Thousands of Albertans in private seniors' facilities still awaiting vaccines, not atop priority lists theglobeandmail.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theglobeandmail.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
CALGARY Days after Premier Jason Kenney’s announcement that Alberta has reached a vaccine “milestone” some families are wondering why their elderly loved ones in care homes had been left out. Just weeks after Betty Clarke celebrated her 99th birthday with family over Zoom from her independent supported living facility in Edmonton she was supposed to get her first dose of COVID-19 vaccine, but it was postponed due to the Pfizer shipment delay. “You just kind of feel that a 99-year-old would have had her vaccine sooner than this,” said her daughter Jennifer Diakiw. She wasn’t the only Albertan confused after the premier’s announcement Monday.
EDMONTON Premier Jason Kenney’s announcement that Alberta has reached a vaccine “milestone” is creating some confusion amongst private seniors home operators. Kenney said Monday that the first dose of vaccination against COVID-19 had now been administered in all 357 long-term care and designated supportive living facilities in the province, a feat he called a ‘tremendous milestone’. “I believe (this) makes Alberta the first province in the country to complete the first dose vaccine rollout for this important and highly vulnerable population,” said Kenney. However, operators of private long-term care homes said they are frustrated by the language being used.
Argyllshire Advertiser
Updated: 07/01/21, 6:03 am
Councillor Donnie MacMillan BEM digs the first sod on a development by ACHA in Mid Argyll, with board members Councillor Roddy McCuish, Douglas Prophet and Councillor Jim Lynch, chief executive Alastair MacGregor and Kenny MacLeod, managing director of MacLeod Construction.
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At the start of the pandemic in March we took the decision to make online access to our news free of charge by taking down our paywall. At a time where accurate information about Covid-19 was vital to our community, this was the right decision – even though it meant a drop in our income.
Argyllshire Advertiser
Updated: 30/12/20, 2:39 pm
John Finnie MSP cuts the ribbon to officially open ACHA s housing development in Connel last January, with Pipe Major Angus MacColl, Councillor Roddy McCuish and ACHA s outgoing chairman Jim Milne.
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At the start of the pandemic in March we took the decision to make online access to our news free of charge by taking down our paywall. At a time where accurate information about Covid-19 was vital to our community, this was the right decision – even though it meant a drop in our income.
In order to help safeguard the future of our journalism, the time has now come to reinstate our paywall, However,