Nova Scotia Health (NSH) Community Transitions director Wendy McVeigh.According to NSH, there is currently one client support worker (CSW) on the health floor working alongside continuing care assistants (CCA).Five CSW’s are required to fill the 24/7 schedule for the floor to operate fully — meaning 21 out of the 28 rooms on the floor are currently unoccupied.“Empty rooms going and people are freezing, I don’t understand this,” said Richard Young.He’s been living in a tent at Grand Parade in front of City Hall and lives rough on the daily.The thought of empty rooms that could otherwise provide shelter doesn’t make sense to Young.“It was minus four the other night, some people didn’t have sleeping bags,” Young recalled “We don’t have heaters, we have summer tents, so it’s just like putting a thin sheet over you — you’re freezing.”While space may exist on the health floor, Nova Scotia’s Department of Community Services (DCS) says The Bridge is typically at 95-100 per cent capacity.There are 152 rooms available for clients, not including the health floor, but the numbers of clients served may be higher as some people share rooms with partners or siblings.Even though NSH are working on the staffing shortage to get CSW’s on its floor, medical staff at The Bridge have been kept busy — serving the entire building rather than just the designated floor.“The early stage of this was, ‘we needed a health floor,’ but as we’re evolving it’s not a health floor because the health services go wherever the person is,” said McVeigh.She says it’s about wraparound coordination of services for clients: health, housing and social supports.“We have health services throughout the building now, we have the health clinic operational seven days a
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