Regina health-care workers plead for health authority to take over care home to avoid layoffs, resident displacement
Around 100 healthcare workers at a Regina care home are preparing for layoff notices following an announcement last week that the Regina Lutheran Home is closing its doors.
It’s a situation many workers feel could have been avoided, including Darleen Gilewich, who has 39 years of service as a care aide.
“Staff are very devastated. I mean a lot of the staff are long term staff. When you get into a facility like this, people tend to stay and make it their career and we feel that we’re like family to these residents,” Gilewich said.
As the long term care facility winds down operations by next spring, 60 residents are also being displaced. The union and the NDP opposition agree that the government should take over the facility.
“A hundred people in Regina who are in danger of losing their employment at a time when you know there’s very few people who can afford any loss of employment at this time,” NDP leader Carla Beck said.
The province said the 60-year-old building is at the end of its life and the decision to close was made by Eden Care Communities and that the province was not involved.
“We recognize this is a difficult time for residents, families and staff and we are committed to working together to minimize impact and support a phased transition plan,” a written statement from the Saskatchewan Health Authority (SHA) said.
The union was hoping that the provincial government would purchase the Regina Lutheran Home and maintain the operation like the province did last year with five Extendicare facilities in Saskatchewan.
So far, the government has expressed no interest in buying the Lutheran Home.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

Health care in Canada could be more like Norway's, with some improvements: study
Canada is trailing behind other Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries when it comes to both the number of physicians relative to the population, and its spending on primary care, according to a new analysis published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.
Schools closed, more than 100,000 without electricity as snow falls in Quebec
More than 106,000 homes in Quebec are without electricity after Environment Canada reported nearly 25 cm of snow had fallen across the province.
Escaped kangaroo found safe after 3 days on the loose in Ontario
A kangaroo that escaped the Oshawa Zoo during a one-night stay last week has been recaptured after more than three days on the loose, with one police officer sustaining minor injuries during the effort to apprehend the marsupial.
LIVE Lawyer of Bernardo victims' families appears before House committee today
Tim Danson, the lawyer and legal counsel for the families of Kristen French and Leslie Mahaffy, who were killed by Paul Bernardo, appears via videoconference before the House of Commons public safety committee today.
Dam threatens to burst in the Laurentians, residents evacuated from homes
People living in Chute-Saint-Philippe and Lac-des-Ecorces in the Laurentians are being asked to evacuate their homes due to potential infrastructure issues at the Kiamika dam and Morier dike.
Israel orders evacuations as it widens offensive but Palestinians are running out of places to go
Israel's military renewed calls Monday for mass evacuations from the southern town of Khan Younis, where tens of thousands of displaced Palestinians have sought refuge in recent weeks, as it widened its ground offensive and bombarded targets across the Gaza Strip.
Hong Kong pro-democracy activist Agnes Chow jumps bail and moves to Canada
One of Hong Kong's best-known pro-democracy activists who moved to Canada to pursue her studies said she would not return to the city to meet her bail conditions, becoming the latest politician to flee Hong Kong under Beijing's crackdown on dissidents.
'Potent and impactful storm' on the way to B.C.'s South Coast, Vancouver Island
Heavy rainfall is in store for much of southern B.C. starting Monday, when a 'potent and impactful storm' is forecast to make landfall, according to Environment and Climate Change Canada.
Oxford University Press has named 'rizz' as its word of the year
Oxford University Press has named 'rizz' as its word of the year, highlighting the popularity of a term used by Generation Z to describe someone's ability to attract or seduce another person.