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“I worry about all the guys out there who don’t have a Gen. Natynczyk watching out for them,” Fitzgerald told The Canadian Press in a recent interview.

Martin Magnan, a spokesman for Veterans Affairs Minister Erin O’Toole, said he’s unable to comment on individual cases.

Fitzgerald said he faced delays in processing all four of his claims before Veterans Affairs, but noted that since being appointed a new case manager last year, his files now seem to be moving along.

“I know guys that just get fed up dealing with them that it just isn’t worth the time,” Fitzgerald said. “It ends up eating up so much of your time fighting with these guys. It’s like an insurance company, and it’s wrong.”

While not commenting on the Fitzgerald case, department spokeswoman Janice Summerby said the department does accept the diagnosis of military doctors, but was not specific about the caveats.

But the legislation governing Veterans Affairs obligates the department to do its own assessment.

The department has been under fire for having too few case managers and overworking the ones they have — something Veterans Affairs Minister Erin O’Toole has attempted to remedy with additional hiring.

Fitzgerald didn’t offer an opinion on how the transition issue could be fixed, saying he was concentrating on his own health and carrying on with his life, which has included a couple of recent brushes with the law.

He said he’s been able to return to school with the help of Veterans Affairs programs, but it was a long and frustrating process. The return to classes has also led to volunteering with at-risk youth.

O’Toole said the disconnect between Veterans Affairs and what military doctors are saying can be dealt with by having departmental staff more involved in the decision-making earlier in the process at operational stress injury clinics.

(the above is by Murray Brewster of the Canadian Press)