Football fanatics
Greater Victoria football fans cheer on Seahawks Page A5
NEWS: Hunters balk at rules for non-residents /A7 SPORTS: HarbourCats release 2015 schedule /A14 CALENDAR: Looking for something to do? /A15
VICTORIANEWS Friday, January 9, 2015
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Advocates eye bridging gap in community care Andrea Peacock Reporting
A new residential care facility for seniors is welcome news, but focus should also be put on the quality of home care, say advocates
A new $70-million residential care facility for seniors with dementia in Victoria will replace two facilities that are expected to close, but experts say there needs to be an increased focus on the quality of home care as well. B.C. Seniors Advocate Isobel Mackenzie said Wednesday there needs to be sufficient support for those who wish to remain living in their own homes and also increased support for the caregivers. “It’s not clear that all of those supports are being provided across the board in the province and even here in the south Island,” said Mackenzie. “There are some people in residential care who could, if there were better supports in the community, be cared for in the community.” The new 320-bed residential facility, Summit at Quadra Village, will house seniors with dementia and who require complex care. It is expected to be completed in 2018. Summit at Quadra Village will replace Oak Bay Lodge and Mount Tolmie Hospital, which consist of 580 beds and will close once Summit opens. The remaining 260 beds that will be lost once Oak Bay Lodge and Mount Tolmie Hospital close are located at the new Heights at Mount View Village. There are currently no plans to add any more beds, said Cailey Hopkins, with the Capital Regional District. This makes the net total of beds the same in the end. “We might [need new beds], we might not,” said Mackenzie. “What we need to do first is make sure that we have provided the supports in the community for people to live independently to the greatest possible extent that we can, and I don’t think we’re doing that yet.” PLEASE SEE: Family members, Page A2
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Floating on air The cargo ship Brattingsborg V6005 unloads the second of two yachts from the deck into the water at Ogden Point on Tuesday. Two large cargo ships were at dock at Ogden Point, the Brattingsborg V6005 and the MV Lillian which was undergoing a cargo hold inspection. Don Denton/Victoria News
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