Owner of Quebec care home where 47 died during pandemic testifies at coroner inquest
MONTREAL — The owner of a Montreal long-term care home where 47 residents died during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic told a coroner’s inquiry Wednesday she was relieved when government officials came to help.
Samantha Chowieri said she started asking the local health authority for help on March 27, 2020, after her staff at Résidence Herron began falling ill or went into preventive isolation and the facility’s doctors refused to see patients in person to reduce contacts.
She said residents weren’t getting the care they needed by March 29, the same day officials first showed up to lend a hand. The inquiry has heard that regional health authorities that day found residents dehydrated, unfed and soiled. The government later announced Herron would be placed under trusteeship.
“When the government arrived I felt hope for the residents,” Chowieri said. Later during her testimony, however, she expressed shock when a health executive accused her of mistreating residents and implied she cared more about money than her clients. Chowieri administered Herron, which was owned by her family through Katasa Groupe, a Gatineau, Que.-based developer.