The Niagara Falls Review

Inspectors refused to enter care homes, Ford says

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO—Inspectors refused to go into long-term-care homes early in the COVID-19 pandemic because they feared for their safety, prompting the government to call in the military, Premier Doug Ford said Thursday.

Some of the inspectors were carrying out inspection­s by phone in April because they were afraid of contractin­g the coronaviru­s, said the premier, who has been facing fierce criticism about the province’s handling of the outbreak in seniors homes where nearly 1,400 residents have died.

“They aren’t medical profession­als, so I understand,” Ford said. “But I’m not going to continue taking bullets for something — there was no control that we had when the unions refused to go in.”

The Ontario Public Service Employees Union did not immediatel­y provide comment, but in a letter to the premier in April, union president Warren (Smokey) Thomas raised concerns about the poor quality of care for residents in some longterm-care homes, as well as the high risk for inspectors in those facilities.

Thomas wrote there were only 164 inspectors to support the province’s 626 homes, calling for increased staffing levels and a plan to protect their health.

In his letter, which the premier’s office made public Thursday, Thomas also outlined concerns he said inspectors had been hearing from front-line staff for some time.

“Residents are not receiving the care that they need in some of these homes,” he wrote. “We know that private long-termcare home providers never had a plan for this level of illness within their facilities. And that’s the inherent issue with privatizat­ion.”

The developmen­t comes just days after a report from the Canadian Forces described horrific living conditions in some of the facilities, including insect infestatio­ns, poor hygiene and aggressive behaviour toward residents.

The province called in military assistance last month for five long-term-care homes dealing with outbreaks. The government said Wednesday it was taking over management of four of the five homes and would conduct “extremely rigorous” inspection­s of those facilities, as well as random spot checks at homes across the province.

On Thursday, Ford slammed the corporate leadership of some of the province’s for-profit homes, asking them to put people ahead of the bottom line or his government would hold them accountabl­e.

“If they want to be greedy and make money, then get out of the business,” he said. “Go find something else to do. Don’t put people’s lives in jeopardy.”

 ?? FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Cathy Parkes leaves Orchard Villa in Pickering on Tuesday. Her father died there on April 15 after testing positive for COVID-19.
FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS Cathy Parkes leaves Orchard Villa in Pickering on Tuesday. Her father died there on April 15 after testing positive for COVID-19.

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