Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Tories To Tackle Thorny Issue Of Lump Sum Payments To Wounded Veterans: Sources

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Mar, 2015 01:28 PM
    OTTAWA — The system of awards for the pain and suffering of the country's most severely wounded soldiers is about to be overhauled as the Harper government attempts to defuse a volatile issue within the angry veterans community.
     
    Multiple federal sources tell The Canadian Press that Veterans Affairs Minister Erin O'Toole will announce targeted improvements Monday to bring lump sum awards for the most severely disabled more in line with what courts award civilians injured in workplace accidents.
     
    Just how much soldiers — with missing limbs and other injuries such as post-traumatic stress — should be paid in compensation has been a lightning rod issue since the federal government overhauled the benefits regime in 2006.
     
    Currently, the maximum tax-free award is $306,698, which is considerably lower than the benchmark civilian award of $342,500, established in 2012 by the B.C. Supreme Court.
     
    Addressing the issue is crucial this election year for the ruling Conservatives and O'Toole, who've proposed a series of new and improved benefits to win back the allegiance of increasingly outspoken and alienated ex-soldiers.
     
    Legislation to enact the changes is expected to be dropped Monday in the Commons, with the issue of the lump sum award being among the most crucial.
     
    Payments are determined on a sliding scale depending on the degree of disability, but the sources say not to expect an across-the-board increase for every category of injury. Instead, the measures will be "limited to the people who are most critically injured."
     
    One source, who was not authorized to speak to the media, said on background one mechanism under consideration since last fall was an additional one-time, $70,000 top-up payment that could be added separately to whatever lump sum is given to a soldier.
     
    The move would bring the payment system in line with Ontario's compensation framework, said a second federal source.
     
    The fact that modern-day veterans receive less is at the heart of the class-action lawsuit by angry Afghan veterans. The government and lawyers for the plaintiffs recently put the suit on hold as they negotiate a settlement. 
     
    The government has heard complaints for years, and in 2011 it tried to placate injured veterans by allowing them the choice of whether to take the lump sum or have it paid out in stages. Only two per cent of those eligible have taken up the offer and the payment schedule remained unchanged.
     
    The Commons veterans committee weighed in last summer, finding the pain and suffering awards given to severely injured soldiers don't match what courts or provincial compensation systems provide.
     
    "The amount of the lump sum payment is considered very low by those with very serious injuries in the short or medium term, who are forced to leave the Canadian Forces but whose permanent disabilities are moderate," said the all-party's committee report, released last June.
     
    Many veterans view the one-time disability award as the government simply washing its hands of the wounded, the committee was told in public hearings.
     
    Former Liberal Senator Romeo Dallaire, a retired lieutenant-general, was among the most outspoken in saying the measure was detrimental to soldiers.
     
    Kevin Berry, a veteran of the Afghanistan mission and a veterans advocate, told the committee the ongoing payments for pain and suffering made under the old pension-for-life system, replaced in 2006, had symbolic value. 
     
    "When my knees ache and I put my hearing aids in — I'm 30, by the way — I'm reminded that there's a connection to the government of Canada and, by extension, the people; that my sacrifice is remembered; and that it's dealt with through a financial stipend," Berry testified.
     
    "It's not a huge amount of money. I'm not going to get rich off of it. But it's a nice reminder that I haven't been forgotten and that's acknowledged — every day."
     
    The government said last year it needed to study the financial implications of adjusting the lump sum and introducing new benefits.
     
    The proposed changes are going to be a hit to the government's bottom line that one source said the Conservatives are eager to book in the 2014-15 fiscal year, which ends Tuesday.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Young men enter burning Newfoundland hotel to alert those inside: police

    Young men enter burning Newfoundland hotel to alert those inside: police
    MARYSTOWN, N.L. — Three young men entered a burning hotel in Newfoundland and played a crucial role in ensuring that four people inside safely escaped the building, RCMP said Monday.

    Young men enter burning Newfoundland hotel to alert those inside: police

    Man Dead After Altercation At Burnaby Skytrain Station; Homicide Investigators Probe

    Man Dead After Altercation At Burnaby Skytrain Station; Homicide Investigators Probe
    BURNABY, B.C. — Homicide officers are investigating at a Burnaby SkyTrain station after a man died early Sunday morning.

    Man Dead After Altercation At Burnaby Skytrain Station; Homicide Investigators Probe

    Erratic Driver Arrested After Crashing Into Several Cars On Highway 1 And Highway 99

    Erratic Driver Arrested After Crashing Into Several Cars On Highway 1 And Highway 99
    LIONS BAY, B.C. — A man has been arrested after crashing into multiple cars on Highway One and Highway 99, and attempting to flee when his pick-up truck rolled over near Lions Bay, B.C.

    Erratic Driver Arrested After Crashing Into Several Cars On Highway 1 And Highway 99

    Demolition Ceremony Set For 'Haunting' Vancouver Island Residential School

    Demolition Ceremony Set For 'Haunting' Vancouver Island Residential School
    VICTORIA — A crumbling, omnipresent red brick building has been a haunting presence for thousands of British Columbia aboriginal people who say they faced physical and sexual abuse at the site.

    Demolition Ceremony Set For 'Haunting' Vancouver Island Residential School

    Ottawa Police Continue Search For 2 Children Allegedly Abducted By Mother

    Ottawa Police Continue Search For 2 Children Allegedly Abducted By Mother
    Ottawa police are continuing their search for two young boys who were the subject of an Amber Alert on Saturday night.

    Ottawa Police Continue Search For 2 Children Allegedly Abducted By Mother

    Ottawa Spent $376K To Repatriate Luka Magnotta In 'National Interest'

    Ottawa Spent $376K To Repatriate Luka Magnotta In 'National Interest'
    OTTAWA — The big-ticket military mission to fetch fugitive Luka Rocco Magnotta from Germany in 2012 was ordered by a senior Conservative cabinet minister who considered it a matter of "national interest," The Canadian Press has learned.

    Ottawa Spent $376K To Repatriate Luka Magnotta In 'National Interest'