Elder abuse response program losing funding
Lethbridge Senior Citizens Organization executive director Rob Miyashiro announced on Wednesday that funding for the Lethbridge Elder Abuse Response Network (LEARN) has been terminated.
Miyashiro said the LSCO has been receiving funding from the provincial government for the last 12 years and on Feb. 29 they were told that will no longer be the case at the end of March.
“The problem that I have with this whole thing is not necessarily that we weren’t renewed for funding, the problem is the way that they did it,” said Miyashiro.
He said he has been in the business long enough to know that funding comes and goes, even after having it for decades.
“The problem is that on Feb. 29 on budget day this government sent the email saying that you are no longer going to be funded by the end of March, by the end of our contract,” said Miyashiro.
He said there are over 20 active cases that now suddenly will have to be closed without warning, without having time to prepare those seniors physically or emotionally to lose the support they have been able to access thanks to that funding.
“This government’s callous indifference to at-risk seniors experiencing abuse runs counter to their budget day exclamations of keeping communities safe and secure. As a result of this decision to end funding for LEARN Case Management, at-risk seniors will continue to suffer abuse with no possibility of supportive interventions available to help them,” said Miyashiro.
He added that those seniors who are vulnerable and at risk of abuse will not only be losing access to crisis support, trauma-informed approach, connection to the justice, legal and police systems and post-crisis support and planning, but also they will lose access to emergency housing that in many cases has been the difference between life and death for some seniors experiencing abuse.
“We developed a model for emergency placement for seniors at imminent risk of abuse and that’s a partnership with the Green Acres foundation. It’s called the LEARN model because what we do is hide seniors in plain sight,” said Miyashiro.
He said the irony is LEARN is such a good model that it has been adopted by the Ministry of Seniors, Housing, Community and Social Services for implementation across the province. The Minister calls it the LEARN model and yet the ones that developed it here in Lethbridge are no longer being funded, said Miyashiro.
He said terminating the funding was not only affecting seniors in the community, but also their case manager Amy Cook, who has worked hard to help as many seniors as she can in her three years with LEARN.
In the last quarter of 2023, Cook had 25 new files started which increased the active caseload to 48. She safety planned 109 times with 46 people and conducted 64 risk assessments with 46 people. She also dealt with 19 cases of domestic/family violence.
Cook said that beyond losing her job due to the funding not being renewed, she was devastated knowing she would not be able to continue helping those individuals that have come to rely on her.
“I had to phone close to 30 people in the last few days and say, ‘hey I know that you’re scared, I know that you just told me yesterday you’re so thankful there’s at least help for you, but I can’t actually help you anymore,’” said Cook.
She said cutting the funding from LEARN is going to impact everyone who was on her caseload, but it also has the potential to impact every senior in Lethbridge and in surrounding area.
“Elder abuse doesn’t discriminate seniors of any socio-economical status, any ethnicity, any race, any age, any cognitive ability,” said Cook.
She said the impact of shutting down LEARN will be felt for many months to come, as people continue to call the LSCO asking for help and they are unable to provide it.
“Over the next six months is really where it’s going to be hard because we’re going to continue to get calls here at the senior centre looking for elder abuse supports, I’m going to have to continue to have that conversation with different people and they’re going to ask who do I call? And the answer is going to be there isn’t anybody,” said Cook.
She said unfortunately there will be no one she could direct them to because there is no legislation on elder abuse.
“Elder abuse is not a criminal offence unless it’s physical assault, sexual assault, or theft, so there’s nowhere to send these people and that’s going to be the hardest part over the next six months assuming we get funding in those six months if not more,” said Cook.
Miyashiro said he is optimistic about being able to receive funding from a different source, but the problem he anticipates is how long that may take.
“I am optimistic that we can get some funding, I don’t know what that looks like, I don’t know how much it is, but
I’m optimistic we can get something because the funding they’re giving out is based on our model, we’ll just be getting it from a different source,” said Miyashiro.