As a vet's spouse and a caregiver, I used to feel that I was nothing, but because the parliamentary system has turned our veterans and their families into political issues and is treating them as such, I've become a jack of all trades of advocacy.
I'm here today representing myself. Although I am a member of the VAC family advisory committee. I am also a blogger on 45eNord.ca, a public speaker, an advocate in English and a militante in French. I support, defend, promote, and attack causes rather than people, including JPSU, medical cannabis, caregiving, PTSD, and political situations of caregivers, all topics that have a connection or impact on families.
Since my chase after ex-minister Fantino in 2014, my life is not the same. I'm now a grandmother. My ex-husband and I are divorced, and in some ways, I am still his caregiver. Following our separation, like many vet spouses I know, unfortunately, I became homeless myself. So I made the decision to live in my car and to do a cross-country tour from Newfoundland to Vancouver Island. For six months, I met people, and visited organizations, etc., allowing me to start my own healing process and develop a much wider perspective about the many challenges veterans and their families are confronted with culturally, socially, and geographically speaking.
Finally, I'm now sharing my life with a veteran, also with PTSD, whose last name is, believe it or not, Fantini. I'm still a vet's spouse and a caregiver. The transitioning process never ends because they never become civilians again. A caregiver can be the best ally or the worst enemy to someone who's suffering. The political battle of families and caregivers is about having their identity valued and their dignity respected through support, financial recognition, and education. The collective efforts of the past few years generated a political love and a national recognition that was felt all over the country. A VAC family committee was created. More programs dedicated to families, including children, the forgotten of the forgotten—do I have to say it—were developed, and books were published. MFRCs became more accessible, and more research was done on caregivers who were also generally speaking more included, for instance, at the OSI clinics.
Because we were heard, we became better caregivers. There's still a lot of work to be done but also we were able to better protect ourselves and our families from the collateral damage.
So the new measure that will come into effect this April allowing a caregiver to receive $1,000 in his or her own name is a major political win on paper. It's a positive game-changer for many families, if it's accessible. So in the end, veterans and their families share the most important barrier preventing them from moving forward positively, that barrier being VAC with its own bureaucratic and schizophrenic way to love.
For example, take medical cannabis, a medication. On one hand, VAC makes it available, and for at least 7,000 veterans in this country, it seems to be working. On the other hand, VAC penalizes the veterans and their families with decisions that are truly hurtful, with no consideration for the pain, the impact on the quality of life, and the costs they have to pay for their medication. Everything that concerns the process of the exemption letters for medical cannabis is a shame.
Do you realize that on top of finding the one person among the three or four Canadians who can satisfy Veterans Affairs by writing an exemption letter, you have to fulfill the ridiculous and complicated requirements, and this veteran, after providing all the paperwork, will still have to wait between three to six months before he receives his approval?
In the meantime, some veterans pay more than $1,000 monthly to be able to have their medication that was prescribed and that they need. Do you think pills are that complicated? The answer is no.
So behind each delay, deny, and die, there is a name.
For each file, there is a person who has the power to make time either a powerful healer or a very silent killer. Who should be held accountable for the pain: VAC as an entity, or the people who come here at every Parliamentary session to tell you what you want to hear? To be honest, I don't think you realize the power that one single person working for VAC can have on a veteran's life and his family. Sometimes the barriers are closer to home than we think, and the situation keeps being ignored.
I will give you one example. The OSI clinics in Montreal and Quebec are known to penalize veterans who choose medical cannabis. Veterans will be kicked out of the clinic with no resources, and in some cases their driver's licence will be revoked. I've heard and know of at least 17 of them. There is a problem there.
Who will stand up for these veterans? Does anybody care about their transitioning? Medical cannabis works for them, yet within the system they are all being penalized and psychiatrists are untouchable in this matter.
Two weeks ago, I represented a veteran at his first appeal for his sleep apnea at the VRAB. I represented the veteran. To make a long story short, the veteran had to wait five years before he was able to gather all the paperwork to prove his condition. You have to wait in the provincial health system for five years to be tested. In 2016, the VAC pension agent received all the paperwork proving the existence of the condition, and the confirmation of two doctors who made the connection between the sleep apnea and the PTSD.
The VAC pension agent didn't seem to think it was enough, because she asked for another medical consultant hired by VAC. What do you think this person said: “Well, of course, it's not related.” After I'm done speaking, I will share with you the decision, because I have it. This single decision was made by a medical consultant who never met the client. That person has a lot of power. It means years of waiting for a veteran to fight a ridiculous system that doesn't make sense.
Would you also tell my why Veterans Affairs requires that a veteran who wants an exemption letter must meet face to face with the specialist, and yet they can ask a medical consultant who never meets the veteran for their opinion and that's good enough? This is schizophrenic.
Finally, because I only have five minutes, sometimes the barriers come from the provinces. I know you don't have much power, but in Quebec things are sometimes very particular when it comes to our veterans. For instance, recently a veteran won a legal battle against Revenue Quebec, which is not respecting the Canadian law by forcing a certain category of veterans to pay public insurance plan for prescription drugs. In fact, to this day, Revenue Quebec still doesn't care about the judgment. Who will stand up for the veterans of Quebec who are concerned?
Once again, I will provide you with the paper. There are two things: an article I wrote about this veteran, and also an article that was published last December about the psychiatrist at the OSI clinic of Quebec, who says very openly that they are against medical cannabis.
Barriers are mostly political, if you ask me, when it comes to transitioning. There are countless stories that keep coming my way—Dave is hearing them every day, I'm sure—and five minutes is not enough to talk about the barriers.
Thank you.