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Hello Army
A couple of weeks ago, the Government of Canada "perfected" its appeal against about 10,000 veterans of past wars. I refer to those mentally disabled, or "shell shocked" veterans, whose pensions were fraudulently administered over many long years. A class action, brought by family members, is winding its way back up to the Supreme Court of Canada. While many of these veterans have died, many are still living. Their mental disability prevents them from realizing that they were uniquely exploited as a veteran class, and from speaking on their own behalf. The Government, in the meantime, concedes that it is guilty of "fraud."
However, it does not wish to pay up. The judgment against it is currently at $4.8 billion dollars. The Government's argument has been that the rectification of this claim, despite the recommendation of the Auditor-General to do the right thing, would be a burden on the taxpayer. By continuing to fight with this group of veterans, however, the Government risks increasing the liability to the taxpayer to $7 billion dollars at minimum. The case has now reached the point that even if the Government were in the right, it would be cheaper to settle than continue. The class action itself is prepared to settle at somewhere near $1 billion dollars. The cost of moving forward, win or lose for the Government of Canada, is $1.5 billion dollars.
So what's the hold-up (apart from the robbery of the veterans)? The answer is that no one is looking or paying attention. But isn't the danger pay story in Afghanistan exactly similar? You get sent over on glory and pay; but when you are not serviceable, the attitude shifts. My dad, George Wallace Langen, went to World War II when he was 17. He was the sole survivor of an ambush in Fiumicino in Italy on September 28, 1994, and left for dead in a culvert, as recorded in the official history of the Canadian Army by G.W.L.Nicholson, where he was identified simply as "one wounded Canadian." Although badly wounded, he crawled to a barn where he spent the night with two German teenage soldiers. They shared a cigarette (no English), and then the "enemy" took him to an Allied medical station in the morning, turning themselves in and perhaps saving his life. Unfortunately, my dad ended up on the street in the early 70s, and then collapsed with dementia in 1974, remaining in hospital and without his faculties until his death in 1998. His pension was held in the Consolidated General Revenue account of the Canadian government, along with other mentally disabled veterans' pensions, where it was used to leverage loans for the Government of Canada and earned not a penny of interest for the veterans themselves.
When in opposition, Harper claimed that such treatment was inexcusable and that the honourable thing to do was to settle with this group of veterans. It appears that he has now changed his mind. That is wrong, in my view, not only for him but for all of us.
Remembrance Day is approaching. Is this a site that could make a difference, or would want to?
Roger Langen, Toronto
A couple of weeks ago, the Government of Canada "perfected" its appeal against about 10,000 veterans of past wars. I refer to those mentally disabled, or "shell shocked" veterans, whose pensions were fraudulently administered over many long years. A class action, brought by family members, is winding its way back up to the Supreme Court of Canada. While many of these veterans have died, many are still living. Their mental disability prevents them from realizing that they were uniquely exploited as a veteran class, and from speaking on their own behalf. The Government, in the meantime, concedes that it is guilty of "fraud."
However, it does not wish to pay up. The judgment against it is currently at $4.8 billion dollars. The Government's argument has been that the rectification of this claim, despite the recommendation of the Auditor-General to do the right thing, would be a burden on the taxpayer. By continuing to fight with this group of veterans, however, the Government risks increasing the liability to the taxpayer to $7 billion dollars at minimum. The case has now reached the point that even if the Government were in the right, it would be cheaper to settle than continue. The class action itself is prepared to settle at somewhere near $1 billion dollars. The cost of moving forward, win or lose for the Government of Canada, is $1.5 billion dollars.
So what's the hold-up (apart from the robbery of the veterans)? The answer is that no one is looking or paying attention. But isn't the danger pay story in Afghanistan exactly similar? You get sent over on glory and pay; but when you are not serviceable, the attitude shifts. My dad, George Wallace Langen, went to World War II when he was 17. He was the sole survivor of an ambush in Fiumicino in Italy on September 28, 1994, and left for dead in a culvert, as recorded in the official history of the Canadian Army by G.W.L.Nicholson, where he was identified simply as "one wounded Canadian." Although badly wounded, he crawled to a barn where he spent the night with two German teenage soldiers. They shared a cigarette (no English), and then the "enemy" took him to an Allied medical station in the morning, turning themselves in and perhaps saving his life. Unfortunately, my dad ended up on the street in the early 70s, and then collapsed with dementia in 1974, remaining in hospital and without his faculties until his death in 1998. His pension was held in the Consolidated General Revenue account of the Canadian government, along with other mentally disabled veterans' pensions, where it was used to leverage loans for the Government of Canada and earned not a penny of interest for the veterans themselves.
When in opposition, Harper claimed that such treatment was inexcusable and that the honourable thing to do was to settle with this group of veterans. It appears that he has now changed his mind. That is wrong, in my view, not only for him but for all of us.
Remembrance Day is approaching. Is this a site that could make a difference, or would want to?
Roger Langen, Toronto