- Where
do I get information on a relative who had Canadian military
service?
- Library
and Archives Canada maintains the personnel records of people
who have served in Canada's military forces. There is a
web site with a guide that can help a person access these
records at Library
and Archives Canada Please note that the Archives only
accepts requests by regular mail. Requests should contain
all the information the person has on the person in question.
Please note that the Legion does not keep these kinds of
records.
- Where
do I get information on a relative who had foreign military
service?
- The
Embassy, High Commission or Consulate of the country in
which the person had the service would be contacted to get
the proper address to which one should pose the query.
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- Where
do I get information on Legion Bursaries and Scholarships?
- Legion
Bursaries and Scholarships are the purview of the Legion's
branches and Provincial Commands. There is no national level
program. One should start by contacting the nearest Legion
branch to get information. Some commands have web sites
with information on them on this subject. To connect with
Provincial Command web sites, or to get contact information
for mailing or phoning the commands, go to www.legion.ca
where there is a Provincial Commands list in which you will
find links to the sites.
- What
are the deadlines for the Poster Essay and Poetry Contests?
- Please
contact your local Legion branch for details as they are
responsible for the initial level of judging in the contests.
Entries are judged at the branch, zone, district and provincial
levels before they are sent to the national level. Entries
at the national level are due to Dominion Command by the
end of February each year.
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- Where
can I find the address and phone number for the branch of
The Royal Canadian Legion nearest to me?
-
Branches are listed in the white pages of your local telephone
directory under the heading "Royal Canadian Legion".
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- Where
can I obtain a copy of military service documents?
- For
information on military service information you should contact
the Personnel Records Centre at the National Archives of
Canada. You can contact them via the internet at: Library
and Archives Canada or via mail at:
Personnel
Records Centre
National Archives of Canada
395 Wellington St
Ottawa, ON K1A 0N3
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The
addresses for the different provincial funds are:
Poppy
Trust Fund
British Columbia/Yukon Command
3026 Arbutus Street
Vancouver, BC V6J 4P7 |
Poppy
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Quebec Command
1000 St-Antoine Street W. #410
Montreal, QC H3C 3R7 |
Poppy
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Alberta/NWT Command
2020 - 15 Street NW
Calgary, AB T2M 3N8 |
Poppy
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New Brunswick Command
490 Douglas Avenue
Saint John, NB E2K 1E7 |
Poppy
Trust Fund
Saskatchewan Command
3079 - 5th Avenue
Regina, SK S4T 0L6 |
Poppy
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Nova Scotia/Nunavut Command
61 Gloria McCluskey Avenue
Burnside Business Park
Dartmouth, NS B3B 2Z3 |
Poppy
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Manitoba/NWO Command
563 St. Mary’s Road
Winnipeg, MB R2M 3L6 |
Poppy
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PEI Command
Box 20132 RPO Sherwood
Charlottetown, PE C1A 9E3 |
Poppy
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Ontario Command
89 Industrial Parkway North
Aurora, ON L4G 4C4 |
Poppy
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Newfoundland/Lab. Command
Box 5745
St. John’s, NL A1C 5X3 |
The
address for Dominion Command is:
Poppy
Trust Fund
Dominion Command
86 Aird Place
Ottawa, ON K2L 0A1
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- Aren't
ex-servicemen and women eligible for government pensions?
-
Yes. Many ex-servicemen and women do get pensions, but many
others, although handicapped, do not. However, no pension
can provide for eventualities such as fire, a long illness
on the part of the breadwinner or other medical expenses.
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- What
is a Service Bureau?
- Throughout
the Legion, in some 1,600 branches in ten provincial commands,
and in Ottawa, there are service officers whose job it is
to assist ex-service persons or dependents with problems
relating to disability pensions or other veterans' legislation.
The national and provincial offices not only provide advice
but act on behalf of the individual. Every year thousands
of representations are placed before the federal government
on behalf of "clients". There is no charge for
this service which is available to any ex-serviceman or
woman or dependent who can qualify for such assistance.
- What
is the correct definition of a 'Veteran'?
- There
was never a definition of a veteran prior to 2000 for the
Legion and prior to 2001 for VAC. Even the Pension Act does
not have a definition of a veteran.
- Accordingly,
at the 26 Nov 99 Sub Exec, a motion was introduced to introduce
a definition of a veteran which reads as follows:
- A
veteran is any person who is serving or who has honourably
served in the Armed Forces of Canada, the Commonwealth or
its wartime allies: or who has served in the Merchant Navy
or Ferry Command during wartime.
- This
was eventually drafted into a resolution, approved by DEC
and the 38th Dominion Convention held in Halifax in June
2000.
- As
for VAC, they introduced a definition of veteran in 2001
which reads as follows:
VAC and the Department of National Defence
(DND) have extended veteran status to former Canadian Forces
members and Reserve Force members who:meet DND's military
occupational classification requirements (MOC qualified);
and have been released from the Forces with an honorable
discharge.
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