Sunday, August 14, 2011

FL Lawmakers Pushed to Slash State Oversight of Assisted Living Facilities




When Sedrek Singleton, a career criminal with a violent past, checked into Nueva Vida assisted living facility, caretakers at the cluster of cottages in Miami-Dade never took steps to protect other residents.

They never had to.

Months after moving in, the 30-year-old man flew into a rampage, beating his roommate to death with a brick — nearly tearing off the disabled man’s ear — before bolting from his new home.

The brutal assault came just weeks after Florida lawmakers rejected a bill that would have put the burden squarely on ALF owners to safeguard people in their homes when accepting residents with criminal histories.
But the defeat in 2008 to bring more protections to vulnerable residents was just the beginning.

Over the next three years, lawmakers rejected sweeping plans to toughen Florida’s ALF law — often at the urging of industry leaders — while stripping away enforcement powers that left hundreds of residents to fend for themselves in dangerous conditions.

While frail residents were dying of abuse and neglect in ALFs across the state — nearly one a month — lawmakers pushed three dozen pieces of legislation since 2007 to cut crucial protections that had been in place for a generation.

Full Article and Source:
Lawmakers Pushed to Slash State Oversight of Assisted Living Facilities

See Also:
Search Currently Active Assisted Living Facilities in Florida

2 comments:

StandUp said...

Money talks and unfortunately, it speaks loudest to our lawmakers.

Anonymous said...

V.E.B.O.!

Vote every bum out!