Thank you very much, Mr. Chair. I much appreciate it.
As noted, my name is Bernard Butler. I'm the assistant deputy minister for strategic policy and commemoration with Veterans Affairs Canada.
Mr. Chairman, bonjour à tous. Many thanks for the opportunity to appear before the committee today. It's always a great pleasure to engage with you in the context of the important work you do on behalf of all of Canada's veterans and their families, and in this context in particular, in terms of a comparison of related benefits and services provided in other jurisdictions.
It is clear that since May 1, 2017, when I last appeared before this committee and you were just embarking on your study, you have been exposed to a wide array of testimony and evidence from a broad range of sources, from our allies to independent organizations. It would seem apparent that there are many similarities as well as differences in both the issues faced by veterans and the approaches that are developed to address them. Although all related benefits and services must be viewed and understood in the historical, socio-economic, and political context of each country that is looked at, it is equally clear that there is always opportunity to learn from best practices and innovative solutions that may be identified elsewhere.
Veterans Affairs Canada has over time endeavoured to ensure that its policies and practices are evidence-informed and based on credible research and best practices in other jurisdictions and complementary to other available programs from the Government of Canada. I would strongly encourage the committee to look at veterans' benefits and services from a whole-of-government perspective, including those benefits provided by the Canadian Armed Forces in terms of programming, such as superannuation benefits, long-term disability benefits, and insurance coverages.
The Veterans Affairs Canada departmental plan for 2017 and 2018 makes it clear that our focus is the well-being of our veterans and their families, and that we seek to provide the best possible benefits and services tailored to their needs. In this context, “well-being” is defined as being determined by multiple factors, including a need for purpose, financial security, housing, health, family and community, resilience, and identity. I have no doubt that this is not entirely different from what you have heard from many of your witnesses. How each jurisdiction achieves this as an outcome, however, may well differ.
What is striking is the commonality of issues that veterans and their families are experiencing across most of these jurisdictions, whether it be the United States, the U.K., Australia, or New Zealand. Transition from military to civilian life, employment, mental health, and support to families appear to be common themes.
As you are aware, there have been many improvements made to programming for veterans, and in particular to the new Veterans Charter since its implementation in 2006. Much of the investment on behalf of the Government of Canada has been directed to these very themes, and all of it has been designed to support the desired outcome of well-being as described above. All of this should be considered as well in the context of a wide range of benefits available to veterans through other VAC programs, such as the veterans independence program; our health care program, including treatment benefits and long-term care; case management; and rehabilitation.
Some of the more significant investments from budget 2016 and budget 2017 have been directed along the themes of supporting transition, providing better support to families, and investing in mental health services and care for veterans at risk. I'm just going to highlight a few of those, such as the hiring of some 400 additional staff to reduce the ratio of clients to case managers to an average of 25 to one; increasing the income support benefit, the earnings loss benefit, from 75% to 90% of pre-release salary; increasing the disability award benefit to $360,000; delivery of a suicide prevention strategy; support to families through the caregiver recognition benefit; expanded access to military family resource centres; ending of time limits for surviving spouses to apply for vocational rehabilitation; creation of the veterans' education benefit; establishment of a centre of excellence for PTSD and related mental health conditions; enhancement of career transition services; creation of a veteran and family well-being fund and a veteran emergency fund; and an outreach strategy to ensure that veterans and their families are informed of the range of supports available to them.
These initiatives should serve Canada's veterans and their families well. At the same time, we continue to work in support of our minister's remaining mandate commitments, including the reduction in complexity of our programming, strengthening our partnership, streamlining our financial benefits, and re-establishing a lifelong pension as an option.
We will continue to work with our federal and provincial partners and not-for-profit organizations in areas such as homelessness and unemployment, and we will continue to work hard to ensure that releasing members and their families can access the rights, benefits, and services more quickly, more efficiently, and more effectively. I have no doubt that the work of this committee in its comparative review of veterans and their families in other jurisdictions will prove of great value to us as we move forward.
In closing, I would like to thank you for your efforts and this opportunity to appear today. I will turn now to my colleague, Michel Doiron, who is going to speak in more detail about what the department is doing to assist veterans and families in transition.
Thank you very much.