:
It's my pleasure to call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting 29 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Veterans Affairs.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on October 27, 2020, the committee is resuming its study on service dogs for veterans.
Welcome to all the witnesses who have taken their time to join us today. I apologize that we're getting starting a little bit later than expected. Votes will do that, unfortunately.
I will introduce all of the witnesses, and then give everyone an opportunity to bring forward their five-minute opening remarks. Once the five minutes are over, I usually give you a one-minute warning, both during your opening remarks as well as during questions. They're timed as well.
To start us off, from Assistance Dogs International, North America, we have the chair Sheila O'Brien. From K-9 Country Inn Working Service Dogs, we have Laura A. MacKenzie, owner and master trainer. From National Service Dogs from Cambridge, Ontario, Danielle Forbes, executive director; and from Paws Fur Thought, Medric Cousineau, co-founder.
As I said, each witness will have five minutes for their opening remarks. We're going to start off today with Ms. O'Brien.
:
Thank you for having me come.
I'm just going to talk a little bit about how service dogs help people with PTSD. I'm going to speak about working with my clients, the things that I have seen and some of the basic things that a service dog can do.
There are a lot of studies out there that have investigated the affects of human-animal interactions that improve the welfare and quality of life of people.
We have found that generally PTSD sufferers suffer from negative moods, periods of depression, anxiety, flashes of anger, reckless behaviour and sleeplessness. One of the main things is that they disengage from relationships with others. They avoid public places. They avoid strangers and they detach themselves from society as a whole. Self-isolation and feelings of despair and hopelessness has led to a suicidal crisis within the first responder community right now.
One of the most significant benefits we have seen with implementing service dogs for individuals with PTSD is that it forces them to interact with society once again. We have found that many of them are embarrassed by their symptoms and they self-isolate. Being part of a group and knowing that others are dealing with the same issue creates a support system for them.
If a program is implemented correctly, it provides a support system to help the individual integrate back into society. The individualized and supported training leads to group classes, group activities, PA—which is what we call public access—and a support system with other handlers who are going through similar circumstances.
We actually don't implement a program dog, which is a dog trained within our program. We have found that self-training or owner training and having the person involved in the training has greatly increased the success of our program because the person is actually involved in the training. We have found that the public access work is even more important with a person with PTSD than the actual obedience training with the dog.
For people with PTSD, one of the main things we have found is that a lot of sufferers of PTSD self-harm. Some of the tasks of the service dog can help out with that. We use the dogs to bring them back to the present. We do an interruption of harmful behaviours. The dog can do this by nudging them, knocking their hands away or refocusing the person on the dog instead of the behaviour they're interacting with.
Once the person has a dog, they become more comfortable and outgoing in public. This allows them to participate in addiction group therapy. They feel more comfortable to go out by themselves and participate. The service dog group also makes them feel that they're not alone and helps encourage the handler to continue with their medical doctor.
We've also found that a lot of people with PTSD are hypervigilant and hyperaware. The dog can do a block. The dog can also be taught to recognize these symptoms. Flashbacks and night terrors are other things that the dog can be taught to recognize.
We can do it with a heart rate increase, a decrease in heart rate, if the person is sweating, if they are pacing, with jerking movements or with anger. The dog can cue in on any change in any kind of behaviour of the person. Once we identify these things, the owner has an opportunity.... The dog can take the person away from a situation or they can use DPT, which is deep pressure therapy, to help the owner feel comfort.
It's a pressure therapy. It's a tactile therapy that will provide comfort and warmth and also helps the person to just regroup. For night terrors, the dog is taught to understand when the person is in distress during sleep and the dog can stop the person—
Five minutes is a bit of a surprise, considering that the notes I have are five to 10 minutes; however, we shall prevail.
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for the opportunity to assist you in establishing the requirements for a federal service dog standard.
The best possible solution to a problem comes from asking the best questions to determine the root cause and decide on the best course of action to solve the problem.
As a direct result of a life-threatening military search and rescue mission off the coast of Atlantic Canada, I am a veteran living life with PTSD. I have battled the demons for over 30 years. I was one of those people who are amongst the 30% to 50% of PTSD survivors who are treatment resistant. My life was an unmitigated disaster, and my family suffered horribly as a result of my injuries.
The best pharmacology and therapist interventions failed to provide me with any relief. I was isolating and cut off from pretty much everyone in my life. I had night terrors every single day. At 4:30 a.m., I would awake shaking uncontrollably, totally soaked in sweat and in a state of extreme panic and anxiety. My life had spiralled to the depths of hell that you cannot begin to imagine, let alone survive. Life seemed hopeless with no way out. I felt abandoned by VAC and, to this very day, information on my case file shocks me. Suicide seemed the only appealing option to end the hell I was living with. Fortunately, by the grace of God, I failed when executing this terminally irreversible decision.
Two factors will separate me from the other witnesses. First, I know this enemy well. Second, and absolutely paramount, is the fact that for eight years and 305 days I have lived on the end of a leash as a service dog handler.
In our house we celebrate “gotcha day”. August 6, 2012, is the day that Thai, my yellow Lab service dog, came into my life. I started to have hope, to laugh, to love and to live again, but inside my left wrist you will notice tattooed “Invictus” with a paw print and a semicolon. This tattoo is my daily reminder to myself that, thanks to Thai, the suicide card is no longer in the deck. However, VAC and the CF are well aware of the high suicide rate of veterans suffering from PTSD.
An extremely important fact is that to date there is no known case of a veteran with a fully trained service dog who has gone on to self-harm. These dogs are a valuable therapeutic adjunct to the war on PTSD. If you ask my wife, she will openly admit that Thai's night terror interventions are one of her most endearing attributes. Thai is so good at her job that she has not missed, and she has become so adept that she can wake me up before things deteriorate.
There is evidence of efficacy. Yes, they work. Scientific studies have proven this, yet certain folks keep demanding more proof and holding out that what a service dog does is not treatment. In fact, you could make the same claim about wheelchairs. They do not treat the underlying injury, but they allow the disabled individual to strive for a quality of life that's unattainable without a medical assistive device. This is not an unimportant distinction.
The Purdue University research study found that veterans paired with trained service dogs experience greater relationship satisfaction and fewer problems in family functioning. Having experienced first-hand the difference that the difference makes, what started as a desperate attempt to reclaim my life morphed into Paws Fur Thought.
To date, Paws is coordinated with organizations like the NS/NU and Ontario commands of the Royal Canadian Legion, along with Wounded Warriors, in funding of agencies like National Service Dogs for the training certification and placement of over 200 service dogs.
Researchers have been asking the wrong question. They keep asking, “Do service dogs work?” when, in fact, they should be asking, “How do they work?” Thanks to science, there's an answer.
MP Doherty recounted an event where a PTSD service dog ratted him out for anxiety, and it does not surprise me, as service dogs do not have an off switch. They do what they are trained to do. I am about to explain in layman's terms what happened.
When MP Doherty started to feel anxious, his reptilian brain, which we cannot control, kicked in. Cortisol is released into your body with other neurochemicals. Dogs have a sense of smell that is unrivalled. They can discriminate a teaspoon of sugar in an Olympic-size swimming pool, a concentration that measures in parts per trillion. Take a moment to think about the employment of dogs' noses: search and rescue, drug detection, bombs, diabetic alert, cancer detection and, most recently, studies to detect the presence of COVID.
When an individual is triggered by a stimulus outside of their control, the reptilian brain activates and you sweat cortisol out of every pore of your body. A dog can detect cortisol and be taught to interact with the handler to mitigate the circumstances. Note the last paragraph on page one of the prescriber guidelines. Cortisol and its links to PTSD have been known.
The science lesson does not stop there. It may seem intuitively obvious that de-stressing the handler in these types of situations is a good thing and a desired result. One of the simplest ways to do this is to flood your system with a neurochemical called oxytocin—a.k.a. the trust hormone. Science has proven that petting your dog has exactly that effect. Your service dog is the readily available all-in-one solution that is both the detection mechanism and the antidote.
Thai and dogs like her allow us to become aware of issues that we are having and mitigate the magnitude and severity of our symptomology using our body's inherent defence mechanisms—no pharmacology required. You can call what a service dog does for their handlers whatever you want, but “effective” heads the list. Thai does not solve the issues of why I am having the episodes I do. That work is done with my mental health care team. She is there to alert me that I am heading for trouble.
Why have I been so passionate and unrelenting in my mission to provide service dogs to others? If you read my book, Further Than Yesterday: That's All That Counts, then you'll understand that all of this was to help the others. As a military leader, our troops are first and foremost our most important asset. Without them, we are capable of nothing. However, this fight has come at the expense of my health. My unrelenting push has seen my trauma issues exacerbated by institutional betrayal, compassion fatigue and survivor's guilt variant.
I could easily have done nothing after I reclaimed my life and broke free from the chains of hell that bound me. Nobody could deny me that—except for myself. The voices in my head will not let me sleep. I carry a huge burden of guilt and shame. I got my life back, and I have not been able to move the yardsticks and provide our troops the relief that I have gotten. This means that my brothers and sisters in arms continue to suffer, battling the demons that I know all too well, but my brothers and sisters in arms are somebody's mother, father, brother, sister, son or daughter. Everybody is somebody's somebody. They are also your constituents.
As I close my remarks, you get two final questions to ponder. If it were your mother, father, brother, sister, son or daughter, would what we're all doing be enough? Would you be satisfied with our country’s response?
I await your questions.
:
Good afternoon, everybody.
Thank you for providing me with the opportunity to speak to the committee on this important issue. I am currently the executive director and co-founder of National Service Dogs. We're based in Cambridge, Ontario. Over the past 25 years we've successfully deployed over 550 service dog teams across Canada.
National Service Dogs was the first program in Canada accredited by Assistance Dogs International to deploy dogs through a PTSD service dog program to veterans. We provide our dogs and our eight years of ongoing support services at no charge to our clients.
NSD values standards and has voluntarily availed itself of the Assistance Dogs International accreditation process, which you're going to be hearing a little bit more about from Sheila. The process in and of itself, though, just so the committee is aware, involves a very intensive, two-day, in-person audit of our programs. These in-person audits occur every five years. They include random reviews of our files, interviews and reviews of our staff, volunteers, clients and dog training processes, our governance model and our financials. We're also required to supply Assistance Dogs International with annual compliance reports.
NSD has also achieved and maintained accreditation with Imagine Canada standards. Not many people are aware, but Imagine Canada sets the standards for charities in Canada. We are one of only a few hundred charities to achieve accreditation with Imagine Canada—out of 85,000 Canadian charities. National Service Dogs along with the Lions Foundation of Canada Dog Guides are the only service dog producers in Canada to achieve accreditation with Imagine Canada.
As I am sitting here with you today, I am actively involved on the Assistance Dogs International standards committee, and have been for almost a decade. I also sit on the legislative and advocacy committee of ADI, North America. Previously I have co-chaired the CGSB technical committee, tasked with developing a service dog standard.
When the topic of standards for service dogs comes up within the community, pretty much everyone agrees that we need them. We need to ensure the dogs being deployed to Canadians are specifically trained to minimize the limitations of a person with a disability. We need to ensure that the dogs are healthy, temperamentally and physically fit for service, and safe for their handlers and the community at large. We need to ensure that service dog providers are ethical, safe, responsive and responsible, not only to their clients but to the dogs they are deploying out. We also need to ensure that the public can feel confident that when they see a dog in a service dog jacket or a guide dog harness, that dog will not interfere with them, their property or their business.
What I have found over the years in conversations on the topic of standards is that there is an assumption or a misconception that somewhere out there is a one-size-fits-all solution that will adequately meet everyone’s needs, and there just isn’t. Any discussion about standards for the service dog community must recognize the need for a multi-pronged approach, as Laura mentioned. Do we want an outcome standard that looks at the teams and the dogs, or a training standard that regulates programs?
Creating standards and regulations for organizations will help ensure that the training of the dogs is ethical and will help reduce fraud. The sad truth is, though, that organizations like National Service Dogs that are dedicated to providing service and guide dogs can't meet the demand within the greater community. We just can't. That leads people to train their own dogs. We cannot deny them the right to train their own service dog, nor do we want to. We want people to be able to benefit from dogs, whether they're ADI program dogs or dogs that are out there. What we concern ourselves with is whether the dogs are safe for the handler and the public, and whether the clients are being looked after.
Any governmental or non-governmental agency seeking a service dog standard must ask themselves if they want to qualify and regulate service providers and dog trainers, or qualify a service dog team in order to assess and verify that said service dog is medically prescribed, providing task-trained support that mitigates the handler's symptoms and needs, is temperamentally sound and safe for the handler and general public, and qualifies as a “legitimate service dog”?
By qualifying and/or regulating service dog providers, you can ensure that a portion of the Canadian service dog users are safe, well trained and supported by their service provider, but this in no way addresses the challenges of qualifying owner or privately trained dogs. They are a significant demographic within the service dog community and, in some cases, they are the victims of fraud, unfortunately.
Currently, processes already exist to assess, qualify, accredit and monitor service and guide dog producers. They exist externally through the International Guide Dog Federation and Assistance Dogs International, who you'll hear from when Sheila gets her mike up and going.
Within Canada, as evidenced by the Alberta Service Dogs Act, the Nova Scotia Service Dog Act—which Medric can speak to in great detail—and the B.C. Guide Dog and Service Dog Act, these are all great examples of legislation that is already working and that you as a ministry already have access to. When it comes to qualifying service dog providers, there's a lot of great work that's already been done.
Where there's really hard work to be done is in developing a fair, equitable and accessible process for qualifying owner or privately trained service dogs. What makes these conversations harder is that many people engaged in the discussion are under the impression that the standards automatically equate to a public policy or legislation. What often gets missed in the conversation is that the standards are a multiphased process. Standards are your backbone and upon that, regulations or public policy is developed, and then the enforcement pieces come on the tail end of that.
The reality is that the development of standards in and of themselves will not meet the needs I've outlined of the community at large. In order for any standards to have true value, there needs to be a regulatory process, a public policy developed that supports not only the standards but those engaging with them, whether it's the clients or the agencies providing the dogs. Then, of course, there's the enforcement mechanism that holds everyone accountable: the users, the producers, the businesses and the public.
:
As you know, my name is Sheila O'Brien. I live in New York. I work for a program called America's VetDogs, which is the largest veterans-only program in the United States. If you remember Sully, the assistance dog of President Bush, my program placed that dog.
I'm happy to say I'm a founding member of Assistance Dogs International. If you live long enough, they make you president or chair, so after 42 years of working in the assistance dog industry, not only as an administrator but as one of the first hearing dog trainers in the world, I find myself as the chair of ADI North America, which oversees 106 service dog training programs and guide dog programs.
We are all very concerned about post-traumatic stress as a disability right now, but it's not a new disability. I strongly believe in following up on these things in terms of history, so I did a little research on it. I have come to the conclusion that veterans, since the beginning of time, if they participated in war, probably suffered from PTSD.
During the American Civil War, in 1865, veterans were suffering from what we now know as PTSD, but they called it a “soldier's heart”. During World War I, in the United States, they called it “shell shock”. In World War II, they called it “battle fatigue”. In Vietnam, they called it the “Vietnam syndrome”. PTSD did not get its name until 1986, and then they had the diagnosis completely wrong, saying that it would only last six months.
We know many veterans now who suffer from PTSD and how devastating it can be, but it was really brought to the attention of the world when the veterans returned home from Iraq and Afghanistan. This large group of young heroes came back and they were not afraid to talk about their PTSD. Many of them came back severely wounded. The signature wounds of those wars were spinal cord injury, which was up 27%, and hearing loss, affecting one out of five of our veterans. Young as they were when they went into war, they suffered from hearing loss at that early age, only to find that now that they're in their forties and fifties, it's worse, as opposed to their sixties and seventies like the rest of us.
Another devastating disability is blindness due to traumatic brain injury. There are not a lot who are suffering that way, but there are some. Another disability is all kinds of mobility issues, including amputations and back and leg problems. The IEDs really struck hard on our young men and women.
When they all started coming back in 2005 and 2006, Assistance Dogs International and the assistance dog industry were only thinking of physical disabilities. We were ready for those young men and women and we were ready to place service dogs, guide dogs and hearing dogs with them. As they started to come back, we started to do our placements, but ironically, no matter how physically disabled they were—and some of them had no arms, no legs or no sight—all that really bothered them and, according to them, what they were unable to cope with was their PTSD.
Therefore, in the industry, the light bulbs went on and the industry started to look at that aspect of our veterans. We had never done this before—never. In all the years that ADI has been around, since 1987, we were all caught up in the physical but came to find out that their spirit or their emotional disabilities were more powerful and had more reign over them than their physical disabilities.
The very first service dog from the Afghanistan and Iraq wars was placed with a young man in 2006. I know that young man personally because he was placed by me at a program in Massachusetts called NEADS.
Again, as more came forth, we started to hear and they were telling us that they were using the tasks that we trained to mitigate their service physical disabilities to mitigate their PTSD.
I had a young man who was a sniper. He had lost an arm and one of his legs was very damaged. He eventually had to have his leg amputated, but at the time he was using a crutch with his service dog, and of course there was the lack of an arm. One the tasks we trained his service dog to do—thinking of the physical—was to turn on a light switch because he liked to read at night and he didn't have a light that was accessible. The brightest light was above him. If he had to get up to turn that light on, he had to get his crutch and it was a big deal. We trained his dog to turn on a light switch, as many programs did.
Well, he was speaking for me at an event. He gets up in front of everyone, and I was thinking he was going to talk about what his dog did to mitigate his physical disability. He said that he was a sniper in Iraq and he is fearful of going into a dark room, so he sends Ruthie in to turn that light on.
The light bulbs went off, so I started a process where I formed a committee that would look into this. The United States Americans With Disabilities Act requires that a service dog has to be trained to task. Could we train tasks to mitigate the disabilities of PTSD?
The veterans helped us because they were using hearing dog tasks to wake them up gently. They were using guide dog tasks to find a door. They'd say to the dog “find the door” and the dog would actually pull them to a door, if they were anxious or something.
The ADI standards were based on what our veterans told us. They weren't just pulled out of the air. It took eight years to bring those standards from best practices within the assistance dog industry to standards.
The past three years of those eight years is when we started the standard work. I just want to indicate that when you do standards or when you do anything like that, it's not always all about the dogs. This was a new realm for us, so we added two mental health professionals. One was a doctor who worked only with veterans with PTSD. The other, Dr. Crosson, was a psychiatric social worker who worked with PTSD. By adding them to the group of trainers and ADI program heads, we came up with super standards.
They've been implemented for three years now. Right now, our international standard committee is looking at those standards to make sure that we were on the right path. We really did a good job with those. They've helped our VA, which only provides benefits to those who have ADI or IGDF dogs. Our VA in the United States does not want to be the one to determine if a dog is a service dog and if it's doing its job.
They also are shared with the airlines in North America and Canada. We've been working on that for a long time, so that they have an understanding of what a well-trained service dog does and what training a veteran has had to receive this dog.
My hope is that if you are thinking of making standards, you definitely use the ADI standards.
:
Thank you, Mr. Brassard.
I'm thankful this committee is meeting virtually. It means that Thai and I do not have to run the gauntlet of getting from here to Ottawa. We would have had to face no less than six major regulatory hurdles from planes, trains, automobiles, airlines, hotels and motels.
Ladies and gentlemen, you and the committee are in the position to significantly advance the rights of Canadians and veterans with disabilities across this country, now and well into the future. We desperately need a national standard that protects disabled individuals and their service dogs while providing oversight, stopping unscrupulous or unqualified businesses from capitalizing on a perceived opportunity and protecting the public from abuses.
You must ensure the establishment of a Canadian federal standard for service dogs, but you cannot—and I repeat cannot—invite back to the table any individuals or groups who deliberately sabotaged the first attempt at national standards. A self-appointed subversive group took CGSB's work product to the Standards Council of Canada and succeeded in creating such a toxic environment that the impasse that CGSB was confronted with was an inevitable conclusion. They set out to derail the process and they succeeded.
Even more stunning is that the deputy minister of VAC was apprised in writing of the impending implosion months before it happened. He acknowledged this and did nothing to prevent what transpired. That may seem like a shocking position. I will be forwarding to the clerk this pile of supporting emails as an annex to these remarks. I wrote those emails. You need to submit an ATIP request on the Standards Council of Canada and the folks on the complaint committee. They have forfeited any right to be a part of this process. Some of those same individuals are attempting to use a private enterprise to produce a standard that they want to offer to the government as a “done deal” solution. You absolutely cannot let that happen. Do not fall for that. You need to know the facts.
Third party objective standards should pair the federal offices of Accessibility Standards Canada with the standard experts at CGSB, unimpeded by obstructionists, to produce a standard that will be adopted at the federal level. CGSB has produced a standard. There's little work to be done. Provinces need to become involved to provide unimpeded interprovincial reciprocity.
The standard needs to encompass three parts. The first is a universal public access test. The second, which will be provided by subject matter experts, is the skills and testing for each subset of dogs. The third is the SRO regulatory oversight piece. Danielle Forbes referred to this in her testimony when she spoke about what is required when you become a member of an organization like ADI.
The short version is that we have no national standards, even though pledged in the House of Commons just after April 18 of 2018 that we would have national service dog standards by the fall of that year. To date, nothing has been done.
Does that clarify things a little, John?
:
Thank you very much, Chair.
I want to thank all the witnesses today for their presentation. It's so important. We only have four meetings, so we need to get to task as quickly as possible. We have key people to help us there.
I want to welcome Medric, a constituent of mine, whom I've known for about six years, and thank him for the conversations we've had when he had his service dog, Thai, with him. I personally experienced some individual supports and how the dog was able to calm the situation and deal with any issues. Medric was able to tell me about the nightmares and how the dog was able to help him, and even wake him up before an event would take place.
I want to thank him and his wife, Jocelyn, of course, for their work co-funding Paws Fur Thought, which is extremely important.
I'd like to share with the committee that Medric played a big role in having Dominion Command, at the convention in Edmonton, Alberta, approve a resolution allowing for 25% of the puppy funds, to help. As well, he just received—I believe it was in February—the Meritorious Service Medal from the Governor General. He indicated his book, which I have a copy of, and he signed it personally for me. I've had the opportunity to read it. It has very important information on that front, and I thank him because that helps many people. As he indicated, it's about helping people.
I have a number of questions, but time is moving. I know Mr. Brassard asked one that I might have asked about that study, so I won't go there. The main question I want to touch on is about what the consequences would be of using the adopted standards from Wounded Warriors. If Veterans Affairs were to adopt those tomorrow morning, what would be the advantages and disadvantages?
:
We could actually take what the Government of Canada is currently doing through the veteran and family well-being fund, which is supporting Wounded Warriors Canada's service dog program, although it's a very small undertaking. Because Wounded Warriors Canada uses the prescriber guidelines, their programs have to be either ADI or compliant with any provincial regulatory body, which currently is B.C., Alberta and Nova Scotia.
It's interesting to note that Nova Scotia did not reinvent fire. They absolutely went out to B.C. and said, “We want to use the standard and the work that you've done. How do we do this?” B.C. said they would just sublicense it to them, and they did. Literally, they brought the entire program across the country.
Now, it is key to note that this is the public access portion that is primarily covered in the B.C. legislation. However, the legislation has been upheld by the B.C. human rights courts. It's a model that works. You can literally take an off-the-shelf solution. What does that look like? The Government of Canada pledges to Wounded Warriors an enhanced funding commitment over a five-year period. That will allow the underlying programs to ramp up their capacity.
If you told us that you want service dogs tomorrow and you were going to fund them, we'd all look at you and say, “Isn't that wonderful. Where are we getting them?” There is a lead time. We use that lead time to solidify the position that Wounded Warriors programs will adopt the national standards that are developed. All of that work has been done at CGSB. The most frustrating part is to know how close we were and to see it explode literally on the goal line when we went to push it over. It causes me to lose sleep at night, because this is what has impeded this program.
Keep in mind that the standards blew up in April of 2018. That was three years ago. Please tell me what's been done. I think the answer is “not much”. We could take a solution and literally start implementation as soon as tomorrow morning if the committee could push this football over the goal line.
Thanks, Darrell.
I will answer in English, as what I have to say is very important.
[English]
First off, it is our country. It is every single one of us who is on this call today, with the exception of Ms. O'Brien, and I'm sure she's right there with us in spirit.
We need to do better for our disabled individuals, and I'm going to harken back to that point where I said 30% to 50% of the people are treatment resistant. That means that the very best pharmacology and interventions that VAC is currently employing leaves—let's just cut it in half—40% of the disabled PTSD population as treatment resistant. Rather than explore options that would allow us to get relief from the hell that we're in, they just throw up their hands and say, “I'm sorry. We need more proof. We need more efficacy.” MP Doherty has proved it. MP Samson has talked about it, and there are others in the room today, listening to this, who have seen what these amazing dogs can do.
There is absolutely no reason to look at them as being anything other than a wheelchair for my mind. It is my medical assistive device. I know some people do not like it when I refer to my floppy-eared, brown-eyed, loving, wet-nosed partner as a medical assistive device. However, when she's off duty, she is my goofy girl. I love her to bits. When she's on, she is on and she works.
What we all need to ask ourselves is this. For the people who are suffering, who are treatment resistant and really need that kind of help to get out of the hell that I know they live in, it's available. It is available to this committee to push that forward, because you have the power to say, “I'm sorry; our answer has not been good enough.”
It is not what the people like me have to say, who are suffering a hell, like I say, that you cannot even begin to imagine. If you talk to Dani Forbes, Mrs. MacKenzie or Ms. O'Brien, they are going to tell you what these handlers have experienced, but do you know what? Don't bother to ask them. Don't even bother asking me, or the hundreds of people like me who have a service dog.
Do you know who you really need to ask? Go and ask their family members. They're the ones who live with us. They're the ones who know what it's really like. Ask them. I can guarantee you, those answers—and I have some of them and I can forward them—will prove to you, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that we can and must do more.
Hopefully, that helps.
I want to thank everyone for your testimony here today.
For me, this is a really important issue. I've worked with veterans who have been denied housing because there is no national standard. People say that it's just their pet, but the reality I hear from those veterans is that they can't walk out that door unless their “pet” is with them. That's what really concerns me.
When I look at all of these challenges, I think they're all important. We need to have a standard, so that people can get on a plane with their service animal and be able to travel as they need to. We need to make sure that we don't have veterans choosing to be homeless because they can't find a place to live that will allow them to bring their service dogs. This is my challenge. It's different from province to province to territory.
I'm just wondering if I could come to you first, Mr. Cousineau. Could you just speak to what the lack of this support really means for veterans?
I think you've highlighted it perfectly. These dogs fundamentally change your life and allow you to have one, which, as somebody who served our country, should be absolutely necessary. What would having some sort of format that makes space for these important service dogs to be recognized do for veterans across our country?
In short, it would make headaches and problems go away. For the people who are involved with providing service dogs and dealing with people with PTSD, we suffer from.... First off, we don't trust anybody. A disproportionate number of us have anger issues that result in a thing called SIR, which is situationally inappropriate response. We have them in droves.
Knowing that we have the full backing of the legislation of this country at a federal level, so that whether I am in Saint John's, Newfoundland; Taloyoak, Nunavut; or Victoria, B.C., I know what the rules are and I know what my rights are, we can educate every Canadian as to exactly how that is. That uniformity is absolutely paramount.
To hear that a service dog...and the lack of understanding of how to deal with an individual with a serious disability in such a complex manner does not surprise me. The easy answer is no. Then you don't have to do anything except for the poor guy or gal who is at risk of becoming homeless over something that should be a fundamental right. That needs to be addressed. Unfortunately, no matter how much I have tried to push this peanut up the hill, it keeps rolling back down.
People like Dani know because they have been involved in this for decades. I really think you need to defer to people like ADI, who operate in 80-plus countries. This isn't a cottage industry that Ms. O'Brien thought up in her basement last weekend because she was bored. This goes back decades.
That's the thing. These standards exist. The problem is that we don't have them because of that group I told you about that literally took this thing off the rails. That is unconscionable.
:
No, you have my apologies.
Because of the physical security threats that accompany PTSD, whether it's a combat threat, whether it's a military sexual trauma scenario, whether it's search and rescue, or whatever happens to be the underlying cause of the trauma, oftentimes it involves a loss of personal security and with that comes trust.
In the military we're taught three things. When your HPA axis fires, you either fight, flight or freeze. Doing nothing is frowned upon. Running away is frowned upon even more, so we fight. That's why veterans become very aggressive when they become threatened. It has been bred into us. It's not that we're bad people. It's just the way—I'm sorry—that....
The military made us the way we are. I won't apologize for it. It's necessary. However, now that we've been made that way, when we are done we need to find a soft landing place for us to land on. That includes our dog. I trusted nobody—nobody—and that included family members. It was dark. It took a long time for me to re-establish some of that trust. Unfortunately, in my work in this space, I have dealt with betrayals, being told that we were going to do certain things on this file and we haven't, and it hurts and causes that. Now, however, because I have Thai—you saw her come in here and check on me a minute ago—I can function in ways that I hadn't in years.
I need to share this with you about another one of our service dog handlers. His wife was approached by neighbours after he had gotten paired with his service dog. The comment was, “My God, you have a husband? We thought you were a single parent.” I don't need to tell you anything else. That's what you need to know.
That happens to be one of Mr. Samson's constituents.
:
Thanks, Chair, and moreover, thanks to all the witnesses for giving their time and testimony today. It's very much appreciated.
Medric, it's nice to see you again. You may remember we spent an evening together at Pier 21 a couple of years ago, and Thai was under the table with us that night. You taught me something that day, and you're teaching me more today, so thank you very much.
Although my questions are going to be for some others, they're going to build on something you said, which is that there is an off-the-shelf option here.
My question is for Ms. Forbes and Ms. MacKenzie, because we're in a Canadian context here—forgive me, Ms. O'Brien. We heard from previous witnesses that this is really quite complex. The dog needs to be trained, the trainer of the dog needs to be trained and the service person who's going to be with the dog needs to be trained to be with the dog. There's the prescriber regimen. This is quite a complex thing.
I wonder if you could, in that context, either one of you, Ms. Forbes or Ms. MacKenzie, talk about whether there is an off-the-shelf option that can achieve that kind of complexity in the Canadian context?
:
Do you want to go first this time, Laura, or do you want me to dive in? Okay, I'll dive in.
With “off the shelf”, in terms of there already being pieces of the puzzle in place, I'm going to go back to what Laura said in her opening remarks. There are a few different lanes.
If you want to qualify programs that do all of those things, like one-stop shopping, you have Wounded Warriors that brings in programs to do that, but so does ADI. You can have something in place that can help you to understand that dogs coming out of certain programs are fully qualified, legitimate dogs.
Where the challenge comes in is the team end of it. For dogs that aren't coming out of programs where it is more easy to put standards in place and hold them to accountability, where I think I've seen, in this space, things get difficult are when people aren't going through programs like mine or like Laura's. They don't have guidelines or a mechanism to qualify their dogs legitimately for doing the good work.
I think for you guys, it's twofold. There's one lane that's service-provider oriented and another one that's owner-trained oriented, because they are a section of your constituency that is demanding access to Veterans Affairs and the greater community. Currently, they're under-represented. It's not my job—I don't service those folks—but that is from the standards board piece that I was party to. They have to be dealt with separately. The standards we have for programs do not cross over well into dealing with individuals.
The outcome standards that Laura referenced for the teams is what we are working on at CGSB to address that. It is sitting on a shelf in Ottawa, and it's darned good. We did good work on that. Medric's not wrong.
:
Danielle has hit on the big problem. The majority of our clients are in our owner-trained program. The reason behind this is that we can service a lot more people and get more dogs with more handlers.
That being said, there is a huge process that we have to go through to make sure that this handler is ready to be able to train. We don't get a group of dogs or puppies from one litter. We specifically test specific puppies. Maybe out of 12 puppies we take two and give these to the handlers. There is a whole bunch of pieces of the puzzle that I really can't explain in just five minutes.
One of the biggest problems out there right now is that we are just overwhelmed with the number of people who require dogs. We have been having great results. It is owner-assisted, and that means through public access. We have two trainers who go out with a maximum of four people to help our handlers go out in public, because that's the biggest thing. We want to make sure that they aren't traumatized when they go out. If we see that they are being traumatized, we have somebody who can go with them and take them away from the crowds. If they start to disassociate, we have somebody there who can help them.
All of my handlers have been trained by me and are service dog owners. A lot of them no longer need their service dogs because they may be on their third dog with me, and now they can do things without them. They are there. They understand what's happening to the person, and they are there to help facilitate if something does go wrong. There's a whole bunch of pieces to the puzzle.
Where it doesn't work is when you have trainers who don't understand the process, who try to train the dogs. I believe—