Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadians Seeking Benefits Face Long Wait as Social Security Tribunal Struggle With Massive Backlog

Lee-Anne Goodman The Canadian Press, 15 Aug, 2014 02:46 PM
    OTTAWA - Ailing, disabled and unemployed Canadians seeking benefits face increasingly long waits to have their appeals heard, even as full-time positions on the government's woefully backlogged Social Security Tribunal remain unfilled.
     
    Documents obtained via the Access to Information Act suggest there won't be any new hirings on the tribunal until March, despite a backlog of thousands of cases and the Conservative government's assurances earlier this year that the jobs would soon be filled.
     
    The government, meantime, says only two of the 12 vacancies that were still open as of July 18 remain to be filled. New employees were hired this summer, said a spokesman for Employment Minister Jason Kenney.
     
    The Social Security Tribunal was created in 2013 with the aim of providing a more efficient and streamlined appeal process for employment insurance, Canada Pension Plan and old age security decisions.
     
    It replaced a board of more than 1,000 part-time referees who heard appeals. The government said the new tribunal would save Canadian taxpayers $25 million a year.
     
    The tribunal, which has fewer than 70 full-time members, took over more than 7,000 appeals of income-security cases from the old board, most of them involving Canadians who were denied CPP disability benefits.
     
    As many as 6,000 still haven't been heard, the documents show — and there are generally about 3,000 new appeals every year. Among the documents is a memorandum from the head of the tribunal, Mureille Brazeau, alerting Kenney that the tribunal is struggling to manage the caseload.
     
    Under federal regulations, the tribunal must make a decision on the cases or schedule an appeal after 365 days.
     
    "Given the magnitude of the backlog, the tribunal will not be able to assign all those cases without delay," she said of cases reaching the 365-day mark.
     
    Nick Koolsbergen, a spokesman for Kenney, said the tribunal is "implementing a plan to deal with these cases in a timely way." The tribunal did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
     
    Jinny Sims, the NDP's employment critic, was harshly critical of the government.
     
    "They took a system that needed improvement and they've broken it," she said in an interview Friday. "And it's the most vulnerable in society who are impacted."
     
    Sims had harsh words for Kenney, saying not only is he neglecting to authorize the hiring of part-time employees to deal with the backlog, but he won't even fill all the allocated full-time positions.
     
    Sims suggests the government is consumed with pinching pennies at the expense of downtrodden Canadians.
     
    Allison Schmidt, a Regina-based disability claims advocate and consultant, decried the swelling backlog of cases and lengthening wait times, saying the delays have resulted in financial ruin, poverty, emotional distress and a lack of access to medication and treatment for many of her clients.
     
    "If this system existed in the private sector it would be out of business and held accountable," she said. "They're doing this on the backs of the most vulnerable people; that's what's so disgraceful about it."
     
    Rather than creating a more efficient system, appeals are now being heard at a far slower pace, she added.
     
    "I've been doing this work for 16 years, and since the implementation of the tribunal on April 1, 2013, I think I've had maybe six appeals," Schmidt said. "Prior to that, it was 50 a year."
     
    Schmidt passed along an email she recently received from a longtime IT worker for a municipal government in western Canada who was diagnosed with a brain tumour a year ago.
     
    Despite paying into CPP for 25 years, he was denied CPP disability benefits in June and is awaiting his appeal.
     
    "Basically, I have become a loser with no pride, extreme fear/anxiety and no hope," he wrote.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Gurmej Singh Gill of Babbar Khalsa to be deported from Canada

    Gurmej Singh Gill of Babbar Khalsa to be deported from Canada
    Gurmej Singh Gill, who had held permanent residency of Canada in the early 1980s, arrived in Vancouver to visit relatives in late November and was to return to his home in the British city of Birmingham Dec 22

    Gurmej Singh Gill of Babbar Khalsa to be deported from Canada

    60-year-old BC woman charged with murder of 61-year-old Burnaby resident

    60-year-old BC woman charged with murder of 61-year-old Burnaby resident
    A second degree murder charge has been laid against a 60-year-old BC woman for murdering a 61-year-old Christina Docherty.

    60-year-old BC woman charged with murder of 61-year-old Burnaby resident

    Transit cops open fire at man in vehicle near SkyTrain station

    Transit cops open fire at man in vehicle near SkyTrain station
    Surrey RCMP is investigating a case where a man fled from scene in his car after Transit cops fired at him near Gateway SkyTrain station Sunday.

    Transit cops open fire at man in vehicle near SkyTrain station

    Surrey Mayor Dianne Watts will not run for fourth term

    Surrey Mayor Dianne Watts will not run for fourth term
    Surrey Mayor Dianne Watts will not be seeking re-election for a fourth term this fall. The announcement was made by Watts Saturday afternoon at the grand opening celebration for the new city hall complex in North Surrey.

    Surrey Mayor Dianne Watts will not run for fourth term

    Election Special: In Punjab, AAP makes inroads in hinterland

    Election Special: In Punjab, AAP makes inroads in hinterland
    Till a month back, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) was not much of a political entity in Punjab. But that is no longer the story. Thanks to some of its candidates, the party is covering ground -- even in Punjab's rural areas.

    Election Special: In Punjab, AAP makes inroads in hinterland

    Four Paris police officials accused of raping Canadian woman

    Four Paris police officials accused of raping Canadian woman
    Four French officials have been detained for allegedly raping a Toronto woman at their Paris headquarters. 

    Four Paris police officials accused of raping Canadian woman