On behalf of Comrade Jack Frost, the Legion’s dominion president, who unfortunately cannot be here today, it is my pleasure to appear again at your committee. We value the work that you do on behalf of veterans and your dedication to the cause.
The subject at hand is the ongoing veterans health services review, or health benefits review, which has also been called the veterans health care review. You have already heard from officials from Veterans Affairs Canada and from members of the Gerontological Advisory Council.
[Translation]
On behalf of Comrade Jack Frost, the Legion’s Dominion President, who unfortunately cannot be here today, it is my pleasure to appear again at your committee.
I would like to congratulate you on the work you are doing on behalf of veterans.
The subject at hand today is the ongoing Veterans Health Services Review, which has also been called the Veterans Health Care Review. You have already heard from officials from Veterans Affairs Canada and from members of the Gerontological Advisory Council.
[English]
I am here today as both a member of the GAC--Gerontological Advisory Council--and also as the director of the service bureau of a major veterans organization, the Royal Canadian Legion, which represents both traditional and modern-day veterans. Even though the mandate of the GAC is focused on traditional veterans, we also in the GAC, as we do in the Legion, recognize that a veteran is a veteran is a veteran.
Recognizing that VAC has a long history of modifying programs and services to better respond to the evolving needs of veterans, Keeping the Promise recommends that VAC combine its three existing health and social programs to create veterans integrated services. You should keep in mind that there are actually two Keeping the Promise reports. One was submitted by the GAC--Gerontological Advisory Council--and it deals with health benefits. There was another Keeping the Promise report, actually submitted by the Senate Subcommittee on Veterans Affairs, which was also labelled Keeping the Promise, and it dealt with long-term care issues. Keep that in mind.
[Translation]
Recognizing that VAC has a long history of modifying programs and services to better respond to the evolving needs of Veterans, “Keeping the Promise” recommends that Veterans Affairs Canada combine its three existing health and social programs to create the Veterans Integrated Services.
[English]
Veterans integrated services, or VIS, should focus on needs rather than complex eligibility criteria. It should promote early intervention, health promotion, more intensive home support, and a wider range of residential choices, all accessible through a single entry point.
What is the driving force behind VIS? The reality is that current programs and services have strengths but also weaknesses.
Another very important factor in favour of change is the sad reality that traditional veterans are dying at a rate of 2,000 a month. In fact, 12,000 veterans have died since Keeping the Promise was issued in November of 2006; 16,000 died between the time it was identified that the GAC should formulate its recommendation for change and Keeping the Promise was published. Approximately 70 veterans will die today, as we speak.
When we talk about strengths and weaknesses, it should be clear that VAC's health programs have been far-sighted in helping older veterans and their caregivers while adapting to their changing needs. The weaknesses can be found in the complex eligibility criteria, the reactiveness of the programs, and the limited choices of housing options. From a service provider's perspective, our experience through the Legion's service bureau has revealed very practical inconsistencies.
For example, to meet eligibility criteria, why should a veteran apply for a hearing loss pension at age 85—and I would suggest a frail veteran at age 85—to establish eligibility when all this veteran seeks is to stay in his house with the benefits provided through the veterans independence program?
[Translation]
For example, to meet eligibility criteria, why should a Veteran apply for a Hearing Loss pension at age 85 to establish eligibility when all that this aged veteran seeks is to stay in his house with the benefits provided through the Veterans Independence Program, the VIP?
[English]
Does it make sense for VAC to provide all 14 programs of choice--and programs of choice are a separate health benefit, which I can address if you ask--because he has achieved a certain level of disability, while he truly does not need all these 14 programs of choice? Does it make sense to provide eligibility for long-term care to a specific class of veterans but only in the facility with the highest costs?
I've included in your package a table that basically gives you a good overview of a complex eligibility criteria for only one of the three health care programs, that is, long- term care. You've heard about these complex eligibility criteria. This table sort of gives it visibility, gives an image of how complex it is. I stress that this is only for long-term care, even though in this table there are some VIP benefits that are associated with long-term care. To navigate this table, there is eligibility type, 18 different categories, and then there is long-term care, whether it be in a contract bed, in a community facility for chronic care, or in a community facility for intermediate care, which then may give you access to VIP. If you look at page 5, there are all the various codes. “E” stands for eligibility, and the numerical code represents a gateway, if you wish, that is deemed to give eligibility for these benefits.
As you can see, this is a very complex scenario and is difficult to understand, even by expert staff.
One look at the above table will help you to understand the complexity of these eligibility criteria, and the same can be said for the other two elements of the health services, namely, treatment benefits, which shows those 14 programs of choice, and VIP as a stand-alone program. Some of these gateways have been based on low income, others on level of disability, pension or type of service.
Keeping the Promise promotes not only an integrated approach based on need; it also suggests that healthy aging must be promoted at the earliest opportunity. This philosophy of promoting improved health outcomes is part and parcel of the proposed VIS. To implement VIS, VAC will have to put in place a structured client screening process that identifies client needs from first contact, progressing to a more integrated approach centred on a high-needs care manager. The structure would deliver coordinated services while providing more options, such as intensive home support and a greater range of residential choices for veterans.
The Royal Canadian Legion has been promoting such a model of service delivery, even before the GAC published Keeping the Promise. At our 2006 convention in Calgary, we adopted the resolution which reads in part:
Because of the complexity associated with various entry gates, veterans are often wary to even ask for benefits, let alone understand their eligibility requirements; VAC should undertake a comprehensive rationalization of health care benefits.
[Translation]
The Royal Canadian Legion has been promoting such a model of service delivery even before the GAC published “Keeping the Promise”. At our 2006 Convention in Calgary, we adopted a Resolution which reads, in part:
Because of the complexity associated with various entry gates, veterans are often wary to even ask for benefits, let alone understand their eligibility requirements; VAC should undertake a comprehensive rationalization of health care benefits.
[English]
The time to act is now. VIS makes sense, not only for traditional veterans but also for modern-day veterans. These integrated benefits must be available to families as well as to veterans, and VIS must include an outreach program to inform veterans and their families and to encourage them to participate.
[Translation]
The time has come to act. Integrated Services make sense not only for traditional Veterans but also for modern day Veterans. These integrated benefits must be available to families as well as Veterans. VIS must include an Outreach program to inform Veterans and their families, and to encourage them to participate.
[English]
This completes my presentation, and I would certainly be very happy to answer any questions.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you, Mr. Allard. I'll try to scratch through this; I'm losing my voice.
You mentioned the value of the work of this committee. Thank you for that compliment, but it's the value of the work the Legion has been doing in the community and in the ridings for many years that I'd like to talk about first.
I come from northern Ontario, where there's a Legion branch in every small town. They've been looking after people. We know there are some criticisms of any organization, but in the work that's carried on in small towns—and I'll use my home town, Dryden, as an example—the Legion has been a focal point forever. It's not only veterans who go there for assistance. It's generally the largest organization. It's the organization that helps everyone with everything from getting married to simply helping with social issues.
I'm tremendously proud of the Legion and the work they do and the work they've done for decades and decades for veterans. I wanted to put that on the record. I've said it before and I'll continue to say it: the legions are the backbone of the small town.
Too often any government, and I won't mention anyone in particular, will forget the small town in rural Canada, and we can't do that. So thank you for your valued efforts on behalf of the Legion.
I've talked before about how the legions are struggling. I know you're here to talk about the health care review, but I think it'll be a loss to any veteran, whether modern-day or a traditional veteran, if we lose the legions in the small towns or if we lose the legions across Canada.
Do you have any comment on any kind of support from any government on supporting the Legion as they support our veterans. If the Legion is not in Dryden, the veterans who are left there, either modern-day or not, will not have the access they have right now.
:
You're correct. It's not necessarily on the agenda, but I will address it. Thank you for your comments.
First of all, we have prided ourselves over the years that we have never received any support from the government. We are apolitical and we would like to maintain that status. We are not looking for government handouts in any way, shape, or form other than when we try at the local level to get a tax exemption from the municipality, or approaches of that nature.
We had our headquarters down on Kent Street for 50 years. We have built our new headquarters in Kanata. If you, as a committee, ever get a chance, we would certainly like to welcome you there to tell you what we do. I don't think there's enough information out in the public about what the Legion is about. You may want to take that into consideration.
Having said that, a number of non-government organizations certainly struggle to survive and maintain their membership. We will continue to survive as an organization. We will continue to maintain our mandate. We will seek new ways of looking at the way we govern ourselves. We will look at our governance model. We are in the process of doing that right now. We have initiated a unity initiative, if you will, to bring some of the other veterans under our umbrella.
We're currently participating in the new Veterans Charter advisory group. To make sure we are linked with the Canadian Forces veteran of today, we have brought in to that group a still serving military member who has seen service in Afghanistan. We want to establish links and routes to the Canadian Forces.
We have established new programs to meet the needs of the Canadian Forces. We are very present at the Canadian Forces show tours where we send elected officials. We sponsor the major show tours and go into Afghanistan. We're now promoting buying a coffee and donut from the Legion for the troops that are deployed in Afghanistan. That's a program we've just initiated.
We are reaching out to the Canadian Forces member, realizing that he may not join us today, but he will more than likely join us in the future if he sees what our organization has brought forward. In that context we also think our advocacy efforts on behalf of Canadian Forces members, veterans, and families will eventually garner us some support.
I'd like to point out, even to the department, that even though they organized the second national symposium on operational stress injury in Montreal, this was really the third national symposium on operational stress because the Legion organized our symposium in 1998. It was in Charlottetown. We brought together some of the same experts who were in Montreal this year, or in Montreal four years ago. They discussed operational stress, and they ensured that eventually operational stress injury would be recognized as an entitled disability by Veterans Affairs Canada.
We are confident that our advocacy work on behalf of Canadian Forces veterans will garner us some support in the future. With those other initiatives we will survive. We will survive as an independent organization, and we will not seek government support other than the local initiatives I indicated.
For the small branches that are struggling we actually have a consultant for housing projects but also to look after real estate. Sometimes local branches are sitting on valuable land, valuable resources. Through the auspices of Veterans Affairs Canada we have a consultant who basically--I won't call it a secondment--through a partnership agreement has been in Charlottetown since 2000 and provides advice to our local branches to be able to survive and use the assets they have and go on into the future. This is where we stand.
We know we're being attacked. We were attacked in The Hill Times yesterday. I brought you a copy of our rebuttal if you want to see it. We're hopeful that this will be published in The Hill Times next week.
You don't need to rebut it to me, but I know there are individuals who have problems with any organization.
Clearly, I must look as bad as I feel because everybody is trying to help me today.
You mentioned some of those numbers that are shocking on the amount of veterans who have passed away and continue to pass away since this program has been announced. I'm going to call it the GAC because I can hardly say Gerontological Advisory Council any longer. They're shocking numbers, and we have to move quickly. That's what we're trying to do here in this committee. We will bring it up and embarrass the government. It's been so many months, and we know it takes time to do it, but we've got to get it done.
I want to go back to one comment you made because it takes it right back to the street level. The people who are listening to this might think, a coffee and a donut, what is that? A coffee and a donut is about involving somebody at the local level, telling somebody you care, and that's what's important to us.
I want to ask you a question. I know it's going to be covered more at length later on....
I guess I'll thank the chairman. Thank you, sir.
:
Mr. Allard, if I may call you Pierre, as you call me Gilles in private. If I get mixed up and call you Pierre during the discussion, rest assured that there is no ill intent on my part.
I have read your presentation this morning carefully. There are a few paragraphs that shock me. That may be because I am sensitive. The first is on page 2. There were other ways this could have been said, without saying that 70 veterans will die today. That seems to me to be using those people's misfortune to strengthen one's own position. I do not like it, and that is not because it comes from you. I would not like it if any organization made that kind of comment.
The other thing, Mr. Allard, that you are surely aware of, is that I am still very uncomfortable with the demands you are making, even if there is good reason for them. I am thinking about seniors who were not in the war, but who made a huge contribution, if not as great a contribution as veterans, to developing this country, and who unfortunately do not have a third, or a tenth, or 20% of what you have. I say this so that it will be on the record: it affects me directly when I walk around my riding and I see seniors wearing the same sweater for 10 or 15 years because they cannot afford to buy a new one, or when I see seniors who have to choose between buying prescription drugs or a baloney sandwich. It upsets me.
Those are the only comments I can make this morning. There is nothing else I can tell you. I would like to know what you think of this.
I am finished speaking, Mr. Chair.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman, and I want to thank the clerk as well for bringing in the chocolate milk today; that was a very kind thing.
Mr. Allard, thank you very much for your presentation. Thanks to everyone at the Royal Canadian Legion for the continuous work they do, not just in assisting our veterans but also in advising young people on what happened during the various wars and conflicts. You continuously educate our young people on the sacrifices and services of our military, not only in the past but currently as well. Thank you very much for that.
Sir, I always like things to be fairly simplified. I've always thought--and I'd like your response to this--that if a military person served, and now they're out of uniform and they require services, shouldn't the only criterion be whether you served? Then, if you did, what do you need? It's not necessarily what you want, but what you need after a careful assessment.
It gets so complicated. I have 22 veterans in the Dartmouth riding who have all been denied hearing aid assistance because they didn't have a hearing test when they left World War II or Korea. As you know, what happened was they worked on the naval ships and on the battlefields; they came home and, typical of most young people of those ages, they went back to work, went back to their communities, and thought nothing of it.
Now they're getting older. Their hearing is impaired. The audiologist says very clearly that there is a direct link from wartime service to now, but because they didn't have an actual test, DVA has denied them any assistance in that regard.
In VIP programs, if a person didn't get a pension, they're not covered. It's also if they make too much money; one veteran I know, who is 95, was accused of being too healthy and wealthy. All he's asking for is a little assistance around the yard--denied.
I know I'm being simple when I say this, because I've been accused of that before, but shouldn't the only criterion be whether you served--and if you did, what do you or your family need?
We get funding from two sources. We get funding from our members through dues. We also get funding from the poppy fund. We have strict regulations on how we can use poppy fund moneys. We cannot use them to sustain branches. That's why, thanks to Veterans Affairs Canada, we have a consultant who can assist local branches make use of the real estate they own, which sometimes can be very valuable and can help them survive.
Do we see ourselves as a service club? If we were only a service club, then we would not provide free representation to any veteran, whether they were a member of a legion or not, or to RCMP members, or to their families in this very complex disability pension process.
I just presented one small window on the eligibility criteria for one program. The same exists for all of their programs, whether or not one is getting benefits under the Pension Act or under the new Veterans Charter. It's a very complex environment. Our professional service officers are trained. They have the tools. They have access to the client service delivery network, which is a VAC database.
If we were just a service group, we would not be doing that. We would not be promoting certain support to the Canadian Forces the way we do. We would not have a defence committee that would argue and basically advocate for a strong Canadian Forces in our country. This is not what a service group does.
Thank you, Monsieur Allard, for being here again to help us.
I'd like to focus in particular on page 6, where you mention the gateway. It seems to me that there are three essential stages for a veteran's application for a service. There's entry, getting in; there's a processing period; and then there's a conclusion, what the result was. There are three simple stages, although no doubt there are many complexities within each of those.
Again, I want to focus on the entry or the gateway. You suggest that right now the gateway requirements could be based on income, the level of disability, or the type of service needed. To summarize, there are different criteria to go through this gateway.
Could you speak a little about simplifying the entry? Rather than requiring a veteran to jump all these hurdles simply to get his grass cut, whereas another veteran requires a more complex set of responses, could you speak about making that gateway less intimidating, especially for the veteran who is already sick or maybe has literacy or language issues? I'd appreciate that.
:
Just a point of correction. Those are not my gateways; those are the current gateways as they exist.
Keeping the Promise is saying you need to shrink those gateways to basically identifying needs. There are some people who have high needs. In another committee it was identified that of the large population of Canadian seniors, there are approximately 12% who have high needs.
Currently, looking at our veterans, it's very difficult to look at the numbers, because there are no precise numbers at Veterans Affairs Canada. But in looking at the numbers, it appears that approximately 14% of clients, if you want to call them that, have been identified as having high needs.
So there are a couple of things that need to be done. I think we need to convince, first of all, Statistics Canada that when they do their census, le recensement à tous les cinq ans, that they must somehow try to identify the target population of veterans across this country. We have to have a firmer handle on the numbers. Keeping in mind the statistics I've just given you, when we anticipate that there might be a slightly higher need--higher statistics of people with a higher need--in our veterans than in our normal Canadian population, then you have to find a way to screen them when they come to get services. There has to be a very quick screening process that would take place at what is currently the National Contact Centre Network, which is really a call centre for Veterans Affairs Canada. There is a simple test, and there is a test in Quebec called PRISMA, which basically asks about seven questions. If somebody answers yea or nay or whatever to those seven basic questions, it could be identified that he's one of those high-needs persons. If he's a high-needs person, then he needs a designated care manager to provide the care package that he needs made up of these various programs that are here under these complex eligibility criteria.
Then that care manager becomes a resource person for that high-needs client. This is basically what Keeping the Promise is recommending. Associated with that, when you go through the PRISMA-like screening, it could be that what you want to recommend to the client who's calling in is to engage in a vigorous health promotion package, which will delay his coming into the gateway as a high-needs person. So in simple terms, this is what we're recommending.
This approach, by the way, would look after the frail veteran of today who, with all due respect to Monsieur Perron, is dying at a high rate. This is what is said in Keeping the Promise, and I won't apologize for that. That frail veteran should be hitting this gateway of high needs not based on a stupid entitlement for hearing loss at 85 years old when all he wants is VIP. This high-needs gateway would look after the Joyce Carters of the world who are asking for VIP, which would actually save money for the Canadian taxpayer. That's what we're saying, too vigorously, I'm sorry, but....
A voice: No, no. It's right on.
:
The challenge I think is in communicating our message, and that's very difficult. People are ready or not ready to receive a message. That's why we've come to realize it's very unlikely that we will touch the still-serving member and bring him into our organization, though we do that, sometimes with great success. We're hoping to capture the Canadian Forces still-serving member when he retires. But we have to pass on the message that what goes on at the Legion is more than what happens at the branch or at the provincial command; it's what happens at all levels of the Legion.
To be seen as professional service delivery experts is a challenge. Service delivery from the perspective of Veterans Affairs Canada has changed over time. For example, they had pension officers who were very visible, sometimes even in Legion branches. They were there, available, talking about benefits, services, etc. We had certain areas where we were the expert and nobody else was playing--for example, departmental reviews. Well, all of a sudden the bureau of pension advocates started doing departmental reviews. Because we have a good relationship with them, we sort of said, well, okay, we'll go along with that. But that's really not in their mandate.
We now have a program that is delivered to Canadian Forces members in a transition interview where we are not present. The transition interview takes place on the base. It is a process that is entirely in the hands of Veterans Affairs Canada or a Canadian Forces case manager, and we're sort of on the outside.
So we have a greater challenge to make it known that we have services to offer. We're allowed a very small window at SCAN seminars, which are a career transition training session of two days for Canadian Forces members. We're more or less allowed 10 to 15 minutes, and we have to get our message delivered.
So it is a challenge. We recognize that, but we are trying to adapt by using modern methodology, if you want, website information, etc.
We are also attacked. There's no doubt you've seen what was published in The Hill Times yesterday. I did bring a copy of our rebuttal. I would like to leave it with you--a number of copies. You can read it. Hopefully they'll publish it. Again, when you're attacked by somebody who's using little tidbits of information, it's kind of difficult to counter it, but we will work at it.
The message I would like to give is that we will survive. We are an institution. We've built our new headquarters in Kanata, and we intend to be there for 50 years, as much as we were 50 years downtown on Kent Street.
:
We're switching now. We're switching, and I'm going to talk really quickly here.
Thank you again for coming today. You're always a very interesting guest to listen to.
Regarding the new Veterans Charter, there are a couple of comments I would like to make. The first one is that it is a working document. The minister and this government are open to recommendations that aim to improve it. When it went through, it went through rather rapidly, and I found some fault with it myself. I think there's room for improvement, and we're working towards making those kinds of improvements.
Every once in a while in this committee, although it is very non-partisan because of who we deal with, there will be the odd comment. One came from my colleague, Mr. Valley, earlier today, who said he was trying to embarrass the government into acting. I would just like it on the record that this government has acted. We implemented the new Veterans Charter. It was the first thing we did. We've put in place the ombudsman position. We've put in place the Bill of Rights. And we are currently, at this committee level, trying to determine what the needs are for improvement to the VIP program.
Now, there are times when it feels like pushing string up a hill to move forward. We've also gotten very involved in the post-traumatic stress portion of it, which is a very important aspect but has very little to do with the traditional veteran.
There was one other comment I wanted to make. You were talking about having Defence and Veterans Affairs put things together, because Defence looks after acting members and Veterans Affairs looks after veterans after they've served. There's a fine line in there. I don't think it would be called a turf war, but there are definite lines as to who looks after what. To blur those lines is very difficult to do, because for an active member, Defence is who looks after you. If you're a member who has finished serving, Veterans Affairs looks after you.
So I understand your frustration, but I did want to point out that slight difference.
Now, we've listened to all of what you've had to say today, and I just have one other question for you. I think I heard you say that the Royal Canadian Legion feels it's losing some connection with the modern-day vet and that you're trying to bridge out and do that. If there is one message that you want to leave for today's modern-day vet, what would it be?
:
Well, what I said is that for World War II veterans and Korean veterans, it is actually simpler because there were no such tests, generally speaking. Maybe once in a while, depending on what classification...for example, if you were a pilot, you may have had an audiogram on release if you were serving in World War II or Korea. But generally speaking, there was no audiogram on release. There was a medical test, if you want, but it was not as intensive as it is today.
The problem is if that person, after serving in World War II, then joined the Canadian Forces and served in the Canadian Forces, because starting at around 1960-ish it became the rule to give audiograms on release. So if there is an audiogram on release, that is the challenge: to prove a disability if it doesn't meet the basic criteria.
Currently, there are a number of processes that releasing military personnel must go through. They have to go through a transition interview, first of all with the Canadian Forces manager and then with a Veterans Affairs Canada transition manager, where they get fully briefed on all their benefits, everything that pertains to their release, whether it be from a disability perspective or from the superannuation perspective, basically their pension, pension rights, insurance rights, provision of health care, etc.
So that transition interview is mandatory. For example, going to see the Veterans Affairs Canada official is a mandatory step in the release process. There has to be a release medical. The release medical does include an audiogram. And there are other briefings that happen throughout the career, throughout the life, of an individual. The challenge is when somebody asks for a quick release. In other words, you can get a 30-day release by giving one day's notice that you're going to be released in 30 days, and things might get compressed in those times. Somebody who might actually be ready to release on a medical release but doesn't want to take the time to go through the full process and he's pushing out the door as fast as he can, that's a little bit more challenging.
But even that individual can come back in and say, “I released under voluntary release, but I subsequently identified that I had medical problems. Can you change my release category?” And the Canadian Forces will do that. There are return-to-work programs, there's job training, etc., that can take place six months before the release is initiated. So I would say that the Canadian Forces have things in hand, and so has Veterans Affairs, for the modern-day veteran's transition to civilian life.
It doesn't mean that there are not any challenges: for example, medical care. Obviously, if you've been receiving the care of a medical doctor in the Canadian Forces, finding a general practitioner when you retire is a challenge. I have gone through two GPs since I retired, and the last one, I just found out, has left, so I don't have a GP. I'm 61 years old and I have to go and find one. So this is a challenge.
It's the same thing for the families, because the families are constantly moving across the country. They may establish that they have a doctor, but they say, “This is my doctor for four years until I move here, and by the way, when I'm released, I don't have a doctor.” So there are some challenges there.
:
Monsieur Gaudet, thank you.
This is exactly where I was leading. You're telepathic. Where I was going with this was, yes, during the next meeting on Thursday we will be having a tour instead, a briefing by the DND VAC centre, and it's at 285 Coventry Road, main floor boardroom. We will be meeting at 8:45 a.m., so 15 minutes earlier than normal, in front of the Confederation building. It's the easiest place for taxis to gather, and then using taxi chits, or whatever the situation is here, we'll use those to transport ourselves. Luckily, I have a vehicle, so I will be driving.
The clerk says he will send this around by e-mail.
I know Mr. Stoffer has now vacated, but he did raise the idea of a trip to Dominion Command for the Royal Canadian Legion, and Mr. Allard probably should be hearing about this as well. Anyhow, it's a possibility.
There's another very serious thing that I want to make sure we get done--I don't know when the House will recess, but....