Thursday, December 4, 2025
ADVT 
National

External review latest to call for more B.C. home-share funding years after death

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Nov, 2025 10:32 AM
  • External review latest to call for more B.C. home-share funding years after death

An external review of British Columbia's home-sharing program for adults with developmental disabilities says the government needs to increase funding to the Crown corporation in charge if it wants to deliver safe and timely supports.

The 203-page report released by the Ministry of Social Development and Poverty Reduction is the latest call for more money for Community Living B.C. after a 54-year-old woman with Down syndrome starved to death while in a home-share arrangement in 2018.

The external review report was commissioned Social Development Minister Sheila Malcolmson in June, and says home-sharing has become the default form of community living by the Crown corporation, but that it's unlikely the program alone can be scaled to meet increasing demand.

Key features of home-sharing have been weakened over the years, the report says, namely individual planning and co-ordination, the matching process, and the development of key relationships and informal community supports.

Florence Girard was living at a home in Port Coquitlam, B.C., when she died weighing only 50 pounds and the woman whose house she shared was convicted of failing to provide the necessaries of life. 

An inquest into her death heard that funding was not adequate to attract and retain home-share providers and a jury recommended that their compensation be increased and those running the program also be paid more.

The Ministry of Social Development said in a statement that it and Community Living BC "will work with partners to implement changes that enhance safety, support choice and maintain accountability."

The report that was released Tuesday says work has been done to make improvements since Girard's death, while calling for a detailed review of the corporation's budgetary requirements.

It recommends working with the Treasury Board to increase funding "to a level sufficient to deliver quality services in a safe and timely manner."

"Even the best system of monitoring and safeguards cannot protect against vulnerabilities created by an underfunded system," it says.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chad Hipolito

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada, U.S., Finland take step forward on ICE Pact plan to build icebreakers

Canada, U.S., Finland take step forward on ICE Pact plan to build icebreakers
Canada, the United States and Finland took a step toward building new icebreakers despite the breakdown in trade talks between Ottawa and the Trump administration.

Canada, U.S., Finland take step forward on ICE Pact plan to build icebreakers

'Gas-for-wine': South Africa seeks deal to boost trade, investment with Canada

'Gas-for-wine': South Africa seeks deal to boost trade, investment with Canada
As Prime Minister Mark Carney heads to Johannesburg for the G20 summit, Canada and South Africa are talking about a deal to boost bilateral trade and investment that could see more South African wine on Canadian shelves in exchange for gas exports.

'Gas-for-wine': South Africa seeks deal to boost trade, investment with Canada

Report finds one in five immigrants leaves Canada within 25 years

Report finds one in five immigrants leaves Canada within 25 years
A new report says one in five newcomers to Canada leaves the country within 25 years of their arrival — and most of those who leave exit within their first five years here.

Report finds one in five immigrants leaves Canada within 25 years

Shots fired in Abbotsford, B.C.; police link attack to extortion case

Shots fired in Abbotsford, B.C.; police link attack to extortion case
Police in Abbotsford, B.C., are investigating after shots were fired overnight in what investigators are calling the latest case of extortion-related violence in the city.

Shots fired in Abbotsford, B.C.; police link attack to extortion case

Carney defends green pledge to get Budget 2025 passed in narrow vote

Carney defends green pledge to get Budget 2025 passed in narrow vote
Prime Minister Mark Carney on Tuesday defended making a commitment to carbon emission targets to get the government's spending plan over the finish line.

Carney defends green pledge to get Budget 2025 passed in narrow vote

B.C. testing emergency alerts to cellphones, TV, radio

B.C. testing emergency alerts to cellphones, TV, radio
To improve public safety in the event of an emergency, a test of the BC Emergency Alert system will take place at 1:55 p.m. (Pacific time) on Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2025.

B.C. testing emergency alerts to cellphones, TV, radio