RCMP veterans press for end to disability clawback - Action News
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Nova Scotia

RCMP veterans press for end to disability clawback

Wounded RCMP veterans are pressing the federal government to stop clawing back their disability benefits.

RCMP launch class-action lawsuit to stop benefits clawback for disabled Mounties

David White receives about $67 a month of the nearly $1,300 he is paid in benefits and pension. (CBC)

Wounded RCMP veterans are pressing thefederal government to stop clawing back their disability benefits.

Former Nova Scotia and Newfoundland Mountie David White has launched a class-action lawsuit against the government to stop the practice.

White says the clawback is costing himnearly $1,300per month.

White, who served for more than 20 years, is the representative plaintiff in a class-action suit started in 2008. It could represent up to 1,000 Mounties.

Hesuffered hearing loss and developed sound sensitivity a decade ago in two service-related accidents in the mid-1990s and 2001.

The incidents led to his involuntary release from the RCMP in 2002, for which he was given a pain and suffering pension from Veterans Affairs and long-term disability for several hearing impairments linked to his 30 years of service.

But White and other injured RCMP members say most of that money is clawed back under a system similar to one that a judge deemed harsh and unfair in a class-action lawsuit by military veterans, but which still applies to the police veterans.

As months drag on, he says aging and injured RCMP veterans are dying before they see any money returned to them.

"It's disappointing," White said at his lawyer's office in downtown Halifax.

"Some of our veterans are suffering and the clawback being stopped is definitely going to help them. They're getting older and it would be nice to have it resolved before too long."

RCMP want same consideration as injured militaryvets

Dan Wallace, White's lawyer, plans to meet with federal attorneys Monday in the hopes of crafting a deal for injured RCMP veterans who have seen their awards heavily skimmed off since 1975.

Wallace, who also handled the protracted military veterans' case, said several meetings with Justice Department lawyers have been cancelled over the last year and a settlement has not been proposed for a class that could number around 800 people.

He says it's not clear why Ottawa has allowed the case to drag on after a Federal Court judge ruled in May 2012 that Canadian Forces veterans should not have their awards clawed back because the money is not income.

"People need the money and people are dying, so it would be nice for them to see the day when it ends," Wallace said.

"It's really a question of dignity for a lot of these folks, so we hope the government will do the right thing."

The need to move it along became clear in 2009 with the death of Gerard Buote, the man who initiated the case a year earlier. Soon after, White took over as the lead plaintiff.

Wallace says if the meeting fails to produce proposals to settle the matter and end the clawback, the group will head to court in the fall to have the case certified as a class action. He says he's heard from about 200 people so far who want to join.

Pierre-Alain Bujold, a spokesman with the Treasury Board, said in an email that he wouldn't comment on the case because it is before the courts.

Both the Royal Canadian Legion and the Veterans Ombudsman have urged Ottawa to end the practice, calling it unfair and unnecessary in the wake of the Federal Court decision.

White suffers from extreme sound sensitivity

White was diagnosed with tinnitus, which causes a steady ringing in his ears, hearing loss and hyperacusis, which effectively makes every soundlike the turning of a page or water dripping extremely loud.

He wears several devices, including hearing aids, earplugs and a machine, to deaden the sound but says nothing can take away the steady thrum in his ears.

"I deal with this every day," he says. "I was medically discharged from the RCMP, I was unable to work, I can't go to large sporting events or anything where there's noise. But the income that I'm supposed to get from a disability pension is considered wage loss ... and I lose it and that doesn't make sense to me."

The government reduces RCMP veterans' long-term disability benefits by the amount of their disability pension.

White was assessed by Veterans Affairs at being 42 per cent disabled and has $1,297 disability benefits. He gets the remaining $67per month.

He estimates that he's lost $100,000 since he was released from the force.

Wallace says he will ask for a return of all money that was clawed back, with interest.

About 8,000 wounded military veterans were awarded a $887.8-million dollar settlement after former army sergeant Dennis Manuge launched a class-action suit against Ottawa in 2007.

With files from CBC News