Code Blue fi)r Borman Hall? TODAY'S ACTIVITIES In the worst- case scenario, Borman would fail inspection, forcing state case workers to relocate all residents to other non- profit homes. Friends Sylvia Ginsberg and Jean Krajden. Borman Hall was not built to accommodate nursing home patients. Rather, it was a place for the poor, yet indepen- dent, elderly to live. Now the majority of residents are on govern- ment assistance, and they are sickly. The needs are greater. For Nancy Cohen and an alternative group called Concerned Citizens for the Jewish Elderly, the community must take an active role in elderly care. The group of less than 20, which formed a few years ago, meets periodically to protect rights of the Jewish elderly. They have written to Jewish clergy, JHA board members and administrators. They call experts all over the coun- try. Though they are not recognized as an affiliat- ed group of Detroit's JHA, their voices have been heard. They want the community to wake up, and to better care for its aging population. "Honoring and caring for one's parents and dependents has always been a cherished part Markey Butler (head of the table) meets with Borman management team. of our Jewish heritage," Ms. Cohen said. "It is shameful that this afflu- ent community, known for its generosity, cannot or will not support its elderly. "How can we provide much-needed help to Israel and Russian Jewry and ignore the plight of our own com- munity's most vulnerable and needy who are caught in this period of the Home's transition?" Across the country, there are 105 not-for- profit Jewish nursing homes. According to Herb Shore, director for the North American Association of Jewish Homes and Housing For the Aged, no nursing home has closed. A few in California, he said, have faced similar code violations as Borman. "At Borman, they are smelling the coffee, hear- ing the wake-up call," Mr. Shore said. "The future now is what becomes of the issue. Is the community pre- pared to really maintain the high level of care that Jewish homes have provided in the last 100 years? "Of course, there is a need for Jewish nursing homes," Mr. Shore said. "The way in which we care for the elderly is a moral imperative, it is part of our faith, tradi- tion, the fifth command- ment. "The Jewish communi- ty never has and never will abandon the elderly. Borman was at the wrong place at the wrong time and the community stopped paying attention to it. It is time to join hands, fix it and go for- ward." 0 CD