Okay, I'd like to first thank you all for allowing me the opportunity to come here today and represent wounded, ill, and injured veterans.
My name is Corporal Mark Fuchko. I joined the military in 2002. I joined the reserve force while I was still in high school. I had the opportunity to do two tours in Afghanistan. I did a nine-month tour in 2005-06 and I did my second tour in 2008. On March 29, 2008, while conducting Operation Mulki Azad the vehicle I was in struck an improvised explosive device.
Upon striking the bomb I remember seeing a red flash in my episcope and I looked down and my right leg was actually sitting right in my lap. I knew I was in trouble. When that bomb had gone off it also shattered my pelvis into several pieces. I had broken every major bone below my belly button and I didn't actually know it at first. I thought I was paralyzed when the initial blast went off. I tapped my left boot. When I did this my tib-fib came out of my trousers. I knew my leg was broken. At that point I took my C-A-T tourniquets, a really expensive device, it costs around five dollars. I tourniqueted my right and left leg to prevent any bleeding just so I wouldn't die.
Just the nature of the blast and the way our vehicle was I could not be extricated from the vehicle for over an hour. So there I sat bleeding and dying and doing my own first aid. It was probably one of the most horrible experiences of my life. I remember when the blast went off the first thing that kind of went through my head was, if I die here my mom's going to kill me. I have a seven-year-old son and I was really keen on seeing him again, so I was bound and determined to do everything I could to make sure I got out of there alive.
After I was able to successfully, or I guess unsuccessfully, apply first aid, my gunner who could actually get his hand down to me told me, “Mark you've got to get the vehicle off because we're starting to smoke, we could start on fire and explode”. So not only did I have to deal with these horrible injuries, I had to deal with a vehicle that could potentially cause other casualties. So after being stranded in the vehicle I was pretty sure I was going to die. I just wanted to get out in the fresh air and die in the fresh air because there I was in this hole, I was bleeding, I was dying, and I was in a lot of pain.
So after roughly about 45 minutes the guys in my combat team were able to bring another tank over that ripped the hatch off the tank and they were able to extricate me out of the vehicle, get me into a helicopter, and put me into the Role 3 hospital. While I was there I took on approximately 25 units of blood and plasma. I am not a medical professional but they tell me that is quite a lot of blood. They told me I could have bled out three times. One of the medics told me I flatlined three or four times. Luckily, I was able to pull through. I went to Landstuhl Regional Medical Facility. The situation was fairly dire. My family was flown over to see me at that point. I actually pulled through and long story short, here I am before you today.
When I originally deployed to Afghanistan in 2005-06 that was when the old Veterans Charter was enacted or Chrétien was still on the books. I was at the Provincial Reconstruction Team when Master Corporal Paul Franklin was injured, when he lost both of his legs. I remember seeing him and remarking to another friend in my platoon, I hope that never happens to me, and two years later it happened to me.
It was a nightmare and I have to live with this every day. It is something that has changed my life for better and for worse and again, I'm just not the same person after that. Everything I do is different, my life is different, my future, what I thought I was going to do. It was a major upheaval. It was really hard on me and it was hard on my family. But what happened to me, I accepted it, but when I came back to Canada there was a whole grip of issues where I really felt that they were the cause of a lot of frustration. I don't even know how to describe it.
I came back and I thought I would have a lot of support when I got home, and I had a lot of support from my family, but where I didn't see it, I didn't see it at the political level. So for example, I would have politicians, I will not name names, who constantly were visiting me, constantly asking me what do you need, what do you need, what do you need? The laundry list went on and on. This happened for every single wounded vet. So far nothing has been delivered on any of this.
I just celebrated six years of my alive day, that's when I lost my legs, and nothing has changed. I keep hearing that this new Veterans Charter is a growing, evolving charter, and thus far it has proved to be anything but. Right now I am still serving in the military. When I was assessed the disability award, which is a lump sum that is handed out, I received the maximum.
Veterans Affairs categorized me as 108% disabled because I'm a bilateral below-the-knee amputee. I had severe damage to my hips. I'll require a double hip replacement in the future, and I'm not even 30 yet. My pelvis, I don't even know how to describe it...it does not look normal. It has been rearranged by that blast and is still healing today.
I was awarded the maximum dollar figure. I got awarded $266,000 as a disability award from the new Veterans Charter. I looked back at what the old system was, because, like most veterans, when I heard the new Veterans Charter was coming in...we weren't really told a whole lot about it. The only brief I remember getting about it was in the field in Wainwright one time before we deployed, and we were told, hey, there's a new Veterans Charter, and it's probably better than the old one. That was it. That's all we were told. It wasn't until after I was wounded that I really learned what this legislation meant to me and what would it mean to my future life.
I was awarded $266,000. That was the maximum. That was my pain and suffering award. To me, for the pain and suffering that I went through in the hour that I was trapped in a tank, a smoking coffin where I thought I was going to die, no dollar amount can really cover that. Nothing can.
Then, when I come back and I hear that this charter is designed to get me back to work, I feel like that is completely laughable. I retire on June 1, and I'm really concerned about what's going to happen to me when I get out.
One specific aspect of the new Veterans Charter that I'm talking about is the earnings loss benefit. This benefit is 75% of a member's pre-release salary. In the Canadian Forces, being injured effectively ends your career. You cannot progress. You cannot get promoted. Through no fault of your own, you're stuck in your position. I've been stuck in my current rank for six years. I could have been promoted six years before getting injured, but I chose to serve and go overseas because I thought I was needed. Thus, through no fault of my own, my career stagnated. When I get out, I'll be receiving 75% of my pre-release salary, which will be taxed.
The other problem with this is that all other income, the way it's been explained to me, will be clawed back out of that. I keep hearing that the new Veterans Charter is designed to get me back to work. Well, if I go out and get a job—menial, just doing whatever I can to contribute to society—there's no benefit to me in doing so, because any money I earn from doing that will simply be clawed back. This is not an incentive for anybody to get back to work and back to contributing to society.
Under the old system, a pension was awarded for life. They weren't subject to a clawback until the age of 65. To me, that's a lot more incentive for somebody to get back to work, because they're earning, they don't have to worry about it getting clawed back, and they can contribute to society in any way they can, even if it's just being a Walmart greeter or doing something like that.
I kind of feel like that was a real slap in the face, and I was really upset by that one.
The other thing is the permanent impairment allowance. I can receive my disability award essentially as soon as I am wounded and disabled, but I cannot collect the permanent impairment allowance until I take my uniform off. I lost my legs. When I take my uniform off, I suddenly become permanently impaired? I think the idea is kind of ridiculous. If they're going to award that, it should be awarded immediately, at the same time as a disability award.
I also hear about the additional stipend that has been awarded for the catastrophically injured. Again, I have received no clear explanation as to who is awarded that or what the stipulations for it are. I am considered 108% disabled, but I still cannot be told whether I quality for this extra stipend.
The other thing about the earnings loss benefit is that the previous award was done for life and was tax-free. This new ELB ends at age 65. After the age of 65, the individual receives 2% of the total payout in a lump sum. If a private at the age of 30, say, is making roughly $42,000 a year, that equates to a $40,000 lump sum to retire on at the age of 65. This is woefully inadequate. I don't know anybody who can retire on that amount of money and live for an extra 20 to 30 years.
Thus, I have a lot of concerns about what's going to happen to me once I leave.
I'm very fortunate. I have my mind intact. I have my motivation intact. I am able to walk and to be fairly active. But given my disability, I may not be able to walk tomorrow, the day after, or in the future. We just don't know. As such, I've taken all the steps I can. I've worked my butt off so that I can go to school. I'm currently at Mount Royal University in Calgary, Alberta. I'm trying to finish my undergrad degree. My intent is to eventually study law, because I really don't have a whole lot of faith in this system to leave me anywhere but poverty-stricken.
Leaving it at that, that is my story, gentlemen, and I'll open the floor to any questions you may have.