WeCare at Rolling Meadows: Food Service Failures - PA
When inspectors visited the facility on Curry Road in September 2025, they checked meal service for 12 residents. All 12 were missing items they had selected from the menu. The administrator confirmed it.
Residents described the problem not as an occasional mix-up but as the way things work. Resident R43, observed at lunch on September 11, was supposed to receive a carton of 2% milk and a can of diet cola. Neither was on her tray. "This always happens," she told the inspector. A few minutes later, down the hall, Resident R8's tray arrived without her packet of Mrs. Dash seasoning or her diet ginger ale. "I am always missing things on my tray," she said.
The resident council meeting the day before had turned into something of an accounting of grievances. The group described a dinner where French fries were listed on the menu and mashed potatoes showed up instead. They said a tray that should carry 12 items might arrive with six. Breakfast, they said, sometimes meant a hard, unbuttered piece of toast and a hardboiled egg, and nothing more.
Three residents interviewed together on the morning of September 9 told inspectors the dietary department regularly fails to serve all the items listed on their meal tickets, and that when something is missing, they cannot get an alternate. Resident R57, interviewed separately that same morning, said the facility serves a lot of rice and eggs and that substitutes are not available when requested.
A licensed practical nurse and a nurse aide, both interviewed on September 11, said the food carts are often late. Residents, they confirmed, do not get everything they are supposed to on their trays.
The facility's own written policy, dated January 2025, states that individual food preferences will be assessed when a resident is admitted and communicated to the care team. Diet changes are to happen only with the resident's or their representative's consent. The gap between that policy and what inspectors observed across every single resident they reviewed was not subtle.
The nursing home administrator, in an interview on the afternoon of September 11, confirmed the finding without qualification: the facility had failed to provide resident-selected menu items for all 12 residents whose records were reviewed.
Inspectors cited the deficiency at a level of minimal harm or potential for actual harm, affecting some residents. For residents in a nursing facility, many of whom have limited mobility, medical dietary needs, or few other daily pleasures, a meal tray is not a small thing. The woman who asked for diet cola and got nothing. The residents who sat through a council meeting cataloguing what they didn't receive. The aide who acknowledged, plainly, that this is just how the carts arrive.
Resident R43 said it always happens. She was not wrong.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Wecare At Rolling Meadows Rehab and Nursing Ce from 2025-09-12 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
Additional Resources
Data source: Official federal inspection data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).
Editorial process: AI-synthesized regulatory data, reviewed for accuracy by our editorial team.
Professional review: All content reviewed by Christopher F. Nesbitt, Sr., NH EMT & BU-trained Paralegal.
Last verified: June 29, 2026 · Our methodology
WECARE AT ROLLING MEADOWS REHAB AND NURSING CE in WAYNESBURG, PA was cited for violations during a health inspection on September 12, 2025.
When inspectors visited the facility on Curry Road in September 2025, they checked meal service for 12 residents.
Health inspections identify deficiencies that facilities must correct. Violations range from minor documentation issues to serious safety concerns. Review the full report below for specific details and facility response.