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Elderly
told to find new homes By BBC news, September 2, 2003 Nearly 30 elderly
residents at a south Devon nursing home have been told they have to find
somewhere else to live. The
Kiniver Nursing Home in Teignmouth has told its residents they have five
weeks to move out before the building is sold.
The owner blames council under funding
for the situation, but Devon County Council has said it would like to
provide more money but cannot because of a budget crisis due to government
under funding. After
it is sold, the nursing home is to be knocked down and replaced by luxury
flats. Joyce
Hutchinson, 75, has been a resident at the home for five years. Her
husband, Bob, visits every day. Mr
Hutchinson said: "It is a terrible thing you have to face, uprooted
after all that time. "And
even when you get to a new place, you don't know what it is going to be
like, or whether you will be happy there or not." Owner
Neville Platt said it is too difficult to run his kind of business with
the subsidies he gets from the local social services department.
He
said: "Nobody cares for the elderly except my staff and myself. "All
nursing home owners and residential care owners in Devon care for the
elderly, but apparently the government and social services don't."
The leader of Devon County Council, Councillor Brian Greenslade, said the
council is continuing to battle with a budget crisis that has been caused
by government under funding. He
said: "More money is needed from government is the argument Devon
County Council has been putting very strongly for several years now. "We
have been doing our very best ourselves to spend more on this kind of care
provision than the government is actually providing for but we can only do
so much." Gladys
Brown, 92, is another resident at the home. Her
son, Campbell, has been trying to find somewhere else for her to live. Mr
Brown said: "Everyone who has relatives here is phoning the same
numbers. "When
you get a reply, they say' 'You are the fifth today. If you like, you are
ninth on the waiting list'." Copyright © 2002 Global
Action on Aging |