Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Hiring almost 400 would clear vets backlog: PBO

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Sep, 2020 07:19 PM
  • Hiring almost 400 would clear vets backlog: PBO

Veterans Affairs Canada can clear its backlog of disability benefit applications in a year if it hires nearly 400 more people, says the parliamentary budget office.

The number of pending applications for benefits had reached almost 50,000 by the end of March, up from about 21,000 three years earlier. More than 22,000 of the applications were considered complete and were waiting only for decisions by the department.

In June, Veterans Affairs said it would extend contracts for 160 employees it had hired temporarily to process applications, and would add another 300 to their number.

The PBO says all these extra people will only reduce the backlog by about 10,000 applications by March 2022, but hiring an additional 392 employees, for a total of 852, would end it in 12 months.

The cost of the additional hires would be about $126 million from now until the end of fiscal year 2024–25, according to the PBO.

NDP MP Rachel Blaney said in a statement Monday that veterans are not getting the support they need.

The PBO report was prepared after a request from Blaney regarding the service standards for processing the applications.

“This is completely unacceptable," she said. "Veterans have already been waiting too long for the benefits and services they deserve."

Blaney said the issue started during the Harper Conservative government when the minister of veterans affairs at the time — Erin O’Toole, now the leader of the Conservative party — caused the crisis by making deep cuts.

She said the Liberals have provided temporary increases in resources for Veterans Affairs but not enough to keep up with need.

The Liberal government announced their plans to hire hundreds more temporary staff as part of a broader plan to tackle the growing backlog of requests for support and benefits from disabled veterans, many of whom are being forced to wait years for an answer.

The backlog has emerged as a major source of frustration and anger for the Canadian veterans' community, with advocates repeatedly warning that delays in processing applications add undue stress on injured ex-soldiers and exacerbate already difficult financial and medical conditions during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Veterans Affairs planned to have the first group of 160 new staff working by last January, and hoped to have the backlog dramatically reduced by March 2022.

But the budget office says the government's efforts to get the backlog under control by adding 300 more staff, at a cost of $87.7 million, are still not enough to fix the problem quickly.

The PBO report projects that with the 460 workers, it will take Veterans Affairs until the first quarter of 2023 to eliminate the backlog. It can maintain its service standards if it keeps most of the additional employees beyond 2021–22, according to the PBO.

The cost associated with that scenario is $103 million over five years, $23 million less than the cost of hiring another 392 people to get through the backlog faster.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canadian firefighters being redirected to Oregon

Canadian firefighters being redirected to Oregon
Alberta Wildfire says on Twitter that 45 firefighters from the province are headed to the state this week.

Canadian firefighters being redirected to Oregon

Not just feds in MMIW action plan: Marc Miller

Not just feds in MMIW action plan: Marc Miller
The call on the federal government to act "was only part of the puzzle," Miller said today as cabinet members gathered for meetings in Ottawa

Not just feds in MMIW action plan: Marc Miller

O'Toole staffer tests positive for COVID-19

O'Toole staffer tests positive for COVID-19
The federal parties are still sorting out how the House of Commons will function when it resumes next Wednesday.

O'Toole staffer tests positive for COVID-19

Task force wants $55B for climate, clean energy

Task force wants $55B for climate, clean energy
The $55-billion, five-year environmental economic plan from the Task Force for a Resilient Recovery is just one of a rising number of reports bombarding the Liberal government with demands for a robust and fair recovery ahead of next week's throne speech.

Task force wants $55B for climate, clean energy

Smoky skies return in southern B.C. after respite

Smoky skies return in southern B.C. after respite
For the first time in days, the weather office lifted smoky skies bulletins for all areas north of Vancouver Island, the Sunshine Coast and Thompson regions.

Smoky skies return in southern B.C. after respite

Overdose fight: B.C. nurses to give out safer drugs

Overdose fight: B.C. nurses to give out safer drugs
More than 5,000 people have fatally overdosed in B.C. since the province declared a public health emergency in 2016, but fatalities were declining before COVID-19.

Overdose fight: B.C. nurses to give out safer drugs