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NDP says more freezers added to morgue; health authority says it’s not true

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An underground parking garage with a walled off section. There are cars parked around it.
NDP Leader Jim Dinn says two new freezers were added to the Health Sciences Centre morgue, located in the hospital’s parking garage. (Submitted by the NDP)

While it may be located in an enclosed parking garage and walled off from sight, Newfoundland and Labrador’s NDP leader says the morgue at the Health Sciences Centre in St. John’s has continued to grow and that the provincial government isn’t solving the problem of unclaimed bodies.

But, in a statement to CBC News late Friday afternoon, the provincial health authority says it hasn’t added any. 

NDP Leader Jim Dinn told CBC News a trusted source told him about additional and recently installed freezer units in the hospital’s parking garage, where a new and expanded morgue facility is going to be built.

“Maybe there is an attempt to hide the fact that they really haven’t made progress on this at all,” Dinn said Friday.

“So if the numbers are increasing, they haven’t addressed the problem. But they are doing a wonderful job of covering up the problem — or trying to anyway.”

In March, CBC News first reported 28 bodies were being stored in freezer units in an alleyway on hospital property due to a lack of space in the actual morgue, which doubles as the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.

Over the summer, the freezers were relocated to the parking garage and a wall was built around it.

At the time, health authority officials said there were four freezer units. Dinn said he isn’t sure how many freezers are currently in the parking garage.

CBC News compared a recent photo, submitted by the NDP, to one taken earlier this summer by CBC News and found that vents had been added to the siding of the structure.

Dinn said he considers the additional freezers a sign that the government hasn’t solved the problem.

A parking garage with a pilon blocking off a wall.
In July, the freezers were relocated from an alleyway on hospital property to the hospital’s enclosed parking garage. (Curtis Hicks/CBC)

“There was a lot of bluster several months ago, back in spring, all this is going to be resolved. And it’s not dignified to have people, you know, on the loading dock in freezers as well,” he said. “Well, it’s no more dignified than to have them in freezers in a parking garage, either.”

In a short statement, NLHS spokesperson Mikaela Etchegary indicated Dinn’s information is wrong.  

“N.L. Health Services has not recently added any new freezer units at the Health Sciences Centre for unclaimed remains,” she wrote.

In July, Children, Seniors and Social Development Minister Paul Pike announced the province was doubling the funeral benefit for residents on income support. However, he also said that it had nothing to do with bodies going unclaimed.

Dinn said that changing the fee structure hasn’t worked if more freezers have been added to presumably store more bodies.

CBC News has asked Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Nash Denic for comment, but his office pointed all inquiries toward Newfoundland and Labrador Health Services.

Unknown count

The news of two additional freezers comes a few weeks after PC health critic Barry Petten pushed the government for an update on the morgue during question period at the House of Assembly.

“How many bodies are presently in the parking garage at the Health Sciences Centre?” Petten asked.

Health Minister John Hogan didn’t provide the numbers, citing privacy concerns.

“There are, obviously, a number of bodies there and some which are the responsibility of NLHS [and] some are with the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner,” Hogan said at the time.

In July, a department official told reporters that there were 30 bodies in storage.

“The number was released at 30, and now, all of a sudden, it is a secret,” Petten said.

Dinn also takes issue with Hogan being unwilling to release the number of bodies in storage, especially as the freezers are relocated and blocked from view.

“I think it’s more about protecting themselves from embarrassment more than anything else,” Dinn said.

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