Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

No End In Sight For 'Spike Unit' Helping Social Security Tribunal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Jan, 2016 12:45 PM
    A special group assigned to help deal with a massive backlog of appeals around employment insurance and other social security benefits isn't winding down anytime soon.
     
    The so-called spike unit was set up in the fall of 2014 to triage the cases that began piling up after the Conservative government launched the Social Security Tribunal of Canada in April 2013.
     
    The tribunal was supposed to streamline the appeals process for Canadians who argued they had been wrongly denied employment insurance, Old Age Security and Canada Pension Plan payments. The Tories also argued the tribunal would save taxpayers $25 million a year.
     
    The 50-member spike unit — comprised of doctors, lawyers and medical adjudicators — has since gone through more than 11,000 tribunal appeals and come to settlements on almost 3,000 of them. Still, the new government has yet to wind down the unit.
     
    Employment and Social Development Canada said the team is still reviewing new cases to help the tribunal "maintain a manageable caseload."
     
    "There are no plans at this time for this work to discontinue," spokesman Josh Bueckert said in an email.
     
    Documents tabled in Parliament this week in response to a written question from NDP MP Cheryl Hardcastle say the government hasn't made a decision on "the end date of the unit."
     
    The response from Employment and Social Development Canada noted the unit didn't cost the department any extra dollars.
     
    But the department did provide a dollar figure in a July 2014 briefing note to then employment minister Jason Kenney: $600,000, found within existing budgets, to have the unit in place from September 2014 until March 2015.
     
    The NDP obtained a copy of the document under the Access to Information Act and provided it to The Canadian Press.
     
    Hardcastle, the party's disabilities critic, said Friday that she's heard from advocates and those who have gone through the system. She said that if the tribunal remains understaffed and overwhelmed, any resources directed to the spike unit should be invested in the tribunal itself.
     
    Until then, "it's vulnerable Canadians that pay the price," she said.
     
    "These are Canadians living without income. They can't wait any longer for the government to get its act together."
     
    Auditor General Michael Ferguson will release his audit Tuesday of how Canada Pension Plan Disability benefit applications are dealt with, as well as how the tribunal dealt with appeals.
     
    The disability pension payments make up almost 11 per cent of all payments under the Canada Pension Plan — amounting to an estimated $3.4 billion in payments during the 2014-15 fiscal year, based on calculations of publicly available figures from Employment and Social Development Canada, which oversees the social security system.
     
    The figures provided to Hardcastle show the tribunal handled almost 4,200 appeals last year from Canadians applying for CPP disability payments, with almost 5,600 cases in the queue.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CIBC Downgrades 2016 Outlook For Canadian Economy, Cites Global Investor Unease

    CIBC Downgrades 2016 Outlook For Canadian Economy, Cites Global Investor Unease
    CIBC World Markets is now estimating the country's gross domestic product will grow by only 1.3 per cent this year, after adjusting for inflation.

    CIBC Downgrades 2016 Outlook For Canadian Economy, Cites Global Investor Unease

    Deepan Budlakoti’s Appeal To Be Declared Canadian Citizen Dismissed By Supreme Court

    Deepan Budlakoti’s Appeal To Be Declared Canadian Citizen Dismissed By Supreme Court
    Deepan Budlakoti was born in Canada, holds an Ontario birth certificate and was issued a Canadian passport, but the government says he is not a citizen 

    Deepan Budlakoti’s Appeal To Be Declared Canadian Citizen Dismissed By Supreme Court

    Former UBC President Arvind Gupta Breaks His Silence Over Resignation

    Former UBC President Arvind Gupta Breaks His Silence Over Resignation
    Gupta calls the released UBC documents a "one-sided representation" of what happened in the months prior to his resignation.

    Former UBC President Arvind Gupta Breaks His Silence Over Resignation

    Cut Overdose Deaths Of Young People By Raising Awareness: B.C. Coroners' Panel

    Cut Overdose Deaths Of Young People By Raising Awareness: B.C. Coroners' Panel
    VICTORIA — A review by a British Columbia's coroners' panel says two issues stand in the way of stopping more young people from dying of overdoses.

    Cut Overdose Deaths Of Young People By Raising Awareness: B.C. Coroners' Panel

    Would-Be Firefighters Flood B.C. Wildfire Service With Applications

    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — There is no shortage of candidates to fill the estimated 200 vacant positions expected this summer with the B.C. Wildfire Service.

    Would-Be Firefighters Flood B.C. Wildfire Service With Applications

    B.C. LNG Minister Says 'we're Not Afraid' Of Federal Environmental Tests

    British Columbia's minister in charge of liquefied natural gas is heading to Ottawa for talks on how the federal government's promised changes to environmental reviews will impact the province's plans for a multibillion dollar LNG industry.

    B.C. LNG Minister Says 'we're Not Afraid' Of Federal Environmental Tests