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  • Yarmouth housing complex for doctors sees huge success

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    Doctors visiting the area now have a designated place to stay
     
    A new housing complex in southwestern Nova Scotia specifically for doctors temporarily practising in the area is paying off. 

    Credit Union Place, a five-unit, bungalow-style complex, has been full ever since it opened in Yarmouth last November. 

    So far, 20 medical students from Dalhousie University and 14 locum doctors from Halifax, New Brunswick, and P.E.I. have stayed in the building, which is the brainchild of Rick Doucette, CEO of the Coastal Financial Credit Union. 

    For years, said Doucette, he'd drive by an old building on Vancouver Street not far from the Yarmouth Regional Hospital and say to himself, "This should be housing for doctors." And so he worked out a plan with the Yarmouth and Area Chamber of Commerce to make it happen.

    The credit union first attempted to renovate the old building on the lot, but it quickly abandoned the idea after the project turned into a money pit. The old building was demolished and a new one was built. The credit union owns the building and leases it to the chamber for a dollar per year. 

    Resident doctors are charged $10 per night and locums are charged $500 per week. 

    Tracy Auten, an executive assistant at the Yarmouth and Area Chamber of Commerce, said doctors usually hear about the building through word of mouth.

    "We're very close to the hospital," said Auten. "It's a two-minute walk. They can drive or walk. People have a hard time finding places to stay, and this kind of opened up the door for them to come to Yarmouth."

    Dr. Gagan Mahil, a resident from Vancouver, said he wishes the complex had been open when he moved to Nova Scotia last year.
    "I didn't have the opportunity to look for an apartment or a place to live, and the rental situation here can be quite dire at times," he said. "So I ended up actually staying in a motel for the first month that I was here."

    Mahil said he likes the opportunities afforded him by working in Yarmouth.

    Kerry Muise, who chairs the chamber of commerce's doctor recruitment team in Yarmouth, said the provincial health authority and other hospital towns have been impressed with the singular focus on bringing doctors to southwest Nova Scotia. Groups in Antigonish and Bridgewater have been in touch asking how they can copy the model, she said.
    Muise said her team is regularly in contact with the medical school at Dalhousie University and the Yarmouth hospital. Those discussions include how to bring more residents to the community.

    "It's a win-win," she said. "Once you have someone moving to this community to learn for a period of time, they get involved in the community and hopefully we can recruit them when they're done their training."

    Preston Mulligan, CBC News

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/yarmouth-housing-complex-for-doctors-sees-huge-success-1.6438507
  • Business Truth & Reconciliation Business Truth & Reconciliation

    The Atlantic Chamber of Commerce takes proactive steps to promote reconciliation and respect for Indigenous rights within the corporate sector. In response to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's Call to Action 92, the Chamber urges its members to embrace the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples as a guiding framework.

     

    Recognizing the importance of education, the Chamber encourages businesses to provide comprehensive training for management and staff on the history of Indigenous peoples, including the legacy of residential schools, Indigenous rights, and Aboriginal-Crown relations. Emphasizing intercultural competency, conflict resolution, and anti-racism, these efforts aim to foster a more inclusive and harmonious corporate environment rooted in mutual understanding and respect.

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