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Montreal

$10 million in emergency aid coming to private long-term care homes in Quebec

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A woman walks down the hall in the CHSLD Idola Saint-Jean in Laval. The CAQ government is giving $10 million to private homes as emergency funding. (Graham Hughes / The Canadian Press) (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press)

A lifeline for private long-term care centres (CHSLDs) that were on the verge of losing their services is coming.

The Legault government is giving them an additional $10 million in emergency funding, specifically to maintain funding for 1,200 places.

However, this is less than the $25 million in emergency funding requested by the Association des établissements privés conventionnés (AEPC).

The Minister responsible for Seniors, Sonia Bélanger, announced the $10 million in funding on Friday morning.

Sonia Belanger Quebec’s Minister Responsible for Seniors Sonia Belanger announced on April 18, 2025 that $10 million is coming for CHSLDs in the province. (Karoline Boucher/ The Canadian Press) (Karoline Boucher/The Canadian Press)

“With this assistance, we are ensuring that we can continue to protect Quebec seniors living in private long-term care centres under agreement, with the same rates and services as in public long-term care centres,” she said in a news release.

At the beginning of March, the AEPC argued that the current agreement with the government did not cover the rapid rise in expenditures and that, if nothing was done by March 31, the establishments would be in deficit.

The CAQ government did not respond to the urgent request for special funding of $25 million for the last few weeks of the financial year.

AEPC had suggested that 1,200 of the 7,600 beds could be closed for lack of adequate funding.

The organization’s executive director, Annick Lavoie, felt it was urgent to act.

AEPC wanted to sit down with the government before the budget was tabled and review the current funding rules.

The agreement with the government, renewed year after year, does not cover the high annual inflation that has persisted since the pandemic.

The gap that has grown between expenditure and the envelopes allocated by the government to fulfil its mission is estimated at 12 per cent by the AEPC, which is calling for indexation in line with the Consumer Price Index.

The association is calling for the return of longer-term funding agreements, over five or six years, as was the case before 2015, to provide greater predictability.

This is the third time in three years that the association has asked for additional aid at the very end of the year, a sign that the issue is a recurring one.

The organisation obtained $15 million in previous years.

According to data provided by the Health and Social Services Ministry, Quebec has paid total net funding of $1.063 billion in 2024-2025 to the 71 private CHSLDs under agreement, including establishments that have recently been approved and that are not part of the association.

The current agreement has three components: a clinical component, a real estate component and a component for operating expenses.

The government is paying $378.4 million for this last component, but it is heavily in deficit, the AEPC deplores.

In particular, it covers administrative staff, maintenance staff, operating expenses, food, heating, and so on.

The building component is also insufficient, according to the AEPC.

It amounts to $41.7 million, and some owners are having difficulty even paying their municipal taxes.

AEPC has 29 owner-managers representing 65 establishments and facilities, including two rehabilitation hospitals.

Private long-term care centres under agreement are private companies that provide a public service within parameters defined by the Health Ministry.

The monthly rates paid by residents are the same in private long-term care centres under agreement as in state-run long-term care centres.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published in French on April 18, 2025.