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Whitehorse's Macaulay Lodge seniors home closes

Most residents and staff from Macaulay Lodge have now moved to Whistle Bend Place, which opened last fall.

Most residents have moved to new Whistle Bend facility which opened last fall

A building on a snowy lot. A sign out front reads
Residents and staff from the 47-bed Macaulay Lodge in Riverdale have all moved into the city's other long-term care facilities. Most have gone to Whistle bend Place, which opened last fall. (Paul Tukker/CBC)

Whitehorse's oldest continuing care facility has closed, as residents settle into Copper Ridge Placeand the new Whistle Bend Place.

MacaulayLodgeopened in Riverdale in 1969 and was the city's only long term care home for many years, according to Cecilia Fraser, with the territory's Department of Health and Social Services.

"The building is getting quite old now," she said. "The codes have changed, theresidents and the complexity of care that we offerhas changed as well."

Most of the staff from the 47-bed MacaulayLodge have moved to Whistle Bend Place, which opened last fall.Some staff have also moved to other long term care facilities in Whitehorse, such as Birch Lodge and the Thomson Centre.

Fraser said saying goodbye to MacaulayLodge was bittersweet for a lot of long-time staff members.

"I think the residents actually did better than the staff did," she said.

The 150-bed Whistle Bend Place is little more than half full. (Claudiane Samson/Radio-Canada)

"For the residents, there was a certain level of excitement, doing something different, new and maybe a move that some of them hadn't counted on."

Fraser said it hasn't been decided yet what will happen to the MacaulayLodge building now that it's no longer in use.

The 150-bed Whistle Bend Place, meanwhile, is still little more than half full. Frasersaid there will be 78 residents by the end of the week.

With files from Sandi Coleman