Stop cutting loose ill, injured soldiers too early, ombudsman tells military
OTTAWA — Canada’s military ombudsman is taking aim at the armed forces for cutting loose ill and injured service members before they know what services and benefits the soldiers are getting from the Veterans Affairs Department.
In a landmark report released Tuesday, ombudsman Gary Walbourne says the military should instead keep those troops within the fold until their supports are secure to make sure they aren’t “slipping through the cracks.”
It’s just one of a number of changes that Walbourne says would transform the much-maligned transition system that ill and injured military personnel must pass through on their way back into civilian life.
“Everything we hear about transition, these people slipping through cracks, it’s because they’re let go from one organization and haven’t been accepted into another,” Walbourne said in an interview in advance of the report’s release.


