The Liberals are promising to end for-profit long-term care and expand access to home care for 400,000 seniors

Claudia Love

Well-known member
Feb 8, 2021
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1,924
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The Liberals are promising to end for-profit long-term care and expand access to home care for 400,000 seniors.
Ontario Liberals Make Bold Promises on Long-Term Care, But Will They Follow Through?
Steven Del Duca/Facebook.
BY NORA LORETO
On April 28, Ontario Liberal Party Leader Steven Del Duca tweeted that if he wins the upcoming provincial election, his party will end for-profit long-term care and expand access to home care for 400,000 seniors.
The Liberals will do this by not renewing the licenses of for-profit operators and by “negotiating and financing the transfer of existing homes” to the control of municipal and not-for-profit operators. The Liberals promise this will be done by 2028.
This is a bold promise that, the Liberals say, is necessary considering the state of private, for-profit facilities in Ontario during the COVID-19 pandemic. They specifically cite the fact that the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) were called in to help manage horrific conditions during the first wave at facilities in Ontario and Quebec.
A 2020 report from the CAF described depraved and horrifying conditions at five facilities in Ontario: Eatonville Care Centre, owned by for-profit operator Rykka Care Centres and where 42 people died; Hawthorne Place Care Centre, also owned by Rykka and where 51 people died; Altamont Care Community, owned by for-profit operator Vigour General Partner Inc. (Sienna Senior Living) and where 54 people died; Orchard Villa, owned by for-profit operator Southbridge Health Care LP and where 77 people died (in the long-term care unit and retirement residences combined); and Holland Christian Homes, a not-for-profit facility where 29 people died.
These were not the only facilities in Ontario that had high numbers of deaths. Of the 12 facilities where 50 or more people died from a COVID-19 outbreak, all but one were owned by for-profit operators.
Ontario has the third-lowest proportion of publicly owned long-term care facilities among Canadian provinces. Of the 627 facilities that operate in the province, just 16 per cent are publicly owned.
Only New Brunswick and Nova Scotia have less public ownership, at 14 per cent each.
Ontario has the highest total number of for-profit operators. Some public and not-for-profit facilities outsource day-to-day management responsibilities to for-profit chains, blurring the lines between each category even further.
For the Liberals to be able to phase out for-profit long-term care, they would need to convince and enable 43 per cent of the system’s operators to absorb the other 57 per cent.
That will be difficult, considering that most not-for-profit and municipal operators only run a few facilities at a time, unlike large for-profit chains like Chartwell, Extendicare, Rykka, Schlegel, Southbridge and Revera, which all operate dozens of facilities across the province.
Asked how the Ontario Liberals plan to convince not-for-profit and municipal providers to take on so many facilities in such a short period of time, a party spokesperson offered few details.
"We will provide capital, operating and governance support to municipalities and local partners who want to build long-term care homes, with an emphasis on smaller spaces," the spokesperson said in a statement to The Maple. "And we will work closely with these partners to ensure the new spaces are spread strategically across the province."
The task will be made even more difficult by the fact that the Progressive Conservative government has continued to expand the reach of for-profit operators into the sector.
On March 11, the PCs committed to building or upgrading more than 2,000 long-term care beds at eight facilities operated by for-profit companies Extendicare, Revera, Southbridge, Sienna Senior Living and Norwood Nursing Home Ltd in Toronto as part of a $6.4 billion plan to build or upgrade nearly 60,000 beds by 2028.
On April 21, the PC government announced allocations for another 18 projects, mostly promised to for-profit providers, to build more capacity. A total of 365 projects have been announced to date.
Undoing these commitments is no small task and taking on the for-profit system more broadly will require strong political will.
Mustering that will might be difficult for a Liberal government, since the problems with long-term care did not begin under Doug Ford or during the pandemic.
During his 10-year tenure, Liberal premier Dalton McGuinty promised to tackle long-term care reform, but broke two significant promises while in office. First, he didn’t reverse the PC’s competitive bidding system for new facilities, which favoured expansion by for-profit operators.
Second, McGuinty's government allowed the gap between the number of patients and hours of care to grow. Staffing levels have not kept up with the number of residents and this was a key reason why long-term care facilities were so deadly during the pandemic.
Another issue is that while the Liberals have fewer direct connections with the long-term care industry than Ford’s Conservatives (Liberals will be quick to point out that Chartwell is chaired by former PC premier Mike Harris), they have their own connections with the industry too.
As reported by Rank and File in 2020, nearly a dozen former Liberal insiders were employed as lobbyists for long-term care corporations or the Ontario Long-Term Care Association, the for-profit sector’s leading advocacy group.
The NDP wants to end for-profit care too, pledging to make all long-term care “public and not-for-profit.”
The sum total of the Progressive Conservatives’ long-term care election campaignpledges are “allowing more seniors to stay in their own homes,” with no further explanation.
The institutionalization of long-term care is deep-rooted and any government that hopes to tackle it will need to be committed to upending the status quo. In Quebec, the province that bore the brunt of Canada’s COVID-19 deaths, 88 per cent of long-term care facilities are publicly owned.
Even still, their system is plagued by many of the same problems seen in Ontario. The Liberals will have to contend with problems within not-for-profit and public delivery too if they hope to see improved outcomes by placing control of all long-term care within these two types of facility.
Nora Loreto is The Maple's Ontario election reporter. She is the author of Spin Doctors: How Media and Politicians Misdiagnosed the COVID-19 Pandemic.

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Nora Loreto
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LickingG2

Well-known member
May 6, 2020
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Just get a lawn sign and refrain parroting the party line here. Please and thank-you.
 

Claudia Love

Well-known member
Feb 8, 2021
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Just get a lawn sign and refrain parroting the party line here. Please and thank-you.
What the conservatives and Liberals have done to long term care patients is a crime. I witnessed how the elderly lived in one place and you don't want me repeating but you want me to be as a mouse and and be thankful I have the right to vote. But darling what transpired in LTC homes can not be unseen or silenced IMO...So good on the Liberals trying to rectify the disaster that still exists under the Ford government.You really wouldn't want to be 98 i years old in 2022. trust me.
 

jcpro

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Jan 31, 2014
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How many years of Libs we had in charge? They concentrated on the climate and increasing our energy prices instead of fixing important shit. They talk a good game, but it's all wind and piss- as we used to say in the old days. Nowadays they call it election promises or stretch goals.
 
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SchlongConery

License to Shill
Jan 28, 2013
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Not making excuses for the shabby and negligent care received in some private facilities, but no way the government is not going to fuck this up too.

And FWIW, the "Non-Profit" sector in society is such a fucking self-serving scam for the heads of the organizations.

The government's role should be to enforce standards of care. Strong enforcement. With Administrative penalties and streamlined hearings. And if the standards are not adequate, then change the standards.

But the shit that happens that is attributable to the profit motivator, will continue under non-profits.
 
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saxon

Well-known member
Dec 2, 2009
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Sounds great like most Liberal election promises but of course no estimate on how many millions it’s going to cost us.
 

SchlongConery

License to Shill
Jan 28, 2013
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I'd rather spend money on that than another highway.
You couldn't build enough highways to come close to the cost of buying out the existing privately owned long term care homes. Never mind the boondoggle to plan, build, staff, manage and operate these and more.

While we may blame the politicians, the real core of the ROT in Ontario is the malignancy of the civil service and bureaucracy. Try being a hard worker in any of the Ministries. You will get burned down by those who spend more time and effort trying NOT to work, than just doing their job.

The less the Province has to do with running, building or operating anything, the better.
 
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SchlongConery

License to Shill
Jan 28, 2013
13,017
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Sounds great like most Liberal election promises but of course no estimate on how many millions it’s going to cost us.
BILLIONS.

And nobody dare question anything about it. After all, like the Teachers say, "it's all for the children grandparents"
 

LickingG2

Well-known member
May 6, 2020
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This is the politics forum.
Deal.
The election has just started and I'm already fed up with the lies and BS from all parties. I don't talk about real issues but save me from the cut and past rhetoric.
 
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