News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: County Says 2 Rehab Facilities Are Unfit |
Title: | US CA: County Says 2 Rehab Facilities Are Unfit |
Published On: | 2000-05-08 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-04 19:21:38 |
COUNTY SAYS 2 REHAB FACILITIES ARE UNFIT
After A Dawn Raid, Health And Probation Officials Tell About 40
Drug And Alcohol Offenders They Must Leave The Santa Ana Apartments.
County health care and probation officials removed dozens of
recovering substance abusers from two Santa Ana facilities over the
weekend, alleging the operator of the programs, Cooper Fellowship
Inc., was no longer fit to handle such cases.
"At this particular point, it is no longer an approved program from
the Probation Department's perspective," said John Robinson, the
agency's chief officer.
Robinson said about 40 drug and alcohol offenders, under court order
to undergo rehabilitation or required to live in housing free of
controlled substances, were removed Saturday from Cooper's complexes
on Euclid and Cooper streets.
The Cooper Street facility is a live-in rehabilitation center for drug
and alcohol abusers, and the Euclid Street apartment complex provides
subsidized "sober living" homes for recovering addicts, officials said.
The state licenses such facilities, which are overseen locally by the
county's Health Care Agency.
On Sunday, the probation and health agencies told an estimated 70
residents, including the 40 probationers, from Cooper's two locations
that they had to move to other county-approved facilities, said Chief
Deputy Probation Officer John Bowater. Information on the other 30
residents was unavailable.
Bowater said some of the residents were taken to the new facilities,
but others were simply given a list of addresses and telephone numbers.
Bowater said he did not believe Cooper's license had been revoked.
Health Care Agency Director Michael Schumacher declined to comment.
Wanda Hunsaker, a Cooper staff member, said employees were told not to
talk to reporters.
Jackie Sweeney, 46, one of the probationers told to leave the Euclid
apartments Saturday, said he had lived there nearly two years.
"We're trying to make our lives better, and this isn't helping,"
Sweeney said.
Sweeney and a handful of residents, complaining they were abruptly
evicted, returned to Cooper's on Sunday, even though officials had
told them not to. The residents said there were no vacancies in the
facilities they were referred to.
They said probation officers began pounding on their doors about 6:45
a.m. Saturday and searched their rooms with drug-sniffing dogs. They
said they were asked to give urine samples.
"The people here are clean," said Dean Griffith, a manager in the
26-unit apartment complex where residents pay $280 a month and share
rooms.
Robinson said that because of current investigations, he could not
comment on why county officials determined Cooper's facilities were
unfit. He said all those affected were assisted in moving to other
homes.
"We know that this is a disruption for them," he said. "It is not
something that they have collectively done, and we are trying to
handle it in the least anxiety-producing way as possible. It was
unfortunate, but it had to be done."
Cooper Fellowship is a private, nonprofit organization headed by local
businessman Jack Blackburn, who could not be reached for comment.
After A Dawn Raid, Health And Probation Officials Tell About 40
Drug And Alcohol Offenders They Must Leave The Santa Ana Apartments.
County health care and probation officials removed dozens of
recovering substance abusers from two Santa Ana facilities over the
weekend, alleging the operator of the programs, Cooper Fellowship
Inc., was no longer fit to handle such cases.
"At this particular point, it is no longer an approved program from
the Probation Department's perspective," said John Robinson, the
agency's chief officer.
Robinson said about 40 drug and alcohol offenders, under court order
to undergo rehabilitation or required to live in housing free of
controlled substances, were removed Saturday from Cooper's complexes
on Euclid and Cooper streets.
The Cooper Street facility is a live-in rehabilitation center for drug
and alcohol abusers, and the Euclid Street apartment complex provides
subsidized "sober living" homes for recovering addicts, officials said.
The state licenses such facilities, which are overseen locally by the
county's Health Care Agency.
On Sunday, the probation and health agencies told an estimated 70
residents, including the 40 probationers, from Cooper's two locations
that they had to move to other county-approved facilities, said Chief
Deputy Probation Officer John Bowater. Information on the other 30
residents was unavailable.
Bowater said some of the residents were taken to the new facilities,
but others were simply given a list of addresses and telephone numbers.
Bowater said he did not believe Cooper's license had been revoked.
Health Care Agency Director Michael Schumacher declined to comment.
Wanda Hunsaker, a Cooper staff member, said employees were told not to
talk to reporters.
Jackie Sweeney, 46, one of the probationers told to leave the Euclid
apartments Saturday, said he had lived there nearly two years.
"We're trying to make our lives better, and this isn't helping,"
Sweeney said.
Sweeney and a handful of residents, complaining they were abruptly
evicted, returned to Cooper's on Sunday, even though officials had
told them not to. The residents said there were no vacancies in the
facilities they were referred to.
They said probation officers began pounding on their doors about 6:45
a.m. Saturday and searched their rooms with drug-sniffing dogs. They
said they were asked to give urine samples.
"The people here are clean," said Dean Griffith, a manager in the
26-unit apartment complex where residents pay $280 a month and share
rooms.
Robinson said that because of current investigations, he could not
comment on why county officials determined Cooper's facilities were
unfit. He said all those affected were assisted in moving to other
homes.
"We know that this is a disruption for them," he said. "It is not
something that they have collectively done, and we are trying to
handle it in the least anxiety-producing way as possible. It was
unfortunate, but it had to be done."
Cooper Fellowship is a private, nonprofit organization headed by local
businessman Jack Blackburn, who could not be reached for comment.
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