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£38m 'super' care homes to replace ageing buildings

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Published Date: 03 December 2008
ALL of Edinburgh's ageing council-run care homes are set to close and be replaced with six new "super" homes at a cost of £38 million.
Hundreds of elderly residents will be on the move as 14 facilities are deemed "no longer fit for purpose" and are shut down over the next decade.

The new homes will complement four care homes recently opened or currently being built by the local
authority, such as Marionville and Castle Green. The cut in council-run care homes will happen in tandem with a doubling of care packages offered in the home.

City leaders are aiming to have 40 per cent of all those elderly people in need of care receiving it in their own home by 2018.

The intention is also to use some of the sites of the former homes for the development of the new care homes, which will all have better facilities such as bigger bedrooms.

The likely sites for the new homes are at Kings Inch, the old Eastern General site in Leith, South Queensferry, Clovenstone, Silverlea and Clermiston.

A survey of the existing 14 care homes has said it is not viable to rebuild them, adding that annual maintenance would run into the millions.

Councillor Paul Edie, the city's spokesman for health, social care and housing, said: "Older people have told us that they want to stay in their own homes, in their own communities. There will of course be some cases where residential accommodation is required and while the quality of care provided in our care homes is consistently high, the fabric of the buildings does not meet modern standards.

"In building new custom-built homes we are able to match the standard of accommodation to the high standard of care we provide."

The proposed changes mean the number of care home places provided by the city council will drop from 652 to an estimated 418 by 2018. It is understood the new homes being built by the council will be a mix of both local authority and privately-operated homes.

A further £18 million has been earmarked to build 270 affordable homes for elderly people, many of which would be built on the sites of the existing care homes. It is hoped that sale of the 11 care home sites will net the council around £23.6m.

The proposals will be discussed by the city's health, social care and housing committee next Tuesday.

PROPOSED CLOSURES
Council care homes which are not "fit for purpose" and set to close.

• Balmwell House, Balmwell Terrace

• Clermiston House, Parkgrove Terrace

• Clovenstone House, Clovenstone Gardens

• Craigour, Moredun Park

• Ferrylee, North Junction Street

• Fords Road, Stenhouse

• Jewel House, Bingham Crescent

• Liberton Gardens, Little Road

• Oaklands, Canaan Lane

• Parkview, Peffermill Road

• Porthaven, Wellington Place

• Sighthill, Calder Gardens

• Silverlea, Muirhouse Parkway

• The Tower, Murrayfield Drive





The full article contains 493 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 03 December 2008 9:56 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Care for the Elderly
 
1

alex paterson,

edinburgh 03/12/2008 12:54:07
City leaders are aiming to have 40% of those elderly in need of care receiving it in their own home,but just how much care will they get at home,think about it.
2

NorT,

Edinburgh 03/12/2008 15:16:25
The Council want to privatise the care homes and the provision of care at home. They want to sell of the sites to get the money. How is Mr Gabbitas going to solve the bed blocking if he has no hopme for people to go to when they are discharged from hospital.
3

Mallory,

Edinburgh 03/12/2008 15:23:52
Having visited a relative there for the last 18 months of her life I find it very hard to see why Oaklands in Caanan Lane is 'no longer fit for purpose'. The Staff and facilities provide a very high standard of care and the buildings appear to have many years of life in them yet.

Do the council want to sell the land?
4

One-man-bucket's older twin,

03/12/2008 17:27:14
#1 - I can tell you exactly how much 'care' they get - my elderly aunt fell in her very sheltered house, and though the warden was willing to lift her, the home help wouldn't help and rang for an ambulance. My aunt lay on the floor for about an hour before we were alerted and went to help, by which time the ambulance arrived and whisked her off to the bl00dy inaccessible Royal, from where she was moved to Liberton. She never got back to her own front door, and ended her days in the now apparently condemned Oaklands, where she received excellent care, companionship and entertainment for the remainder of her life.

I agree with Mallory - the council must want to sell off the land at Canaan lane - I believe Oaklands was purpose-built about 25 years ago. It has excellent facilities and staff, and surely one expects a building to last more than 20 years? How much do older folks' needs change from generation to generation?
5

daveserviceman,

edinburgh 03/12/2008 19:53:38
This is also to get rid of staff all of them will be sent to the private sector for the minimum wage at the moment a private care home manager with all that responsibility only gets £6.50 per hour they want the land for money and I can say that the elderly will not get 24 hour care like they do in the care home and for someone to visit will cost them £9 per hour so they could be laying on the floor for days waiting for help I have elderly relatives in the coumcil homes and I despair what will happen to them now of course the snp council does not care about people only oil and money
6

alex paterson,

edinburgh 03/12/2008 20:31:12
#4
How nice.
7

The real dracula,

03/12/2008 21:18:53
With less beds , that's a marvellous idea considering there are still patients in hospital waiting for accomodation therfor there will be even more bed blocking.

Well done authorities you got it wrong again. All at the patients expense. Im sure they dont want to be stuck in hospital just because the authorities have taken away yet more places.

 

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