Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Cancer Victim Won't Get Assist From Poilievre In Fight For Canada Pension Plan Disability

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Apr, 2015 02:06 PM
  • Cancer Victim Won't Get Assist From Poilievre In Fight For Canada Pension Plan Disability

OTTAWA — Employment Minister Pierre Poilievre will not intervene to ensure a terminally ill Alberta man denied Canada Pension Plan disability benefits finally gets his payments.

Peter McClure, 62, is suffering from lung and rectal cancer and has outlived his doctor's prognosis.

McClure says he was told by Service Canada 18 months ago that his condition wasn't severe or prolonged enough to qualify for CPP disability, and advised to apply for CPP retirement benefits instead, which pay significantly less.

The government's social security tribunal recently expedited McClure's CPP disability appeal, but ultimately told him its hands were tied because he was already receiving retirement benefits.

Provisions in CPP legislation give Poilievre, as minister, special authority to intervene if people have been denied benefits due to erroneous advice.

Weeks after first being asked the question — and requiring a waiver signed by McClure to speak about his case — Poilievre's office says that won't be happening.

In an email, Poilievre spokesman Aaron Block says that both the minister and the tribunal are "bound" by the legislation when determining whether a person meets CPP disability requirements.

MORE National ARTICLES

New Brunswick Forecasts $477m Deficit, Hikes Gas Taxes, Cuts Teaching Jobs

New Brunswick Forecasts $477m Deficit, Hikes Gas Taxes, Cuts Teaching Jobs
FREDERICTON — New Brunswick's Liberal government has introduced an $8.6-billion budget that increases taxes for the wealthy, bumps up the price of fuel, promises to close some courthouses and cut nearly 250 teaching jobs.

New Brunswick Forecasts $477m Deficit, Hikes Gas Taxes, Cuts Teaching Jobs

Bring All Branches Of Government Under Information Law, Watchdog Urges

Bring All Branches Of Government Under Information Law, Watchdog Urges
OTTAWA — A federal watchdog says the Access to Information Act should be extended to all branches of government — including the offices that support Parliament and the courts.

Bring All Branches Of Government Under Information Law, Watchdog Urges

Tender Call Finally Issued In Decade-long Plan To Replace Military Search Planes

Tender Call Finally Issued In Decade-long Plan To Replace Military Search Planes
OTTAWA — The Harper government has issued a long-awaited call for tenders to replace Canada's aging fixed-wing search planes, more than a decade after the project was first proposed.

Tender Call Finally Issued In Decade-long Plan To Replace Military Search Planes

Murder Trial To Start Sept. 8 For Man Charged In 2012 Quebec Election Shooting

Murder Trial To Start Sept. 8 For Man Charged In 2012 Quebec Election Shooting
MONTREAL — The trial for the man charged in Quebec's 2012 election-night shooting has been scheduled to start on his 65th birthday.

Murder Trial To Start Sept. 8 For Man Charged In 2012 Quebec Election Shooting

Canadian Investment In Renewable Energy Up 8 Per Cent In 2014, Sixth In World

Canadian Investment In Renewable Energy Up 8 Per Cent In 2014, Sixth In World
OTTAWA — A United Nations-sponsored report says Canada remained among the top 10 countries in the world for investment in renewable energy last year.

Canadian Investment In Renewable Energy Up 8 Per Cent In 2014, Sixth In World

Lack Of CFIA Meat Inspectors Is Putting People At Risk: Agriculture Union

Lack Of CFIA Meat Inspectors Is Putting People At Risk: Agriculture Union
EDMONTON — The union representing Canada's meat inspectors says there is a critical shortage of inspectors that is putting the safety of consumers at risk.

Lack Of CFIA Meat Inspectors Is Putting People At Risk: Agriculture Union