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Ontario bill will protect bad actors in long-term care homes, advocate says

CBC

Tue, June 10, 2025 at 10:19 a.m. EDT

 

Under a bill by Minister of Red Tape Reduction Andrea Khanjin, long-term care home inspection reports will be published online for three years before being removed from the website. (Ben Nelms/CBC - image credit)
Under a bill by Minister of Red Tape Reduction Andrea Khanjin, long-term care home inspection reports will be published online for three years before being removed from the website. (Ben Nelms/CBC - image credit)

The Ontario government is proposing restricting public access to long-term care (LTC) home inspection reports — a move one advocate says will protect bad actors in the sector.

 

Currently, all LTC home inspection reports are posted online. But under the proposal, contained within a bill tabled last week by Minister of Red Tape Reduction Andrea Khanjin, the reports would be published for three years before being removed from the website.

 

"It's very clear here that it's to shield the bad reputations of repeated bad actors in long-term care from having their records of non-compliance being made visible," said Dr. Vivian Stamatopoulos, a professor at Ontario Tech University and long-term care advocate, in an interview with CBC Radio's Metro Morning on Tuesday.

 

Over 30,000 reports are currently available online, dating back over 15 years, including for homes that are no longer operational, according to the Ministry of Long-Term Care.

The ministry will continue maintaining reports outside the three-year time period, and reports will be available "upon request," spokesperson Mark Nesbitt said in an email on Monday.

 

"By setting a three-year publication period for reports, the government is ensuring the public has access to relevant and accurate information that reflects each long-term care home's current performance," he said.

 

The time frame is similar to other inspection industry practices, such as for child-care settings, he said.

 

But Stamatopoulos called the comparison a false equivalency. Children don't live in daycares, and the history of deaths, noncompliance and abuse in Ontario LTC homes demands a full public record, she said.

 

From March 2020 to April 2022, during the COVID-19 pandemic, 4,335 residents died in Ontario's LTC homes, according to a September 2023 report from the province's ombudsman.


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