Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - June 23, 2012, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A12
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T HE Anglican diocese and a refugee
sponsorship group in Winnipeg
are taking the federal government
to court over its plan to strip new
refugees of medical benefits such as
prescription medicine and prosthetics.
" Churches don't often take governments,
or anyone else for that matter,
to court," said Bishop Donald Phillips,
with the diocese of Rupert's Land.
What prompted the legal action was
Citizenship and Immigration Canada's
decision to no longer provide supplemental
health care to refugees during
their first year in Canada, starting
June 30.
That's a breach of contract, said Tom
Denton, executive director of Hospitality
House Refugee Ministry.
The diocese and church- funded Hospitality
House have a contractual relationship
with the federal government,
as do other refugee sponsorship-
agreement holders,
Denton said. " One of the
assumptions underlying the
sponsorships is the interim
federal health plan would
be in place," he said.
The plan has been providing
supplemental health
benefits to former refugees
during their first year in
Canada, when their needs
can often be great, he said.
" Their health and their
lives are literally on the
line."
Human rights lawyer
and Nobel Peace Prize nominee David
Matas is representing the diocese in
the court battle, which is funded by donations
from private citizens, Denton
said.
" You don't undertake a decision like
this lightly, but the issue is very, very
important to people," he said.
In the past 18 months, the Anglican
Church of Canada's diocese of Rupert's
Land has had more than 450 refugees
arrive under its sponsorship. The diocese
is one of the largest sponsors of
refugees in Canada.
Hospitality House has sponsored
thousands of refugees under the authority
of sponsorship agreements the
Anglican diocese and the Roman Catholic
archdiocese of Winnipeg have with
Ottawa. Hospitality House is joining the
lawsuit to protect its clients sponsored
under the Catholic archdiocese, Denton
said. It has around 6,000 outstanding
sponsorships awaiting processing overseas,
he said.
Ottawa is cutting the interim federal
health plan for refugees not long after
announcing plans to shift 1,000 refugees
annually from the government- assisted
refugee program to private sponsorships
over the next couple of years.
The Canadian Council for Refugees
says the cut to the interim federal
health plan will be a serious deterrent
to sponsors such as churches that the
government hopes will pick up the
1,000 cases it's planning to drop.
For a number of years, Canada has
selected many refugees with high medical
needs and brought them here, the
council said in a press release. Canada
bears a responsibility to make sure
those needs are met once the refugees
are here, the council says.
Immigration spokeswoman Alexis
Pavlich didn't comment on the court action
but emailed a statement supporting
her department's actions.
" Contrary to some claims,
genuine refugees whose
claims have been accepted
and the vast majority of
asylum claimants will see
little change in their primary
coverage. They will continue
to have access to the doctor
and hospital services that all
Canadians receive through
their provincial health- care
system, including treatment
for chronic disease," she
said.
The cost of things such as
medication, and dental and
vision care will have to be
covered by the refugees or their sponsors,
said Denton.
" It's much worse for governmentsponsored
refugees," he said. " The government
is their sponsor and they've
abandoned them."
The government says it's only treating
refugees the same as Canadians
who can't afford supplemental health
benefits. " What we will no longer do is
ask hard- working Canadian taxpayers
to foot the bill for health- care services
for asylum- seekers, including failed
asylum claimants who refuse to leave
the country, that are more generous
than what they are entitled to themselves,"
Pavlich said.
Denton said the Harper government
is trying to pit Canadians against refugees
it approved and selected. " It's beneath
contempt."
carol. sanders@ freepress. mb. ca
Health- benefit
cut for refugees
spurs lawsuit
Feds breaching contract: ministry
By Carol Sanders
' Their
health and
lives are
literally on
the line'
- Hospitality
House executive
director Tom
Denton
GEORGE DOUKLIAS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS ARCHIVES
Bishop Donald Phillips: lawsuit unusual
GORDON SINCLAIR JR. / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS ARCHIVES
Tom Denton: contempt for Tory move
A_ 12_ Jun- 23- 12_ FP_ 01. indd A12 6/ 22/ 12 7: 56: 52 PM
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