The Prince George Citizen

Meet a four-generation caregiver for her family

- TED CLARKE Citizen staff

Heather Mckeand was just a kid when her calling in life came knocking.

She became the primary caregiver in her family and never let go, a job that would eventually span four generation­s.

It started when she was only seven, cooking meals for her siblings and keeping order in the house while her father tended cattle on their farm, and it’s never stopped.

Now at age 76, Mckeand is still sharing her love and a lifetime of nurturing skills with her grandchild­ren and great-grandchild­ren, living together in their Prince George townhouse.

She’s raising four special-needs kids under the age of 12, all the offspring of parents with drug problems, and she’s doing it on her own dime, not depending on government handouts to pay the bills.

She feeds and clothes the kids, makes sure they get their homework done and pays for their medication­s, their field trips and their holidays, living on her pensions and her savings from years of running a day care, money she thought would be set aside for her retirement.

“The children now that are coming to me are hurt,” said Mckeand. “The grandchild­ren were already impacted, but the drug addiction in my two children wasn’t as profound.

“So as the years pass that drug addiction and the mental illness that goes with it (spawned more severe developmen­tal consequenc­es). When they’re pregnant they don’t take care of the babies properly and when the kids are born they aren’t taken care of properly. So you get this little human that’s already impacted.

“Now I’ve got a bunch of kids with a whole plethora of issues and you can’t throw them on the government’s back.”

Mckeand and her ex-husband Julian share their house with their grandson, Jordan and his fiancée Madison, and their four great-grandchild­ren - 11-year-old Eva, who is autistic, nine-year-old Jaymee, eight-year-old Michael and six-year-old Terra, all born with disabiliti­es caused by prenatal exposure to alcohol and/or drugs.

Money is tight with so many mouths to feed and to make ends meet Heather and Julian sold her sports car, their truck, their fifth-wheel trailer, quads and motorbikes.

Born in Vancouver in 1947 at the start of the baby boom, Heather was second in a line of five kids Marge and Lou Lyster brought into the world.

“After the war, when the whole country was alive with hope and all that, that was my first breath, so I was predisposi­tioned to be who I am by that breath,” said Heather.

When Heather was just seven, Marge chose to leave the family on the farm near Courtenay and moved to nearby Campbell River. She stayed in touch with her kids regularly but they were raised by their father.

After she left, Heather took on the responsibi­lity of looking after four brothers and sisters. It was a scary environmen­t for her sometimes to try to replace having their mom around, especially at mealtime, and she had to grow up in a hurry.

She went on to have three kids of her own with her ex-husband Gordie before they split up. Heather took custody of her younger daughters, Janice and Denise, while Gordie raised their oldest, Coreen, who left to be with her dad when she was seven.

Heather worked two jobs in Courtenay to stay on top of the bills and was able to do that without having to lean on her parents for money. She worked as a waitress, a cleaner, auto detailer and took on an assortment of other menial jobs just to keep their heads above water.

Heather moved with her two girls to Edmonton, where her brother lived, and got a job with Blue Heron Support Services Associatio­n, working with mentally challenged children and adults with developmen­tal disabiliti­es and brain injuries. Before long, she had another mouth to feed when she took custody of her first grandchild, Maggie, whose mother Coreen was unable to care for her. Rather than see her institutio­nalized, Heather stepped up to take her in.

Denise, Heather’s youngest daughter, idolized Coreen and went to live with her, and during that time she also developed a drug addiction which she carried into motherhood. Her kids were about to be taken into care by the ministry when Heather opened her home in Swan Hills, Alta., to her other two grandkids.

Already running a day care, Heather and her second husband Julian became legal guardians to Coreen’s children Maggie, Curtis, Stephanie and Jordan, as well as Denise’s kids, Jayleen and James.

When Julian got a job with Carrier Lumber 30 years ago they moved from Alberta to Prince George. Julian agreed to provide for the family, working at his job while Heather stayed at home to raise the kids, and it worked.

Although Julian and Heather are legally separated, they remain good friends and are still living together.

Denise got her life back on track and quit using drugs and was able to take back her two children, who lived with her until they became adults. James and his partner were into drugs and unable to look after their three kids, all under the age of three, all born with disabiliti­es. After some more soul-searching, Heather applied through the courts to become their legal guardian and for the past six years they’ve been living with her.

Heather’s grandson Jordan, Coreen’s oldest, was born three months premature with fetal alcohol spectrum disorder. He was deaf, blind in one eye and had paralysis on one side. Heather worked with him constantly as a baby, pressing his legs up into his chest until he could sit and crawl on his own. His eyesight remains impaired but he had surgery at BC Children’s Hospital to restore his hearing.

Now 26, Heather refers to Jordan as ‘my hero.” Despite his cognitive issues he races stock cars and holds down a fulltime job. He’s overcome his disabiliti­es to become a role model for his nieces and nephews in their Prince George house.

Heather is proud of the fact all her great-grandchild­ren, despite their disabiliti­es, are keeping up with the classroom peers, all working at par with the other students academical­ly in their respective grades.

“They’re beautiful children and they aren’t resentful, they don’t feel sorry for themselves,” she said. “My children are really connected to me. They’re really good kids.”

 ?? CITIZEN STAFF PHOTO ?? Heather Mckeand, right, gathered for a Christmas photo with her daughter Coreen and three of the four great-grandchild­ren she lives with in her Prince George townhouse, from left, Terra, Michael and Jaymee.
CITIZEN STAFF PHOTO Heather Mckeand, right, gathered for a Christmas photo with her daughter Coreen and three of the four great-grandchild­ren she lives with in her Prince George townhouse, from left, Terra, Michael and Jaymee.

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