Military member waits almost a decade for defence department to process grievance - Action News
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Military member waits almost a decade for defence department to process grievance

Canadian military commanders are often accused of showing indifference towardcomplaints from junior members especiallymisconduct complaints. Now,the defence department'sombudsman reports thatone military member has waited for more thannine years for agrievance claimto be processed.

Ombudsman says it's another sign of a grievance process on the verge of collapse

A man in a blue suit stands in a dark room.
Canadian Armed Forces Ombudsman Gregory Lick speaks during a news conference after releasing a position paper on the ongoing misconduct crisis in the Canadian military in Ottawa on Tuesday, June 22, 2021. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

Canadian military commanders are often accused of showing indifference towardcomplaints from junior members especiallymisconduct complaints.

Now,the defence department'sombudsman reports thatone military member has waited for more thannine years for agrievance claimto be processed.

In a bluntly-worded letter to the country's top military commander, ombudsman Gregory Lick complained that his office has received two individual grievances that have languished for "over 912 days and 3,285 days respectively."

The complainantsand the substance of the grievances were not identified.

The ombudsman's office reports that, as of mid-October, 664 grievances hadbeen sitting in limbofor over a year and a half,awaitingfinal review by the Department of National Defence prior tothe chief of the defence staff signing off.

It's a significant if little-known aspectof the sexual misconduct crisis which has shaken the military to its foundation.

The right of military members to grieve decisions played a central role in the Federal Court's recent decision to reject Maj.-Gen. Dany Fortin's challenge of his removal as head of the country's vaccine rollout task force. His claims of political interference were turned aside by Justice Anne Marie McDonald on Oct. 12.

Justice McDonald ruled the career soldier had not fully taken advantage of the redress mechanism already in place for members of the Armed Forces. Fortin faces a single charge of sexual assault dating back three decades in a separatecriminal case, which returns to court on Jan 5, 2022.

Fortin's lawyers had argued the grievance system was too slow and overwhelmed to properly address his concerns.

Deadlines in name only

Beyond the recent legal challenge, Lick has argued repeatedly that the broken redress system has underminedmilitary members' beliefthat they can getswift, fair and impartial reviews of their complaints whether they'readministrative orcareer-related, or linked to allegations of sexual harassment.

Under the current rules, complaints must be acknowledged within 10 days and a decision rendered within 120 days. Those deadlines are rarely met.

"There is an immediate need to address timeliness in the grievance process and the backlog of reviews at the [final authority] level," Lick wrote in an Oct. 12, 2021 letter to chief of the defence staff Gen. Wayne Eyre. The "final level" refers to the review process that takes place in the chief of the defence staff's office.

A system on the verge of failure

"These significant delays have resulted in matters being unresolved for too long and do little to inspire trust in the process,"Lick added.

It's not the first time Lick has raised the matter in public. Duringa news conference at the end of June to address the growing sexual misconduct crisis, hewarned the grievance system wasabout to "collapse under its own weight."

Chief of defence staff Gen. Wayne Eyre says that the lack of deadlines for adjudication of grievances is "unacceptable." (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

In his written response to Lick's letter, Eyre conceded the backlog was a major issue.

"Speaking directly to your point, we acknowledge that the current lack of an adjudication time limit at the Final Authority level is unacceptable," Eyre wrote. "Given limited increases in resourcing anticipated for [Canadian Forces Grievance Authority] over the near to mid-term, any time limit will need to be implemented in a reasonable, progressive and phased manner in order to be successful."

A lack of trust

Eyre told Lick that many of the grievance files are "tremendously complex" and the department has made progress onthe backlogover the past 18 months.

In his landmark review of the military justice system, retired Supreme Court justice Morris Fish devoted some of his sharpest criticisms to the grievance system, which he called "broken." He said military members are entitled to a system that permits them to freely bring up their complaints and concerns.

"The military grievance system, in particular, has not done that for decades and it does not do so now," Fish wrote in his review, released earlier this year.

In a follow up letter to Eyredated Nov. 23, 2021, Lick warned that the lack of reform has a direct "impact on the morale of Canadian Armed Forces members.

"This in turn creates a distrust in a system meant to help, not hurt them, and can negatively impact the CAF culture."