Families sharply rebuke private Montreal care home where 47 died in COVID-19 1st wave
MONTREAL — Family members who lost loved ones at a Montreal long-term care home where 47 people died during the pandemic’s first wave told a coroner’s inquest Thursday that caring for society’s most vulnerable should not be a for-profit exercise.
Thursday was supposed to be the final day of hearings for private care home Résidence Herron, but coroner Géhane Kamel decided to hear more witnesses at the end of October because she said testimony had been contradictory and left her with too many unanswered questions.
She added that she would also like to view video surveillance footage to determine whether employees at the facility abandoned their posts on March 29, 2020, leaving residents alone. The inquiry has heard that regional health authorities arrived at the severely understaffed facility on that day to find residents dehydrated, unfed and soiled.
“At least then it will feel like I have closed the loop with Herron,” Kamel said Thursday about her decision to extend the hearings. “Maybe I won’t have all of my answers, but at least I can sleep soundly.”

