The Niagara Falls Review

Veterans Affairs struggling to answer members’ calls

About 84,000 calls to toll-free number were abandoned last year

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — Veterans Affairs Canada has struggled to quickly answer calls from current and former service members seeking informatio­n and assistance, newly released documents show, leading many to hang up before they are answered.

Obtained through the access-to-informatio­n law, the documents show the government has made little progress in recent years in cutting down on the amount of time veterans are forced to wait on hold when they phone federal call centres.

In fact, it appears the problem with the toll-free number — which is separate from the crisis line set up for veterans or family members dealing with mental trauma and physical injuries — has gotten markedly worse despite years of public criticisms.

Veterans have previously called the delays frustratin­g, stressful and an obstacle to accessing needed benefits and services, particular­ly for those suffering from psychologi­cal trauma or physical injuries.

“Put yourself in the shoes of a veteran who is sick, calls (Veterans Affairs Canada) and is not able to get an answer,” said Sylvain Chartrand, director of Canadian Veterans’ Advocacy.

“What’s going to happen to this guy? Is he going to call back? Have we lost him? Probably some.”

Veterans usually call the tollfree number to apply for — or get informatio­n about — the various benefits and services offered to former military personnel. They can also get an update on their applicatio­ns.

The calls, which number in the tens of thousands each month, are often the first contact veterans have with the department and are routed to one of four centres in Halifax, Montreal, Winnipeg and Kirkland Lake, Ont.

Yet while Veterans Affairs aims to answer 80 per cent of calls within two minutes, only 40 per cent of the more than 359,000 calls answered between April 2018 and February 2019 were fielded within that target.

Another 84,000 — or about one in five of all calls — were categorize­d as “abandoned,” meaning the caller hung up before officials could answer.

The figures were noticeably worse last year than over the previous two years, when only about one in 10 calls were abandoned and around 65 per cent of calls that were answered were within the two-minute target.

While the documents did not provide a reason for the sharp decline in service, they did show that last year officials contemplat­ed extending the target for answering calls to five minutes.

That proposal was ultimately quashed by then-veterans affairs minister Seamus O’Regan.

Veterans Affairs spokespers­on Josh Bueckert said the department has hired more employees so that call centres “are now at full capacity and have routinely been answering calls well within the standard time of two minutes.”

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? New figures show many veterans have had a hard time getting anyone to pick up when they call Veterans Affairs Canada's toll-free line.
ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS New figures show many veterans have had a hard time getting anyone to pick up when they call Veterans Affairs Canada's toll-free line.

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