75¢ unity ----l Celebrating 50 years of growth with the Detroit Jewish ComnT THE JEWISH NEWS 13 ELUL 5752/SEPTEMBER 11, 1992 State Slaps Borman Hall Major changes in staffing and approach at Borman Hall come amid a critical public health report. ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM ASSISTANT EDITOR hen Arnold Budin was named ex- ecutive director of Borman Hall last May, he said changes were needed at the facility. A new Michigan Department of Public Health report confirms it. Issued last month, the report gives Borman Hall four Level A deficiencies, citing major problems in resident quality of life and qual- ity of care. Among the concerns noted in the report: residents' med- ical needs need more attention; residents often feel ignored by Borman Hall staff; Borman as- sessment accounts, which detail the medical, mental and physical status of each resident, are inade- quate. The state report also gives Borman Hall 84 Level B deficien- cies. Mostly environmental con- cerns, these range from the need for improved nurse-call systems to the fact that the facility is official- ly registered as Jewish Home No. 2, though the name on the build- ing is Borman Hall. CLOSE-UP Howard Kioc cannot remember a time when the Nazis did not live with him. They were there in the death camp films he could not bear to watch and there when he returned home to parents who had sur- vived the war, but could not bear to speak of it. Then one day Mr. Kloc took a tape recorder and asked his mother to talk about the Holocaust. He wanted to know everything. Today, the wartime memories of the Klocs are included in a new book ...And So We Must Remember. Published through Temple Emanu-El, the book com- prises selections written by congregants and their families. The initial purpose of the book was to capture Holocaust recol- lections. But for many involved, it proved to be much more than a matter of writing and editing. It meant lifting layer upon layer of silence, removing the shroud of uneasy quiet that had enveloped families for years. A Fragile History Story on page 24 Hall has not made major progress toward decreasing its number of Level A deficiencies, revocation of the facility's certification will be- gin. Mr. Budin is determined to see that does not happen and has come forth with an agenda he says will get Borman Hall back on track. It indudes the hiring of new upper-level personnel and a pro- gram of what he calls "changing attitudes"— refocusing the way staffrelate,s to residents. Conducted annually at nursing care facilities throughout Mich- igan, the state reports are based on interviews with residents cho- sen at random, talks with resi- dents' families and observation. The report deals only with Bor- man Hall in Detroit — the Jewish Home for Aged's Fleisch- man Home in West Bloomfield and Prentis Ma- Borman Hall in Detroit. nor in Southfield are inspected separately. The public health team will re- turn in 45 days — on Oct. 1— to Borman Hall to see that changes are being implemented. If head- way has not been made by that point, the facility will receive a re- prieve of another 45 days. If, at the end of 90 days, Borman r # zi lA I „i Many of the recommendations outlined in the report had already been noted by Mr. Budin. "We've gotten our financial house in order," Mr. Budin said. Now he is asking the community for a little patience as he solves the facility's other ills. BORMAN page 12 Mission Numbers Take Off Over 1,100 will fly to Israel next April from Detroit. PHIL JACOBS MANAGING EDITOR en David B. Hermelin first discussed the idea of a Miracle Mission, he was thinking of one El Al flight direct from Detroit to Tel Aviv with 200 people aboard. He and his Mission com- mittee figured they would need a heavy boost from the High Holiday pulpits of area rabbis to build excitement and in- terest in the April 18-28 mission. But that's no longer necessary. The Miracle Mission has already grown from one 747 to three. There are at least 1,150 people who have submitted ap- plications with deposits for the trip. There are only 200 spaces remaining. Applications have been coming it at 20 a day. The Mission, co-sponsored by the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit and The Jewish News in hon- or of its 50th anniversary, is already MISSION page 22 nside BACKGROUND Face-Off Clinton and Bush woo B'nai B'rith convention delegates. page 31 BUSINESS Board Room Bankruptcy attorneys are doing big business. page 41 Contents on page 5