MAiD unit, forced onto St. Paul’s campus, now operational

June 19, 2025
7 mins read
The B.C. government’s MAiD facility, forced onto the site of St. Paul’s Hospital, is operated by Vancouver Coastal Health and called Shoreline Space. (photo: Terry O’Neill)

VANCOUVER (CCN) — A government-ordered euthanasia facility, operated by the B.C. government’s Vancouver Coastal Health Authority, on the downtown campus of the Catholic-run St. Paul’s Hospital is now fully operational.

A six-month investigation into the impact of the NDP government’s MAiD-imposition edict also uncovered that planning is underway for another euthanasia facility to be operated by Vancouver Coastal on the site of the new St. Paul’s Hospital on False Creek Flats, which is being built 3 km east of the existing hospital.

Vancouver Coastal is also currently operating MAiD rooms in the same buildings that house two Catholic-run hospices in Vancouver.

Providence Health Care, which operates all these Catholic facilities and is under the auspices of the Archdiocese of Vancouver, has long maintained pro-life policies that prohibit abortion and euthanasia from being performed on its premises. However, it was powerless to block these developments.

Alex Schadenberg, executive director of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, has deep concerns about the imposition of MAiD units alongside pro-life Catholic facilities.

“This is incredibly sad news,” Schadenberg said in an interview. “It’s sad that the unit is now operational. And I’m also incredibly saddened by the fact that the new St. Paul’s will also have a euthanasia clinic attached to it.”

The provincial government forced the euthanasia facility onto the current site of St. Paul’s Hospital in November 2023 in response to persistent death-on-demand activism and mainstream media pressure.

The MAiD facility, about the size of a laneway home, built by Vancouver Coastal at an undisclosed cost, is in an interior courtyard of the hospital, founded 131 years ago by the Sisters of Providence.

The facility opened Jan. 6, a Vancouver Coastal spokesperson said in an email dated April 17.

“The new space provides patients with options for specialized end-of-life care in a way that supports and respects them, their loved ones, and health-care providers,” he said.

Called the “Shoreline Space,” the facility is attached to an exterior wall of the western section of the hospital’s Providence Building, facing the courtyard. Public access to the facility from the courtyard is blocked by a locked gate and a 2-metre-high, black chain-link fence.

There is no exterior signage that would give pedestrians using the hospital’s nearby Thurlow Street entrance any hint of the purpose of the green-metal-clad facility, equipped with security cameras and floodlight fixtures.

The MAiD facility at St. Paul’s Hospital is attached to an exterior wall, facing the courtyard. Public access to the facility from the courtyard is blocked by a locked gate and a 2-metre-high, black chain-link fence. (photo: Terry O’Neill)

Inside the hospital, there is also no indication that MAiD is provided behind a locked door that has the signage, “Shoreline Space. Vancouver Coastal Health.” 

Vancouver Coastal emails, obtained through a freedom-of-information request, indicate the health authority launched a planning process to insert a euthanasia facility at the new St. Paul’s Hospital, slated to open in 2027.

No agency — the B.C. government, the Ministry of Health, Vancouver Coastal Health, Providence Health, or the Archdiocese of Vancouver — has announced publicly that the new St. Paul’s is being forced to accommodate a MAiD facility.

Yet, the text of a Nov. 15, 2024, email from Laurel Plewes, operations director of the “Assisted Dying Program” at Vancouver Coastal Health (VCH) to Jennifer Chan of Providence Health Care (PHC) shows that such planning is taking place.

Under the subject heading, “Preliminary VCH requirement for MAiD space at the new SPH [St. Paul’s Hospital],” Plewes wrote: “Here is a list of preliminary requirements, subject to refinement and additions.”

That list, in bullet form, reads:

“• Internal 2,800 sq feet

• We suspect PHC requirement will still remain, and VCH agrees, that the pathway must allow for patients to remain in their PHC bed

• 5 min or less travel time from pharmacy located in SPH

• Ramp or ground-level entry — ramp is not included in square footage above

• Require connections for sewage, water, electricity, and IT connections similar to what is listed in previous partial agreement

• At least two parking spots for staff, easy access for transfer van

• Physical address to support emergency services knowing where to go”

Most emails received in response to the freedom-of-information request were almost completely redacted, but one with the subject line, “Future Planning: MAiD spaces,” was sent by Nina Dhaliwal, a “senior project manager” at Vancouver Coastal, to four of her colleagues on Nov. 27, 2024.

It describes the need to connect all the parties to ensure that “future planning for MAiD spaces” is being done efficiently. Dhaliwal also asks whether “the MAiD team” had an “SOA” (presumably meaning Service-Oriented Architecture) and a “Functional Program.”

Although the email does not mention the new St. Paul’s Hospital, Vancouver Coastal released that information in response to a request for the communications regarding the possible construction of a MAiD unit at the new hospital.

St. Paul’s Hospital is building a new campus, 3 km from the current hospital. An investigative report reveals that the B.C. government plans to insert a MAiD facility on the site to be operated by Vancouver Coastal Health. (photo: Terry O’Neill)

Neither Vancouver Coastal nor Providence Health has commented in response to questions about MAiD facilities at the new or old St. Paul’s.

Providence Health’s service contract with the provincial government guarantees that it can prevent abortions and euthanasia from taking place within Providence facilities. Patients seeking such procedures are discharged from Providence and transferred to a Vancouver Coastal facility.

Pro-euthanasia groups criticized the arrangement when MAiD was legalized in 2016, and then ramped up pressure when, as revealed in an article published in The B.C. Catholic in May 2022, the B.C. branch of Dying with Dignity Canada launched a multi-platform public relations campaign aimed at forcing the B.C. government to amend the service agreement in order to compel Providence to allow MAiD.

Dying With Dignity called the “forced” transfer of patients to MAiD-allowing facilities “cruel and unusual.”

The pressure peaked the next year when news media seized on the case of a Vancouver woman, Sam O’Neill, whose family complained that she was forced to transfer from St. Paul’s to access MAiD. In response, the B.C. government announced what observers called a “workaround” or “end-run” solution in November 2023.

The arrangement called for the province to take land at the St. Paul’s campus on which to create a “clinical space” for MAiD to be performed. The space would be staffed by Vancouver Coastal healthcare professionals and was to be connected by a corridor to St. Paul’s Hospital.

“Patients from St. Paul’s Hospital accessing MAiD will be discharged by Providence Health and transferred to the care of Vancouver Coastal Health in this new clinical space,” the release said. The MAiD facility was originally scheduled to open in August 2024.

Then-Archbishop J. Michael Miller of Vancouver was quoted at the time as saying the directive “respects and preserves Providence’s policy of not allowing MAiD inside a Catholic healthcare facility,” and the new patient discharge and transfer protocols would be consistent with existing arrangements for transferring patients at other Providence facilities.

St. Paul’s Hospital, operated by Providence Health Care, has a MAiD facility on its campus, operated by the B.C. government’s Vancouver Coastal Health. (photo: Terry O’Neill)

However, that did not end the matter. In June 2024, Ms. O’Neill’s mother, Dying with Dignity Canada, and a doctor launched a lawsuit against Providence, Vancouver Coastal and the provincial government, alleging they had denied Ms. O’Neill her constitutional right to access MAiD.

They seek to have MAiD conducted within all provincially funded facilities, such as those of Providence Health Care, which relies on provincial funding for its operating costs. Providence owns the hospitals.

In a formal response to the claim, Providence not only described the St. Paul’s arrangement, but also disclosed that at two hospices it operates, May’s Place and St. John, “patients who choose to receive MAiD are provided with MAiD by a VCH healthcare provider in a space operated by VCH which is located down the hall from the Providence operated hospice rooms in the same building that houses the hospice.”

But that does not mean MAiD is actually being performed within a Catholic facility, said Shaf Hussain, a communications officer with Providence.

Hussain said in a May 30 email to CCN that both St. John Hospice and May’s Place Hospice are in buildings and on lands that are not owned by Providence. He said he believes the whole building in which St. John Hospice is located “is leased by VCH.”

“Since September 2013, Providence has been operating a 14-bed hospice in the building and continues to do so,” he said. “In 2021, VCH took some space in the building for its Vancouver Community palliative programming. A room in that space is used for MAiD.”

Providence also leases space to operate a six-bed hospice in a building, in which “VCH also leases space,” he said. “This space, which they use for MAiD, is separate and away from our hospice operations.”

In a follow-up email to CCN on June 17, Hussain said that Providence does not present MAiD as an option to its patients.

“To clarify, no, we don’t proactively mention MAiD as an option to consider,” he said. “We never initiate an offer of MAiD.

“If a patient enquires about it, we contact the VCH MAiD team,” he said. “From PHC’s perspective, we ensure the patient is provided information about all [non-MAiD] end-of-life options, so the patient can make an informed decision.”

Hussain explained the process Providence staff follow if a patient enquires about MAiD, which includes assessing for MAiD eligibility by two doctors or nurse practitioners; discussing the patient’s medical condition with them; and discussing services and treatments that are available to relieve suffering, which “may include adjusting a current treatment plan, engaging palliative care services, community support services or other options.”

“A person does not have to accept any of these services, but it is legally required for a person requesting MAiD to be offered care options to address the person’s suffering,” he said.

Dr. Will Johnston, who heads the Euthanasia Resistance Coalition of B.C., said he believes the B.C. government’s decision to force MAiD into previously life-affirming healthcare settings is a form of totalitarianism.

“This is another example of zealots who won’t allow the population any freedom from euthanasia,” Johnston said. “They obviously control the provincial government … I think it’s totalitarianism, and it shows none of their claimed virtues of inclusion and diversity.”

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