Toronto Star

Troops deployed to care homes starting to head home

Hundreds of personnel called in to help facilities hit hard by COVID-19

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA— Ontario drivers are being told to stay on the lookout for military vehicles on the roads this week as hundreds of Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) members deployed to longterm-care facilities in the Greater Toronto Area begin to pack up and head home.

Around 500 military members and their associated equipment were gathered at Canadian Forces Base Borden north of

Toronto in early April to support the federal government’s response to COVID-19 as the pandemic spread across the country.

Many of those troops ended up being deployed to seven long-term-care homes in the GTA hit hard by COVID-19, where they found cases of abuse and negligence as well as bug infestatio­ns, bleeding infections and residents being left crying for help for hours.

Their observatio­ns were compiled into a damning report released last month that has sparked several lawsuits as well as calls for an overhaul of how Ontario’s long-term-care homes are managed.

Troops remained in two longterm-care homes on Sunday and won’t formally wrap up their mission until Friday, but the military says hundreds of others who have completed their mission will hit the roads and return home on Monday and Thursday.

“Despite very challengin­g circumstan­ces, CAF personnel and civilian staff have made an important impact and set the conditions for success in these facilities,” the Department of National Defence said in a statement to The Canadian Press.

“The overall number of new cases is decreasing, and conditions — including hygiene, staffing, and access to personal protective equipment — are improving for residents and staff.”

It was not immediatel­y clear whether similar moves would be made in Quebec this week, where the military has deployed more than 1,000 troops to help in 47 long-term-care facilities since April. Like in Ontario, their mission is set to end on Friday.

The Armed Forces were first put on high alert because of COVID-19 in late March as military commanders prepared to respond to requests for assistance from federal and provincial authoritie­s in relation to the pandemic, as well as floods and wildfires.

While those natural disasters have not materializ­ed in any significan­t way, the military did end up mobilizing Ranger units in several northern communitie­s before deploying into the long-term-care facilities in Ontario and Quebec. The deployment involved most of the Armed Forces’ medical personnel. Quebec Premier François Legault had indicated he wanted to the military to stay in the homes until September, but military officials subsequent­ly warned that was not sustainabl­e.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada