British Columbia

Interactions with caretaker challenging at times, inquest into B.C. woman's starvation death told

The inquest into the 2018 death of Florence Girard, who had Down syndrome, began Monday.

Home care co-ordinator said caretaker Astrid Dahl was resistant to new care requirements

A woman wearing a black top smiles.
Florence Girard, seen here in a family handout photo from 2006, died of starvation in a Port Coquitlam, B.C., home in 2018. A coroner's inquest into her death began on Monday. (Handout/The Canadian Press)

A former co-ordinator at the home-care organization overseeing Florence Girard's care says interactions with the woman's caretaker grew more challenging before Girard's starvation death in 2018. 

Krista Maniezzo, who was the Kinsight Community Society shared-living co-ordinator, told a coroner's inquest into Girard's death that while there was "nothing outrageous," caretaker Astrid Dahl was also increasingly resistant to new care requirements introduced a few years before the woman died. 

Maniezzo told the inquest that about a year before Girard's death, Dahl had trouble keeping appointments with Kinsight, which was under contract from the provincial Crown corporation Community Living B.C. 

Girard, who had Down syndrome, weighed about 50 pounds when she died while living with Dahl. 

Dahl was convicted in 2022 of failing to provide the necessaries of life for Girard. 

She told the inquest earlier this week that Kinsight didn't provide adequate support for home-sharing care providers, including not paying for prescribed pain medication for Girard. 

When asked by the lawyer representing Girard's family if she was sorry about what happened, Dahl responded by saying she was "beyond" sorry and viewed Girard as a member of her own family.

In a coroner's inquest, the jury acts in a fact-finding role but does not assign fault or blame. The inquest has been scheduled through to Jan. 22.