Benefits for myself were non-existent, and I mean that. They were absolutely non-existent. I was not even briefed about SISIP long-term disability. The dark decade of the 1990s was a real shambles.
Having said that, please let me give credit to Veterans Affairs in terms of their front-line employees. These people, the majority of them, are super-compassionate people. They work super-hard, and they're overworked, stressed, and frustrated. If you speak with district offices, I think it'll be pretty clear that if district offices at random throughout Canada are asked how often a senior manager has come down and actually heard concerns directly from them, the answer will probably be, “Never”. They've come and visited and said hi once every year, but never more than that, so I'm wondering, first, how the senior managers in Charlottetown, isolated from the main oversight agencies in Ottawa, can understand how the rest of the federal government is working.
Second, I'm wondering how those senior managers who are isolated from their district workers can understand what the real needs and requirements are for administering those programs directly to the veterans.
Third, they are not veterans. I mean no disrespect to you, Mr. McColeman; I understand that everyone wants to look at these things logically, but the point is that you have veterans who are disabled and have lost everything. There is a difference between World War II veterans and disabled CF veterans. Word War II veterans were more than happy to get out of the military and integrate back into the workforce, and they were provided with all the programs, which were much more extensive than what exists under the new Veterans Charter, but CF veterans who are disabled want to stay in the military.
I cannot emphasize too much what an incredible blow to the soul, the self-esteem, and the actual sense of worth a veteran has when they're kicked out of the military and forced to go through bureaucratic processes. These are good bureaucrats, they're good people, but they're not good administrators and they don't understand veterans and the needs of those veterans. That's where the problem lies. They will come here sounding very professional, and they are very professional, and they're following all the processes, but they're not doing the job that veterans need them to do, and that's where the problem lies.