NDP to table motion requiring Veterans Affairs to carry over unspent funds
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NDP to table motion requiring Veterans Affairs to carry over unspent funds
By Rahul Kalvapalle
National Online Journalist Global News
November 4, 2018
National Online Journalist Global News
November 4, 2018
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Re: NDP to table motion requiring Veterans Affairs to carry over unspent funds
New Democrats poised to push for boost to spending on veterans’ services
By Kady O'Malley. Published on Nov 5, 2018
By Kady O'Malley. Published on Nov 5, 2018
Riverway- Registered User
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Re: NDP to table motion requiring Veterans Affairs to carry over unspent funds
Singh urges Liberal government to 'roll over' unspent money for veterans
The Canadian Press
Published: Nov 05, 2018
The Canadian Press
Published: Nov 05, 2018
Warrior- CF Coordinator
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Re: NDP to table motion requiring Veterans Affairs to carry over unspent funds
I think that VAC should give themselves more $$ bonuses with that cash.
Maybe productivity would improve? Union would be happy, for sure.
Maybe productivity would improve? Union would be happy, for sure.
vet1- Registered User
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Re: NDP to table motion requiring Veterans Affairs to carry over unspent funds
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh proposes plan to ‘end the theft’ of money meant for veterans
By Brian Hill - November 5, 2018
By Brian Hill - November 5, 2018
Garrison- Registered User
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Re: NDP to table motion requiring Veterans Affairs to carry over unspent funds
Liberals and Conservatives confirm support for NDP plan to ‘end the theft’ of money meant to help veterans
November 5, 2018
November 5, 2018
Slider- Registered User
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Re: NDP to table motion requiring Veterans Affairs to carry over unspent funds
Parliament unanimously approves plan to stop leaving money unspent at Veterans Affairs Canada
November 6, 2018
November 6, 2018
Xrayxservice- Registered User
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Re: NDP to table motion requiring Veterans Affairs to carry over unspent funds
Victory for Veterans
by Nelson Daily Staff on Wednesday November 07 2018
by Nelson Daily Staff on Wednesday November 07 2018
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Re: NDP to table motion requiring Veterans Affairs to carry over unspent funds
Alistair MacGregor column: NDP motion to restore lapsed funding for veterans passed unanimously
Dec. 3, 2018
By Alistair MacGregor
Dec. 3, 2018
By Alistair MacGregor
In early November, the House of Commons unanimously adopted the NDP Opposition Day Motion introduced by my colleague, Gord Johns (MP for Courtenay-Alberni, and NDP Critic for Veterans Affairs), calling on the Department of Veterans Affairs to carry forward all annual lapsed spending to the next fiscal year, for the sole purpose of improving services for Canadian veterans. The motion reads as follows:
“That, in the opinion of the House, the government should automatically carry forward all annual lapsed spending at the Department of Veterans Affairs to the next fiscal year, for the sole purpose of improving services for Canadian veterans, until the Department meets or exceeds its 24 self-identified service standards.”
In the 2016 budget year, the Department of Veterans Affairs underspent $80.9 million in funding for veterans. In 2017, the figure increased to $143 million in unspent funding, and again in 2018 to $148.6 million in unused funding for veterans’ services. That means the Liberal government has now left $372 million unspent, even as service levels deteriorate. The preceding nine years under the Harper government left more than $1.1 billion of funding for veterans approved by Parliament left unspent; they also closed nine regional offices across the country.
The above motion references the department’s 24 self-identified service standards. One of the most important ones is the department’s case management ratio for caseworkers to veterans. While their target is 25 veterans to one caseworker, their 2016-17 result was 33:1, with the ratio being as high as 39:1 in some regions. At present, the Department of Veterans Affairs employs 2,609 full-time employees. Had the current government spent that $372 million earmarked thus far by the current Parliament, more than 5,000 new full-time caseworkers could have been hired to provide support services to Canadian veterans, instead of the mere 260 they’ve hired to this point in time. This could have had a significant impact on the longer and longer wait times being experienced by veterans waiting to qualify for benefits for suffering physical and emotional traumas.
Hiring more caseworkers and clearing the backlog will mean shorter wait times for long-term care applications, for rehabilitation programs, for career transition programs, for earning-loss benefit applications and for the war veterans allowance program. It will mean that if veterans or their families are unhappy with the department’s decision to deny them benefits, they will be able to appeal those decisions and receive a resolution quickly.
Veterans have helped shape the history of our country, solidifying our reputation around the world today as a nation that upholds human rights, and stands steadfastly to protect the most vulnerable. We are failing in our duty to them without ensuring veterans and their families are well cared for and receive all the services and supports they are entitled to when they return home. The responsibility now lies with the Liberal government to implement these changes unanimously adopted by Parliament.
Alistair MacGregor is the Member of Parliament for Cowichan-Malahat-Langford and the NDP’s Critic for Agriculture and Agri-food.
Navigator- CF Coordinator
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Re: NDP to table motion requiring Veterans Affairs to carry over unspent funds
THE MONEY IS THERE, IT JUST HASN’T BEEN SPENT
KYLE CHRISTENSEN, STAFF MONDAY, DEC. 3RD, 2018
KYLE CHRISTENSEN, STAFF MONDAY, DEC. 3RD, 2018
A motion recently passed unanimously in the House of Commons to restore lapsed funding for our veterans.
In the nine years the Harper Conservatives were in power, more than $1.1 billion dollars in funding for veterans wasn’t spent and in the three years since the Trudeau Liberals gained power, $372 million has gone unspent.
The NDP Critic for Veterans Affairs Gord Johns is calling on the Department of Veterans Affairs to carry forward all lapsed spending to the next fiscal year in an attempt to improve services for Canadian veterans.
Cowichan-Malahat-Langford MP Alistair MacGregor said the New Democrats need to hold the Liberals feet to the fire.
“The government could still, potentially, not favour the terms of the motion, so it’s up to us to keep on them to make sure that they actually honour what they agreed to vote on,” said MacGregor. “What our motion is basically calling on is for the government to actually spend the money that was budgeted for veterans in the first place.
MacGregor calls the government not spending this money a ‘crying shame’ when you consider the current condition of Veterans Affairs in Canada.
“In the current term of the Liberals, its been $372 million dollars of unspent program funding, over the three years they’ve been in power,” said MacGregor. “Money that was allocated but not spent and I think it’s a crying shame given that we still have services that are not meeting the standards that the department set out for itself.”
MacGregor said had the Trudeau government spent the 372 million dollars, more than five thousand new caseworkers could have been hired to support veterans.
To date, 260 have been hired.
Navigator- CF Coordinator
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Re: NDP to table motion requiring Veterans Affairs to carry over unspent funds
I would propose a 'motion' that VAC gets bonuses from that $$.
After all, they 'improved' so much for veterans. If 'minister' and his lap dog say it at every town hall mtg, then it must be true.
After all, they 'improved' so much for veterans. If 'minister' and his lap dog say it at every town hall mtg, then it must be true.
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Parliament unanimously approves plan to stop leaving money unspent at Veterans Affairs Canada
Parliament unanimously approves plan to stop leaving money unspent at Veterans Affairs Canada
By Brian Hill Online Writer & Researcher, Investigative Global News
An NDP plan to end the practice of leaving money unspent at Veterans Affairs Canada (VAC) was unanimously approved by the House of Commons Tuesday afternoon, just five days before Remembrance Day and the 100th anniversary of the end of the First World War.
Proposed Monday and voted on Tuesday, the NDP motion says the government should “automatically carry forward all annual lapsed spending at the Department of Veterans Affairs to the next fiscal year, for the sole purpose of improving services for Canadian veterans.”
The motion states that any money carried forward should be targeted toward VAC meeting its own standards in the 12 service areas where it is currently failing, including improving wait times for disability benefits, telephone services, vocational training and rehabilitation programs.
As Global News first reported in September, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government has allowed more than $372 million meant to help veterans and their families go unspent since taking office in November 2015. This is despite promises from then-Liberal leader Trudeau, who in August 2015 said that leaving money meant for veterans unspent was “wrong,” that a government led by him would fix it.
Tuesday, Trudeau made good on that promise.
“Our government is and continues to be committed to supporting and honouring Canada’s veterans and their families,” he said. “And of course we will be supporting the NDP motion.”
This also follows more than $1.1 billion of unspent funding at VAC during the time Stephen Harper’s Conservatives were in power.
According to NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, this proposal will “end the theft” at VAC and stop veterans from being “robbed” of the resources they so badly need and deserve.
“Over the past number of years money is promised to Veterans Affairs, that money has lapsed or not been spent,” Singh said Monday. “That means veterans have been robbed of finances and resources for the services they need. This has to end.
While motions passed in the House of Commons are not binding — meaning the government has no legal obligation to stick to the plan — they carry significant meaning.
Singh says this plan could mean as much as $124 million a year more for veterans. He also says it’s an important first step in ensuring veterans who’ve sacrificed so much have access to the benefits they need in a timely manner.
Since taking office, Trudeau’s Liberals have reopened nine veteran service offices closed by the Harper Conservatives. The government has also rehired roughly 470 front-line staff — including case managers — who work closely with veterans.
The NDP says with unspent money at VAC now being carried forward, the number of front-line staff at VAC can increase dramatically, meaning shorter wait times and better outcomes for veterans.
2018 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
https://globalnews.ca/news/4635188/parliament-veterans-funding/
By Brian Hill Online Writer & Researcher, Investigative Global News
An NDP plan to end the practice of leaving money unspent at Veterans Affairs Canada (VAC) was unanimously approved by the House of Commons Tuesday afternoon, just five days before Remembrance Day and the 100th anniversary of the end of the First World War.
Proposed Monday and voted on Tuesday, the NDP motion says the government should “automatically carry forward all annual lapsed spending at the Department of Veterans Affairs to the next fiscal year, for the sole purpose of improving services for Canadian veterans.”
The motion states that any money carried forward should be targeted toward VAC meeting its own standards in the 12 service areas where it is currently failing, including improving wait times for disability benefits, telephone services, vocational training and rehabilitation programs.
As Global News first reported in September, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government has allowed more than $372 million meant to help veterans and their families go unspent since taking office in November 2015. This is despite promises from then-Liberal leader Trudeau, who in August 2015 said that leaving money meant for veterans unspent was “wrong,” that a government led by him would fix it.
Tuesday, Trudeau made good on that promise.
“Our government is and continues to be committed to supporting and honouring Canada’s veterans and their families,” he said. “And of course we will be supporting the NDP motion.”
This also follows more than $1.1 billion of unspent funding at VAC during the time Stephen Harper’s Conservatives were in power.
According to NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, this proposal will “end the theft” at VAC and stop veterans from being “robbed” of the resources they so badly need and deserve.
“Over the past number of years money is promised to Veterans Affairs, that money has lapsed or not been spent,” Singh said Monday. “That means veterans have been robbed of finances and resources for the services they need. This has to end.
While motions passed in the House of Commons are not binding — meaning the government has no legal obligation to stick to the plan — they carry significant meaning.
Singh says this plan could mean as much as $124 million a year more for veterans. He also says it’s an important first step in ensuring veterans who’ve sacrificed so much have access to the benefits they need in a timely manner.
Since taking office, Trudeau’s Liberals have reopened nine veteran service offices closed by the Harper Conservatives. The government has also rehired roughly 470 front-line staff — including case managers — who work closely with veterans.
The NDP says with unspent money at VAC now being carried forward, the number of front-line staff at VAC can increase dramatically, meaning shorter wait times and better outcomes for veterans.
2018 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
https://globalnews.ca/news/4635188/parliament-veterans-funding/
Guest- Guest
Re: NDP to table motion requiring Veterans Affairs to carry over unspent funds
This is what was reported on November 6, 2018
Parliament unanimously approves plan to
stop leaving money unspent at Veterans
Affairs Canada
Read Article here: https://globalnews.ca/news/4635188/parliament-veterans-funding/
This is what is reported today, January 31, 2020
Liberals left $105M meant for veterans
unspent in last fiscal year
Read Article here: https://globalnews.ca/news/6489101/liberals-unspent-money-veterans/?fbclid=IwAR1P7uKvVkfnpBXCPd8r9-OYryOnurjt2DceruuA9-ux1TQqZtIJP8avodk
Parliament unanimously approves plan to
stop leaving money unspent at Veterans
Affairs Canada
Read Article here: https://globalnews.ca/news/4635188/parliament-veterans-funding/
This is what is reported today, January 31, 2020
Liberals left $105M meant for veterans
unspent in last fiscal year
Read Article here: https://globalnews.ca/news/6489101/liberals-unspent-money-veterans/?fbclid=IwAR1P7uKvVkfnpBXCPd8r9-OYryOnurjt2DceruuA9-ux1TQqZtIJP8avodk
Re: NDP to table motion requiring Veterans Affairs to carry over unspent funds
Bill Kelly: Feds continue to short-change Canadian vets
BY BILL KELLY . 900 CHML
Posted February 3, 2020
BY BILL KELLY . 900 CHML
Posted February 3, 2020
Canadian veterans Al Roy, centre, and Hugh Patterson, right, attend a French-Canadian ceremony to commemorate the Poche de Falaise battle in Chambois, Normandy, Tuesday, June 4, 2019.
https://globalnews.ca/news/6498329/canadian-veterans-funding-services/
Alpha- Benefits Coordinator
- Posts : 234
Join date : 2018-02-07
Re: NDP to table motion requiring Veterans Affairs to carry over unspent funds
March 15 2020
Government not spending all funds
allocated to veterans
Government not spending all funds
allocated to veterans
Despite the federal government’s promise to take care of veterans as they transition out of service, new information obtained by Global News shows that Veteran Affairs Canada is not spending all the money allocated to support Canada’s former troops. Mike Le Couteur explains the impact on those who have served the country.
https://globalnews.ca/video/6681440/government-not-spending-all-funds-allocated-to-veterans/
Spider- CF Coordinator
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Join date : 2017-10-08
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