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  #21  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2019, 5:16 PM
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  #22  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2019, 5:21 PM
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Glad it wasn't cut by the Ford Government. Although, with Doug, it's never too late to pull funding.

If this project is a success, I hope we can start building similar facilities in Barrhaven and Kanata (with the main full-service hospitals staying within the Greenbelt).
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  #23  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2019, 7:22 PM
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This is great news! after many years of promises, talk, & no action, finally nice to see shovels in the ground.
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  #24  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2019, 9:34 PM
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There is an announcement tomorrow, which I assume is the official groundbreaking
https://news.ontario.ca/mohltc/en/20...th-care-1.html
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  #25  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2020, 4:04 PM
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  #26  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2020, 5:15 PM
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Beautiful.
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  #27  
Old Posted Oct 19, 2020, 1:09 PM
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Former high-tech exec Yves Tremblay and wife make 'historic' donation to Montfort's Orléans Health Hub

New Hub to provide wide range of specialized and community health-care services in both official languages

Caroline Phillips, OBJ
October 15, 2020



$1-million donors Sylvie Villeneuve and Yves Tremblay at the site of Montfort Hospital's new Orléans Health Hub in the east end of Ottawa.

The retired high-tech executive behind the largest single donation in Montfort Hospital's history is hoping his $1-million gift will inspire other wealthy entrepreneurs and business leaders to step up their game for the greater good.

Yves Tremblay and his wife, Sylvie Villeneuve, made their contribution in support of the hospital’s new Orléans Health Hub, which, barring any pandemic-related delays, is scheduled to open next summer.

The 96,000-square-foot facility will bring health care much closer to home for those residents living in Ottawa's east-end suburb of Orléans. It will serve all ages, from newborns to seniors, through integrated, community-based health-care programs that focus on patients' needs. Services will be provided in both official languages, recognizing that Orléans has a large francophone population.

The project, which is being led by the Montfort Hospital, started in the planning stages more than a decade ago when Dalton McGuinty was premier. It's mostly funded by the Ontario government.

The Montfort Foundation is now one-quarter of the way toward raising the $12 million it needs to raise for the $87-million facility located at the corner of Mer-Bleue Road and Brian Coburn Boulevard. It has assembled a campaign cabinet chaired by Tremblay, who retired in 2001 as senior vice-president of operations at JDS Uniphase, a once-booming Ottawa-based fibre-optics company.

Tremblay is in the unique position of having connections to both the Franco-Ontarian community and the English-speaking, west-end high-tech community. He also has a long history of philanthropy and community involvement, including a stint as chair of the Ottawa Hospital board of governors from 2005 to 2008.

Kanata residents

Here’s the thing, though: Tremblay and his wife don’t live anywhere near Orléans. Their home is in west-end Kanata, along the Ottawa River. It’s conceivable his only reasons for visiting the hub involve the cheque presentation and ribbon-cutting ceremony.

“I’m not looking for my philanthropic activities to bring me anything, other than to be a good citizen and a good community member,” replied the father of four and grandfather of 15.

“I have put myself on this path to be generous, to think about the community and to share, and not only for my family or my neighbours or my neighbourhood, but at large,” said Tremblay, who has lived in Ottawa since the late 1970s.


Yves Tremblay and his wife, Sylvie Villeneuve, who made a $1-million donation to Montfort Hospital, check out the progress being made at Montfort's new Orléans Health Hub located at the corner of Mer-Bleue Road and Brian Coburn Boulevard.

Tremblay acknowledged that he usually prefers to remain behind the scenes. He decided to go public with the donation in order to encourage others to be philanthropic, if they have the means.

“Ottawa is blessed right now with a lot of successful businesses,” said Tremblay. “There is a new crop of entrepreneurs who are benefiting, like we did in the late '90s and early 2000s with the JDS, Nortel and Newbridge companies of this world. A lot of people made out fairly well.”

In 2003, Tremblay was part of a $15-million donation to the Ottawa Hospital from former JDS employees.

Tremblay hopes the new wave of freewheeling entrepreneurs and e-commerce superstars will also “put their shoulder to the wheel and push” to make Ottawa a better city for all.

“You get to become quite wealthy ​– you never dreamed of being so successful ​– and then you ask yourself, 'What do I do now?' You build a big house, and then what?”

It’s up to the so-called one percenters, Tremblay believes, to be the rising tide that lifts all boats.

“We have to be generous, to think about the community, and to share.”

The million-dollar donation from Tremblay and Villeneuve is a “historic gift” for Montfort, lawyer Ron Caza, board chair of the Montfort Foundation, said during the recorded ceremonial cheque presentation event.

Said Montfort Hospital CEO Bernard Leduc: “This important financial support will allow Montfort and its partners to innovate and provide exemplary care and services to the Orléans community.”

'Montfort is for everybody'

Tremblay said there’s a general misconception that the Montfort serves only French-speaking people. More than 50 per cent of patients at the bilingual hospital don’t even speak French, he noted.

“Montfort is for everybody. It’s first and foremost a high-quality hospital. If you speak French, you can be guaranteed to be served in French.”

Tremblay listed several reasons why he believes in the Orléans Health Hub so strongly. The centre will make it more convenient and simpler for east-end residents to access health care. He also sees it as a wonderful collaboration between Montfort and such other health and community service partner organizations as: Youth Services Bureau, the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario, the Eastern Ottawa Resource Centre, Ottawa Public Health, Ottawa Community Geriatric Psychiatry Services, Bruyère and Champlain LHIN.

“I like the fact that it connects with other partners,” said Tremblay. “I don’t like the silo approach in health care.”

Mélanie Potvin, who's Montfort's project director for the Orléans Health Hub, said work on the new facility is more than 80 per cent done. EllisDon has done a great job with the construction, she said, and the new building is now at the stage where the drywall is up and the flooring is being installed.

“We're excited," she said. "It’s really starting to take shape inside."

https://obj.ca/article/local/former-...tforts-orleans
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  #28  
Old Posted Nov 17, 2020, 6:10 PM
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I can confirm that Montfort's for everyone. I've made use of their sleep clinic, and being an anglophone wasn't a barrier to that.
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  #29  
Old Posted Jan 15, 2021, 2:29 PM
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  #30  
Old Posted Jan 20, 2021, 2:25 AM
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In the home stretch now, then...?
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  #31  
Old Posted May 13, 2021, 9:46 PM
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'Unique' Orléans Health Hub slated to open its doors June 24

Megan Gillis, Ottawa Citizen
Publishing date: May 13, 2021 • 1 hour ago • 1 minute read




The Orléans Health Hub, billed as a “unique and innovative” project putting specialized and community care under one roof, is slated to open its doors next month after years of planning and construction.

The hub aims to offer east-end residents integrated, needs-based and bilingual programs in a nature-inspired building at the corner of Mer Bleue Road and Brian Coburn Boulevard.

Family doctors will be able to refer patients for community and specialty services.

On offer starting June 24 are seniors services, medical imaging, rehabilitation services, some mental health and wellness services, some specialty clinics, care coordination services, a store selling mobility aids and a laboratory.

More health and wellness services, some Montfort Hospital specialty clinics and a coffee shop will be added in the fall.

The health hub is a partnership between Bruyère, the Youth Services Bureau of Ottawa, the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, the Eastern Ottawa Resource Centre, the Montfort Hospital, ParaMed, Ottawa Public Health, Geriatric Psychiatry Community Services of Ottawa and Home and Community Support Services Champlain.

A web site will be launched in the coming weeks with an official opening expected this summer when pandemic-era public health restrictions allow.

A fundraising campaign led by the Montfort Foundation is expected to be launched soon to help finance the project.

In 2019, supporters of the health hub celebrated the start of construction and a funding commitment from the Ontario government, more than a decade after planning began for a bilingual health centre in Ottawa’s east end.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...-doors-june-24
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  #32  
Old Posted Jun 25, 2021, 1:24 AM
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  #33  
Old Posted Oct 4, 2021, 10:57 PM
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'State-of-the-art' Orléans Health Hub marks official opening

Megan Gillis, Ottawa Citizen
Publishing date: Oct 04, 2021 • 34 minutes ago • 2 minute read




The $88-million Orléans Health Hub, which puts bilingual specialized and community-based care for people in Ottawa’s east end under one roof, had its official opening Monday.

It was an occasion marked “with a great sense of pride” by people representing the partners in what was billed in a release as “a unique and innovative model.”

Those partners include the Bruyère Hospital, Youth Services Bureau of Ottawa, CHEO, the Eastern Ottawa Resource Centre, the Montfort Hospital, ParaMed, Ottawa Public Health, Geronto-Psychiatry Community Services of Ottawa and Home and Community Care Support Services Champlain.

The “state-of-the-art” facility at 2225 Mer-Bleue Rd. at Brian Coburn Boulevard had a soft opening in June, two years after the ground-breaking. Construction stayed on schedule despite the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We are grateful to the province for its investment to bring integrated health and community services closer to home,” Michael Lindsay, president and CEO of Infrastructure Ontario, said in the release.

He thanked Montfort, construction company EllisDon and “everyone who worked tirelessly to ensure the hub opened its doors on schedule while navigating a global pandemic.”

The hub now offers seniors’ services, medical imaging, rehabilitation services, some mental health and wellness services, some specialty clinics, care co-ordination and a mobility aids store.

A laboratory, a café, more mental health and wellness services, additional medical imaging capacity and Montfort specialty clinics are scheduled to open soon. All family doctors in the region can refer their patients for community and specialty services. A complete list of services is on the hub’s website.

“At Orléans Health Hub, we have services for the whole family,” Marc-André Sabourin, clinical manager, ambulatory care at Montfort, said in an interview at the opening. “We’ll start soon offering services for pediatrics, we go up into adulthood to geriatrics.”

The aim is integrated care with physicians and allied health professionals as well as support staff there to guide people through the care and services they need, he said.

“We’re very lucky to have our partners here and to be able to co-ordinate and integrate the care so it’s seamless in the transition, so there is no information that’s lost,” Sabourin said.

“We can go up, knock on the door for the home and community services, introduce a family member, a patient, and they leave with detailed information as to what their next steps are, what the plan is for their care.”

Meanwhile, what’s described as “the most important fundraising campaign in the history of the Montfort Foundation” will be launched Oct. 16 to benefit the hub’s programs and mission.

For now, only clients and people with an appointment can enter the building but an open house is slated for spring if the pandemic situation allows.

In 2019, after more than a decade of planning, supporters celebrated the start of construction of the health centre with a funding commitment from the Ontario government.

At the time, Health Minister Christine Elliott called the project unique and a model that could serve as a template for other communities as the province works to build a more integrated health system.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...ficial-opening
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  #34  
Old Posted Oct 5, 2021, 1:15 PM
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This is great. Hopefully we get one of these in Kanata and Barrhaven and/or Riverside South as well.
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