Owners of care home didn’t co-operate with health authority, Quebec inquest hears
MONTREAL — The former owners of a long-term care home where dozens of people died of COVID-19 early in the pandemic refused to fully co-operate with the local health authorities and threatened not to pay workers who came to the residence at the government’s request, a Quebec coroner’s inquest heard Tuesday.
Lynne McVey, the head of the regional health authority for western Montreal, testified that the situation culminated in her calling police early on April 11, 2020 after learning that 31 people had died at Résidence Herron since mid-March — not the 13 listed in official government reports.
“The worry that I had at that moment was, ‘What don’t we know? What other information don’t we know in this situation that we’re going to find out?’ ” McVey told the inquest.
McVey said that when three managers were sent to the private facility in the Montreal suburb of Dorval on the evening of March 29 they found only the owner, the owner’s spouse and one staff member on the premises to care for over 130 residents.

