Nova Scotia

Inquiry hears of slow pace of change to supports for people with disabilities

The inquiry is looking at whether two Nova Scotians with disabilities have the right to live in supported housing — meaning, in the community, rather than institutions and psychiatric facilities.

Expert witness says province agreed in 2013 people shouldn't have to live in institutions

Beth MacLean, shown with her former social worker Jo-Anne Pushie in 2015, spent more than 15 years living at Emerald Hall, part of the Nova Scotia Hospital complex in Dartmouth. (CBC)

An expert witness testified Tuesday at a human rights inquiry about the slow pace of change to Nova Scotia's system to house and support people with disabilities.

The inquiry is looking at whether two Nova Scotians with disabilities have the right to live in supported housing — meaning, in the community, rather than institutions and psychiatric facilities.

Michael Bach was hired by the province to help transform its system for people with disabilities about five years ago, and help close its remaining institutions.

He told the inquiry Tuesday that the province agreed in 2013 that people shouldn't have to live in institutions or psychiatric facilities if they were capable of living in the community with supports.

He said this came after numerous provincial reports calling for the shift, along with high-profile incidents of abuse in facilities.

The first witness at Tuesday's hearing was Michael Bach, managing director at the Institute for Research and Development on Inclusion and Society. (CBC)

Bach, who is also a researcher who advocates for people with disabilities, said government officials who sat on committees agreed the system needed to be "transformed" towards an approach where people with disabilities — including those who also have mental-health diagnoses — could live in the community.

"If you're going to provide people supports in ways that enable them to achieve their own life goals, we need to disattach supports from facilities, from bricks and mortar, and make supports available to individuals according to their own life paths and goals," Bach said.

The Nova Scotia government has said it may agree with the principle of providing supports, but it's not necessarily a human rights violation for the province to refuse funding or eliminate waiting lists.

Forty-five-year-old Joseph Delaney and 46-year-old Beth MacLean say they should be permitted to move from the hospital-like settings into small homes where assistance is provided in areas such as meals and personal care.

A third complainant, Sheila Livingstone, died as the case wound its way through various delays, but her story will be told by family members and the complainants' lawyer.

With files from CBC