Don't know if the Equitas Society sponsored or endorsed this event or not. Anyone know the status of the Equitas Society action?
http://bc.ctvnews.ca/veterans-group-suing-government-over-pension-promise-1.3633478
Veterans group suing government over pension promise - CTV Vancouver - October 15, 2017
Dozens of injured veterans and their supporters gathered in Burnaby’s Central Park on Sunday to raise money for their ongoing legal battle with the federal government.
The event - Equitas Society’s first-ever Walk for Veterans - aims to defray the cost of the society’s class-action lawsuit, which seeks to reinstate lifetime pensions for veterans injured in the line of duty.
In 2005, the federal government replaced the pension plan for injured soldiers with a lump sum payment worth a maximum of $360,000 - an amount Equitas Society president Mark Burchell says isn’t enough for people who risked their lives for their country.
“It’s substantially lower than what the pension act offered,” Burchell said of the current system. “Prime Minister Trudeau, when he was running for election in 2015, promised to reinstate lifelong pensions and he hasn’t kept that promise, so we’re here to send him a message.”
Aaron Bedard was among those walking on Sunday. He was injured in Kandahar, Afghanistan in 2006, during one of Canada’s earliest missions in the country.
He told CTV News he sustained brain and spine injuries during his tour, and has spent the better part of a decade going to medical assessments and filling out government forms in order to obtain compensation.
“Veterans Affairs Canada and Department of National Defence didn’t do a great job of managing my issues and giving me a proper treatment plan,” Bedard said. “I need to see better security - lifelong security in the form of a pension.”
The Trudeau government has said that it will soon introduce a new pension “option” soon. Veterans Affairs didn’t respond to requests for comment on Sunday.
Conservative MP John Brassard, who recently served as his party’s critic for veterans affairs, said the Trudeau government has not kept its promise on pensions.
“They’re now changing their tune,” he said. “They’re talking about an option of a lifelong pension and nobody really knows what that means. The Prime Minister made it very clear he was going to return life long pensions and he hasn’t done that at this point.”
With files from CTV Vancouver’s Scott Roberts
https://www.bclocalnews.com/news/video-canadian-veterans-fight-to-reinstate-lifelong-pensions/
VIDEO: Canadian veterans fight to reinstate lifelong pensions - Oct 15th, 2017
The battle has gone all the way to the to the Supreme Court (of British Columbia)
Burnaby’s Central Park was packed with people on Sunday morning, all there with one goal: to bring back lifelong pensions for veterans.
The event, the inaugural Walk for Veterans, was hosted by the Equitas Society.
Since its formation in 2012, the South Surrey-White Rock based group has been advocating for the cause through a class-action lawsuit against the federal government.
The Pension Act, which guarantto the Supreme Courteed lifelong pensions for veterans, was replaced by the New Veterans Charter in 2006.
“It replaced [lifelong pensions] with lump sum payments that ended up being disproportionally lower,” said president Marc Burchell.
Burchell said that although Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made a pledge to reinstate the lifelong pensions, the lack of action has left veterans feeling betrayed.
“He has failed to keep that promise,” said Burchell.
Currently, the Canadian government is fighting the lawsuit in the B.C. Supreme Court of Appeals. If it fails to get the result it wants, it must take it to the country’s top court.
The lawsuit has six plaintiffs, including Coquitlam veteran Aaron Bedard.
Bedard served in Afghanistan as part of the first combat tour of Kandahar. He served for 10 years, from 2002-2010, despite a serious injury from going over an anti-tank mine just three months in.
“I hid my injuries and carried on with a traumatic brain injury and damage to my spine,” said Bedard. He returned to Canada in 2007 and was went to doctor to doctor, but received little help.
“I started developing post-traumatic stress disorder.”
It took three years before he was released from service but according to Bedard, much of the fight remained ahead.
“Dealing with Veterans Affairs Canada was immediately adversarial,” said Bedard. He learned that he would only be getting a lump sum, which in 2010 was only $250,000.
It’s a common thread, said Burchell, that’s not helped by what he calls Veteran Affairs’ “culture of denial.”
“These men and women come back from Afghanistan and a lot of them are suffering from PTSD,” said Burchell. “They’ve been fighting [for pensions] but it’s hard for the to fight when they’re suffering from this disability.”
To learn more about the Equitas Society, visit their website: http://www.equitassociety.ca/