Montreal Gazette

New lump sums offered to badly wounded soldiers

Decision part of an effort to mend relations with frustrated veterans

- The Canadian Press

The Harper government is offering yet another new lumpsum benefit to the country’s most critically wounded soldiers, hoping to silence complaints that the existing pain and suffering awards are too cheap.

The new critical injury benefit unveiled Monday by Veterans Affairs Minister Erin O’Toole will — once approved by Parliament — provide a $ 70,000 tax- free award to injured soldiers and veterans.

The one- time payment is meant to complement the existing lump sum awards system, which has been constantly maligned since being introduced in 2006 as part of the federal government’s overhaul of veterans benefits and entitlemen­ts.

The proposed new scheme is separate from the disability awards system, which a Commons committee has said is less generous to soldiers wounded on the battlefiel­d than the courts are to civilians hurt in workplace accidents.

“It is a tax- free, immediate, personal payment in recognitio­n of their stress and hardship in the days and weeks following a traumatic event, such as an attack in theatre, or a training accident here at home,” O’Toole told a news conference.

A department background­er notes when other eligible benefits are included, support for soldiers often exceeds what the courts award.

The new benefit is retroactiv­e and troops injured since 2006 can apply, O’Toole said.

“Eligible military members and veterans will receive this $ 70,000 benefit, even if their medical condition never results in a permanent disability,” he said. “I hope it lets them know that we recognize they deserve to be compensate­d for their pain, their surgeries, their prolonged hospitaliz­ations, the stress and hardship they face on their road to recovery.”

The system of lump sum payment for pain and suffering — known as non- economic loss awards — has been a lightning rod for controvers­y for the Conservati­ves. It’s also one of the reasons the federal government is facing a class- action lawsuit from angry Afghan veterans.

Under t he existing system, 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.

The government has heard complaints for years. In 2011, it allowed ex- soldiers the choice of whether to take the lump sum or have it paid out in stages, but did not change the sliding scale of payments.

O’Toole’s announceme­nt Monday is just the latest in a series of initiative­s, all of which are part of a calibrated effort to rebuild bridges with a frustrated veterans community.

 ?? A D R I A N WY L D / T H E C A NA D I A N P R E S S ?? Minister of Veterans Affairs Erin O’Toole unveils new a critical injury benefit in Ottawa on Monday.
A D R I A N WY L D / T H E C A NA D I A N P R E S S Minister of Veterans Affairs Erin O’Toole unveils new a critical injury benefit in Ottawa on Monday.

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