It was just six months ago when an excited Hilda Reimer signed the papers for a condo unit at Chinook Manor.
âI thought, âThis will be my last homeâ⊠I actually lived here 40 years ago when they were rentals.â
Unfortunately, Reimer broke her pelvis during the winter move.
Since then, sheâs been recovering and waiting for warmer weather to finally enjoy her new home to the fullest.
âI have a scooter to go longer distances, I was looking forward to all that. But here we are, stuck in our homes.â
Just days after her 82nd birthday, Reimer says the buildingâs lone elevator stopped working.
She hoped it would be fixed after the May long weekend, but now itâs been three weeks â and sheâs been trapped inside ever since.
âWeâre prisoners in our homes. Itâs quite the barrier â and itâs not only impacting me, itâs impacting many people in this building.â
Throughout this turbulent period, Reimerâs missed important medical appointments. Her recovery has slowed, as have the visits.
âFriends of mine canât come over, and I canât go over to see them. Some of them are older and canât do stairs,â Reimer said.
âWeâre a bunch of old farts.â
Thereâs one moment Reimer missed out on that sheâll never get back.
âMy former husband passed away in hospice just recently,â she said.

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âI couldnât go to see him and he was asking for me.
âI will always regret that I couldnât go and visit him.â
Reimerâs son, Darren DeLorme, has been working through that grief alongside his mother.
âThat put a lot of stress on myself, my mom, my dad⊠because she couldnât go see him in hospice.â
Heâs spent much of the past three weeks lending a hand to his mother and others.
âIâve come to help her do laundry, the facility is in the basement⊠Somebody had a big suitcase, I helped her carry it up â she was just grunting trying to carry her luggage and I carried that up to the fifth floor. I encountered someone bringing groceries in that I helped with⊠itâs just not fair.â
âI donât know what I would have done without, him really,â Reimer explains.
She says thereâs still no word on when the missing part needed to fix the elevator may arrive.
Most affected people believe the buildingâs owners are doing everything they can to fix the problem â but also think it could have been avoided altogether.
âThis problem could have been taken care of had (the condo board) had the part ready.â
âTheyâd been recommended to upgrade parts but they chose not to, and here we are.â
Global News reached out to Diversified Property Management, which looks after Chinook Manor.
When asked directly if the group is expediting the repairs as quickly as possible, representatives declined to comment.
The home is advertised as a 40+ community.
While not a seniorâs home by definition, Delorme says many of his momâs neighbours are older and face similar challenges.
âIt stands to reason thereâs going to be a higher population of seniors living here with that criteria.â
âI would suggest to the condo board president to do a survey of this whole building and see who would have purchased a unit if it was a five-storey walkup, I can probably tell you⊠nobody.â
Itâs not an uncommon issue for seniors to run into, according to a local advocate.
âWe certainly work with partners who have brand new, beautiful buildings,â explained Larry Mathieson, president & CEO of Unison Alberta.
âBut there are a lot of buildings in the province where theyâre older⊠been around for decades. (Owners) are constantly attending to things that might present a safety or mobility issue.â
Itâs something Unison witnessed first hand just a few years ago.
âAt our (Elder Abuse Shelter), we had to completely rebuild the elevator â not just because there was problems with it, but replacement issues. (Repairing elevators) is a fairly specialized trade,â Mathieson said.
âElevators like this that are fairly deep into their life cycle⊠very quickly parts can become obsolete.â
Mathieson says his group and others can offer resources to seniors who find themselves in situations like this and havenât been able to get a resolution with their housing provider.
Reimerâs only been able to take in the warm summer air through her third-floor balcony, but sheâs hoping that all changes for the better, soon.
âItâs a comfortable home, but câmon â youâve got a life to live and when youâre older, you gotta live it⊠because you donât know how long youâve got.â
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