Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canadian Military Spouses' Pension Problems To Be Reviewed

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Nov, 2015 01:32 PM
    OTTAWA — The federal department in charge of retirement benefits has quietly been reviewing its protocols amid concerns that military spouses were wrongfully being rejected for old age security payments.
     
    That review has been ongoing since at least June after reports emerged of at least one military spouse being asked for myriad documentation, including mortgage payments and high school graduation records, to prove her eligibility for the OAS.
     
    Her husband, a veteran, was reportedly easily approved for the pension payments.
     
    Speaking points and background material provided to then-employment minister Pierre Poilievre in early June suggest the department should have approved the woman's application for OAS and that other military spouses applying for benefits should seamlessly receive them as well.
     
    The department doesn't know how widespread the issue is — Service Canada doesn't track specific information on military spouses — but only about one in 10 OAS applicants doesn't receive a pension payment in the first month of entitlement.
     
    A person has to have resided in Canada for a prescribed number of years before they qualify for payments.
     
    Federal rules say that a person qualifying for old age security must have lived in Canada for at least 10 years if they never lived abroad. That number goes up to 20 years if that person has lived and worked overseas after turning 18.
     
    In certain cases, that time outside the country can be considered as time at home in Canada. Among those cases are military members and spouses who are deployed abroad.
     
    "Spouses who accompany military personnel may also be deemed a resident of Canada for the period of their absence," said government spokeswoman Amelie Caron. "These periods count toward both eligibility and the amount of the OAS pension."
     
    Still, the department said, military spouses have to prove their eligibility by providing proper documentation, which can include passport stamps, customs declarations, airline or train tickets, or a letter from an employer attesting to the employment abroad.
     
    The note to Poilievre said the department had to confirm a person's absence was for one of the special cases outlined in federal regulations, to determine whether they could receive payments and how much they were entitled to each month.
     
    Caron said the department is still reviewing existing procedures for applying for old age security to make sure they "remain responsive to the needs of Canadians."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Gordon Stuckless Doesn't Meet Dangerous Offender Status: Psychiatric Assessment

    The 38-page report on Gordon Stuckless was compiled by Dr. Mark Pearce, a forensic psychiatrist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health.

    Gordon Stuckless Doesn't Meet Dangerous Offender Status: Psychiatric Assessment

    Unpaid Internships Still Demand Action For Exploiting Young: Expert

    Unpaid Internships Still Demand Action For Exploiting Young: Expert
    You must be punctual. You must own your own car. You will be emailing and calling seven days a week at all hours.

    Unpaid Internships Still Demand Action For Exploiting Young: Expert

    Saskatchewan Fixes Essential Services Law After Supreme Court Ruling

    Saskatchewan Fixes Essential Services Law After Supreme Court Ruling
    Saskatchewan has fixed a law that the Supreme Court struck down as unconstitutional because it prevented some public-sector employees from striking.

    Saskatchewan Fixes Essential Services Law After Supreme Court Ruling

    Blood Spatter Expert Tells Oland Trial He Was Called Four Days After Crime

    Blood Spatter Expert Tells Oland Trial He Was Called Four Days After Crime
    Sgt. Brian Wentzell of Halifax testified today that he arrived in Saint John, N.B., on July 11 and began to examine the scene.

    Blood Spatter Expert Tells Oland Trial He Was Called Four Days After Crime

    Terrorist Cites Right To Vote In Challenging Move To Strip His Citizenship

    Terrorist Cites Right To Vote In Challenging Move To Strip His Citizenship
     An Ottawa man jailed for his part in a terrorist conspiracy says a federal move to strip him of Canadian citizenship violates several constitutional guarantees, including his right to vote.

    Terrorist Cites Right To Vote In Challenging Move To Strip His Citizenship

    Social Security Tribunal Short-Staffed, Under Pressure From Start: Report

    Social Security Tribunal Short-Staffed, Under Pressure From Start: Report
    An outside review of the tribunal Canadians turn to when denied social security benefits appears to have been short-staffed from its inception, leading to a backlog of new cases and stressed-out, error-prone employees.

    Social Security Tribunal Short-Staffed, Under Pressure From Start: Report