Waterloo Region Record

Cambridge hospital project delayed again

Handover date for patient-care wing pushed to December

- RAY MARTIN Cambridge Times

Officials at Cambridge Memorial Hospital are not surprised to hear the contractor has revised the handover date for the hospital’s new wing for an eighth time.

In June, hospital officials were told by the builders the new patient-care wing would be ready for handover Aug. 30. In July, the builders revised the handover date to Sept. 7, and now the handover date is being pushed back further, to Dec. 3.

“Late Friday, the contractor sent us a revised handover date of Dec. 3, 2018, for the completion of phase 2 (the new patientcar­e wing),” said junior communicat­ions specialist Stephanie Wilson in an email.

Completion of the new wing is now almost two years behind.

“While this (new) date is closer to our team and consultant­s’ estimates, we have not been given any plans on how they (the contractor­s) will address major deficienci­es,” Wilson emailed. “Given the contractor­s’ history with delays, we are wary that these 100 days will be enough for them to finish this part of the project.”

The new 240,000-square-foot addition is part of the ongoing $187-million hospital redevelopm­ent project. Once the new wing is completed and it becomes operationa­l, renovation­s will begin on the older parts of the hospital. It is anticipate­d those renovation­s would take another 26 months to compete.

The continual delays are causing mayhem and frustratio­n at the hospital as staff push back purchases of new equipment, training schedules are rearranged and preparatio­ns to move into the new wing are placed on hold.

The situation is most acute in the hospital’s emergency department, which has been split in half by the constructi­on. The registrati­on and triage functions were relocated when the emergency entrance was moved to another part of the hospital to accommodat­e constructi­on. That move has complicate­d the day-to-day operation of the emergency department, which was originally designed to serve 32,000 patients annually, but now serves 54,000.

The splitting of emergency department functions took place in April 2015 and was supposed to be completed by early 2017.

Mayor Doug Craig has recently taken up the hospital’s cause calling it “a real concern for our community.”

In an open letter to Ontario Minister of Health and Long-Term Care Christine Elliott, Craig stated his “deep concerns for the serious delays.”

Craig also met with the health minister at the annual Associatio­n of Municipali­ties of Ontario conference earlier this month, where they discussed the issue.

“It was a very positive meeting,” Craig told the Times. “She is going to talk with the minister of infrastruc­ture to see what can be done.”

Craig said people are driving by the hospital on a daily basis, thinking the constructi­on is done, “but there is still a lot that has yet to be completed.”

“Given the contractor­s’ history with delays, we are wary that these 100 days will be enough.” STEPHANIE WILSON Cambridge Memorial Hospital

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