Care Home and Tenants Rights

What is a Care Home?

 A care home is rented accommodation that provides care services. Such services include nursing care, prescription drug supervision, an emergency response system, transportation, incontinence care and assistance with daily activities (e.g., eating, bathing, dressing, and personal hygiene).

If you live in a care home, you have the same rights as other tenants under the Residential Tenancies Act (RTA) to live in a safe, well-maintained home. Hospitals and long-term care homes (e.g. nursing homes) run by municipalities or Indian Band Councils do not qualify as care homes (however, elderly adults in such homes can take advantage of the home care Bill of Rights set out in the Long Term Care Act).

Care Home Information Packages

 Before you sign a tenancy agreement, your landlord must provide you with a Care Home Information Package (CHIP). This should include information such as:

  • How to make a complaint
  • Whether there is an emergency response system
  • The types of rental units and the cost
  • The types of care services available and their cost
  • Optional services available and their cost
  • The minimum number of staff that must be in the home at all times
  • Staff qualifications

Tenancy Agreements

As a tenant in a care home, you are also entitled to a written tenancy agreement which outlines your rent, the cost of meals and care services, your right to consult an outside party about the agreement and your right to cancel the agreement by written notice to the landlord within five days.

You may end your tenancy agreement at any time with 30 days’ notice to your landlord. You may also cancel meals and services before your tenancy ends by giving 10 days’ notice to your landlord.

Eviction Based on Care Needs

As a care home tenant, you may be evicted due to change in your condition or needs. The Tenants Board must hold a hearing when your landlord must provide you with thirty days of notice of the hearing.

To make a decision in favor of your landlord, he or she must prove to the Board that:

  • Your needs cannot be met by the landlord’s care services, even when combined with other services available in your community; and
  • Appropriate alternative accommodations are available.

Your landlord cannot therefore evict you unless you can move into the alternative accommodation on the same day that you move out of your current home.

If you do not wish to move, you must provide written notice to the Board expressing this wish.  The Board is also required to offer mediation to you and your landlord.

 

Related Posts

Where Should I keep my original Will?

Your original Will should be kept somewhere safe and accessible, when it will be needed. A copy should be kept in a personal file and you should let your executor know where to find it. Contrary to popular belief your safety deposit box is not the safest place. Most financial institutions will require court authority

Read More »

COVID-19 Communiques

March 30, 2020 (Litigation clients) To Our Valued Clients We hope you and your family are keeping safe and well. As you may have heard, last week’s announcement by the provincial government has deemed lawyers to be considered an “essential service”. We continue to be open and available albeit with a modified work routine.  Accordingly,

Read More »

Checklist: Executor’s Duties

Being an executor is an important obligation not to be taken lightly. There are many duties that are necessary. Initial Work The Estate Trustee or executor’s first steps are to make funeral/burial arrangements, obtain the Funeral Director’s Proof of Death and deceased’s identification, bank and credit cards, Last Will (any codicils), valuables needing safekeeping, notify

Read More »

Administration Bonds

What is an Administration Bond?  An administration bond is a promise to pay under specified circumstances, undertaken by a prospective estate trustee, to protect the interests of the beneficiaries and creditors if the estate trustee misappropriates assets of the estate or otherwise perpetuates a fraud on the estate. The bond is obtained from a surety

Read More »

Insolvent Estate Administration

What happens if I die without enough assets to satisfy my debts?  When someone dies with insufficient assets to meet the claims of their creditors, they leave an insolvent estate. The Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act and the Trustee Act govern the administration of insolvent estates, and the legislation allows executors to pay for “proper funeral

Read More »

Estate Administration Basics

When a person dies, the property he or she holds in their own name is called an Estate. A Will is a legal document that names the person or persons appointed as estate trustee (formerly known as an executor/executrix) and sets out how you want your assets will be distributed. The authority for administering the

Read More »
Scroll to Top