Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canadians With Terminal Illnesses Face New Rules In Test For Speedy Benefits

The Canadian Press, 31 Jul, 2018 12:00 PM
  • Canadians With Terminal Illnesses Face New Rules In Test For Speedy Benefits
OTTAWA — The federal government will set a new test for fast-tracking disability pension requests from Canadians with terminal illnesses.
 
 
The $4.3 billion Canada Pension Plan disability program fast tracks benefits decisions for dying Canadians, but has faced hurdles in meeting the processing timelines.
 
 
Now, the government plans to change the rules in a few weeks to grant an expedited review to people whose doctors believe have just six months left to live.
 
 
Documents obtained by The Canadian Press under the access to information law show the decision to rewrite the policy is aimed at untangling problems in how the government decides who deserved a speedy decision.
 
 
A briefing note earlier this year to senior officials in Employment and Social Development Canada notes that the department's definition of terminal illness was problematic enough that it may have clogged up the fast-track system.
 
 
Auditor general Michael Ferguson's February 2016 review of the disability pension program found people with terminal or grave conditions were waiting too long for benefits, or being snowed under by complicated paperwork.

MORE National ARTICLES

Don't Call 911 If Your Pizza Isn't Ready On Time, Provincial Police Say

Don't Call 911 If Your Pizza Isn't Ready On Time, Provincial Police Say
Starvation can be a life or death matter, but police in eastern Ontario say a woman's recent complaint about the wait time for her pizza order doesn't quite qualify.

Don't Call 911 If Your Pizza Isn't Ready On Time, Provincial Police Say

Mom Sparks Debate By Detailing Daughter's 'Extreme' Punishment On Social Media

Mom Sparks Debate By Detailing Daughter's 'Extreme' Punishment On Social Media
A Newfoundland mom is being both praised and panned for what some say are extreme measures to punish her daughter for apparent bullying behaviour — and then discussing it all on social media.

Mom Sparks Debate By Detailing Daughter's 'Extreme' Punishment On Social Media

B.C. Aims To Recycle Difficult Plastic: Six-pack Rings, Chip Bags, Crinkly Wraps

B.C. Aims To Recycle Difficult Plastic: Six-pack Rings, Chip Bags, Crinkly Wraps
A British Columbia non-profit group has launched a pilot project to start collecting some of the toughest plastics to recycle such as potato chip bags, zipper-lock sandwich bags and six-pack rings.

B.C. Aims To Recycle Difficult Plastic: Six-pack Rings, Chip Bags, Crinkly Wraps

Banff Town Council Bans Smoking And Vaping Cannabis In Public Places

Banff Town Council Bans Smoking And Vaping Cannabis In Public Places
Council has decided to limit the use of marijuana to private property in the small mountain town that attracts a large number of international tourists and has a reputation as a place to get a "Rocky Mountain high."

Banff Town Council Bans Smoking And Vaping Cannabis In Public Places

First-Degree Murder Charges Laid In 2010 Double Homicide Near Cranbrook, B.C.

First-Degree Murder Charges Laid In 2010 Double Homicide Near Cranbrook, B.C.
Officers were called to a rural residence near Cranbrook in May 2010, and found 43-year-old Leanne MacFarlane dead and 42-year-old Jeffrey Taylor in critical condition.

First-Degree Murder Charges Laid In 2010 Double Homicide Near Cranbrook, B.C.

WATCH: Driver Pepper-Sprayed Over Honking Spat In Montreal, Police Open Probe

WATCH: Driver Pepper-Sprayed Over Honking Spat In Montreal, Police Open Probe
Montreal police opened an internal investigation Monday after a widely shared video showed an officer pepper-spraying a black driver liberally in the face over alleged excessive honking.

WATCH: Driver Pepper-Sprayed Over Honking Spat In Montreal, Police Open Probe