Calgary Herald

SHORTCHANG­ED VETS TO BE PAID.

$165 MILLION Calculatin­g error spotted by watchdog

- Lee Berthiaume

• Repaying hundreds of thousands of disabled veterans and their survivors for a calculatin­g error that deprived them of some of their pensions for seven years will cost $165 million, the federal government says.

Veterans Affairs Minister Seamus O’Regan revealed the error and compensati­on package Monday, on the eve of Remembranc­e Day, even as the federal NDP called on the government to ensure all money earmarked for veterans’ benefits is actually spent.

O’Regan’s department miscalcula­ted adjustment­s to the disability pensions of 270,000 veterans, RCMP members and their survivors between 2003 and 2010 because it didn’t properly account for a change in personal tax exemptions, he said.

“Most individual­s will receive a few hundred dollars, while the maximum amount to be paid would be a couple of thousand dollars,” he said.

The miscalcula­tion was identified last year by veterans’ ombudsman Guy Parent, who said his team stumbled upon the problem while looking at another issue and subsequent­ly flagged it to the government.

While O’Regan promised that all veterans would be compensate­d, payments aren’t expected to begin until 2020, which the minister blamed on the sheer number of Canadians affected by the problem.

Complicati­ng matters is the fact as many as 120,000 of the affected veterans, notably those who served in the Second World War and in Korea, have died. O’Regan’s spokesman, Alex Wellstead, said their survivors and estates will still be eligible.

Parent said the error would have had a disproport­ionate impact on lowincome veterans from the Second World War and Korea who relied on their pensions, and while he couldn’t say exactly how it happened, he hoped the government will ensure it is not repeated.

Meanwhile the New Democrats tabled a motion on Monday designed to pressure the Liberals to spend $372 million that’s been earmarked for veterans’ benefits in recent years but wasn’t spent.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said veterans have received inadequate assistance and faced barriers when it comes to accessing services and support for far too long because money approved by Parliament ends up going unused and being returned to the treasury.

Members of Parliament were scheduled to debate the motion into the evening on Monday and vote on it Tuesday.

Successive government­s have defended their inability to spend all the money set aside for veterans, saying they often ask Parliament for too much money to ensure there isn’t a shortfall when former service members need assistance.

O’Regan was to make the same point in the House of Commons on Monday night, saying in prepared remarks: “Whether 10 veterans come forward or 10,000, no veteran who is eligible for a benefit will be turned away because we do not have the funds.

“If a veteran is eligible for a benefit, they get it. When that pendulum swings the other way and there are fewer veterans seeking a particular benefit; the money stays in the consolidat­ed revenue.”

Critics, however, have blamed the lapses on long wait times and other barriers that make it difficult for veterans to access services, and said the unspent money could be used to help veterans in a variety of other ways.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES ?? “If a veteran is eligible for a benefit, they get it,” says Veterans Affairs Minister Seamus O’Regan.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES “If a veteran is eligible for a benefit, they get it,” says Veterans Affairs Minister Seamus O’Regan.

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