Certainly. First, any civilian employee of the federal government would have to report their injury to their immediate supervisor, whoever that may be, who then completes a report of injury and sends it to a central function here in Ottawa, or it may be in one of the other centralized service areas. It's logged there, and somebody in that operation determines for certain that the person is in fact a government employee rather than a self-employed contractor or something.
They then forward that claim of injury, that report of injury, to the workers' compensation board in the home area of the injured person. It's adjudicated there based on the laws of the province in which the individual normally resides, where their home is, or where they're working. So if a person was injured in Afghanistan but their home was in British Columbia, their claim for injury benefits would be adjudicated and then managed by WorkSafe British Columbia on behalf of the Government of Canada. The rules around the quantum of benefits that would be paid and so on would generally be those of that specific jurisdiction.
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