Thank you, Chair.
I really want to sincerely thank all of you for inviting me here today. After 17 years of not a single substantive change to the Public Servants Disclosure Protection Act, a highly discriminatory act designed to fail, Bill C-290 is a long-overdue, vital and desperately welcome first-step initiative. I would not remove anything from this bill. However, like those who have come before and will come after me, I recommend some essential additions. You will find them in the four-page brief I have submitted to the committee.
First, please allow my story to underscore and add to your fine work.
As an air force intelligence officer, I served in the first Persian Gulf War. I would return early, broken physically and mentally, lost in a military culture that heavily stigmatizes any injury as a moral weakness. I hid much of my suffering, and therefore received little help. Veterans Affairs Canada, after a litany of bureaucratic deterrents, would recognize my disabilities and provide treatment and care.
As I regained my strength, I could not ignore that this system was abandoning or destroying so many of those it should be helping. I would be the first to speak out against the 2005 money-saving initiative to replace lifelong veterans disability pensions with one-time lump sums.
My calls for due process caught the eye and the ire of senior bureaucrats. The Government of Canada, which I lost much of my well-being and health protecting, sought revenge. My benefits and treatment were threatened or taken away. Allies who sat in Parliament refused to speak with me. Even the Prime Minister's Office told me that I should seek treatment, as if these reprisals were merely a manifestation of combat-related post-traumatic stress disorder.
I fought blindly to defend my family. My wife, an immigrant, was not yet a Canadian citizen. Senior bureaucrats with no medical training planned an ambush, calling me in for a “friendly chat” wherein they would issue an ultimatum that I be placed into the Veterans Affairs clinic for psychiatric care. Should I refuse—senior bureaucrats informed the minister of the outcome of the medical assessment before it had occurred—VAC would refuse to support my mental health providers, knowing full well that removal would likely result in my taking my life.
It took me five years to prove this. By 2010, over 14,000 pages were generated on every aspect of my personal life available to Veterans Affairs Canada, then distorted and placed into briefing notes provided to over 250 senior bureaucrats, my member of Parliament, the parliamentary secretary of the veterans affairs committee and two ministers, and briefings to the Prime Minister's Office. Meanwhile, another lengthy battle with VAC had them finally admit to having over 2.1 million pages resulting from a request I made about the department monitoring my newspaper columns and media appearances.
The evidence is overwhelming. Senior bureaucrats took the gloves off and pursued a two-part plan to remove my benefits and treatment while simultaneously discrediting me and my advocacy work. I would receive one of only two official federal government apologies at the time given to an individual not related to wrongful conviction. The other recipient of the apology was Maher Arar.
I put my life back together yet again and completed a master's in public ethics. Shortly after, in 2017, the government would table other deceptively crafted legislation that claimed to be reinstating lifelong pensions. I spoke out. Minister Seamus O'Regan accused me in a newspaper column of stating “mistruths”. The day after the article's publication, Veterans Affairs, without warning or consultation, terminated care for my son, who was then six years old—except Veterans Affairs had learned much since the 2010 privacy breaches and apology. Officials never put on record the reasons for cancelling the care, or they merely refused to release this information.
Four years of working with the privacy and information commissioners have been disheartening. Meanwhile, my health has spiralled again. My PTSD and depression have the unwelcome bedfellow now of severe anxiety disorder, as my mind and body broke once more, with panic attacks lasting not hours but months. Telephone calls from the case manager who signed the letter ceasing my son's care sent me to the ER on multiple occasions with heart arrhythmia. There were ambulances to our house as my son looked on, and monthly ER visits and hospitalization for household accidents as my mind and body disconnected.
After 30 years of suffering constant prostatitis caused by the Persian Gulf War, I developed stage 3 cancer. I sit here today recovering from that surgery.
A system with dozens of the most senior public service officials attempted to humiliate, disempower and discredit me, and then attacked my son's care when I was already dealing with life-threatening chronic illnesses from my military service, yet I was the one accused of being unreasonable, unstable and untruthful.
It is a wonder that anyone who serves in any capacity for our federal government would risk their job, their health, their reputation and their family to speak out. Still, they selflessly do. I, like them, believe that the corruption and mismanagement that appear in the country we love so dearly.... Such unscrupulous or dangerous behaviour must be called out lest others, or our nation, be harmed.
I strongly support expanding the act to former public servants and contractors. Serving military members and CSE have their deeply flawed internal complaint mechanisms. That leaves military veterans as the only federally employed or formerly employed demographic without protection, yet veterans are deeply vulnerable to the whims of a vengeful bureaucracy.
Over 100,000 veterans and almost 40,000 family members are partially or wholly dependant on Veterans Affairs for their financial security. There are no big box stores for veterans' benefits. There's only Veterans Affairs. This places veterans and their families in a particularly vulnerable situation, especially considering that almost 40,000 veterans are suffering a mental health injury.
Veterans are also uniquely positioned to not just see but experience any potential wrongdoing, not only in the $200 million in contracts awarded annually by Veterans Affairs Canada, but also in the new $0.5-billion contract for rehabilitation. We must, as a nation, take good governance and accountability as seriously as the rest of the developed world.
We must see whistle-blowing not merely as an inherent right to be protected, as we protect freedom of expression and our Charter of Rights and Freedoms. We must see whistle-blowing as the voice of reason, independence and accountability in a system where senior civil servants hold all the cards in consistently avoiding accountability.
Ultimately, we must protect those, especially—