new housing subsidy to help homeless veterans Vets
watchdog troubled by 'lack of trust' in his office, asks for mandate review Both
the Conservatives and Liberals have made countless promises to Canada's
veterans over the years, with Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer the latest to
commit to making life better for those suffering from service-related wounds
and illnesses. Yet, while some are ready to look past their treatment by the
previous Conservative government under Stephen Harper and accept Scheer's
promises on faith after what they describe as Justin Trudeau's lies, others
like Jorgensen are fed up and at a loss over whom to believe. "When you
say something, that means to me that you will do it," Jorgensen says from
his home north of Saskatoon. "None of these parties have demonstrated that
in the past, so I can't believe they will do it in the future either." The
root of the distrust can be traced back to 2005, when Paul Martin's Liberal
government did away with lifelong disability pensions, the backbone of Canada's
support for those injured in uniform for nearly a century.
Changes that span years,
governments
The New Veterans Charter was
approved in the House of Commons with all-party support before Stephen Harper's
Conservatives came to power in 2006 and his administration implemented it even
as the war in Afghanistan was heating up. Instead of pensions, veterans would
receive lump-sum payments for injuries, plus rehabilitation programs and
income-replacement support for those having difficulty finding work. The goal
was to better help veterans adjust to civilian life after leaving the Forces. Since
then, the charter has undergone numerous changes — none of which have satisfied
veterans who complain it provides far less financial support and who want the
old pensions re-instated. That demand manifested itself in the high-profile
Equitas lawsuit filed in 2012 by six disabled Afghan war veterans, whom many
former service members saw as champions for the cause of fairness for all
ex-military personnel. The Harper government also closed several Veterans
Affairs Canada offices and slashed hundreds of department jobs — including
frontline staff working directly with veterans — to balance the federal budget,
resulting in huge delays in claims. If there was one moment that captured how
bad the relationship between Harper's Conservatives and veterans got, it was
when then-veterans affairs minister Julian Fantino in May 2014 refused to speak
to the wife of a veteran struggling with PTSD who wanted more support for families
and ducked out before she was scheduled to appear before a House committee. Fantino
was later replaced by Erin O'Toole, a former air-force officer who was starting
to fix the Tories' relationship with veterans when Justin Trudeau took the
stage during an election-campaign event in Belleville, Ont., on Aug. 24, 2015
and made his pitch. In an appearance a few kilometres from CFB Trenton, Trudeau
made a promise to veterans. "If I earn the right to serve this country as
your prime minister, no veteran will be forced to fight their own government
for the support and compensation that they have earned," Trudeau said in
apparent reference to the Equitas lawsuit. "We will re-instate lifelong
pensions and increase their value in line with the obligation we have made to
those injured in the line of duty." It was exactly what many veterans had
been waiting to hear. Four years later, however, faith in the Liberals has all
but disappeared.
New plan not necessarily better
The Liberals re-opened the closed
Veterans Affairs offices, increased some services and benefits for veterans and
hired hundreds of staff at Veterans Affairs Canada. But the backlog of veterans
waiting to hear whether they qualify for assistance has grown to nearly 40,000
as hiring and the department's budget failed to keep up with demand. And not
only did the Liberals continue to fight the Equitas lawsuit, which the Supreme
Court tossed last year, they also failed to bring back the previous disability
pensions and instead introduced their own version. This past February, the
parliamentary budget office reported disabled veterans would have received on
average 1 1/2 times more over their lifetimes under the pre-2006 pension than
through the Liberals' so-called Pension for Life. That led to fresh allegations
the government was trying to support veterans on the cheap. And while the PBO
found many veterans will see small increases in financial compensation compared
with the 2005 charter, it also reported that some of the most severely disabled
would actually receive less. In January 2018, one month after the Liberals
unveiled the Pension for Life, Trudeau was confronted during a townhall meeting
in Edmonton by Brock Blaszczyk, who lost a leg in Afghanistan. Blaszczyk wanted
to know: Why was the government still fighting the Equitas lawsuit? "Why
are we still fighting against certain veterans' groups in court?" Trudeau
responded. "Because they're asking for more than we are able to give right
now." The comment still elicits outrage.
Promises and silence
Now Scheer is appealing to
veterans to trust him. During a campaign event in Prince Edward Island last
weekend, the Conservative Leader attacked Trudeau's record before laying out
his own plan to help veterans. Those include clearing the backlog of
applications for assistance, introducing legislation enshrining in law a
"military covenant" between the government and veterans, and creating
a "reliable, dependable pension system" that is "fair to
Canada's most disabled veterans." The Liberals have yet to say what they
will do for veterans. The NDP and the Greens have talked about a review of the
current suite of benefits; the Greens say they will "restore periodic
payments" at pre-2006 levels. Retired major Mark Campbell was one of the
plaintiffs in the Equitas case. While he is critical of the Harper government's
treatment of vets, he is willing to give Scheer a chance. "Looking forward
right now, as I see it, we have a set of promises from the Conservatives that
look actually quite good at first blush and we have a deafening silence from
the Liberals." Others such as retired master corporal Paul Franklin, who
made headlines for having to prove to Veterans Affairs each year that he had
lost both legs in Afghanistan, remain more circumspect. "We don't trust
these guys," Franklin said. "It almost comes down to a point where we
either have to vote local or vote on other reasons and sadly forget our own
reasons to vote as a group or make the individual choice if you wish to trust
the leadership." Back at his home near Saskatoon, Jorgensen already knows
what he is going to do: "I will be striking my ballot," he says.
"I will be striking my ballot."
^ When a country (whether it’s
Canada or any other country) promises their soldiers and veterans certain
things before, during and after their service and does not keep those promises
it is a national shame. I can understand why Canadian soldiers and veterans
feel abandoned by both the Liberals and the Conservatives. My only hope is that
whichever party wins the Federal Election starts putting their words and
promises into real action and programs. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/after-years-of-broken-promises-vets-struggle-with-which-party-to-support-1.5301468
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