Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feds Promise $165 Million In Compensation After Shortchanging 270,000 Veterans

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Nov, 2018 01:53 PM
    OTTAWA — The federal government says it shortchanged hundreds of thousands of veterans and their survivors over seven years, and is preparing to compensate them a total of $165 million.
     
     
    Veterans Affairs Minister Seamus O'Regan says his department miscalculated adjustments to the disability pensions of 270,000 veterans between 2003 and 2010 because it didn't properly account for a change in personal tax exemptions.
     
     
    O'Regan says the problem was spotted by Veterans Ombudsman Guy Parent.
     
     
    Most of the affected veterans will receive a few hundred dollars in retroactive payments, though some will receive thousands of dollars. O'Regan says given the number of veterans affected, some will have to wait until 2020 to get their money.
     
     
    News of the error and compensation comes as Canadians across the country are preparing to mark Remembrance Day this Sunday, coinciding with the 100th anniversary of the end of the First World War.
     
     
    It also comes amid anger and frustration within Canada's veteran community over their treatment by the Trudeau Liberals and Veterans Affairs Canada, including long wait times for service and the government's refusal to bring back a previous form of disability pension.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Father Who Forgot Baby In Car Will Not Be Charged In Death: Crown

    Father Who Forgot Baby In Car Will Not Be Charged In Death: Crown
    MONTREAL — Crown officials will not be laying charges against a man whose baby died after he forgot the six-month-old boy in his car last June.

    Father Who Forgot Baby In Car Will Not Be Charged In Death: Crown

    August Heat Wave: Calgary Could Break All-Time High Temperature On Friday

    August Heat Wave: Calgary Could Break All-Time High Temperature On Friday
     Weather Network’s All-Time High For Calgary Is 36.1 C, Which Was Set In 1919 And Matched Again In 1933.

    August Heat Wave: Calgary Could Break All-Time High Temperature On Friday

    Calgary Police Investigating Death Of Foreign National After Altercation On Plane

    Calgary Police Investigating Death Of Foreign National After Altercation On Plane
    Calgary police say they are in the early stages of their investigation into the death of a man who being deported to Amsterdam from Canada.  

    Calgary Police Investigating Death Of Foreign National After Altercation On Plane

    Crews Battling Wildfire North Of Horseshoe Bay

    Crews Battling Wildfire North Of Horseshoe Bay
    It was another hectic night across British Columbia as several significant wildfires created new challenges for firefighters.

    Crews Battling Wildfire North Of Horseshoe Bay

    New Zealand Woman Dies As Group Jumps From Bridge In Sicamous, B.C.

    New Zealand Woman Dies As Group Jumps From Bridge In Sicamous, B.C.
    A 23-year-old New Zealand woman has died after she and three friends jumped from a bridge in Sicamous, B.C.

    New Zealand Woman Dies As Group Jumps From Bridge In Sicamous, B.C.

    Scientists Concerned About Endangered Orca Still Pushing Body Of Her Calf

    Scientists Concerned About Endangered Orca Still Pushing Body Of Her Calf
    An endangered orca is not letting go of her newborn calf, whose body she has been pushing through the water for more than two weeks.

    Scientists Concerned About Endangered Orca Still Pushing Body Of Her Calf