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COST REDUCTION, 24,000 MILES TOTAL ALLOWED, 150 PER MILE OVER.TOTAL OF PAYMENTS X 24. OPTION TO PURCHASE AT END OF LEASE, LESSEE RESPONSIBLE FOR EXCESS WEAR AND TEAR. ** Requires Ameritech activation through our dealership. BORMAN page 1 "We are hopeful and we have reason to believe that there are third parties out there who would be interested in one or both of these options, but we are not certain we will be success- ful in these endeavors," Mr. Page said. If unsuccessful, the third op- tion is for Borman Hall to shut its doors. It likely would be sold as a different type of facility. Were Borman to close com- pletely, the process would be gradual, officials say. To mini- mize the trauma associated with moving elderly people, JHA directors would embark on a comprehensive placement program between late spring and fall of 1994. "If we are successful (with these options), we think that we will end up in a better position than we are in today and that we have been in during the past several years," Mr. Page said. The Elder Care Options Committee, chaired by Mark Schlussel, has been looking into ways of better providing for the frail elderly. Its efforts will con- tinue, Mr. Schlussel said. Borman Hall has operated on shaky ground for a long time. It was designed as a Jewish home for aged. Most of its early resi- dents were healthy. But as the Jewish population grew older, Borman turned into a home for frail aged — a nursing home that required more intensive, expensive care. Unfortunately, the facility's sprawling, bi-level floor plan is not conducive to this kind of care, officials say. When the fed- eral government passed stricter nursing home regulations in the late 1980s, Borman Hall was hit hard for non-compliance. During the past year and a half, the Home was cited for top-lev- el health deficiencies after three separate inspections by the Michigan Department of Pub- lic Health. Ironically, the Home passed its latest inspection earlier this fall. Inspectors were impressed with improvements to quality of care and administration. Nevertheless, community lead- ers say long-term wisdom com- pels them to seek other avenues. `The painful experience of re- peated failures is not something we want to see happen again, but we're not sure we can avoid it in a facility configured like Borman and located where it is," Mr. Page said. Borman Hall's urban setting deters the younger generation from bring- ing parents there, many people say, but plans for constructing another facility in West Bloom- field have been put on hold. Federation still has a "certifi- cate of need," a legal document enabling it to transfer beds to a different facility, however lead- ers say any action toward breaking ground for a new nursing home will require many more months of study. For now, the 212-bed nurs- ing home's census is at an all- time low: 164. Lower Medicare/Medicaid funding has put a financial strain on the Jewish community. Officials estimate that $15 million in community dollars have been spent on the Jewish Home for Aged over the past five years. The bulk of these monies have gone to support Borman Hall. "Approximately 85 percent of the current JHA budget deficit is attributable to Borman Hall. Projections indicate that the agency in total will lose $2 mil- lion this year," said Mark Davidoff, Federation's chief fi- nancial officer. Earlier this year, the UJF al- lotted $2.95 million for a special fast-track cleanup that suc- cessfully saved Borman from failing consecutive inspections. In addition to its 1993 Federa- tion allocation, the Home need- The changes will begin in late spring. ed about $70,000 more from Federation to correct deficien- cies cited after the failed in- spection last summer. Though relocating residents and/or closing Borman Hall will cost millions and millions of dol- lars, these optionS -will prove cost-effective in the long run, of- ficials say. In the short term, the Home for Aged's Executive Director Denise Bortolani-Rabidoux will meet with residents, their fam- ily members and staff. "We've already been working on a letter that will be put out to the families in preparation for what we knew was going to occur, and we have a Family Fo- rum meeting scheduled for Sun- day. I will be meeting with staff in small groups so that the staff maintains the sense of what this decision is. This isn't a to- morrow closure," she said. Officials stress that Borman Hall will not be sold or shut down immediately. "We know the emotionalism of this issue," Mr. Page said. "We know that there are people who are going to read into this and say that we're abandoning their parents or the population in general. That is not our in- tention. "We can serve more people in the same population with the same dollars if we just do it dif- ferently." ❑