Canadian 25 year old Veteran with Depleted Uranium – Induced Cancer Battles for Pension

Steven Dornan, 45, of Kingston, is battling Veteran Affairs Canada for a disability pension.
Steven Dornan, 45, of Kingston, is battling Veteran Affairs Canada for a disability pension.

Veteran with cancer battles Ottawa for pension
Kingston man exposed to uranium while serving in Yugoslavia in 1996

Steven Dornan served two terms in Bosnia while in the Canadian military, but is now fighting a different kind of battle on two fronts.

Dornan, 45, is battling cancer that doctors say resulted from exposure to uranium while he served as a weapons inspector in the former war-torn Yugoslavia in 1996.

The Kingston, Kings County, resident is also battling with Veterans Affairs Canada for a pension that he and veterans groups say he is entitled to because of his illness.

“It’s just atrocious,” Dornan said in an interview Tuesday as his wife, Roseann, entered the second day of a sit-in at the Wilmot, Annapolis County, office of West Nova MP Greg Kerr.

Kerr, a Progressive Conservative, serves as a parliamentary secretary to Veterans Affairs Minister Jean-Pierre Blackburn.

Dornan, a 25-year veteran of the Canadian Forces, said he has been fighting Veterans Affairs for the past nine years for a full pension for his non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, which doctors say was caused or aggravated by his exposure to toxic chemicals inhaled during his service in Bosnia. Doctors say Dornan’s disease is a chronic lymphatic cancer that will eventually claim his life. He was given 15 years to live from the time of his initial diagnosis in 2002.

Dornan, who also served in Afghanistan in 2002 while undergoing cancer treatment, is being treated with drugs and chemotherapy. But doctors say the treatments will eventually stop working.

But the Veterans Affairs Review and Appeal Board has repeatedly denied him a disability pension, even though the Federal Court, along with five doctors and two scientists, has upheld his claim.

The review board ruled that the evidence presented by the doctors and scientists is not credible, even though the Federal Court has ruled that the board has no authority to rule on the credibility of expert witnesses.

“It is shameful behaviour and incredibly unjust,” Roseann Dornan said in an email.

“Their inability to do what is right has personally cost us much precious time, energy, frustration, and major financial strain.

“Most important of these is time, as my husband will only become more ill as his disease progresses.”

Dornan said she is staging the sit-in out of “profound frustration and desperation.”

Steven Dornan said the only option left is to take his battle public.

He wants his case referred to the veterans affairs minister and has made a formal request for the minister to review his claim.

“I am hoping that by shining a bright light on our personal, private issues and situation, the minister of veterans affairs will be able to review my husband’s entire . . . file and hopefully give us closure and a graceful exit from this nine-year nightmare,” said Roseann Dornan.

Michael Blais, founder of the Canadian Veterans Advocacy group in Ottawa, is encouraging other veterans and their families to support the Dornans.

“Many of you will know that Steve, a career soldier, has cancer attributed to his service in former Yugoslavia,” Blais said in an email message distributed to veterans.

“They have applied for . . . VAC support and have been denied through the appeal process, even though their doctors have attributed his cancer to his service.

“I would encourage all veterans and their families who support . . . Canadian Veterans Advocacy to stand beside Rosie as she begins her quest for justice.”

The Dornans organized a rally in Kingston last November to protest shoddy government treatment of Canadian military veterans.

Blackburn has said he is waiting to hear from the board concerning Dornan’s formal request that the minister review the case.

Source: The Chronicle Herald.ca
By: GORDON DELANEY Valley Bureau
( gdelaney@herald.ca)

4 responses

  1. Unbelievable!!!!But not surprising. This is how a Colonel got away with break and enters and sexual assaults, yet had a perfect military record. They covered up for him for years. it is an officer’s army. It wasn’t until he got caught murdering people did he get dealt with.If this was one of those high ranking officers he would have got his pension right away. It is a reflection of the real Harper Government. The officers in the Canadian Military routinely overrule medical doctors often leading to futher injury to already injured soldiers. Look at the statistics on troops hurt here in Canada. These are the same people on the appeal board. there are some civilians but most are retired Colonels and Lt Colonels who rountinely overruled medical doctors. The appeal board does this sort of thing all the time. This is nothing new. They wouldn’t act like this unless they had the approval of both the Minister and Harper. Each board member should do jail time for undermining the findings of a Federal Judge. But they won’t do that, they will probably get a medal instead.

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