Workers at troubled Sydney funeral home to be subject of inquiry - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 12:05 PM | Calgary | -8.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Workers at troubled Sydney funeral home to be subject of inquiry

The provincial body that oversees embalmers and funeral directors in Nova Scotia is calling an inquiry into some of the employees at the troubled S.W. Chant and Son Funeral Home in Sydney.

Embalmers, funeral directors association calling an inquiry into employees at S.W. Chant and Son Funeral Home

S.W. Chant and Son Funeral Home was shut down by the Nova Scotia government after a suspicious fire in February 2019. (Tom Ayers/CBC)

Some of the workers at a troubled funeral home in Sydney, N.S., are to be the subject of an inquiry.

The Nova Scotia Board of Registration for Embalmers and Funeral Directors is looking into possible professional misconduct at S.W. Chant and Son Funeral Home.

It's too soon to say who is being examined "because we're in such early stages of the inquiry," said Kortney Adams, the board's executive manager.

"Individuals are still being notified and we're still compiling all the evidence and putting it into a package to be issued."

A date for the inquiry and other details will be released later, she said.

Suspended licence

Cape Breton regional police launched a fraud investigation into the funeral home several weeks after a suspicious fire at the home in February.

Service Nova Scotia had already suspended the funeral home's licence to sell prepaid funerals over accounting issues, and the government suspended the home's operating licence after the fire.

The inquiry found the home was re-using caskets, in some cases, up to six times. (Gary Mansfield/CBC)

Adams said the professional misconduct inquiry will not be affected by the police investigation.

The inquiry is not into the funeral home, but the professionals licensed to work there, she said.

"The police are going by [the] Criminal Code and criminal laws, whereas we're comparing to acts, regulations, policies and professional code of conduct," Adams said.