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PUBLICATION:
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The London Free Press
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DATE: |
2005.05.25 |
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EDITION:
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Final |
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SECTION:
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Opinion Pages
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PAGE: |
A11 |
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SOURCE:
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BY GREG WESTON, SPECIAL TO
THE FREE PRESS |
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DATELINE:
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OTTAWA |
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COLUMN:
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National Affairs
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SOLUTION FOR
TOXIC TEST VICTIMS, FAMILIES
Justice is finally coming to dozens of elderly widows whose
husbands were used as human guinea pigs by the Canadian
military during government-run tests of chemical warfare toxins.
The widows were shut out of a government compensation
program over a bureaucratic glitch, and have been fighting a bitter
battle for their due.
A recent article in this space about the widows' plight --
and the public outrage that ensued -- apparently moved Defence
Minister Bill Graham to kick some butts in high places.
Graham says he has now resolved the issue, and the widows
will get their compensation. He has secured cabinet approval to
issue special $24,000 cheques to each of the widows or other family
members.
From 1941-1970, more than 3,600 young army
recruits stationed in Ottawa and Suffield, Alta., were doused in
chemical warfare agents, jammed into trenches soaked in toxic
mustard gas, and forced to breathe poisonous fumes.
The tests left most of the men scarred for life, with
serious health ailments from cancer to chronic heart, respiratory
and skin problems and blindness.
Last year, on the eve of the federal election, the
government agreed to pay $24,000 in compensation to each of the
victims -- or, given that most of the veterans are dead, to their
families. So far, about 700 cases have been settled.
But there was one hitch: A widow or other family member had
to provide the government with a copy of the veteran's will before a
claim could be processed. No will, no compensation.
It should have come as no surprise to the bright lights in
government that many of the victims had died without a will.
Finally, following our story, the defence minister
personally intervened with the bureaucrats.
"I kept saying to my officials, 'Look we have to resolve
this,' " Graham said. "They are pensioners wrangling over legalities
as they get older every day."
To get around the legal tangle over the will issue, the
defence officials devised a new rule.
Calling it a "very fair and practical solution," Graham
said the government is simply cutting special cheques to whichever
family member was caring for the victim at the time of his death.
"It will at least ensure that the person who was the
primary caregiver is the person who is getting the compensation."
The problem was so silly, the solution so simple, the big
wonder is why it took more than a year and a public uproar to fix
the mess.
No matter. Graham deserves credit for finally giving the
bureaucracy a collective head-shake.
Graham also told me he is equally determined to find a
solution to the much larger and thornier issue of compensating the
potentially thousands of Canadian veterans poisoned by
Agent Orange herbicides in the 1960s.
The Defence Department has admitted the U.S. military was
allowed to test Agent Orange for use in the Vietnam War by spraying
it at CFB Gagetown, N.B., around 1966.
Exposure to Agent Orange has been linked to a long list of
cancers and other diseases.
The Canadian Department of Veterans' Affairs
has now accepted two compensation claims from former Gagetown
soldiers that their exposure to Agent Orange gave them terminal
cancer.
Since our story appeared, Veterans' Affairs has been
flooded with inquiries, and a litany of health-related horror
stories from military families who were stationed at Gagetown
during the tests.
The defence minister says his department is combing old
files to try to identify the many thousands of veterans who would
have been at Gagetown around 1966.
"We're telling
veterans . . . 'get in touch with us, and we'll help put together a
case,' " Graham says. "We do have to compensate the people who were
exposed -- there is no question of that."
