Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feds commit $140M to keep temporary veterans staff

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Feb, 2022 03:39 PM
  • Feds commit $140M to keep temporary veterans staff

OTTAWA - Veterans Affairs Minister Lawrence MacAulay says the federal government will spend nearly $140 million over the next two years to retain temporary staff hired to deal with a backlog of disability claims from injured ex-soldiers.

Today’s funding announcement comes after The Canadian Press reported earlier this month that the government was poised to lose hundreds of temporary staff next month.

That was despite Veterans Affairs Canada still having nearly 34,000 unprocessed applications for disability benefits on its desk, a number officials warned would grow by the thousands if more temporary staff weren’t retained.

MacAulay at that time said any new funding would have to wait until the next federal budget, meaning a delay of weeks if not months.

In response to the Canadian Press report, Royal Canadian Legion dominion president Bruce Julian last week sent a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau asking that the temporary staff be kept on contract until the backlog is eliminated.

The backlog has emerged as one of the main sources of frustration, anger and hardship for Canada's veterans' community, with those ill and injured forced to wait months — and often years — for access to financial or medical support for their injuries.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Erin O'Toole loses leadership review vote

Erin O'Toole loses leadership review vote
Erin O'Toole has lost a vote to remain leader of the Conservative Party of Canada.  The party's members of Parliament met virtually today to cast secret ballots after about one-third of them signed a notice that triggered a leadership review.

Erin O'Toole loses leadership review vote

Canada's groundhogs disagree on weather forecast

Canada's groundhogs disagree on weather forecast
Nova Scotia's celebrity groundhog, Shubenacadie Sam, and Quebec's Fred la Marmotte both predicted a long, cold winter ahead, while Ontario's Wiarton Willie claimed an early spring is on the way.

Canada's groundhogs disagree on weather forecast

Hundreds using special code to avoid no-fly snags

Hundreds using special code to avoid no-fly snags
A dozen of these travellers have been cleared to board an aircraft as a direct result of having the personal code since the program began in November 2020, says Public Safety Canada.

Hundreds using special code to avoid no-fly snags

CMA urges Canada to speed vaccine access globally

CMA urges Canada to speed vaccine access globally
Raising the international vaccination rate in less prosperous countries is the only way to prevent the emergence of new COVID-19 variants that are prolonging the pandemic through an endless cycle of lockdowns and serious illness, said Dr. Katharine Smart, the president of the leading association of Canadian medical professionals.

CMA urges Canada to speed vaccine access globally

Jan. home sales slow, supply low: Vancouver board

Jan. home sales slow, supply low: Vancouver board
The B.C. board says home sales totalled 2,285 las month, an almost five per cent decrease from 2,389 in January 2021 and a 15 per cent fall from 2,688 in December 2021.

Jan. home sales slow, supply low: Vancouver board

Omicron cases peak but path ahead uncertain

Omicron cases peak but path ahead uncertain
The Omicron wave appears to be cresting across the country, but it's difficult to predict what's next for the pandemic, experts say. Prof. Bernard Crespi, an evolutionary biologist at Simon Fraser University, said the development of the Omicron variant of COVID-19 gives clues as to what might come.

Omicron cases peak but path ahead uncertain