After 18 days with only water and broth to drink, Jimmy Velgakis says he just wants a chance to tell his side of the story.
After more than 20 years, Jimmy Velgakis is still angry.
With a sign around his neck, he’s been
standing in front of Queen’s Park for the past 18 days on a hunger
strike. The former city ice rink worker injured his back lifting a piece
of plywood on the job in 1991 and has never received the workers’
compensation benefits he says he’s due.
When he tells his story, Velgakis’ voice grows louder and his deep tan takes on a reddish hue.
“I have the injury. I prove that and they
refuse to pay me,” he says in a thick Greek accent. “When I get to a
second tribunal, they kick me out of the room. They don’t allow me to
talk. They play with me.”
As he reaches his crescendo, the 74-year-old
mustachioed man stops and stumbles backward. After nearly three weeks
with only water and broth to sustain him, he says, these flashes of
weakness hit with increasing frequency.
It’s Velgakis’ third hunger strike in the past four years. The last two ended with promises that he would get a new hearing and be given an opportunity to tell his side of the story. Both times, a full hearing didn’t materialize.
“At every turn this poor man has just been
shut down. He really is literally at the end of his tether right now. We
tried everything to convince him not to do this, but he insisted,” said
NDP MPP Cheri DiNovo, who went on a 10-day hunger strike with Velgakis
in 2013.
DiNovo, who plans to highlight Velgakis’ case
in a statement to the House on Monday in honour of injured worker’s day,
has tried to get the premier, minister of labour and Toronto city hall
involved, but says she has been rebuffed at every turn.
“It’s a matter of justice. He’s been fighting
for years. It’s very indicative of what injured workers have to go
through with (the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board). He’s just not
letting it go. Why should he?” she said.
The WSIB declined to comment and referred the
Star to the Workplace Safety Insurance Appeals Tribunal. The WSIAT
doesn’t normally comment about individual worker’s cases, said acting
general counsel Michelle Alton.
“We are aware of Mr. Velgakis’ hunger strike. The tribunal hopes he takes care of himself and he stays healthy,” she said.
After his injury, Velgakis continued to work
for three years in a role that had been adapted for his bad back. When
the city laid him off in 1994, he was given a one-time payout and signed
away — unwittingly, he says — his right to pursue further claims.
In 1996, Velgakis won a decision recognizing
his injury and granting him benefits, but he only got a few days of
payments before they were cut off.
At the next hearing, his temper got the best
of him and he was asked to leave while his future was decided without
him. His claim was rejected.
Velgakis rented out his basement and asked his
brother in England for some help to make ends meet, but soon the
pressure became too much. He says his marriage fell apart and he grew
estranged from his two daughters. He now lives off a half-pension from
the city and CPP.
Marion Endicott, of Injured Workers’
Consultants, represents Velgakis free of charge. While acknowledging
that he’s exhausted his legal avenues for recourse, she argues that he
should be given a new hearing on humanitarian grounds.
“Jimmy has been the victim of an insidious
transformation of our workers’ compensation system from an inquiry-based
one to an adversarial one,” Endicott said. “Jimmy’s fighting not only
for himself, he’s fighting for all injured workers — the only difference
is that he’s not giving up.”
Source: www.thestar.com/news/gta/2015/05/29/injured-worker-on-hunger-strike-for-compensation-hearing.html
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