Leaky Band-Aid At Borman Hall The latest state health department inspection of Borman Hall leaves this community wondering and our Jewish elderly in a quandary. After recently pumping $2.95 million in emer- gency communal funding into the Jewish Home for Aged's Seven Mile Road facility, the latest state inspection would indicate we are back to square one. Not so, say JHA leaders. All that is needed now is additional time to put in place what the $2.95 million in United Jewish Foundation dollars pur- chased. State officials appear to be willing to give the Home that additional time. The community is certainly willing. So are the residents. But the situation still begs the question, in fact, numerous questions: Why did the Jewish Home for Aged reach this stage in the first place? Why did Borman Hall fail two inspections last- year, pass a third inspection after the $2.95 mil- lion "fast-track" fix, and then regress? Was the expensive quick-fix consulting team pulled out too quickly, before all of its new ad- ministrative systems were permanently in place? Will the new systems and administrators be able to change staff work habits in 45 or 90 days? Will this newest fix need just time, or more mon- ey? Does the community have the funds to spend, and at what cost to other community needs? Detroit's Jewish community is faced with a dis- mal prospect: a Home for Aged that may contin- ue to need far more dollars to move it back to the highest level of care we expect for our elderly. The alternative, that the Home is now unworkable and may have to close, is frightening. But it is an option we have to face, and one the JHA, the community, its elderly and their fami- lies must consider if Borman Hall requests an- other Band-Aid. Lebanon Should Not Change Madrid Secretary of State Warren Christopher's sched- uled visit to the Middle East comes at a critical juncture. This week's counterattack by Israel against Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon — while warranted — makes peace even more elusive by giving Arab negotiators further pretext to delay making hard compromises. But signs of frustration over the lack of progress in the talks have been coming from the State De- partment for some weeks now. There have even been hints that the Clinton White House will end its high-level participation in the talks if there is no tangible progress soon. To break the stalemate, Palestinians and some Israelis — including some high in the Rabin gov- ernment — have suggested junking the Madrid formula, the rules under which the peace talks were first convened in October 1991. Palestinians want the guidelines altered so the PLO can become a full participant and they can skip talking about interim self-rule and leap ahead to discussing a fully independent state, with east Jerusalem as its capital. Israelis who support changing the ground rules see full Palestinian sovereignty as either justified or inevitable anyway, and fear that to keep Madrid in place is to doom the negotiations for no good rea- son. They also note that Madrid's safeguards have C.0 L1.1 Cl) LLI CC w LLJ F- 4 already been breached by the inclusion of east Jerusalem's Faisal Husseini and the PLO's obvi- ous control over Palestinian negotiators. American involvement is crucial to moving the parties along, but curiously, Mr. Christopher him- self has said that Madrid should remain intact. Palestinians, he said, should concentrate on achiev- ing interim self-rule in the West Bank and Gaza Strip — the terms of the negotiations as defined in Madrid — and then go from there. Palestinian independence in some part of the territories is justified and is inevitable. But set- ting aside Madrid will not necessarily advance the talks. It is just as likely to lead to even stiffer Pales- tinian demands and even more insecurity — jus- tified, at that — on the part of Israelis, who were tested enough this week by the volleys of Katyusha rockets falling on Kiryat Shemona. The majority of Israelis have expressed a desire to reach a negotiated settlement. But they also fear that creation of a Palestinian state may re- sult not in peace, but in one more sovereign Arab enemy. For that reason, the built-in tests of interim self-rule must come first. Unless some unforeseen and unexpected major compromise is forthcoming from the Palestinians, Madrid should remain in effect. Half A Loaf Better Than None According to a Jewish News editorial ofJuly 23, President Clinton should have stuck by his guns and accepted nothing less than a complete end to dis- crimination against homosex- uals in the military. Apparently, the writer of the editorial would rather see President Clinton get shot down in flames regarding this issue, than reach an accom- modation with opponents of his policy through negotiation and compromise. This is like say- ing that no loaf at all is better than half a loaf. What President Clinton did was to take an important step that will eventually lead to the end of all discrimination against homosexuals in the military. He deserves to be commended, not criticized, for his efforts. Arthur Lyons Huntington Woods Lack Of Caring About The Home After 21 years, we have de- parted as bingo volunteers at Borman Hall. As much as we enjoyed doing a little some- thing for the residents/pa- tients, we no longer could stomach witnessing the lack of dignity afforded them. Or the quality of food. Or the reduc- tion of minor pleasures and benefits. Something as trivial as re- ceiving 10 cents each bingo game is important for a man or woman in a wheelchair, or simply confined to a nursing home. When the source of the bingo money cut the prize to 5 cents, it was no trivial disap- pointment. For us, it was the last disappointment we want- ed to witness. Your Editor's Notebook col- umn ofJuly 2, "Healing Time for Home," revealed primarily that you have not experienced Borman for more than a mo- ment. When the director walks the hall, she should be seeing staff straighten slumped-over resi- dents, and not have to do it herself. She should know more than employees' names; she should know that they are do- ing their jobs, and getting a de- cent wage to provide incentive for compassion and efficiency. ( Federation funds should not be considered a bailout. The budget should reflect what is required, not deflated and sac- rificed to considerations oth- er than the elderly, sick, handicapped, etc. If the com- munity's true "goal is the best j care possible for our Jewish el- -1-\ as you contend, then their budget share should not be fixed at a point that imme- diately makes the goal impos- sible to achieve. The budget needs to make certain that wages are ade- quate to attract caring and ef- fective people who will be tending to our elderly. The professional staff is not the major factor for the Home's success. The Federation offi- cials and Home directors — those who already hint strong- ly that the Home is expendable — comprise the hope for Bor- man. Unfortunately, however, they may be involved with a conflict of non-interest vs. sin- cerity because their resources / 1 are much greater than those of the average Jewish family and they need not be concerned about obtaining care for their elderly in the Home. This may or may not be an element of -/ the situation that exists, but we believe it bears considera- tion in view of the consistent budget inadequacy. The distracting "noise" men- tioned July 2 has not been "so much" but rather too little, be- cause the Jewish community simply does not care unless a family member or friend is in the Home. When each family awakens to understand that its elderly may one day need the Home that vanished in the magic of apathy, there may be enough "noise" to compel the Federation and JHA board to provide a realistic, caring bud- `-\ get. We are not optimistic on that score in light of our com- munity's lack of meaningful re- action or concern when the state inspectors found the Home in deplorable condition. It was a gigantic stain on the Jewish tradition of caring, but today's obsession with non-tra- HOME page 13