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Nova Scotia

Legions pause funding PTSD service dogs over training concerns

Some provincial branches of the Royal Canadian Legion are no longer using poppy funds to help pay for service dogs to treat post-traumatic stress disorder for veterans, a CBC News investigation has learned.

Ottawa promises standards to regulate 'Wild West' animal market

Legions pause funding PTSD service dogs

10 years ago
Duration 1:35
Ottawa promises standards to regulate 'Wild West' animal market

Some provincial branches of the Royal CanadianLegion are no longer using poppy funds to help pay for service dogs to treat post-traumatic stress disorder for veterans, a CBC News investigation has learned.

Legion officials say there are increasing concerns about poorly trained dogs, and there should benational standards.

Service dogs can be trained to help veterans with PTSD by alerting them to their symptoms, whether it's night terrors or anxiety in a public place.

Commands in Ontario and British Columbia have funded dogsbut have put that funding on hold until standards are in place.

Dave Gordon, executive director of the Royal Canadian Legion Ontario Command, said while his organization is eager to see PTSD service dogs paired with veterans, a number of people have complained after purchasing dogs that could not do their jobs.

"If somebody comes up with a good idea to raise money, somebody else comes up with a good idea, a way to scam it," said Gordon.

Gordon told CBC News the Ontario Command has had to turn down about five requests for poppy fund assistance for PTSD service dogs since that decision.

In January 2014, the British Columbia/Yukon Command announced it would pair veterans with PTSD with service dogs. After funding about half a dozen dogs through oneprovider, executive director Inga Kruse said the command put a moratorium on funding the dogs because some veterans using thembrought concerns to their attention.

Quebec and P.E.I. commands haven't had any requests to fund service dogs, but say they won't approve any applications until there are national standards.

'Like the Wild West'

Medric Cousineau, who runs an organization in Halifax that pairs veterans with PTSD service dogs, also thinks the service dog industry needs a national standard.

Medric Cousineau, who runs an organization in Halifax that pairs veterans with PTSD service dogs, thinks the service dog industry needs national standards. (CBC)

"The service dog market right now, in a lot of cases it's like the Wild West and there's not a lot of regulation out there, said Cousineau, who runs Paws Fur Thought.

Cousineau runs his organization through the Nova Scotia Nunavut Command. While some of his clients have received funding through local legion poppy funds in Ontario and Nova Scotia, much of the money comes from other fundraising.

Nova Scotia's Royal Canadian Legion Branch 164, in Eastern Passage, used $3,200 of its poppy funds to help Cousineau buy his own service dog to help his PTSD a few years ago, said "Lefty" Layton Hollis, the branch's president.

"I do believe that there should be a standard set somewhere to make sure not only is the dog trained properly but is the dog compatible with the individual," said Hollis.

Advice for legions

Alberta/Northwest Territories Command told CBC News it's continuing to approve poppy funds for PTSD service dogs, provided certain guidelines are met.

The legion's Dominion Convention in June 2014 passeda resolution allowing regional commands to authorize up to 25 per cent of poppy funds at local branches to help veterans fund PTSD service dogs.

Ray McInnis, director of the Dominion Command, said in an email that while the regional branches have autonomy, he has advised them to follow certain rules if they pay for theseservice dogs.

Those rules include the legion selecting a Canadian service dog provider that is "able to show proof of liability insurance" and can "conduct an intake process that determines that the veteran is in the right phase of his or her recovery or treatment to receive a service dog, i.e. has a doctors prescription or recommendation and is financially able to care for the dog," wrote McInnis.

Pilot project

By late spring, Veterans Affairs Canada hopes to launch a pilot project pairing 50 veterans with PTSD, with service dogs. It hopes to study the potential therapeutic effects, as well as developing a national standard for dog providers.

Veterans Affairs Minister Erin O'Toole said by late spring, his department hopes to launch a pilot project pairing 50 veterans who have PTSD, with service dogs. (CBC)

"While we're doing this pilot we want to put together national standards to try to see how we can ensure that if a veteran gets a dog that it's going to meet their needs and it's going to provide a benefit," Veterans Affairs Minister Erin O'Toole told CBC News.

"We're also going to study, does this service animal help the underlying psychiatric condition or mental condition? Or is it helping their anxiety? Which is a good thing, but is it actually treating the underlying operational stress?"

The preliminary work for that pilot project is already underway, led by the Canadian Institute for Military and Veterans Health Research.

When CBC News asked the minister about concerns raised by legion branches about what they say are poorly trained service dogs, O'Toole said, "We want to make sure that that the service animal is the right one and is properly trained."

He explained the growing popularity ofservice dogs as help and potential therapy for PTSD was the main reason behind Veterans Affairs developing a pilot project.

"I think we can give peace of mind to veterans knowing that, in the future, once we have this standard, if they have a service dog join their family, they know that it's properly trained, they know the care that's required."

Once the pilot project gets underway in the upcoming months, it could take 18 to 24 months before national standards are in place.