The new owners of Prentis Manor plan to open a kosher assisted-living facility in mid-summer. JULIE EDGAR STAFF WRITER I t'll be called Ilan Village. With each new admission, the area's newest assisted-living facili- ty — "Tree Village" in Hebrew — will make a donation to the Jewish Na- tional Fund for the planting of a tree in Israel. This is Prentis Manor's new incar- nation, a kind of continuation of the old — in keeping with the theme of roots and branches. Assisted Living Associ- ates, a company owned by Richard L. Fink and John Hamburger, the exec- utive vice president of Parliament Building Co. in Southfield, will man- age the facility, which is designed for people who do not require 24-hour nurs- Prentis Manor is about to undergo a transformation. ing care but are not fully independent. Although the building has a full kosher Parliament built Prentis Manor in the late kitchen, Mr. Hamburger initially thought 1960s. Mr. Hamburger, a board member of the it might be too expensive to operate. After Benefactors of the Jewish Home for Aged talking to members of JHA and Jewish Fed- (JHA) and Jewish Federation Apartments, eration Apartments, however, Assisted Liv- said he hopes to open the new facility in ing Associates decided to keep it in July after extensive renovations to the in- operation. "One of the things that came through terior of the 35,000-square-foot building, which sits on six acres at the corner of clearly was that having a full kosher kitchen Lahser Road and Civic Center Drive in was important to people. A fairly small per- centage — less than 15 percent — require Southfield. PHOTO BY DANIEL LIPPITT Putting Down Roots kosher food, from what we've been told, but people identify that as a very important in- dicia ofJewish identity in the facility," he said. As a "preferred provider" for the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, the fa- cility has agreed to set aside 10 percent of its 78 beds for lower-income residents. Fed- eration, however, isn't offering subsidies. The sale price of the property is confidential, said Mark Davidoff, Feder- ation chief oper- ating officer. The building was owned by JHA, an agency ofJewish Feder- ation of Metro- politan Detroit, and run for 26 years as a nurs- ing home. Last Decem- ber, JHA shut Prentis, ending an era in which Federation owned and op- erated Jewish nursing homes. Some Pren- tis residents moved into the Marvin and Betty Danto Family Health Care Center, an upscale nursing home on the West Bloomfield Jewish Community Campus. Others moved to Menorah House in South- field and non-Jewish facilities throughout the metro area. Mr. Davidoff said he is "thrilled" at the change of ownership. D "We view this as the continued develop- ment of our strategy, which is to create this network of preferred providers who will ser- vice the Jewish community in high-quali- ty facilities in the areas where our community is best served. This couldn't have been a better outcome," he said. The Commission on Jewish Eldercare Services (COJES), a new Federation agency that will coordinate services for older adults in the community, may provide religious and cultural programming at Ilan, said CO- JES Director Linda Blumberg. COJES just hired a full-time rabbi to provide pastoral care to Jewish residents in nursing homes throughout the city. Mr. Hamburger said rents at Ilan Vil- lage will be comparable to those at Fleis- chman Residence, an assisted living facility on the West Bloomfield campus of the Jew- ish Community Center. Rents there range from $1,325 to $2,440 per month. But Ilan will offer a higher level of care, including handling people with dementia. Round-the- clock monitoring, medication dispensing, and bathing, grooming and dressing assis- tance will also be available. "What we provide is more of a medical than a social model. We say we know you'd rather be with your family or living at home, but because of certain circumstances you can't live alone anymore; you need help. We think we're the best of the alternatives," Mr. Hamburger said. ❑ Q00 A El HARDWARE GRAND OPENING EVENTS! SATURDAY APRIL 26th Come listen to GLENN HAEGE 4110 WXYT's "Ask the Handyman" 1-3 pm Manufacturer Experts 11-3 pm Prize Giveaways Every 1/2 Hour 1 0-4pm It's all at our NEW West 8looinfield location 10 Showroom Hours: Monday-Friday 11-5, Saturday 11-3 or by appointment 3160 Haggerty Rd. • West Bloomfield • 48323 Orchard Lake at Zone Pine Rd. 870-6264860