Annapolis Valley Register

Kings County business expanding

Careforce home health care co-op acquires assets of Pictou County business

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Two Nova Scotia worker co-ops have joined forces to provide quality home health care throughout the Annapolis Valley and Pictou County.

Careforce Home Care Workers Co-operative Limited, based in Kentville, has purchased the assets of Pictou County Home Care Cooperativ­e Limited, which will continue to operate under the name Pictou County Home Care as a division of Careforce.

Phyllis Macdonald will become the director of operations. Her mother, Kathy Bubar RN, founded the Pictou County co-op in 1988, and Macdonald joined the business a few years later.

The two co-ops have a combined 58 years of experience in providing a range of home-care services to seniors and to people of all ages with injuries or disabiliti­es. They employ about 80 caregivers across both regions.

“The two worker co-ops have a long history of working together Phyllis Macdonald, left, of Pictou County Home Care and Debbie Raine of the Kentville-based Careforce have inked a deal to combine the two co-op businesses.

and supporting each other,” says Debbie Raine, manager of Careforce. “Over the years, we have often shared informatio­n and worked

together on projects. When the opportunit­y to bring our businesses together arose, it seemed like a natural fit.”

For Careforce, the deal means expanding beyond the Valley and strengthen­ing the business. The aim is to continue offering consistent, high-quality home care in both regions.

“Our greater numbers will strengthen our capacity to offer care, but they will also enable us to combine our resources and strengthen our administra­tive support to be more productive and efficient,” she says.

Any new expansion or moves into new territorie­s will be under the Careforce name.

For Pictou County Home Care, the merger means maintainin­g their local brand while continuing to deliver the same high-quality home health care in Pictou County and beyond. The deal also creates a succession plan that keeps local control and investment within the community and looks after the business’s care workers.

“It’s a win-win. Our caregivers are excited that they’ll have access to better benefits than we could offer them, because we were a smaller organizati­on. They’ll have more recognitio­n and more of a future, too.”

Dianne Kelderman, president and chief executive officer of the Nova Scotia Co-operative Council, says this move is a win-win.

“Co-ops are more relevant than ever, in Nova Scotia and nationally, in terms of economic issues we face and a strong social fabric,” she says. “I think it’s great that Careforce and Pictou County worker co-ops can come together, join forces, and be stronger. To see this collaborat­ion among co-operatives, which is one of our values and principles, is terrific. We hope it will result in the new co-operative being stronger and better.”

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