Feature: * 05 Nov Veterans' Day of Protest

* Rebuilding trust with our CF veterans: now is the time for a public inquiry

 

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PERIODICAL - Nov 2011

Issue No: 201146

 

 

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Canadians Veterans National Day of Protest, 5 November, 2011

Extracts from 'Canadian Veterans Advocacy Situation Report . 29-Oct-11'

The Conservative government is cutting $226 million from VAC’s budget, over and above the planned “Strategic Review” which will result in a further $175-350 million axing, and the department has already confirmed they will be getting rid of 500 employees...

...With up to half a billion dollars in cuts coming to the VAC and with 500 fewer employees in the department, it is highly unlikely that this department will have the human or financial resources to deliver services to our veterans they need and deserve,” said Mr. Casey..

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Veteran's National Day Of Protest
Saturday, November 5th, 2011

 

CVNDOP-2  

Parliament Hill pilgrimage. Thanks to Jacques de Winters, all is in order for Parliament Hill  for 1100 hrs, 5 November, 2011, in front of the Peace Tower. Louise Richards, Gulf War veteran and staunch veterans advocate, will be joining us on Parliament Hill to speak on behalf of Gulf War veterans and the inexplicable illnesses mayy have endured. Meg Sears, a scientist who specializes in the effects of environmental toxins such as Agent Orange and Depleted Uranium, has also accepted our invitation to speak. Our mission is to enlighten Canadians of the hardships our abandoned veterans have confronted, to seek their understanding and compassion. Eric Rebiere will speak on behalf of RCMP and law enforcement veterans, men like Mel Pittman, who still has not be provided the dignified assistance he needs. 

Colin Pick, president of the venerable War Pensioners of Canada, has requested an opportunity to add his voice to ours. Dennis Manuge, leading the charge for the estimated 6000 veterans subject to the SISIP Clawback on their VAC pain and suffering pensions, will be journeying from Nova Scotia and will be our cornerstone speaker. I would encourage all veterans in the Ottawa area who have been subject to the unfair SISIP Clawback to join Dennis on Parliament Hill and offer your support for his/our ongoing advocacy for justice. This is a crucial time, the class action lawsuit is proceeding in a Halifax court in three weeks, if we can support this mission on Parliament Hill, we can send a message to our opponents that we will not be denied!  

 

We are also seeking volunteers to sing the national anthem in both official anthems and God Save the Queen. If you know anybody whose dream is to sing on the anthem on Parliament Hill, this is the time for nominations. The same applies for buglers and pipers, if you want to perform on the Hill for veterans and their families, maybe get a spot on national tv, be there by 1030 hours. Opportunities to play before and after the rally will be provided.

CVNDOP National Events. Klaus Rimke is heading up the event in front of Prime Minister Steven Harper’s riding office in Calgary. Due to the preeminent position of Mr Harper and the powerful voice he has in reference to excluding VACs budget for debt reduction plan, we are encouraging veterans from Calgary and Southern Alberta to rally to the call. These are important issues, a potential half billion dollar cut in the budget responsible for our wounded warriors is not acceptable, not after five years of hard combat, the consequences of which have yet to be told. Sandy Brace will be joined by liberals veterans Critic Sean Casey in front of VAC Headquarters in Charlottetown on FRIDAY afternoon 4 NOV and we are encouraging supporters to arrive early and participate in the support rally being held earlier in the day. Our objectives are the same, to honour our troops by ensuring VAC has the tools to do the job and the financial support to ensure our wounded warriors are compensated with dignity.

Sean Wilson will once again be assembling in Victoria Park in London, Ontario, a location we are encouraging all veterans in the immediate region to participate. The city’s MP’s, including veterans supporter Irene Mathyssen, have been invited. In Sarnia, Wilma Mcniell just turned 80 years of age and is leading Team Sarnia at the office of MP Pat Davidson at 11 am. How can one not admire her spirit? Wilma has also been a staunch advocate for making Remembrance Day a national holiday and has been successful in her quest in several provinces. Let us join her in her quest! Another extraordinary demonstration of support comes from James Green, a WW2 veteran at 86, who will lead the way at Justice Minister Rob Nicholson’s office in Niagara Falls. In Halifax, Veterans Advocate Gary Zwicker will parade in front the Cenotaph Memorial and MP Peter Stoffer, who will present Bill C-215 to end the annuity clawback at age 65, will be speaking to the issues. Martin Frechette will be at at St Anne’s in Montreal at a special location and we have concerns about disturbing the veteran residents and will be assembling at a location beyond their sight. Our quest is to draw awareness to the projected half billion dollars in cut backs to VACs budget, the visual inference, particularly in light that that this is the last VAC hospital and will soon be transferred to provincial control, is obvious. I would reiterate, Sainte Annes de Bellevue is a marvelous facility and the CVA is committed to ensuring the standard of care we witnessed during our visit this week will be the same standard of care today after the facility is turned over to the province of Quebec, something that I am quite sure will not be an issue. Kingston Team leader DAB McDonald will assembling be at the Princess and Gardiner intersection. Tom Beaver and Fred Doucette will be at the front gates of CFB Gagetown while, in Chilliwack, Claude Latulippe and Joe Beauchene are well on the way to organizing one of the largest gatherings on the West Coast. All Nov 5th events commence at 11.

Team leaders of organized events are encouraged to send me a sit reps that we can publicize your actions. 

Website       http://www.canadianveteransadvocacy.com/index.html
Facebook    https://www.facebook.com/groups/CdnVetsAdvocacy/
Forum         http://www.canadianveteransadvocacy.com/board/
Twitter         http://twitter.com/#!/CdnVetsAdvocacy
Blog            http://www.canadianveteransadvocacy.com/blog/

Michael L Blais CD

905-357-3306

info@canadianveteransadvocacy.com

 

See CVA SITREP 29 Oct 2011...

See Veterans' Aide Memoire...

 

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Rebuilding trust with our CF veterans: now is the time for a public inquiry

Photograph courtesy DND Combat Camera: Sgt Lou Penney
Into war: Canadian soldiers pictured in Afghanistan. Sean Bruyea says 600,000 CF veterans have been denied comprehensive programs including education in trade schools, college and university, re-establishment grants, housing, and more.
 
OTTAWA—Less than two weeks from now, Canadian Forces veterans, many of them disabled, will publicly protest throughout Canada. This is not part of “Occupy Canada.”

However, alienation and abandonment by the Canadian government of its Canadian Forces (CF) veterans has long scarred our noble warriors and their families in a much more profound manner than that motivating the current worldwide protests.

What began last year under the initiative of a new veterans’ organization, the Canadian Veterans’ Advocacy, continues to expand upon the growing frustration and suffering of thousands of injured CF members, CF veterans, retired RCMP and the families of all. That veterans are forced to protest in the streets on November 5 is a call for substantial and meaningful government action.

The justification for the protest is simple: Canada is treating CF veterans in a far more beggarly and discriminatory manner than veterans of previous eras.

Veterans of World War II and Korea, whether wounded or not, were provided, amongst other things, with comprehensive programs including education in trade schools, college and university, reestablishment grants as well as housing, farming and land grants along with associated economic assistance.

Canada’s 600,000 CF veterans have been denied all of this. Not until 1973 did the federal government establish a limited rehabilitation program, but only for medically released CF members. Oddly, Veterans Affairs Canada (VAC), the department legally mandated for the “care, treatment and rehabilitation” of veterans and their families did not create the program. It was created by the CF.  In the ensuing years, the CF also created at least three separate job training and career assistance programs for releasing military.

Before 2006, VAC at least provided CF members with lifelong monthly compensation for disabilities incurred as a result of military service.

In 2006, the CF rehabilitation as well as the job placement programs were duplicated by Veterans Affairs Canada (VAC). The catch was that injured CF soldiers have to now accept a one-time lump sum payment instead of lifelong compensation. Also part of the program is a one-time priority hiring opportunity in the federal public service. Par for VAC’s course, the accompanying rehabilitation program does not include university even though most positions open for priority hiring require university.

There are many flaws in this lump sum and associated programs. VAC promised to revisit them every “two or three months” as it was proclaimed a “living document.” Months became five years and the living document received over 400 recommendations from two of its own advisory groups as well as Parliamentary Committees calling for immediate remedies.

VAC bureaucrats under current Deputy Minister Suzanne Tining ignored them all. Then, last month, the department implemented just three-and-half of the 400 recommendations. Departmental officials were boastful in their submission to Cabinet and Treasury Board. Although costing $13-million gross annually, the changes will reward the federal government by forcing veterans to pay back $4-million of that in taxes for a net annual cost of $8.7-million.

The department quickly defended itself with the incongruous claim that it was spending $189-million over five years not $87-million over 10 years for the same programs. Did departmental officials mislead Treasury Board and Cabinet with $87 million over 10 years or are they misleading the public about the $189-million over five years?

What is certain is that VAC will be cutting $232-million annually starting next year. Taking inflation into account, in four years, the cuts will amount to $1-billion.

Coincidentally, the total amount paid out in lump sum payments since 2006 until Dec. 31, 2010 was $1-billion. These cuts effectively mean the lump sum program will cost zero dollars going forward. These are contemptible savings at the expense of Canada’s most vulnerable and noble citizens. Not surprisingly, a class-action lawsuit was filed last week challenging the lump sum payments.

Veterans were somewhat hopeful last year when Parliament passed a bill to stop deducting CPP payments from the retirement pensions of disabled as well as retired CF personnel. Prime Minister Stephen Harper refused to request a royal recommendation and the bill died.

Meanwhile, about 6,000 of the most disabled CF veterans have been forced for the past five years to fight all the way to the Supreme Court and back again. Unanimous Parliamentary committees and the CF and DND ombudsman offices have soundly condemned these “profoundly unfair” deductions from already reduced and limited long-term disability income. The 6,000 go to court yet again on November 16, with no end in sight.

 

It is increasingly obvious that Veterans Affairs and other federal government officials have repeatedly shown contempt for oversight agencies. They show contempt for the highest offices of our land including Parliament. They show contempt for public outrage.

Most abhorrent is their contempt for the suffering and rights of veterans and their families. One wonders why Canadian Forces veterans have waited so long to protest.

 Before last year, Canada had not seen veterans publicly demonstrate since the aftermath of World War I. Then, just as now, insensitively designed and inadequately administered programs, such as one-time lump sums drove veterans and their families into the desperation of public protest. Back then programs were managed by civilian bureaucrats who had no idea what it meant to serve in the military.

The same is occurring today. Not one director or above in VAC has ever worn a uniform. Yet such bureaucrats refuse to have veterans sit at the table to design programs for veterans and their families.

Sadly, veterans’ organizations are not united in calling bureaucrats and Parliament to account for such disdain. Many members of traditional World War II organizations such as the Royal Canadian Legion believe that it is disloyal, or even treasonous, to publicly demonstrate. How sad they forget that they and their deceased comrades sacrificed much defending such democratic freedoms.

Ironically, in spite of more comprehensive WWII programs, veterans from that era have had many difficulties receiving necessary assistance from government. How many widows and comrades need pass away before receiving benefits, treatment, and support? What will it take before these organizations are finally willing to exercise their hard-fought rights in standing up against the government which is abandoning them?

The reality is that approximately 60,000 CF veterans are living with lifelong injuries and disabilities as a direct result of military service. This equates to a casualty rate of about 10 per cent, slightly more than the 9.3 per cent casualty rate suffered by those who served in World War II. Minds and bodies in 1941, 1961, 1991, and 2011 are equally vulnerable and should be equally compensated for disability. And all military should be offered comprehensive, not token, assistance to retrain and rejoin Canadian society.

Circulating through the veterans’ community is a poster depicting five CF members in various uniforms along with a homeless veteran and his dog captioned with the following: “They were prepared to fight, they were prepared to be wounded, they were prepared to be captured, they were even prepared to die. But they were never prepared to be abandoned.”

And abandoned to their personal demons and suffering they have been. Government has done a superlative job ensuring Canadians have little understanding of what CF veterans and their families have sacrificed. We as a nation need to learn how to establish trust again with our veterans. Successive governments have long taken advantage of veterans’ honour, silence, and even shame. Veterans must not be forced to accept inadequate programs designed by unqualified personnel who never served in the military or never suffered a disability.

All military members throughout Canada’s history are sent to sacrifice at our bidding. Canada has not sacrificed in return. We have to finally grant our Canadian Forces veterans and their families a proper homecoming.

 The demonstrations are an emphatic invitation to begin public reconciliation. Only public reconciliation will re-establish long lost trust. The easiest and most honourable reconciliation begins when the Prime Minister and his Cabinet create a (royal) commission of inquiry into how injured Canadian Forces members, all CF veterans, RCMP and their families have been neglected by Canada. The commission should be given the broadest mandate to recommend sweeping and creative approaches to rebuilding that trust.

The alternative is to have government encourage veterans to fight amongst themselves like desperate dogs competing for a few scraps of compassion. This alternative will have us go on building a nation upon deception and contempt for what our military has and continues to selflessly sacrifice in our country’s name.

On this dark path, it will not be long before we realize that no one is willing to sacrifice for a country which does not sacrifice in return. The scars may be deep for our CF veterans. However, the “first aid” of a public inquiry to finally honour them is a fiscally modest and relatively simple medical procedure.

 

Sean Bruyea is a columnist, former intelligence officer and graduate student of a masters in public ethics. He is a long-time advocate for the rights of injured soldiers, veterans, and their families and his privacy lawsuit was settled with the federal government last fall.

 

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