Westchester Advocates for Disabled Adults v. Pataki

931 F. Supp. 993, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9178, 1996 WL 363139
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJune 21, 1996
DocketCivil Action CV-96-0930
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 931 F. Supp. 993 (Westchester Advocates for Disabled Adults v. Pataki) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Westchester Advocates for Disabled Adults v. Pataki, 931 F. Supp. 993, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9178, 1996 WL 363139 (E.D.N.Y. 1996).

Opinion

*995 MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

TRAGER, District Judge:

This ease against Westchester County and State of New York officials and West-chester County is the third of three cases concerning the care and treatment of profoundly disabled and medically fragile adults whose rights under the federal Constitution have been gravely imperiled as the result of an unfortunate funding dispute between the State of New York and three of its local governments. These adults have been the beneficiaries of a joint state and local program called Transitional Care Funding (TCF). The program was developed to provide a bridge between educational placements of severely disabled persons in residential programs and long-term adult residential care when they “aged-out” of educational placements at the end of the school year in which they became twenty-one.

This action arises from the withdrawal from TCF by the Westchester County (County) Department of Social Services (DSS) in November 1995. The first suit arose from the withdrawal by New York City from TCF at the end of May 1995. 1 Following New York City’s successful withdrawal, in November 1995, both Suffolk and Westchester Counties emulated New York City’s withdrawal from the .program, 2 This court entered an order directing Suffolk County to resume payment of plaintiffs’ residential care for a period of six months, with the State to assume full funding of any plaintiffs remaining in out-of-state placement at the end of that period. That order, however, has been stayed by the Second Circuit with respect to the County, pending appeal, and is presently in effect with respect to the State.

Background

1. The Plaintiffs

(a)

The present action involves six severely disabled, multiply handicapped, plaintiffs, all of whom were placed in out-of-state institutions as children, years ago, with the approval of the State, because no appropriate treatment programs were available in-state. For example, one plaintiff, Jason Goodhue, aged twenty-seven, “has a diagnosis of severe mental retardation, cerebral palsy, spastic diplegia, 3 functional scoliosis, statis [possibly static ] encephalopathy 4 and a seizure disorder. He uses a wheel chair which [he] is able to push independently, though his control is poor. He is nonverbal, understands simple commands and usually responds yes/no verbally to questions.” Unsigned document on Letchworth Developmental Disabilities Services Office (DDSO) letterhead, 5 titled “90 Day Update for Transitional Funding,” dated December 30, 1995, Pltf.Ex. 10. *996 Nearly six years ago this plaintiff “aged out” of his educational placement, that is, at the end of the school year in which he became twenty-one, he became ineligible for educational funding.

Westchester County asserts that Stephen Goodhue, Jason Goodhue’s father, rejected an available placement in a letter dated September 9, 1995 to Carole R. Touzalin, Director of Clinical Services for Community Based Services, Inc. (CBS). Giuliano Aff. ¶¶5-6. In fact, the letter submitted was one, and certainly not the last, of a series of letters exchanged between Mr. Goodhue and Ms. Touzalin and others in the long-drawn-out process of arranging an appropriate new placement for Jason Goodhue. In the letter which the County now chooses to interpret as a rejection of an available placement, Mr. Goodhue, who observed that he had read an article that stated, ‘“[t]he group home system in the state of New York has, for the foreseeable future shut down,”’ told Ms. Touzalin that “it is in the best interest of our son, Jason, that he remain at the Melmark Home where he has resided for the past twenty-three years_” However, this was not the end of Mr. Goodhue’s correspondence with Ms. Touzalin nor did it represent the rejection of an available placement.

Plaintiffs have submitted a series of letters regarding CBS evaluation of Jason Goodhue and proposal of a placement for him in a CBS facility. The following chronological summary provides the context for the single statement to which the County now assigns such significance.

June 13, 1995 Ltr. from Touzalin to Mel-mark School official requesting information about Jason and asking Melmark to “inform the family so we can ascertain if they are interested in an alternate placement for Jason.” Pltf.Ex. 17.
June 23,1995 Ltr. from Goodhue to Touza-lin, requesting a meeting “to discuss your facilities, share with you Jason’s medical and personal history, and visit one or more of your group homes.” Pltf.Ex. 18.
June 28, 1995 Ltr. from Touzalin to Goo-dhue, describing “the possibility of opening an additional group home in Westchester County” that might “open up spaces in a few areas” so that “Jason might fit nicely into our group home into our group home ... [in] Buchanan, NY.” Ms. Touzalin also notes that CBS had “not received the final go ahead that would enable us to purchase property.” Pltf.Ex. 19.
July 25, 1995 Ltr. from Olveira (County Case Manager) to Goodhue belatedly notifying him of Jason’s referral to CBS that had been made in June. Pltf.Ex. 20.
September 9, 1995 Ltr. from Goodhue to Touzalin, expressing “decision that it is in the best interest of our son, Jason, that he remain at the Melmark Home where he has resided for the past twenty three years,” but also stating that he hopes to visit the CBS facility in Buchanan in October. Pltf.Ex.22.
September 25, 1995, Ltr. from Olveira to Goodhue, warning Goodhue that a refusal of a placement would mean that “transitional funding will not take over the financial responsibility of keeping Jason at Mel-mark Home.” Olveira also stated: “As far as this Department is concerned your son has been formally accepted into Community Based Services, and the bed will be available in the near future.” Pltf.Ex. 23. This latter statement by Olveira is astonishing: CBS had not yet reviewed Jason’s records nor, apparently, yet purchased the home that would become a new facility and, when occupied by existing CBS clients, create vacancies in existing facilities, one of which might be suitable for Jason Goodhue.
November 30, 1995 Ltr. from Touzalin to Goodhue, notifying him that Jason had been accepted for placement “sometime in 1996.” She also noted a meeting with Goodhue and his wife and invited them to see the facility “after the holidays.” She further noted interest in meeting Jason. Pltf.Ex. 24.
December 21, 1995 Ltr. from Goodhue to Touzalin, providing a contact for a CBS visit to Jason at Melmark Home and accepting an invitation to visit the Buchanan facility for which Goodhue notes the availability of placement is from six to nine months in the future. Pltf.Ex. 25. *997 January 19, 1996 Ltr.

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931 F. Supp. 993, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9178, 1996 WL 363139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westchester-advocates-for-disabled-adults-v-pataki-nyed-1996.