Family angry top general rejected stigma as factor in RMC student’s suicide
OTTAWA — The father of a Royal Military College student who took his own life says the family is upset that Canada’s top general rejected a board of inquiry’s finding that stigma around seeking mental-health support was a contributing factor in the death.
Richard Kelertas says Gen. Jonathan Vance’s response suggests there is a “disconnect” between senior officers and other Forces members, including RMC students, who remain fearful of what could happen to their careers if they ask for help.
“I’m concerned that there isn’t enough of an alarm bell sounding on the stigma issue,” Kelertas said. “And everyone that we know, and all the other cadets that we know, they all say of course there is stigma.”
The board of inquiry was launched in May 2016 following the deaths of Kelertas’s son Harrison as well as fellow officer cadet Brett Cameron, whose bodies were found within weeks of each other on the campus of the 142-year-old military college.

