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City Council

Council throws support behind Hospice plans

May 11, 2026 | 9:01 PM


PRINCE GEORGE – Not surprisingly, Council has not only supported efforts by the Prince George Palliative Care Society to pursue a wellness centre, but took it one step further. A motion from Councillor Garth Frizzell will take the plans to the Intergovernmental Affairs Committee, which has the mandate of advocating to other levels of government on issues deemed important by Council.

In the Society’s report, it was noted that there are thousands more seniors staying in the community than historically was the case and many of those seniors would prefer to age at home.

It also noted that an “unacceptably” high number of seniors are finding themselves in the hospital setting.

“People are sitting in the hospital when they don’t need to be,” noted Donna Flood, Executive Director for the Prince George Palliative Care Society. “We can do better than this.”

The proposed centre would provide for services not readily available to seniors in the community, such as a social environment, a place to gather.

“We realized there’s a large gap [in services] for those living with a life-ending illness,”explains Flood. “They’re in their homes, trying to live their best lives.”

The centre would also provide a dozen palliative care beds, in addition to those already in place at the Rotary Hospice House on Ferry Avenue.

“I think right now, we work in crisis,” she says, referring to the healthcare system. “And that’s not okay. That’s not a good way to know how you’re going to spend the rest of your life.”

Council not only endorsed the plan, but sent it to Council’s Intergovernmental Affairs Committee.

“What we have seen these last four years is the committee’s success with our advocacy in Victoria,” noted Councillor Frizzell, who Chairs the committee and put forward the motion. “And when talk about the issues, it gets the attention of decision-makers are a provincial level. The provincial government does have a bigger purse.”

The Society estimates it would cost $2.2 million to build the centre and an additional $1.7 million annually to operate the facility.

“What we need is the operational money. The money to pay the staff. When we did the math, what we can do with $1.7 million, what we’re actually saving the health care system is over five million dollars.”

Currently, only 35 per cent of the society’s costs are covered by the Province.