Good morning to all.
I am grateful for the opportunity to speak to you about my work as National Defence and Canadian Armed Forces ombudsman. I propose to briefly review what my office has been doing lately, describe some major projects we are working on, and indicate the critical focus we are placing on problems faced by members of the military when they transition to civilian life. I will then of course be happy to answer any questions you may have.
My office was established as a neutral and objective mediator, investigator, and reporter on matters related to the Department of National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces. I also hold the role of special adviser to the minister.
Our investigations, reports, and educational pieces are not intended in any way to diminish this organization. Rather, as ombudsman I am here to provide independent, evidence-based recommendations intended to contribute to substantial and long-lasting improvements to the defence community. It is not part of my mandate to discuss theatres of operation, strategic defence policy, or military procurement.
Three weeks ago, during the Minister of Veterans Affairs' stakeholder summit, the deputy commander of military personnel command, Major General Eyre, stated that our country’s security is threatened by systemic personnel issues because they directly affect recruitment and retention. I have long held the position that outdated policies and procedures hinder the engagement of capable and committed personnel.
I am now halfway through my mandate as ombudsman and have had the privilege to meet members of the defence community across this country from coast to coast to coast. Wherever I go I find members of the defence community working hard and professionally to defend Canada. Since 2014, my reports to the Minister of National Defence, which have been publicly released, have included recommendations on a wide range of topics, including priority hiring in the public service, operational stress injuries, compensation options and periodic health assessments for reservists, and an investigation into the tragic events at Valcartier in 1974.
Many of the complaints we receive can be solved quite easily. Wearing the uniform, for example, should not require a member to suffer unreasonable financial loss on the sale of their home when they are posted. The home equity assistance program exists for this purpose, but it provides insufficient protection.
This is fixable. Members and their families should be properly protected from the impacts of huge variations in the cost of living when they are posted across this country. The post living differential program exists; however, it has been bounced between the Department of National Defence and Treasury Board since 2008. I ask why.
These problems are not beyond comprehension, nor are they too tough to crack. The military that landed on Juno Beach can surely figure out whether a loaf of bread costs the same in Shilo as it does in Esquimalt, Borden, or Bagotville. We cannot keep playing musical chairs on this issue. We must sit down and make a decision. Working together, we know what to fix and in most cases how to fix it.
In the coming months, I will submit reports to the Minister of National Defence on the care received by ill and injured cadets. I intend to shed light on the maze of administration facing parents and guardians of these young people should tragedy strike while they are in the care of the Canadian Armed Forces.
My office is also conducting a systematic review on Canadian rangers, whose vigilance and service is often little known in the southerly parts of this country. In this report, I will touch on chronic understaffing, equipment support, compensation challenges, and other personnel and logistical issues.
Finally, in the new year I plan to issue a report that flows from our study on boards of inquiry, which was published in 2015. Developed in collaboration with the Canadian Armed Forces, this update will address issues faced by grieving families during and after a board of inquiry. The report will include concrete recommendations aimed at ensuring that everyone involved is treated with respect.
Ladies and gentlemen, earlier this year the Minister of National Defence made a call for submissions from a variety of stakeholders to help inform the government’s defence policy review. My office prepared a comprehensive submission highlighting concerns related to our defence community personnel serving both at home and abroad. It is my sincere hope that this submission is being taken seriously at the right levels. Today I would like to highlight some of our findings.
Just over half of all contacts made to my office deal with the issues of transition from military to civilian life. Both medically and non-medically releasing members of the Canadian Armed Forces face a daunting administrative process at end of career. In order to provide a clear picture of this complexity, my office, working in partnership with the Office of the Veterans Ombudsman, mapped out the release process in September.
We published this educational piece to inform our constituents, the Canadian public, officials, and law-makers such as yourselves on the process that is often the root cause of many of the issues surrounding transition. I have provided copies to the committee.
In keeping with the mandate letter of the Minister of National Defence and the direction to work with the Minister of Veterans Affairs to reduce complexity and overhaul service delivery, my office has recently published two reports that speak to simplifying the release process for transitioning members.
In the first report, released to the public in early September, I recommended that the Canadian Armed Forces determine whether an illness or injury was caused or aggravated by that member's military service and that that determination be presumed by Veterans Affairs Canada to be sufficient evidence in support of an application for benefits.
In conducting their adjudication under the new Veterans Charter, Veterans Affairs Canada, as the administrator, considers mostly documentary evidence generated by the Canadian Armed Forces. The evidence consists largely of the member's medical records and possibly other career-related records. Given that the Canadian Armed Forces has control of the member's career and has responsibility for the member's medical health throughout that career, such a determination can and should be presumed to be evidence in support of an application for benefits.
The second report, also released in September, proposed a new service delivery model for releasing members. The report contained three straightforward, achievable recommendations.
First, the Canadian Armed Forces should retain all members until all sources and benefits have been put in place prior to release. Second, a single point of contact, a concierge service, if you will, should be established for all medically releasing members to assist in their transition. Third, the Canadian Armed Forces should develop an electronic tool that is capable of providing members with information so that they can best understand their potential benefit suite prior to release.
These three recommendations are founded in evidence and focused on members and their families. They are easy to understand and could be implemented rapidly if the will exists to do so.
My recommendation of having the Canadian Armed Forces determining service attribution in conjunction with a change to the service delivery model could cut wait times at Veterans Affairs Canada by 50% or more.
Ladies and gentlemen, I truly believe that these recommendations, if implemented, would be game changers.
Improving the transition process should be a real no-fail mission. I believe that many of the reports submitted by my office have served as a strong blueprint for change within the Canadian Armed Forces and will have positive downstream effects especially at Veterans Affairs Canada.
It was recently reported that there was a backlog of 11,500 applications at Veterans Affairs. This means many releasing members will experience moderate to extreme psychological and financial stress while awaiting adjudication of their files. Many will fall through the cracks. Many already have.
As former deputy veterans ombudsman, I have seen this backlog of applications at Veterans Affairs rise and fall, but never by more than a few thousand. These are not people issues. These are process issues. Fixing the service delivery model will mean real and positive change for the people who have served, sacrificed, and suffered on our behalf.
I want to conclude my remarks by highlighting a theme that runs through much of the work we do, the need for benefit parity for all those who wear the uniform. The concept of benefit parity is not new, but in my four years as deputy veterans ombudsman and two and a half years as the Canadian Armed Forces ombudsman, I am constantly reminded of the inequity. Whether it be regular or reserve force, Canadian rangers, junior Canadian rangers, cadets, or even veterans, benefit disparity continues.
My position has always been that a soldier is a soldier, an aviator is an aviator, and a sailor is a sailor. Once you put on the uniform, you are in service to Canada. If you get hurt while you are in uniform serving Canada, you should be treated equally.
I have promised still serving and former members across this country that I will strongly advocate for benefit parity. I have produced a number of reports that contain evidence-based recommendations on what needs to be fixed; we just need to do it.
I doubt there is not one of you who does not have a current or former Canadian Armed Forces member or a DND civilian living in your constituency. You play a vital role in their lives, as does my office, and I enjoy working with many of you on personnel issues, both individual and systemic. I believe that I have a duty to keep you up to date on my activities so you can feel confident to refer your constituents to my office should they feel they have nowhere else to turn.
Mr. Chair, distinguished members of the committee, I thank you and I stand ready for your questions.
:
Thank you for the question.
As you say, the transitioning piece is very difficult at times, especially when the end of a career is not your choice, and you have to leave because of a medical reason.
I think that because of the process we have in place, we aggravate that whole episode. If someone has had to leave the military and doesn't understand what the financial support is going to be or what the medical support looks like, then that adds an extra burden of stress. If I lay that over an operational stress injury, then I can see where I'm very quickly creating a formula where there could be problems. The fallout of that is that these things are usually felt on the home front long before even the ombudsman's office hears about them.
When members are releasing, I think that they need to have stability. They need to know what the future looks like, and they can go home and have those conversations with their families of what the new world order will be for them all. That's a major concern for me.
The Canadian Armed Forces has total responsibility for providing medical health care for a member. We know when, where, and how a soldier has become injured. If we know when, where, and how, that's adjudication. It's already been determined. I struggle a little with why we have to take a medical file that's been managed over the career of the member and then send that medical file to an outside organization, Veterans Affairs Canada, and have them adjudicate. That's my problem, and I've been pushing hard on this point.
I think we can really make the member understand what the future looks like if we do the adjudication. Before the release, if a member knows everything is in place, then I think that brings stability to the member and that helps ease transition. More importantly, it gives stability to the family, and I think that's a very important piece that we sometimes do not pay close attention to.