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Twice-forgotten soldier sues Veterans Affairs over 'abandoned' case file

A former soldier with PTSD is suing the federal government, accusing it of mishandling his case file and causing him to miss out up to $1,000 per month in benefits.

Critics say Charles Scott's case describes an overwhelmed VAC unable to keep up with veterans' pleas for help

Former master corporal Charles Scott in Kabul in 2004. 'I missed out on a lot, just like a lot of other Canadians.' (Contributed)

When former master corporal Charles Scott left the army in 2008, a note was scribbled in his Veterans Affairs file warning that he faced asignificant risk of developing post-traumatic stress disorder.

The warning was never followed up on by the department; no one ever contacted him about it and no one ever arranged for treatment. Scott himself didn't know about the assessment until more than a decade later, after he applied under privacy law to see his file and several years after he had sought treatment for PTSD on his own.

It wouldn'tbe the last time the former combat soldier and army intelligence operative, who served with thePrincess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantryin Bosnia and Afghanistan, fell through the cracks of thebureaucracy.

Scott launched a lawsuit in Federal Court last month accusing Veterans Affairs Canada (VAC) of negligence and of violating federal law (the Veterans Well-being Act) in its handling of his file.

"It gives me no pleasure to sue Canada, a country that I joined to serve for benefits that impact me and my very young family," Scott, 45, toldCBC News.

Scott saidthat his Veterans Affairs case manager stoppedreturning his calls and emails in the winter of 2019, just asthe Liberal government was preparing to launch its long-awaited pension-for-life plan for Canada's former soldiers.

Buried and forgotten

What Scott didn't know at the time and what it took an access-to-information request filed by him with the federal governmentto fully explain is that hiscase managerhad been gone from the department sinceearly2019.Scott'sfile, and possibly those of others,lay buried and forgotten in the Edmonton VAC office and no one noticeduntil Scott called the veterans' crisis line in late April 2019.

"My file was abandoned and not handed over," he said. "The veteran team service manager in Edmonton did not hand over my file to another case manager."

As a result, Scott said, hemissed his chance to lockin the supplementary career replacement benefits which had been a feature of Veterans Affairs'old benefits system before beingphased out with the introduction of the current Liberal government'srevised system.

He was forced to join the new system of benefits a system that,prior to its introduction on April 1, 2019,the Parliamentary Budget Officer saidwas less generousthan the old system to the most severely disabled veterans.

Scott's statement of claim doesn't cite a sum at this point, but heestimates the federal government's error has cost him as much as $1,000 per month.

Former master corporal Charles Scott in 2019. (Contributed)

Scott, who worked for several years as a federal occupational health and safety inspector beforePTSD overwhelmed his life, said he did not want to sue the federal government but was left with no alternative.

"I have made every attempt to contact the minister of Veterans Affairs. I have made every attempt to contact members of Parliament without success," he said.

'It's not fair'

Critics tracking the veterans file likeNDP MP Rachel Blaney say Scott's experience fits with what they've heard from other veterans, and describes an overtaxed Veterans Affairs bureaucracy that can't keep up with veterans' pleas for help.

"It's absolutely unacceptable," said Blaney."We have heard from folks working at VAC they have a lot of concerns about this very thing happening and that they're under-resourced in terms of staffing to deal with these issues.

"It's not fair that our veterans are the ones paying for the consequence of that."

It's alsoa perfect illustration of what the Liberal government was warned about when it implemented the overhaul of veterans benefits, Blaney said, adding the government should have "listened more closely to the people who are analyzing the system."

The Liberal government under Paul Martin proposed in 2005 to replace the decades-old system of veterans benefits under the Pension Act with a new system called the New Veterans Charter.

The subsequentConservative government under Stephen Harper adopted the charter, then tweaked it in response to protests from veterans. The campaigning Liberals promised in 2015 to restore to veterans a choice betweena pension for life and a lump-sum payment as compensation for service-related injuries.

But beforethe Liberal plan could beimplemented, Parliamentary Budget Officer Yves Giroux wrote a report warning thatwhile the plan would beslightly more generous than the system it replaced, it still would leave many in worse financial shape they would have been under the old pre-Veterans Charter system.

"From the perspective of the veteran, virtually all clients would be better off if they received the benefits of the (pre-2006) Pension Act," Giroux's report says.

'I missed out on a lot'

Scott is bitter.

"All of my occupational injuries and illnesses are pre-2006," he said. "I missed out on the Pension Act. I missed out on those financial services. I missed out on a lot, just like a lot of other Canadians."

VAC spokespeople won't speak to the particulars of Scott's case, citing privacy protections. They also haven't explained why Scott's file was allowed tolanguish,or say how many other soldiers might be affected by forgotten files.

VAC spokesperson Marc Lescoutre toldCBC News in an email that,normally,the department "proactively" reassigns files as required when a case manager is set to retiresoon, for example.

When a case managerleaves unexpectedly,or calls in sick,the on-duty case manager is supposed to take over the manager's files.

As for the problems with the department's services for veterans and the pension plan, another VAC spokesperson,John Embury, issued a statement noting that the "Pension for Life" program representeda $3.6 billion federal investment, and citingthe government's promise to review how the "Pension for Life" plan is being administered.

"As directed by both the prime minister and the minister of Veterans Affairs, VAC is thoroughly reviewing the implementation of Pension for Life, and may recommend changes, where needed, to improve the outcomes and experiences of veterans and their families," said the statement.