for display only
Big Blue Interactive The Corner Forum  
Back to the Corner

Archived Thread

NFT: NYT on Graft and Abuse in the Recovery Industry

Dunedin81 : 5/30/2015 9:41 am
A very troubling piece about so-called three-quarter houses, semi-regulated transition homes for addicts that are run with minimal insight.

Quote:
After a lifetime of abusing drugs, Horace Bush decided at age 62 that getting clean had become a matter of life or death. So Mr. Bush, a homeless man who still tucked in his T-shirts and ironed his jeans, moved to a flophouse in Brooklyn that was supposed to help people like him, cramming into a bedroom the size of a parking space with three other men.

Mr. Bush signed up for a drug-treatment program and emerged nine months later determined to stay sober. But the man who ran the house, Yury Baumblit, a longtime hustler and two-time felon, had other ideas.

Mr. Baumblit got kickbacks on the Medicaid fees paid to the outpatient treatment programs that he forced all his tenants to attend, residents and former employees said. So he gave Mr. Bush a choice: If he wanted to stay, he would have to relapse and enroll in another program. Otherwise, his bed would be given away.

Link - ( New Window )
Wow, tough to create interest around this topic I guess.  
ktinsc : 5/30/2015 8:09 pm : link
Anecdotally speaking I have seen smaller scale parallels here in So CA. I've assumed that gov't subsidies combined with minimal oversight has contributed to the proliferation of these "rehab" homes throughout Orange County. Some of these homes are very low key and only the immediate neighbors know what they are. Others have minimal supervision and generate numerous issues which demand significant police response.
This is probably a pretty  
Phil in LA : 5/30/2015 9:11 pm : link
massive problem.
It's one of those sort of human universals...  
Dunedin81 : 5/30/2015 9:24 pm : link
don't take advantage of the most disadvantaged, at-risk members of society. Recovery is a lengthy, difficult process that can have a lot of false starts but it's a helluvalot harder to make it when the people who are supposed to be providing you a stable living environment just view you as a financial resource.
Back to the Corner