Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Judge In Wounded Veterans Case Agrees To Consider Government Contradictions

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Jun, 2016 11:15 AM
    VANCOUVER — A group of severely wounded military veterans claimed a victory in its years-long battle for better benefits from the Canadian government, which they accuse of treating them differently than soldiers from earlier wars.
     
    Justice Harvey Groberman of British Columbia Appeal Court said on Friday the court will consider whether to take into account contradictions between the government's current legal position and the stand the federal Liberals took during the election.
     
    In court documents the government says it does not owe an "extraordinary obligation" to modern-day veterans, but Veterans Affairs Minister Kent Hehr reaffirmed in a news release on Friday the government's electoral promise to uphold Canada's "sacred obligation." The Trudeau government's position in court was initially held by the Conservative government before the Tories changed their stance in December 2014 after a public backlash.
     
    Don Sorochan, the lawyer representing the veterans, told the court the federal government shouldn't be allowed to adopt a position it previously abandoned, especially after passing a unanimous resolution last year affirming Canada's "moral, social, legal and fiduciary" duty to its injured and disabled military members.
     
    The federal government's move to revert back to its 2014 stance amounts to an abuse of process in the courts, he said.
     
    "You can't have politicians going around making promises and then saying they don't mean it" when it comes to constitutional obligations around Canada's "sacred covenant" with soldiers, Sorochan said outside court.
     
    He described the sacred, or social, covenant as the long-standing obligation the country has to citizens who fought on its behalf and contributed to "the independent and free Canada we now enjoy."
     
    The initial legal action was launched in B.C. Supreme Court in 2012 by six severely disabled veterans over changes made to their compensation six years earlier.
     
     
    The federal government replaced lifelong pensions with lump-sum payments, upsetting veterans, who argued they deserved disability payments on par with workers' compensation.
     
    Efforts by the federal government to have the case thrown out were dismissed, which led to an appeal. Last June, the lawsuit was put on hold while the parties agreed to wait and see whether new legislation and a federal election would allow for an out-of-court resolution.
     
    The deadline for a decision passed last month, prompting the government to file documents on Monday saying the 2014 arguments "accurately reflect the current position of the federal government.''
     
    The unexpected move stoked outrage from the veterans community.
     
    Nineteen-year veteran Brian McKenna was in the courtroom during Friday's proceedings and later expressed dismay about the state of the ongoing legal battle.
     
    "We finally thought we were getting somewhere a year ago, where we could avoid this process. But here we are again," he said outside court.
     
    "You're going to have a very hard time finding any veteran who enjoys suing their country," he added. "They serve their country. They don't want to have to litigate against it."
     
    A decision from the B.C. Appeal Court isn't expected until after the summer.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Statistics Canada Says 69 Per Cent Were Dual-Income Households In 2015

    Statistics Canada Says 69 Per Cent Were Dual-Income Households In 2015
    The report says the proportion of dual-income families was 69 per cent in 2015 compared with just 36 per cent in 1976.

    Statistics Canada Says 69 Per Cent Were Dual-Income Households In 2015

    300 Firefighters From South Africa Arrive To Fight Flames In Northern Alberta

    300 Firefighters From South Africa Arrive To Fight Flames In Northern Alberta
    Kim Connors of the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre says the mobilization represents the largest group of wildland firefighters ever brought into Canada.

    300 Firefighters From South Africa Arrive To Fight Flames In Northern Alberta

    Schools Look To Address Mental Health Effect Of Student Debt

    Schools Look To Address Mental Health Effect Of Student Debt
    While schools attempt to lessen the load by offering financial aid, average student debt appears to be climbing. So some institutions are also responding by beefing up their mental health services to help students cope with life in the red

    Schools Look To Address Mental Health Effect Of Student Debt

    New Child Benefit Could Pose Pitfalls For Divorced Couples: Lisa Raitt

    The Liberals' new $23-billion-a-year benefit will replace three different programs on July 1 with one income-tested payment to families each month.

    New Child Benefit Could Pose Pitfalls For Divorced Couples: Lisa Raitt

    Atlantic Canadians Eager To Return To Work After Wildfire In Fort McMurray

    Larry Coleman is in Springhill, N.S., waiting for the okay to get back to his job of building scaffolding for other trades at Syncrude

    Atlantic Canadians Eager To Return To Work After Wildfire In Fort McMurray

    Climate Change Scientists Ask Federal Government To Reject B.C. LNG Project

    Climate Change Scientists Ask Federal Government To Reject B.C. LNG Project
    The $36-billion dollar plant backed by Malyasian state-owned energy giant Petronas is slated to be built south of Prince Rupert, B.C.

    Climate Change Scientists Ask Federal Government To Reject B.C. LNG Project