Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Officials Separate Couple After 73 Years: 'I Listened To My Mother Weep'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Dec, 2017 12:30 PM
    PERTH-ANDOVER, N.B. — An elderly New Brunswick couple bid a tearful goodbye this week, separated just days before Christmas after 73 years together.
     
    Herbert and Audrey Goodine gave each other a peck on the lips and said goodbye Monday, moments before Herbert was driven to a new care residence about 45 minutes away.
     
    The couple have been married for 69 years, spending the last three years together at the Victoria Villa Special Care Home in Perth-Andover, N.B.
     

    This is one Sad Christmas story for Herbert and Audrey Goodine who reside at Victoria Villa Special Care Home in Perth...

    Posted by Dianne Goodine Phillips on Sunday, 17 December 2017
     
    But after a recent assessment of Herbert's health, officials decided the home could no longer accommodate him because the 91-year-old's dementia had progressed to a point where he needs a higher level of care.
     
    Dianne Phillips, the couple's daughter, said she was told last Friday her father would have to move.
     
    By Monday, a van carried him away to another home in Plaster Rock as Audrey stood by the window and watched him go.
     
    "I feel people need to know what a flawed system we have in place. Two words describe it 'unethical and cruel,'" she said in a Facebook post.
     
    "This should never take place to another human again."
     
    Phillips is upset the couple was separated a week before Christmas, saying it's mentally and emotionally difficult for her parents who had, up until now, shared a room and the same bed at the villa.
     
    Phillips said in the post that she understands her father requires a higher level of care, but felt the facility could have arranged for the couple to be separated after the holiday.
     
    "I listened to my mother weep and I could hear my father in the background," she said. "My mother said, 'Christmas is over for us now and this is the worst Christmas that we will ever have. Why could they not have waited till after the holidays.'"
     
    Jennifer Eagan of Victoria Villa told Global News she cannot comment on specific cases due to privacy, but stresses the home is a Level 2 facility for residents who need a little bit of supervision.
     
    Phillips said her father was assessed as being Level 3, while her 89-year-old mother is Level 2.
     
    The couple will be together for Christmas at their daughter's home in Fredericton.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Small businesses in B.C. in line for $18,500 relief for losses in wildfires

    Small businesses in B.C. in line for $18,500 relief for losses in wildfires
    Donaldson said funding is also available to not-for-profit organizations and Indigenous communities.

    Small businesses in B.C. in line for $18,500 relief for losses in wildfires

    NDP, Greens unite to support electoral reform ahead of vote; Liberals opposed

    NDP, Greens unite to support electoral reform ahead of vote; Liberals opposed
    The minority NDP government, supported by three members of the Green party, is poised to pass legislation today that paves the way for the referendum on Nov. 30, 2018.

    NDP, Greens unite to support electoral reform ahead of vote; Liberals opposed

    Repeat bad drivers can expect dramatically longer prohibitions in B.C.

    Repeat bad drivers can expect dramatically longer prohibitions in B.C.
    The Ministry of Public Safety says starting Dec. 1 prohibitions ranging from three to 36 months will replace existing 15-day penalties for those drivers and other repeat offenders.

    Repeat bad drivers can expect dramatically longer prohibitions in B.C.

    Police uniforms, vehicles no longer allowed in Vancouver Pride parade

    Police uniforms, vehicles no longer allowed in Vancouver Pride parade
    She says the decision was made in September after more than a year of community consultations where members of the LGBTQ community told board members they were uncomfortable seeing uniformed officers or police vehicles at the event because of historic police oppression.

    Police uniforms, vehicles no longer allowed in Vancouver Pride parade

    Softwood lumber: Canada takes its complaint to the World Trade Organization

    Softwood lumber: Canada takes its complaint to the World Trade Organization
    A similar battle dragged on for four years at the WTO in the last instalment of the Canada-U.S. softwood dispute

    Softwood lumber: Canada takes its complaint to the World Trade Organization

    PM Trudeau to name new Supreme Court judge to replace retiring McLachlin

    PM Trudeau to name new Supreme Court judge to replace retiring McLachlin
    Insiders say the announcement will not include naming a new chief justice.

    PM Trudeau to name new Supreme Court judge to replace retiring McLachlin