‘We failed her’: CEO apologizes as B.C. starvation inquest seeks pay boost for carers
The head of a Crown corporation that funded the care of a B.C. woman with Down syndrome who died of starvation said the organization “failed her,” after an inquest jury ruled the death a homicide and called for better pay for home carers of adults with developmental disabilities.
It was among 13 recommendations made by the coroners inquest jury after hearing evidence about the 2018 death of Florence Girard in the home of her caregiver, where she lived as part of a government-funded program.
The head of a provincial Down syndrome advocacy organization said the detailed recommendations, released Friday after nearly two days of deliberations, are a sign of the need for a “complete reset” of the system.
The homicide ruling is not a determination of criminality and inquest juries are not asked to find fault in cases that they hear, but rather make recommendations on how to prevent similar deaths in the future.