Thank you so much, Chair.
Thank you all for being here.
I want to bring forward something that we discussed at our last meeting when the veterans ombud was here. She had a recommendation from 2021 regarding mental health treatment benefits for family members in their own right, for conditions related to military service independent of the veteran's treatment plan and regardless of whether the veteran is engaging in treatment. This is something that has been discussed a lot at this committee as well. That recommendation was affirmed by the government—it had a “yes” beside it—but in the last four years it has not been implemented at all.
We all know that in the most challenging circumstances, when the veteran struggles with mental health, the family struggles, and then the veteran struggles more. It becomes a very caustic and dangerous cycle for the veteran and the family members they have alienated. She affirmed VAC and the work that you do—meeting family needs whenever you can when the veteran is being treated and affirms that family members getting that assistance is required—so kudos to that. That's great, but in the end, that's all you can do because that's all you have legal authority to do, from my understanding. That's the lane you have to work in.
That means if a veteran isn't being treated, the family can't access mental health treatment. If a veteran is estranged, separated or divorced from their significant other, that individual and probably the children can't access mental health. If a veteran is being treated but doesn't support family members receiving that treatment, they don't get it. Also, right now—and this was very troubling to me—if a veteran dies, the family is immediately cut off from mental health services. If that veteran died by suicide, I would think at that point in time that family needs mental health care more than ever.
There are barriers here that need to be taken down, according to the government, this committee and, I think, you. Have you tried reaching out to the government about where you have to go to get that extended authority to provide those services? Have you reached out to the government and had any interaction with them about providing this specific care to family members? We say that when the member serves, the family serves. Have you reached out and had any conversations or interaction in this regard with the government?