Afghanistan, fatigue blamed as veterans issues go missing in action on election trail
OTTAWA — Mark Ross first applied to Veterans Affairs Canada for assistance with post-traumatic stress in June 2019. More than two years later, he is still waiting to hear whether his claim has been approved and the government will cover the costs of his treatment.
“That’s the reason I’m upset,” the former soldier said in a recent interview from his home in Pembroke, Ont. “Because they say if it’s post-traumatic stress, they’ll hear it very quickly and they’ll do everything. Well, I’m 100 weeks now.”
Like Ross, tens of thousands of other Canadian veterans have been forced to wait months and sometimes years to learn whether their requests have been approved for disability benefits stemming from psychological and physical injuries sustained while in uniform.
The backlog is among several issues that have become a source of stress, frustration and anger within Canada’s veterans’ community but was noticeably — and unusually — absent from the federal election campaign.