22    Business View - July 2015
        
        
          for the membership right now and how do they break
        
        
          down? What are the different types of members?
        
        
          RUBIN:
        
        
          There’s a whole continuum from lighter ser-
        
        
          vices to heavier services. We have charities and not-
        
        
          for-profits that provide long-term care, and they often
        
        
          have their origins with cultural and ethnic groups, such
        
        
          as the Mennonites, the Latvians, and the Germans –
        
        
          people who came to Ontario and wanted to care for
        
        
          their seniors. Others have roots in seniors’ clubs and
        
        
          community groups, such as rotary clubs and legions.
        
        
          These members rely very much on volunteer support
        
        
          and the financial benefactors of their communities,
        
        
          along with very much-needed government support.
        
        
          These homes still have their roots in their origins or
        
        
          culture, but they are non-denominational, and now
        
        
          they must take anybody in.
        
        
          We also have municipal homes, because every south-
        
        
          ern municipality in the province must operate a long-
        
        
          term care home. And our membership includes se-
        
        
          niors’ housing and supportive housing – what you may
        
        
          call assisted living -- as well as other support services.
        
        
          For example, we offer adult-day programs for families
        
        
          to bring in their elderly loved ones with dementia to
        
        
          give them some stimulation and programming a few
        
        
          days a week. And we also have other services that
        
        
          reach out to the community, such as meals on wheels.
        
        
          Some of our members deliver thousands of meals per
        
        
          week. And so there are ancillary services that are quite
        
        
          common.
        
        
          BUSINESS VIEW: Have you had any membership
        
        
          trends up or down? Is one segment of the group
        
        
          growing more than the others?
        
        
          RUBIN:
        
        
          The trend will be to keep people in their homes
        
        
          as long as possible and to provide support services to
        
        
          HEALTHCARE