Story updated March 25 to clarify funding amounts.

The Fraser Health Authority has given the Delta Hospice Society until March 29 to clean out its belongings and move out of the hospice and supportive care centre the society built 10 years ago.

“Now we have nothing. Now we have to create ourselves again,” said society president Angelina Ireland.

In March she took The B.C. Catholic on a tour of the state-of-the-art facilities, the Irene Thomas Hospice and the Harold and Veronica Savage Centre for Supportive Care, built by the society for about $8.5 million on land leased from the Fraser Health Authority.

“This corner used to be a field of grass,” said Ireland. “It was because of the vision, the creativity, the courage of the Delta Hospice Society,” that funds to build both centres were raised and programs were launched “to create the kinds of miracles that happen here.”

The supportive care centre stands next door to the Delta Hospital.
Empty shelves, formerly filled with resources, in the supportive care centre.
Butterflies representing the 1,711 patients who have been cared for in the Irene Thomas Hospice.

The 10-bed hospice was designed for comfort, with community dining, a spiritual room, spa room, and places for family members to visit and rest. Over the years it has cared for 1,711 patients, each represented by a paper butterfly in a bright arrangement on a wall in a music therapy room.

The supportive care centre runs grief counselling, music therapy, art therapy, yoga, and many other programs for free for the community. At last count it had 96 clients in its programs, and that was after a dramatic decrease due to pandemic-related regulations on physical distancing.

“We figure we put $30 million, including a capital project of $8.5 million, into the community of Delta and the public health care system, plus 750,000 volunteer hours in the last 10 years,” Ireland said.

Now, due to the battle with the Fraser Health Authority about whether assisted suicide is part of hospice care (the society and its founder Nancy Macey maintain that it is not), the lease has been terminated, the society is moving out, and the health authority takes control of the buildings.

A room with a garden view in the Irene Thomas Hospice.
The hospice’s kitchen, which was built with a focus on good food and community dining.

Ireland said the society is considering court action.

“At this point we have no other option than to seek justice,” she said. “They prematurely cancelled our lease, and because you can’t pick up your buildings and take them somewhere,” the society is more or less starting from the drawing board. There were 25 years left on the lease.

Ireland is currently in consultation with a lawyer and preparing a crowdfunding page to help raise funds for legal fees.

The society still runs and owns a charity thrift store in Tsawwassen, which is a main source of funding for its bereavement programs.

Several months ago the City of Delta took away the thrift shop’s tax exemption, which meant a loss of $25,000 per year for the society in taxes.

The society has secured an interim location in South Delta where they hope to be able to run their therapy programs, “but we’ll never have a 7,500 square foot facility again.”

An outdoor garden between the hospice and the supportive care centre.
Artwork in an art therapy room.
A communal living area in the hospice.