Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feds Falling Short On Promise To Provide Better Case Management To Vets

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Apr, 2019 08:06 PM

    OTTAWA — The federal government is blaming a surprise increase in the number of veterans seeking assistance for its failure to make good on a key Liberal promise of ensuring enough case managers to help those in need.


    While case managers help the most severely disabled veterans navigate the myriad applications and red tape needed to get services and benefits after they have left the military, there have long been complaints about large caseloads.


    The Liberals promised to reduce the ratio of veterans to assigned to each case manager from a high of 40-1 under Stephen Harper's Conservatives to 25-1 by hiring more staff.


    Yet while newly released figures show a doubling in the number of Veterans Affairs case managers since 2015, the ratio has been stuck at around 32-1 for the past couple of years.


    The government says adding more staff won't be enough to keep up with demand.


    So it's starting to direct more veterans to online services and giving their files to other employees to monitor.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Fresh Flour Mills Cater To Consumers Seeking Whole, Traceable Baking Ingredients

    In a small warehouse near the southern edge of Vancouver, a man scoops freshly milled flour into brown paper bags stamped "Flourist" that will soon ship out to customers hungry for fresh, additive-free baked goods.

    Fresh Flour Mills Cater To Consumers Seeking Whole, Traceable Baking Ingredients

    B.C. Overdose Prevention Sites Should Be Template For Others: Report

    B.C. Overdose Prevention Sites Should Be Template For Others: Report
     It was a day Heather Hobbs recalls vividly: the staff at AIDS Vancouver Island had pulled another overdose victim from the washroom, his body was blue from a lack of oxygen.

    B.C. Overdose Prevention Sites Should Be Template For Others: Report

    Trudeau Walks In Vaisakhi Parade After Government Removes Reference To Sikh Extremism

    VANCOUVER — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau touted the strength and contributions of Canada's Sikh community as he celebrated the religion's holy day of Vaisakhi in Vancouver.

    Trudeau Walks In Vaisakhi Parade After Government Removes Reference To Sikh Extremism

    Former Foster Child Remembers B.C. Shooting Victim As Loving And Supportive

    In a statement to The Canadian Press, the former foster child says he lived with Parmenter and his wife Peggy from 2012 or 2013 until he aged out of the system in 2017.

    Former Foster Child Remembers B.C. Shooting Victim As Loving And Supportive

    One Dead, One Hospitalized, Man In Custody After Shooting In B.C. Church

    VANCOUVER — A 25-year-old man is in custody following a shooting at a church in Salmon Arm, B.C., that left one person dead and sent another in hospital Sunday morning.

    One Dead, One Hospitalized, Man In Custody After Shooting In B.C. Church

    Surrey RCMP Send Voter Fraud Probe Results To B.C. Prosecutors For Consideration

    Surrey was one of several municipalities in Metro Vancouver where voter fraud allegations were reported during local election campaigns last fall.

    Surrey RCMP Send Voter Fraud Probe Results To B.C. Prosecutors For Consideration