Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Applying for the Ontario Disability Support Program










Louis Shalako





Applying for a disability pension is a last-ditch resort. No one wants to end up on disability—no one in their right mind, that is. You really would have to be crazy, which will become clearer as we go along.

After an accident, an illness, an injury, people struggle along as best they can, perhaps not understanding the life-changing nature of what has happened to them. Most people already have a home. Honestly, they really do. Later, they might be told this is an asset and they must live on that asset, until their assets are down to an acceptable level of poverty, before they can come back and apply for disability again. They do what they can to find work, just trying to pay the bills and keep that roof over their head. If someone has children or dependents, feeding them takes priority. I was lucky, in that I didn’t have any assets, nor any dependents…welcome to the topsy-turvy, upside down and inside out world of the disability pension.

It is a world where every fact is a lie and every statement must be examined with great care.

It might take a bit of a push, some extraordinary event to get someone to apply at all. People who apply for ODSP typically need it.

In my own case, I had gone back to school for a couple of years. I had sent resumes all over Canada and put applications in all over town without getting a bite. I was in a lot of pain, I had no skills (other than journalism and other communications courses) and the only jobs I could ever get, paid the most minimal wages. Some jobs were part-time, seasonal, odd jobs and self-employment of a creative nature.

Months and years went by when I had no income at all—not even welfare. I was a scrounger, a mooch, a bum. I lived in the parent’s basement. I picked up beer bottles and cans, and I drove guys to the mall to shoplift. I used the parent’s borrowed car to do that. This was good for a bit of gas money or a couple packs of smokes…you need a source for the narcotic pain pills by this time anyways.

For three or four years I was on Welfare (now called Ontario Works, with the government’s knack for ironic propaganda generation) before I went back to school.

Welfare was about five or six thousand a year, and the student loans and grants were more like eighty-eight hundred a year. This was a calculated risk. Those loans will never be repaid as far as I can project, that is to say not within the next five or ten years. But, for better or worse, that’s where I got all those skills, including journalism, broadcasting, marketing, photography, etc.

It was a way to learn how to write, which is a whole other story and not really important here.

But for years I had tried to get into this plant or that shop, always with an eye to making it through the probationary period and getting on full time, preferably with a union. I knew I had a bad back, even then, and I thought many things. If I could just make it into a union, I thought…then someone would go to bat for me if real problems came along. I knew my back was screwed in my mid-twenties, at least for the jobs I was getting. At a later date, the thoughts changed: if I can just get some education, if I can just make it through school, if I can just get in the door in some good place, a newsroom, a TV or radio station…anything, really. Anything at all would have done by that point. 

(Ultimately, I did work at a small newspaper, and even as a baby photographer for a brief period.)

My goal was to try and find an appropriate job. I tried everything, and applied anywhere I could think of, wildly over-reaching as often as not. I tried taxi-driving, and found that twelve hours in a car was more than my lower back could take. Working as a security guard was all right, but the five-buck an hour part-time wages meant that I would always be living in my dad’s back bedroom. Yet at one time 
I had made a lot more money—and we sort of have our expectations. I even lost the security job, and 
I had at least two different ones—one in Sarnia, which lasted for about fourteen months, and one extremely temporary one in London. They did train me, though.

Observe, identify, and report—mall cop stuff to be sure.

The whole time I was taking narcotic pain medications. I had to have those pills to work. I had to have them just to make it through the day. This is not always a good idea, when you are working with power tools, heavy machinery, or driving a cab. There were times when I was nodding off on the job as a security guard—and this was at the Shell fuel terminal.

I was a walking bag of liabilities for any employer who figured things out, right? They all have to make it past the scrutiny of Workmen’s Compensation, (now Workplace Safety and Insurance Board) site inspections and their own private liability insurance provider’s inspection. In a chemical plant these are serious considerations.

I’ve had a few good jobs in my life—mostly when I was younger.

At first, not having a doctor, and sort of erroneously believing that they simply wouldn’t believe me anyways, I bought painkillers on the street for fifty cents a pill, a buck a pill, whatever the going rate was. It was only when I heard about a certain doctor, from an acquaintance, that I got the scrip for Tylenol 3.

“Come on, Louis, half the speedos in town go to him—the other half go to that other guy, but he’s my doc and he’ll set you right up.”

This turned out to be correct.

Each tablet has 30 mg of codeine, and codeine is an opiate. It’s addictive, even if you didn’t have any pain. The trouble with the Tylenol, is that it gives you a real lift. I was never a speedo or heroin junkie. The lift wasn’t what I was looking for. What I wanted was pain relief. Discussing this with my doctor, he was easily persuaded to prescribe Lorazapam, a member of the diazepide group, which includes Valium and a host of other similar drugs, branded and generic. The Tylenol got you high, and the Lorazepam kept you from bouncing off the walls all day long like Ricochet Rabbit. Among other things, Lorazepam is cheap—and it’s listed in the ODSP approved meds catalogue that all Ontario doctors keep right there on the desk…

I discovered that doctors love to prescribe pain pills. I also discovered that people will pay you good money for your meds.

There’s just a whole shit-load of issues here, and while some may think I am incriminating myself unnecessarily, some of this really needs to be said.

(Consulting with the legal department indicates the statute has long since run out. — ed.)

I went back to the doctor more than once, eventually persuading them to prescribe 90 Tylenol 3s every two weeks. I began by taking them as prescribed, one pill every four hours or about three pills a day. Some days maybe even less, if there was little pain and I didn’t really need pain control. At first I was selling the bulk of them for fifty cents each, but seven years later I was taking five or six of those pills a day myself. Six or seven years later, I was up to six or seven Lorazapem a day, and that stuff is real strong bug juice. This is exactly what they call it in jail, and some of them guys ought to know.

One day my dad asked me a question. It was kind of a hurtful question.

“So. What’s your big plan for today?”

I was laying on the couch, watching TV and it must have been his day off. He had a really good job in Chemical Alley, and he had always aspired to the same thing for me. I hadn’t worked in a while. In fact, I had been a real disappointment to him. Every time I got into one of the plants on a tryout, they dropped me before the ninety-day probationary period was up. They do this to everybody, it’s common knowledge, but over time I think he just lost hope, or faith, or respect for his own son…not that he had all that much to begin with.

I told him that my back was on fire and I wasn’t planning on doing anything much at all. This was after a long history, including a fall from a scaffold in 1989, where there is an incident report and all that sort of thing. One of the things we need to do is ‘document things’ when applying for disability.

“Well, if your back is really that bad, why don’t you apply for disability?”

All these years later, I don’t know if that was so snarky after all. Memories dim with time, and the more painful, the dimmer they get in some natural psychological survival mechanism.

The next morning, I went downtown and picked up the forms to apply for ODSP. I can’t recall the exact details, but at that time I was on welfare and they probably provided the forms, as half the disabled people in the province ended up on welfare over the years. Some of them are still on it, decades later.

There but for the grace of Darwin go I.

Bringing the forms home and filling them out was one thing. There is a little box on one sheet where you describe the nature of your disability, and a box where you describe the impact on your life—in my case, painful sitting, standing, unable to lift heavy objects without risk of re-injury, all kinds of things. This is where taking every shit job that came along tends to haunt you. It gives you an employment history—maybe that’s not so good, but mine was definitely spotty and intermittent. It’s a small box and there’s not much room to write there…

They ask about employment history, and all this is taken into account in some way.

I worked here and there, some of those jobs were menial, heavy labour, and even though I might have only lasted a few days or weeks, it played against me. Back then, the criteria included the following phrase.

“…unable to seek, hold and maintain regular, renumerative employment due to the nature of their disability…” or words to that effect.

This is important, because I could still walk—I could still talk, I still had some kind of skills.

The way I looked, I could apply for some sort of shit, unskilled job and stand a fair chance of getting the job. Keeping that job was another thing. I recall one job in particular, where I was hired full time but had to quit after four hours. It involved cutting strips of screening and sheet metal, on a table-brake or a set of foot-stomper shears. Metal workers will perhaps know what I’m talking about, but the name of the machine eludes me. The pain was so bad I couldn’t go back the next day. This happened sooner or later at every job I had successfully gotten.

There is a process to apply for ODSP.

You take the forms to the doctor, and he sort of tries to dissuade you. I was a young guy. I wasn’t really going to the doctor regularly, and this was the first time he’d heard of it.

What happens is the doctor, and later the ODSP themselves, or the Ministry of Community and Social Services themselves, send you to specialists. They want more information. You submit your application with whatever information you can provide. Then you wait. And a few months later, you get a letter in the mail saying you have been turned down.

The Ministry sends you all kinds of mail. You’ve given them an application consisting of a few pages, and two weeks later you get something back from them. The gist of it is that you have rights.

On the face of it, they are saying that you have rights, and at the same time, this package that comes in the mail is a bulky envelope with a quarter of an inch of materials in it. It took a while before I caught on. They have gotten so many complaints from applicants who feel their rights were violated, that legislation had to be enacted, ensuring that all applicants are fully informed of their rights.

But it’s also a bit of a snow-job. In that package, they also had questions, they had requests for further information. If you do not comply, your application will be denied—surely the government has the right to full and complete information before making a decision. If you do not agree, you may appeal. 

If you do not provide the information by a certain deadline, the application will be denied. Then there is some rule that you have to wait six months or a year before you can apply again. The whole process is like that—Catch-22, damned if you do and damned if you don’t, they present you with all kinds of stuff to read about the process, your rights, duties and obligations under the system. They want more and more and more information. They’ve got you running off to London to see an orthopedic surgeon, and they’ve got you in the MRI machine, and they’ve got some guy injecting cortisone into your lower back and hip, and at some point I began to wonder at the nature of the game. What are the rules of engagement, and how is it played? I know how to lose by this point—I’ve already done it. No one knows how to win, but win they somehow did—often with a lawyer, and the rules of evidence. They were persistent. When they were denied, they bided their time and went back. What you are fighting against is a snow-job.

How many times, how many people have told me that their doctor didn’t get the forms in on time, before the deadline.

Duh.

Many.

Many, many people.

That’s why they send a guy claiming back injuries or chronic back pain for a psychological exam. (If you don’t show up, the claim is denied, right? The client is presented with one more opportunity to fail.)

And yet, to your certain knowledge, they have already read a number of medical reports stating your injuries, the ongoing nature of it, the permanence, the pain, the suffering, and they don’t seem to care about that at all.

You wonder what the hell’s wrong with them, but you soon learn: they send everybody for a psychological exam. That’s just a fact. They send everyone.

If you ask about it, they always say the same thing: “We treat all of our clients, (and applicants), the same way...”

It’s true enough, too. They treat all of their clients and applicants like shit, ladies and gentlemen.

Apparently, it is the policy of ODSP that every single person who ever walked through their door was a no-good piece of shit, someone set on defrauding the system.

This appears to be their standard operating procedure.

***

One of the real eye-openers with the ODSP application process is the obligatory psychological exam. 

Every person I ever spoke to said they had been obliged to attend this exam. Now, I would be the first to point out that there is a good case to be made for this exam. So many people who fall through the cracks of our educational system, our employment system, and our social support system, are suffering from some form of mental illness.

More than anything, they want to identify the people who are going to fall through the cracks of the system and make sure they do it quicker…or something like that.

Children who suffer from mental illness, or any one of a thousand other ailments typically do not do well in the school setting. It’s fair to say that steps have been taken and the situation is different today than it was thirty or forty years ago when I attended school. But a lot of applicants aren’t all that literate or all that educated to begin with. The mentally ill are particularly easy to stigmatize, for when you maybe talk to someone for the first time, or for a limited time, they might not tell you their entire life story—probably not their entire medical history, all in the first go. This affects their education, it affects their self-image and it affects their ability to navigate the system and be an effective advocate for themselves. It affects their employment prospects and their fates in general.

It’s easy to assume someone is a criminal—for surely many of them (or us) present in exactly this fashion.

Some guy swilling back a beer, handing you a meth-pipe and telling everyone that he’s got court tomorrow for assaulting someone isn’t necessarily the most sympathetic character to begin with.

Yet there are certain implied issues there. This is not the typical, average model of behaviour in this particular cultural mode, i.e. Canada, in a relatively prosperous city in a developed part of the country.

Then when you find out he’s got a record as long as your arm, going back years, and you also find out they’re on welfare or ODSP.  Now you’re halfway to stigmatizing someone. It’s pretty easy to do, especially if we don’t know much about mental health, or the process of socialization in children, or the longer term effects of child abuse, beatings, sexual interference, deprivation or neglect…we need to ask those questions, and sometimes the person themselves might not be the best witness or most objective narrator of their life so far.

All we have is a snapshot of how they are right now, and sometimes it ain’t pretty.

Suffice to say the psych exam is Standard Operating Procedure for the ODSP. They probably do detect, suspect, or confirm, many cases where the applicant does indeed suffer from some form of severe, chronic, permanent or ongoing mental health issue—one (or more) of which might seriously affect their ability to seek, obtain, and to hold, regular, and renumerative employment. To be fair to this aspect of the public health system, many applicants go on to get treatment and support through this system.

In other words they need support. They actually need ODSP and the system recognizes this.

What is interesting is that the sort of experience I had, and the answer I got from the social worker I was dealing with.

The doctor asked certain questions, at face value looking for specific answers, but also pushing your buttons a bit and trying to elicit a response—which it did.

“Do you hear voices?”

“Only enough to formulate speech—there’s nothing wrong with my hearing, doctor.”

I pressed my social worker for the result of this exam, and they tell you it’s all confidential—you don’t even have the right to know what their assessment is. When pressed further, the lady told me, 

‘Some kind of anti-social personality disorder, but the psychiatrist really would prefer not to say because a proper diagnosis takes more time than one interview.”

Anti-social personality disorder. So they’re not allowed to tell you, but somehow they told me. This may seem a bit ‘paranoid’ but what were they really trying to tell me?

I was just some guy who fell from a scaffolding. I was just some guy who fell through the cracks of the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board—an injured worker. And the government was trying to tell me that I was crazy if I thought they were going to give me a disability pension for a back that was broken in three places.

That’s what I got out of it, ladies and gentlemen.

When people are in pain, when people are desperate, they’re just looking for help. They are looking for a friend. The system makes a real bad impression sometimes, usually when you are at your most vulnerable.

We never ask enough questions, because we know so little about the system we are dealing with.

I may not have all the answers, but I sure as hell got a lot of questions.


END

Saturday, September 27, 2014

Researching a Historical Novel.

Justus Juncker, A Scholar Sitting at His Desk.












Louis Shalako


The thing about research is that 99.99 % of it never ends up in the book. You do have to know your ground.

It's not even necessary to be an expert on any given period of history.

However, for a historical novel set in France in 1924, it must be anchored in time and place. The Olympics were held in France in 1924, the Tour de France would be happening,
everyone would have heard of the Flying Finn, and France had a new President.

There were certain political attitudes, the arts were at a certain stage, and technology and culture had reached a certain stage of development.

Some of the links are simple, finding fresh names, checking geography and transportation, maps, places, terrain.

Every so often I want to check my understanding of a word--'pension,' for example, which was from something I had read years or decades ago.

Here are some but by no means all of the resources used in the making of Architect of His Own Destruction, the fourth in the Maintenon Mystery Series.



Events in 1924


Summer Olympics


Paavo Nurmi


World Events


World Events History Orb


World Events


Boy names


Girl Names


Surnames


%C3%A9mery#mw-pages

Bagneres de Luchon (Haute Garonne)


French Rail System (2014)


Haute Couture


Evening Dresses

Gare de Bagneres de Luchon




President of France June 13, 1924


Radical-Socialists



Chiappe


France in the 1920s


en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interwar_Period 

Radical Party

"In 1924, Radicals formed electoral alliances with the SFIO: the Cartel des Gauches (Coalition of the Left). It won the 1924 legislative election and Édouard Herriot took the head of the cabinet. But then Radicals gradually drifted to the right, moving from Radical governments supported by the non-participating Socialists to a coalition of "Republican concentration" with more conservative parties in 1926." (Wiki)

36 quai d’orfevres surete generale paris


Serial Killers Wiki


Montmartre


La Sante Prison


Minister of Justice   Antony Ratier


Timeline 1924


fascists march into rome June 17

French Communism


Nationalism and Colonial Development


The Cleveland torso killer


Arrondissements of Paris


14th arrondissement (Montparnasse)


Andre Breton


Anarchism


"Illegalists usually did not seek moral basis for their actions, recognizing only the reality of 'might' rather than 'right'; for the most part, illegal acts were done simply to satisfy personal desires, not for some greater ideal,

Dadaist Manifresto



Bodies in fridges


Tuberculosis


Pension-style apartment



END













Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Permanently Unemployable.

Deutsche Fotothek, (Wiki.)













Louis Shalako




Permanently unemployable is not the same as being disabled.

I was speaking to a gentleman the other day. We were sitting in a waiting room. I made some remark about the weather and he opened right up. There are a lot of lonely people in this community.

“There’s not much work around these days.” I remember saying that too.

“I want to work but they won’t let me.” That’s what the man said.

He told me that he wanted to work but that his Ontario Disability Support Program case-worker, had told him not to do it.

“You’ll just lose your benefits, and it’s hard to get them back again.” His worker was absolutely correct.

She knows what she is talking about.

The gentleman was using a short aluminum cane to walk with and he had some kind of brace or bandage on his right foot. He was in his early sixties. That might have been a simple injury, and it might have healed up in a month or two.

There was more to it, a lot more.

The gentleman was an epileptic. He suffered from seizures and could not hold a driver’s license.

No employer who knew about his condition would hire him. That’s because they were afraid that he might have a seizure on the job, and somehow injure himself. It’s pretty easy to injure yourself when you have a seizure. They can fall and hit their head. They can swallow their tongue and suffocate. Not every employee knows First Aid. 

They can fall on someone else, a co-worker, or a customer, and drag them to the ground, injuring them and causing all sorts of nasty liabilities for the employer.

Workplace insurance costs money, whether it is a private or public service provider. The gentleman might not have had a lot of skills, but then, where would he acquire them in the first place?

In order to make themselves more ‘employable,’ a person cannot waive their rights under the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board legislation in the Province of Ontario. It would be a violation of their human and civil rights, even if they were willing, and no matter how badly they wanted to work. It would also tend to encourage employers, the scabbier ones, to look for such folks and then prey on them as employees. They would have no workplace insurance, and most likely they would be getting a lower rate than the person at the next desk, kiosk or service counter. Yes, there are employers like that. Plenty of them.

The gentleman was permanently unemployable, and yet he could walk. He could talk. He was not stupid.

How many times had some well-meaning person said: “Surely there must be something you could do.”

Would you ride in a taxi driven by this man? What if you knew about his condition? What if you had your kid or grandkid with you? Would you like him on a jobsite somewhere, working alone at night, as a security guard? If you rode in that cab, would it be better for you if you didn’t know about his condition?

What if he had a car accident, and you and your attorney found out later, about his condition? What if his employer found out about it later, because the guy wanted to work and just didn't tell him?

That’s why we have disability pensions, and that’s why we have the class of beneficiary called ‘permanently unemployable.’

There are all kinds of reasons why a person might not appear disabled and yet be disabled.

There are all sorts of reasons why a person is not actually disabled in the classic sense, looking like a quadriplegic in a wheelchair and yet be permanently unemployable.

If a person suffered seizures, or was deaf, they might be unemployable. Yet when they line up at the food bank and someone a little more fortunate drives past on the way to their employment, employment that might not be highly-paid or even full time, there could be a tendency to leap to conclusions.

There might be a tendency to make character assessments, often based on some other person—someone they know from somewhere else. Every poverty-stricken person they see fits into that class. It’s a kind of social bigotry, one that doesn’t rely on skin colour or racial profiling.

They might not approve of that other person. That disapproval becomes a kind of blanket disapproval, to a certain type of mindset.

In certain disorders, the subject is frantic to find help, a solution. A cure.

Some afflictions have no cure, and sometimes the treatments have so many side effects that the people go off the medications. Sometimes, and I have experienced this myself, a simple two or three-dollar co-pay is beyond their means.

They can’t afford their meds.

Now, a certain type of mindset will see this as connected, even though it isn’t really.

Some people self-medicate. They are seeking relief from pain, depression, suffering of one kind or another. 

They just don’t want to suffer any more, they can’t seem to get help anywhere, and have nowhere else to turn. They try to obliterate the pain, or even just themselves. They can't take it any more. It's that simple sometimes.

And so they take drugs, sometimes anything they can get…literally. Some of those drugs are illegal. And yet, for example marijuana, tranquilizers, or illicit pain medications, they are seeking relief of some ailment which they might not even be able to describe properly or identify. This is one reason why alcohol is the most abused drug in the repetoire. It's cheap, it's easy, and to some extent it's even socially acceptable. You can get it anywhere, and there are plenty of like-minded individuals for mutual enabling. You don't have to hide your habit. You can obliterate yourself, and nobody even asks why.

Not every sufferer has a proper diagnosis.

It took twenty years before I knew that I suffered from depression. Yet I had been given more than one diagnosis, and I had seen any number of doctors.

I was told ‘possibly’ that I might suffer from ‘some sort of anti-social personality disorder.’

There might be good reasons for a mistaken diagnosis.

I bitterly resented being sent to a shrink when I had a back injury and all I wanted was my frickin’ disability pension. I fought two and a half years for that pension. That was a stormy interview, and the psychologist did not give a definitive diagnosis. They would require much more time with the subject, (me) in order to make a proper assessment. That’s exactly what they told the ODSP.

Another doctor suggested that I might be suffering from manic depression. Another one said ‘cyclo-thalamic personality.’ I still don’t even know what that is. Basically what they told me was ‘…when you feel bad, you feel very bad, and when you feel good, you feel very good…’

That’s understandable given the nature of depression. There is nothing quite like the feeling of being ‘good’ again, after a long bout of serious depression—and I was suicidal, on one occasion, for a year and a half.

That’s a long time to wrestle with thoughts of suicide, ladies and gentlemen. I wanted to kill myself so very, very badly…sure glad I didn’t do it, eh? That was only eight or nine years ago.

Life is worth living, and I’m doing okay. I promise you that, okay?

It was only when I got on the internet, (and therefore I could frickin' well look it up) that I could really confirm the diagnosis that made sense; in that I was a guy who fell from a scaffolding, broke his back in three places. My whole life was destroyed, and I was never going to work at my old job ever again. That’s a tough thing to deal with.

And yes, ladies and gentlemen, I had suffered from depression, off and on, since I was about fourteen years old. One day that all became clear, and then things got better because at least then I knew what the hell I was dealing with.

Depression can be treated, but the back injuries are permanent and they made me permanently unemployable in conventional terms.

Employers think in conventional terms.

Even then, I did get work from time to time. I never lasted very long at the relatively unskilled construction jobs where I could at least work. I never lasted long enough to qualify for unemployment benefits, which would have been a kind of solution—hang in there as long as you can, and then just try to make it through the winter sort of thing. Nowadays if you quit your job, you are barred from collecting unemployment. The government of the day knew exactly what impact that would have on some people’s lives. They’re not stupid, ladies and gentlemen.

As often as not, I worked as an independent subcontractor. If you are working for someone else, they expect you to be ready, willing and able to work, at least five days a week. They want their forty hours out of you.

Sooner or later, all those jobs blew up in my face as well.

And so I had to find a better way.

I’m fifty-five years old. I still have unpaid student loans going back to the early nineties, when I confronted the problem by studying journalism. What that means is that I simply can’t get student loans or grants. I would have to repay those other loans first, and I might be a bit of a bad risk.

I am not very suitable for retraining anyway, not at my age, and being back in school with a bunch of spoiled-rotten twenty year-olds who are away from home for the first time and just there to party and get laid doesn’t have a whole lot of allure for one such as I.

And so, I write.

I collect my pension. I try to stay out of trouble, I know exactly what my blessings are, and every so often, I try to do a little good in the world.

I figure it’s the least I can do, to try and contribute something to the community.

Anyhow, thank you for listening, ladies and gentlemen.

Sometimes its good to talk about such things.


END


The Mysterious Case of Betty Blue is my thirteenth novel. It's available exclusively from Amazon for the time being, and it's only $3.99, minus whatever discount Amazon throws in there.