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B.C. residential mental health facility to close over lack of funding

Owner worried over fate of residents as Fraser Health declines to enter contract with new owner

A dozen residents of a White Rock mental health housing facility scheduled for closure next summer are on the cusp of losing not only their home, but their support system and community, too, says the facility’s owner.

Buena Vista Lodge, which has offered live-in mental health treatment to people in White Rock for more than 50 years, through 12 beds funded by Fraser Health Authority, will close next June due to a lack of funding, according to its current owners.

On Oct. 5, Buena Vista Lodge received a letter from FHA, informing them of the decision, which came after the current owners decided to sell the facility.

The budget for the mental health space had been steadily decreasing, the owner said, making it tough for them – one of whom has been at Buena Vista Lodge for more than 20 years – to continue.

“We can’t afford to do this. For the last year, we’ve been putting in money out of my own pocket to support this group,” explained the owner, who when approached by Black Press Media agreed to speak, but asked not to be identified.

The situation was not sustainable, so they decided to lease the building, and found a party they believe are the best candidates for the job — individuals who have experience in the field and are “interested in working with the new budget.”

However, when they informed Fraser Health of the plan to switch operators and handed over a one-year notice, they were sent an email indicating that no more money would be forthcoming once the current contract had expired.

“You have been caring providers and have provided excellent service to clients at the site,” the letter reads.

“However, the process we have embarked upon for bed replacement has dedicated our resources to other projects. Please advise any potential leasers of the space that, at this time, we are not able to negotiate a MHSU (mental health and substance use) services contract with them.”

Staff members have informed residents of Buena Vista Lodge of the health authority’s decision.

“Some of them have been here 27, 28 years. The (newest) one we have here has been here probably 17 years. Like, everyone’s been here forever. This is their home, this is their community,” the owner said.

Residents, who the facility’s owners describe, as “family” have not reacted well to the news that they will have to relocate in a few months, they said.

“You want to pick them up and put them in a different community? I guarantee you, there’s going to be some kind of loss (of life) at some point,” he said.

“Should people end up on the streets because of this?… They’re here for a reason and this is not helping them… we are witnessing an increase in paranoia and anxiety (and) behavioural challenges. ”

The largest concern lies with where Buena Vista Lodge residents will go.

In 2018, Good Shepherd Lodge, a similar White Rock facility, but with 30 beds — also funded through Fraser Health — was shut down. Fraser Health noted that in that situation, as well, it was the owners who “initiated its closure.”

With the closure of Good Shepherd Lodge, options for re-housing in South Surrey and White Rock are slim, Buena Vista’s owner said.

They reached out to Surrey-White Rock Liberal MLA Trevor Halford for support in their fight to keep their doors open. Halford addressed the issue in the legislature on Tuesday, Nov. 1.

“Why is this minister cutting beds in the middle of a mental health crisis?” Halford challenged Minister of Mental Health and Addictions, Sheila Malcolmson.

“These are 12 beds that are leaving the community, without any explanation.”

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“I welcome the member letting me know any details about the facility that he describes,” Malcomson replied.

Halford, in turn, called it a “problem” that the minister did not already know about Buena Vista Lodge.

“In every health authority, we have opened more addiction treatment and recovery beds, more mental health beds than there have ever been in the history of the province,” Malcolmson responded.

In a statement to PAN on Wednesday (Nov. 2), a representative from Fraser Health reiterated that the closure of Buena Vista Lodge was not the health authority’s decision.

“I can tell you that the owner of Buena Vista Lodge – a private facility – has notified Fraser Health that it intends to close the site. The owners indicated it decided to end its service agreements,” the representative said.

“Fraser Health met with the owner to discuss its concerns and potential mitigation strategies to prevent the closure. However, the owner was firm in its decision. We have been in ongoing conversations with the owner to ensure it is supported to the end of the notice term.”

In response to concerns about where the residents will go and how far they will have to move from their families, Fraser Health indicated that a plan is in place.

“Over the next year, Fraser Health will be working with all residents and their families at the facility to ensure proper transition plans to new homes are in place and that residents continue to receive the supports and services they need. We are committed to reinvesting this funding into new bed-based mental health programs in our region and we work closely with our partners to identify optimal locations,” the representative continued.

“While Fraser Health does not have plans to close any mental health and substance use bed-based programs in our region, in instances where a contracted provider chooses to close a residence, we will work with the provider to ensure appropriate transition plans are in place for all residents and that they have continued access to the supports they need.”

A petition has been started to halt the closure of Buena Vista Lodge. So far, it has received nearly 300 signatures.

“Just show me that there’s a new facility being built in White Rock if there’s an issue with us… Most of their families live in the neighbourhood. There’s not a single person here who doesn’t get a visitation from their family on a weekly basis,” Buena Vista’s owner said.

By having their families close by, residents of Buena Vista Lodge have had their mental health improve over time. This situation threatens to unravel that progress, they said.


@SobiaMoman
sobia.moman@peacearchnews.com

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Sobia Moman

About the Author: Sobia Moman

Sobia Moman is a news and features reporter with the Peace Arch News.
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