New financial report reveals St Basils Fawkner faced insolvency amid COVID peak

·

St Basils Home for the Aged in Fawkner, Victoria was facing financial insolvency during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, The Age has reported.

According to the latest financial report by St Basils Fawkner, which was lodged almost a year late, the home has not paid rent to the property owner, the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Australia, for years.

For the past decade, the home paid the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese an average annual rent of $2.37 million, but the chairman of St Basil’s Fawkner Bishop Evmenios confirmed to The Age the nursing home’s difficult financial position meant it was still not paying the church to occupy the site.

St Basil Fawkner’s auditor William Buck noted there was “material uncertainty” over the home’s ability to continue as a going concern.

The aged care home also had to slash staff dramatically after 45 residents died from COVID-19 and another five died from alleged neglect during a coronavirus outbreak at the facility in 2020. The outbreak is now the subject of a coronial inquest.

St Basils Fawkner during the outbreak in 2020.

The collapse in revenue from residents dying or departing did allow St Basils Fawkner’s to claim $2.4 million in JobKeeper payments from the federal government. 

The report, for the financial year ending June 2021, also revealed the nursing home needed 70 residents at the time to break even, well above the 59 residents the federal Health Department last week confirmed were currently living there.

In response, Bishop Evmenios said the home remained solvent and that since joining as Chairman in September 2020 he had, together with staff at the home, been “rebuilding a once proud and exemplary aged care facility.”

The families of residents who died at the facility told The Age they believe St Basils Fawkner should not have reopened following the deaths.

Source: The Age.

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

Kyle Sandilands’ chauffeur George Plassaras speaks out from hospital after horror crash

George Plassaras, long-time chauffeur to Kyle Sandilands, has spoken from his hospital bed after suffering life-threatening injuries.

Disgraced former Adelaide GP Mario Athinodorou dies in Indonesia

Mario Athinodorou, a former Adelaide GP banned for 13 years over repeated sexual misconduct against female patients, has died in Indonesia.

Security footage key in probe into drowning death of young girl on Athens beach

Security footage has become central to the investigation into the death of an unidentified young girl, around three years old.

Cyprus War Memorial Committee launched in New South Wales

The Cyprus War Memorial Committee was officially launched this week. Read more via The Greek Herald about what it is.

The Greek Herald honoured by Mark Coure MP at Community Recognition Morning Tea

The Greek Herald was formally recognised by NSW Member for Oatley, Mark Coure MP, at a special Community Recognition Morning Tea.

You May Also Like

NK Foundation inspiring tennis community with new facility development in Canberra

"For all the families in the Gungahlin region, this facility will fill the desperate need for tennis courts in the area," Nick Kyrgios said.

7th Castellorizo International Documentary Film Festival to open this month

The 7th Castellorizo International Documentary Film Festival "Beyond Borders" will open its curtain on August 21.

Family First backs recognition of Greek Genocide ahead of 2025 Federal Election

Yet another Australian political party has adopted recognition of the Greek Genocide as policy. Family First has issued a powerful statement.