
IAFF CANADA 2007 LEGISLATIVE FACT SHEET
The Need to Establish a National
Public Safety Officer Compensation (PSOC) Benefit in Canada
Background
Fire fighting is a dangerous profession.
Studies confirm that those in the profession suffer the highest rate of
job-related illness and injury of any occupation, the result of innumerable
hazards they encounter every day in the course of protecting the lives and
property of Canadians.
On any given call, a fire fighter may be
required to enter a burning and damaged structure or other confined space
that is choked with toxic smoke, or respond to highway accidents or other
medical calls where they can be exposed to infectious diseases.
Additionally, several forms of cancer are now recognized as occupational
diseases in fire fighters. Since 1970, more than 170 professional fire
fighters have died in the line of duty in Canada. In the years 2000 to 2005
alone, 52 fire fighter deaths were attributed to job-related cancers. The
average age of these fire fighters was just 58.
Fire fighters are aware of these risks when
they choose the profession. Fire fighters are also aware that they are the
nation’s first line of defense in the event of an attack of a chemical,
biological, radiological or nuclear nature on Canadian soil. Fire fighters
are prepared to face these dangers and they are prepared to make the
ultimate sacrifice without hesitation in order to save the lives of
Canadians.
There is no greater example of the sacrifice
that fire fighters are prepared to make on behalf of their nation than the
events of September 11, 2001 in New York City. When terrorists attacked the
United States, it was municipal fire fighters who were first on scene,
rushing into the burning, twisted wreckage of the two towers in the hopes
that lives might be saved. Sadly, 343 of those fire fighters made the
ultimate sacrifice on that fateful day.
As a nation grieved, thoughts turned quickly
to their survivors; families who in most cases had lost their primary
breadwinner. How would the financial security of these families be
protected? Who would ensure they would be able to meet their financial
burdens in the wake of these tragic circumstances? In the United States, the
federal government has taken a responsible role and since 1976 has
administered the Public Safety Officer Benefit (PSOB). This indexed benefit
is immediately available to the families of public safety officers who are
killed or disabled in the course of their duties.
The U.S. government did not hide behind
jurisdictional arguments when it created the benefit. It recognized that
implementing the PSOB was the right thing to do. The benefit is available to
all pubic safety officers, regardless of whether they are employed
municipally or federally. First implemented at $50,000, the benefit was
increased to $250,000 after the events of 9-11 and for 2007 stands at
$295,194.
In the past, the Canadian government argued
that because most fire fighters are municipally employed, it is up to
municipalities to provide some appropriate form of compensation. The truth
is that only a minority of professional fire fighters have been able to
bargain this kind of benefit, and even so, it is in many cases just a token
amount – not nearly enough to realistically address the needs of a grieving
family that has lost a major source of income.
Among those fire fighters who have been able
to negotiate a line of duty death benefit, a typical benefit is two years’
continuation of the fire fighter’s salary, which is enough to keep the
surviving spouse and their family in the family home for two years. Then
what?
If a fire fighter dies at age 43 – the
average for fireground line-of-duty deaths - even $300,000 is only about a
quarter of the income that the family would have received over the next 17
years if that fire fighter had worked until age 60 at an average salary. Why
should the family of a public safety officer who gave their life on behalf
of Canadians suffer any financial penalty?
The financial security of the family of a
fire fighter who is killed or permanently disabled on behalf of Canadians
should not be in question, and it should not depend on the uncertainties of
the collective bargaining process or the province in which they live. It is
deserving of an equitable national standard; a minimum base amount that
would apply to all fire fighters on top of any line of duty death benefit
they may be eligible for locally.
During the 38th Session of Parliament, NDP
MP Peter Julian (Burnaby – New Westminster, B.C.) introduced
M-153 in the House of
Commons. M-153 states that in the opinion of the House of Commons, the
federal government should establish a national benefit for the families of
fallen and permanently disabled fire fighters. M-153 was adopted in the
House of Commons by a vote of 161 to 112.
This important issue is addressed again in
the 39th Session of Parliament in M-49 a private member’s motion introduced
in the House of Commons by New Democratic Party MP Libby Davies (Vancouver
East, B.C.). M-49 states:
M-49 – April 4, 2006 -
That, in the opinion of the House, the government should consider
establishing a federally funded Canadian public safety officer
compensation fund payable to the survivors of a firefighter, police or
public safety officer killed, or permanently disabled, in the line of
duty.
The IAFF supports M-49 and any other
legislative or bureaucratic initiative that would lead to the establishment
of a national PSOC benefit in Canada.
IAFF Position
The IAFF calls on the federal government to
establish a national Public Safety Officer Compensation benefit in Canada as
an appropriate way for the nation to recognize the sacrifice made by a
fallen fire fighter and to address the financial security of the fire
fighter’s family. This benefit should be established in the amount of
$300,000 and function as a direct, indexed benefit to the fire fighter’s
family.
IAFF Arguments
• Fire fighters risk
their lives and safety every day in the name of protecting Canadians
• When fire fighters
are killed in the line of duty, it is in service to all Canadians
• Fire fighters are
Canada’s first line of defense against the aftermath of a terrorist attack
• The establishment of
a national PSOC benefit in Canada would be a fitting way for Canadians to
recognize the sacrifice of a fallen fire fighter
• A national PSOC
benefit would enable the family of a fallen fire fighter to face their grief
without additional worries about financial security
• Few of Canada’s
professional fire fighters have been able to negotiate a meaningful line of
duty death benefit at the local level
• M-153, which was
adopted 161-112 in the House of Commons on October 26, 2005, confirms that
the majority of parliamentarians representing a majority of Canadians
believe the federal government should establish this benefit.
Current Status
Until a national PSOC benefit is established
in Canada, the families of the nation’s professional fire fighters stand to
endure financial hardship in addition to the grief of losing a loved one. It
is time for the federal government to act on the need for this benefit and
respond to the adoption of M-153 by implementing a national PSOC Benefit in
the amount of $300,000 for the families of Canadian fire fighters killed or
permanently disabled in the line of duty.
For more
information about this issue or any other issue affecting Canada’s
professional fire fighters, visit www.iaff.org/canada or contact the IAFF
Canadian Office at (613) 567-8988. The International Association of Fire
Fighters represents 280,000 professional fire fighters in North America,
including 20,000 in Canada. The IAFF is affiliated with the AFL-CIO and the
Canadian Labour Congress.
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