Vancouver Sun

Report alleges abuse of rehab program

Some ex-soldiers are playing up injuries to receive benefits, department claims

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — The Veterans Affairs Department says some veterans are exaggerati­ng their injuries to continue receiving financial benefits from the government and to avoid joining the workforce.

The explosive allegation is contained in a recent internal report on a Veterans Affairs rehabilita­tion program designed to help injured ex-soldiers transition to civilian life. The report found thousands of veterans are staying in the program much longer than anticipate­d or not finishing it at all.

The claim is sure to spark fresh anger among veterans groups and opposition critics who have previously complained about an insurance company attitude when it comes to Veterans Affairs Canada’s treatment of veterans.

But Veterans Affairs Minister Julian Fantino’s office, asked about the report, said this week the government will continue to support injured veterans as long as they require assistance.

“Our government makes no apologies for ensuring that veterans receive urgent rehabilita­tion care when they need it, and that they receive this support for as long as they and their medical practition­er deem appropriat­e,” Fantino’s spokeswoma­n, Ashlee Smith, said.

NDP veterans affairs critic Peter Stoffer was critical of the department’s emphasis on potential abuse. “In my experience, the vast majority of veterans don’t want to be sick. They would love to be working full time. I think they’re trying to shift the blame for the problems they have in their own program.”

Nearly 1,000 injured veterans

enrolled in the rehabilita­tion program when it was created in 2006, according to the report. Demand was expected to drop off over the following years, but more than 5,800 vets were enrolled in the rehab program in March 2013, and 9,100 are expected by 2018.

In a background briefing this week, a Veterans Affairs official attributed the growth to pent-up demand among veterans who had served after the Korean War. But the report also shows that veterans, once

they are in the program, aren’t leaving.

More than 2,800 of the 5,800 veterans in the program at the end of March 2013 had been participat­ing longer than originally expected, the report found. In fact, of the nearly 1,000 who originally joined in 2006, nearly one-third were still enrolled.

Reviewers who prepared the report acknowledg­ed some problems with the program. They found weaknesses in determinin­g veterans’ needs, including

delays in consultati­ons with health care profession­als. And only 28 per cent of veterans who sought help finding a job landed a career they wanted.

They also found the department had little informatio­n about how the program was functionin­g because it relied almost exclusivel­y on voluntary surveys filled out by participan­ts. This, they suggested, opened it up to abuse.

Meanwhile, only 22 per cent of the 5,800 injured vets in the program were taking advantage

of services to help them find a civilian job. Part of this was because about 32 per cent were receiving similar assistance from National Defence.

But a full 30 per cent were deemed unsuitable for such help or simply had no interest. The remaining 16 per cent were veterans determined to be too ill or injured to find gainful employment. That number has tripled since 2011, which reviewers noted coincided with a hike in cash benefits for injured ex-soldiers.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Veterans Affairs Minister Julian Fantino is expected to face criticism from former soldiers and Opposition politician­s over an internal report that found the military’s rehabilita­tion program had weaknesses in determinin­g veterans’ needs.
ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS Veterans Affairs Minister Julian Fantino is expected to face criticism from former soldiers and Opposition politician­s over an internal report that found the military’s rehabilita­tion program had weaknesses in determinin­g veterans’ needs.

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