The Welland Tribune

Veterans brace for Liberals’ longpromis­ed disability pension plan

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — Veterans across Canada are praying that the Trudeau government will deliver more than a lump of coal when it rolls out its long- awaited plan for providing pensions to injured ex- soldiers.

Veterans Affairs Minister Seamus O’Regan will unveil the pension scheme on Wednesday, more than two years after it was first promised during the 2015 federal election.

The Liberals were the only party to promise to reinstate lifelong pensions for disabled veterans, which were replaced by a controvers­ial lump- sum award, career training and income- replacemen­t programs in 2006.

The commitment was in direct response to widespread complaints from veterans that the new benefits, known collective­ly as the New Veterans Charter, amounted to far less financial assistance than the old pensions.

Yet there are widespread fears that the Liberals’ plan, which is being announced after the House of Commons has risen and only days before Christmas, will fall far short of expectatio­ns and leave many veterans in the cold.

“They’ve been warned that they can’t let down the veterans,” said Aaron Bedard, who was injured while serving in Afghanista­n and is now one of the most vocal proponents for bringing back the pensions.

“You can’t drop a bomb on us at Christmas.”

Veterans receive financial benefits and compensati­on based on the extent of their injuries or disabiliti­es, and were eligible under the previous pension system for up to $ 2,733 per month, tax free, for life.

The New Veterans Charter, implemente­d by the previous Conservati­ve government with unanimous support from the Liberals and NDP, provides a lumpsum award for pain and suffering worth a maximum of $ 360,000.

But it also included various rehabilita­tion and career- training programs to help disabled veterans adjust to civilian life, and incomerepl­acement benefits for those unable to work.

Comparison­s are difficult, but a high- profile lawsuit against the government that was recently thrown out by the B. C. Court of Appeal claimed veterans under the charter receive 40 per cent less than those with pensions.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau first promised to bring back the previous lifelong pensions while on the campaign trail in August 2015.

“If I earn the right to serve this country as your prime minister, no veteran will be forced to fight their own government for the support and compensati­on that they have earned,” he said at the time.

“We will reinstate lifelong pensions and increase their value in line with the obligation we have made to those injured in the line of duty.”

But the government has since backed off that commitment to bring back the old pensions, and veterans are being told that it will offer the lump- sum award in instalment­s of up to $ 1,200 or $ 1,450 per month.

The actual amount will reportedly depend on the veteran’s age and injury; the average lump- sum award is currently $ 43,000, according to Veterans Affairs, meaning most will get far less than the maximum amount.

Severely disabled veterans are expected to continue to receive additional assistance through the income- replacemen­t programs included in the charter, but it remains unclear what will happen to everyone else.

There are also questions over whether any changes will be retroactiv­e — more than 61,000 injured veterans had received a lump- sum award as of March 31, 2017 — and if the new scheme will be taxable.

While that means the devil will be very much in the details, veterans and opposition critics are worried that the timing of the announceme­nt in the lull before Christmas is an indication that it will be bad news.

“By virtue of the fact that it’s two years in and in the middle of a very busy holiday season, it just doesn’t leave me feeling that the news is going to be all that good,” said NDP veterans affairs critic Irene Mathyssen.

Many veterans say they are ready to fight if the government doesn’t live up to its promise, including on the hustings, as happened when the community turned against the Conservati­ves in the last election.

“I can see how they are hoping that the celebratio­ns over the holidays combined with the extended break from Parliament will provide time for the anger within the veterans’ community to be marginaliz­ed and dissipate,” said Mike Blais, founder of Canadian Veterans Advocacy.

“That’s not going to happen.”

They’ve been warned that they can’t let down the veterans.” Aaron Bedard

 ?? FRED CHARTRAND/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Veteran Affairs Minister Seamus O’Regan is shown during an interview in his office on Parliament Hill in Ottawa in December.
FRED CHARTRAND/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Veteran Affairs Minister Seamus O’Regan is shown during an interview in his office on Parliament Hill in Ottawa in December.

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