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Montreal

CHSLD Herron in Dorval, hit hard during first wave of COVID-19, closing for good

The West Island regional health board will be relocating the residents progressively over the next 6 to 12 months.

West Island regional health board will be relocating residents over the next 6 to 12 months

The owners of CHSLD Herron are closing the facility and handing over the transition of patients to the local health authority as of Nov. 14. (Jean-Claude Taliana/CBC)

The owners of CHSLD Herron are ceasing operations at the long-term care home in Dorval as of Nov. 14, according to a letter sent out to residents and their families.

The West Island regional health board, theCIUSSS de l'Ouest de l'le de Montral, will be taking over operations and relocating the remaining residents progressively over the next sixto 12 months.

Quebec Health Minister Christian Dubsaid Monday the province would ensure the residents find a good home.

The CIUSSS confirmed thatthe owners of CHSLD Herron, the Katasa Group,had decided to close the facility.

Lynne McVey,president of the CIUSSS de l'Ouest de l'le de Montral, said the minister asked the health boardto step in.

"The residents that are there will transfer into the public sector and we will spend the next six or 12 months listening to the residents and their families on where they would like to be placed, whether they want to stay in the public system or whether they want to be transferred into a private long-term care facility," McVey said.

Lynne McVey is the president of the CIUSSS de l'Ouest de l'le de Montral. (Jean-Claude Taliana/CBC)

The letter sent to residents and their families, signed by Katasa Group manager Katherine Chowieri and dated Nov. 2, states that "the decision, which was not easy to make, can be explained by the current state of operations."

No additional detail about the reason for closing is provided.Katasa has not yet responded to a requestfor comment.

The letter goes on to say that residents will be reimbursed their rent for the period of Nov. 14 to Nov. 30.

CHSLD Herron first made headlines earlier this year when dozens of residents died in lessa month, following a COVID-19 outbreak.

In all, between March 26 and April 16, at least 38 deaths at Herronwere confirmed by the coroner's office. During a particularly dark period from April 5 to 10, 23 people died.

WATCH| Nurses say conditions at Herron were inhumane

Nurses say conditions at Dorval long-term care facility are inhumane

4 years ago
Duration 2:05
Elderly residents at CHSLD Herron in Dorval, a long-term care facility dealing with COVID-19, were found underfed and, in some cases, covered in urine and feces, by health care workers.

Quebec politicians expressed outrage upon learning that most staff hadabandoned the facility, leaving seniors hungry, thirsty, sickand alone.

"I think it looks a lot like major negligence,"Premier Franois Legault saidback in April.

After management of the facility was taken over by the regional health authority, Montreal police launched acriminal investigation.

The owners were accused of not co-operating with the CIUSSS,a development deemed"extraordinary" byMcVeyat the time.

It was only after issuing two formal notices and an eventual court order under Quebec's Public Health Act that officials were able to see residents' medical files and information about family contacts, McVey said.

Katasa Development Group, based in Gatineau, owns CHSLD Herron and six other seniors' residences in Quebec.

Family of COVID-19 victim to sue Quebec care home

4 years ago
Duration 3:21
The family of a COVID-19 victim at CHSLD Herron in Dorval, Que., wants to file a class-action lawsuit against the private residence, claiming at least $2 million in damages that would be divided among residents. Thirty-one residents have died since mid-March.

In September, the Quebec Ministry of Health and Social Services released itsreport into the operations of the facility, finding that residents at CHSLD Herronwere victims of "organizational negligence".

The report said that if management at the private seniors' home had understood its responsibilities and used the resources at its disposal, "it is reasonable to conclude that the Grim Reaper would not have been as devastating."

When theCIUSSS arrived at Herron onMarch 29, there were three employees caring for133 residents. It was filled with a "nauseating odour of urine and feces" and unwashed dishes.

Quebec's coroner's office also opened its own investigation into the management of the care home.

With files from Valeria Cori-Manocchio, Radio-Canada's Daniel Boily