Wednesday, August 10, 2022

Aug 10, 2022 ride around the new home.

 I was out on my Bike today, did a 12 mile trip in and around northern GR and Comstock park. Went by the vets home.  Not one veteran was seen outside, walking about the new home.  This was about 1.30pm. 

Went over to the duckpond landing. Wow, the water level is low.  The gate to the water fall down to the grotto can be seen very clearly thru the overgrowth.  
Top photo: Creek under the bridge.. water level is so low behind it, nothing is flowing thru it. 

Middle photo: The fountain.

Bottom photo: Waterfall gate at the old railroad bridge, where the water falls down into the grotto. 







Thursday, July 14, 2022

Construction firm responsible for new Vets home named one of the top 100 companies in nation?!

 https://grbj.com/news/construction/construction-firm-ranks-among-best-in-nation/

So let me get this correct. The company that built the new Veterans home in Grand Rapids that failed inspection twice, that was not completed on time, was named one of the best in the nation?

Ok, who is paying off who here? 

We already reported several problems with the new home here, on this blog. So how did this firm get named one of the top 100 in the entire country? Something here is not adding up. 


Wednesday, June 29, 2022

It's Empty now. No more Grand Rapids Home for Veterans.

I stopped in last week to drop off some stuff for one of the veterans. I was told the old GRH4V buildings were now empty of residents.

Anyone remaining there has been moved to the new building, which is part of the Michigan Veterans Homes. New name, same old poor service to the veterans.  Most of the guys I talked to do not like the new building as there are too many things wrong with it, that have not been properly corrected. 

And all but 2 told me the new home is nothing more than a fancy place to go to die. 

No one seems to know what they are going to do with the remaining 2 older buildings.  Or that multi million dollar fiasco awning over its main entrance. Maintenance crew has been reduced, as well as grounds crew.  Not even sure if the Duck Pond or fishing pond, or Grotto is even being used anymore. The place is starting to look a bit dilapidated.  

No more carnival, no more cozy corners, nor more anything. Soon the entire place will be a forgotten memory just like this blog. 

This is the last post here. I see no reason to carry on posting about that place.  It will remain as a monument of shame for the way we the people of Michigan have treated our veterans. And perhaps that too is best forgotten. 


Monday, May 23, 2022

15 years, millions of dollars spent, are our veterans better cared for than before?

This is an end of an era and the beginning of a new one after millions of dollars were spent, with millions still unaccounted for and Michigan is still near the bottom of the list for taking care of its veterans compared to 49 other states and 2 federal zones. 

What did this accomplish, and was it a success or a failure? I guess that depends on your point of view as to what the goal was. 

If the goal was to get better treatment for the limited number of veterans the state cares for, then in some ways the answer might be yes, but that can be argued that the answer is clearly no.  While the state did chose a new model to use, it only adopted part of that model. The state is still trying to run its veterans homes as a for profit business instead of a non profit business and that can create a lot of problems for the veterans themselves. Using contract labor instead of full time state workers is that problem. 

This means caregivers at a given location can change every day, and that is not good for some of the veterans who need consistency in their care. They need to feel safe and comfortable with their caregivers. And after working with their charges, caregivers learn what each veterans needs are and thus can provide better long term care. You cannot get that result when new people are being rotated in every other day or every other week. 

If the goal of changing the model of how Michigan takes care of its veterans was to provide proper care for existing veterans and more veterans, then answer is clearly no. It is a failure. 

600,060,000 or so thousand veterans live in Michigan. WWII and Korean war vets, Vietnam vets, Cold war Vets, peacetime vets, Desert shield, Desert Storm, and Afghanistan veterans  are passing on to the next reality every day, so the number constantly fluctuates. Many are taking their own lives rather than live with their problems that no one is helping them with. 

And still today, the state cannot or does not provide any care for more than 1,000 of them.  

In 2010 when Frank Sanarski had to leave his post of administrator of the home due to health reasons, the politicians took over and really messed things up. Instead of getting a qualified administrator to take his place, they promoted an unqualified person to the position, which was supposed to be temporarily until they could find a properly qualified person to do the job.  They promoted the head of kitchens, Sara D to the position. 

A search was made for qualified people, and several were found but the politicians in Lansing (the capital), played games, and violated Michigan's laws, and kept her in the position longer than she was allowed to be there. Then in 2012, she got her certification and the job became permanent over objections of many representatives in Lansing.  And things got very very bad at the home under her administration. This was in part due to the fact that even with her certification, she was not the best person for the job.  And the other part was the politicians in Lansing trying to micromanage everything at the home. Some of those people were out right political monsters that played dirty, and our veterans suffered because of it. 

It started under Democrat governor Jenny Granholm. 2009 Dec Governor Granholm signs into law, no smoking in state owned buildings. At the time Vets had special smoking rooms to use. They were supposed to get an exemption to the law but Granholm refused to sign it. The result was veterans who smoked, including those disabled and in wheelchairs had to go outside in the middle of winter with no place to go to get out of the weather.  This caused many deaths at the home, among other problems. This cruel situation was addressed 2 years later in a haphazard way that was better than nothing. 

Under the administration of Sara D, residents became afraid to speak up, as they noticed that those who did, found themselves kicked out of the home. Many of them had nowhere else to go, and ended up on the streets where they died. We lost quite a few to that. The residents were living in fear.  So in 2010, 3 guys who had lived in the Domiciliary unit, started a blog page about what was happening at the home so people could learn what was going on. They started reporting on things the administration did not want people to know. This blog, is the one they started and have run all this time.

2012 Feb, A Michigan State Job posting for administrator level 18 (the job Sara has held for over 18 months, a full year longer than allowed by Michigan law), is posted all over the home in several locations.

2012 March legislature introduces bill for Ombudsman for the veterans. It takes them another year or more to get it signed into law, and even then veterans are still hesitant to speak with the ombudsman out of fear of reprisals from the administration. 

In March 2013 a new Michigan Veterans Affairs Agency is created with the goal of qualifying Michigan for federal tax money to help them with the states Veterans. at that time, Michigan was dead last, 52 out of 52 Federal sections, which include 50 states and Guam and Puerto Rico. It did manage to do achieve its goal to some extent, but due to interference and lack of cooperation by legislators, the agency was not able to fulfill its mission properly and completely

In 2013 May, at a  Board of managers meeting,  Former Congressman and then MVAA representative Jim Dunn is reported as saying "If they do not like it, they can leave", in response to a group of residents calling themselves"Veterans for Justice" concerns over the treatment of Veterans at the home.

This bad attitude of “You don’t have to be here” and “you don’t like it, leave” was very, very, common among administrators and Pubic Employees in MVAA towards veterans. The problem was most vets had nowhere else to go. And GRH4V had a habit of tossing vets to the street where they died.  This is why some residents decided to form a group and dare speak up for those who could not. The founder of the group Jerry L., was later kicked out of the home for preventing a resident from killing another resident. Jerry L. was also one of the residents who went to Lansing to testify to the state congress committee about the conditions at the home. 

In May 2013, the Federal government also started investigating what was going on at the home. 

Going to skip forward 3 years.

In 2016, Residents and former residents went to lansing to testify to the state legislature. Then the government did something it has done only once before in our states history - they held a session outside of the capital. They held 1 session at each of the two veterans homes that Michigan runs. The Grand Rapids home for Veterans and the John Jacobetti home in Marquette. This only the 2nd time in our state history this happened. 

Many changes came from this. Some good, some not so good. 


Michigan decided to follow the Model of Tennessee, and found that having 1 big location for most of michigan with a 2nd home in the upper peninsula, just depended too heavily on local resources for the Grand Rapids home. This also meant that the home had to compete with the 3 big local hospitals for qualified workers. And this resulted in qualified worker shortages. 

This model also meant that people whose families lived on the other side of the state had to drive for hours to visit their veterans. 

So, the Tennessee model had 5 smaller homes located in various parts of the state, each one drawing on local resources, and not overwhelming their locations. And Michigan thought that was a good idea - and it is. Each of the Homes were divided up into 4 "pods" or "neighborhoods" type units with 25 or so residents in each one, all connected to a central building. Each Pod had its own eating area, its own common room (like a living room in a house) and the main center building was the visitor center and held the staff offices and such.  Great idea! 

Now where to put them.. A new home for the Grand Rapids area.. One near Detroit.. So they built one in Chesterfield, just west of Detroit 

Now there is talk of adding a 2nd one just north of detroit. This one, in my humble opinion is not needed as the Federal VA already runs a veterans home in downtown Detroit.

They were talking about putting one up in the thumb area, in the Flint/Saginaw/Bay City area, and one somewhere by Cadillac to cover the upper west side of the lower peninsula including Traverse City.  

And of course the one in Marquette would be rebuilt and upgraded to modern standards.

So they began on the Grand Rapids one first. But where to put it. Instead of taking down the existing builds and putting the new one where they are now, they took down the Rankin building and half the support area. They wiped out the picnic area and the old growth forest there. They had to leave the old Train Station in place because its an historical building. And they put the home between the old VA clinic, wrapping it around the train station, and down along the access road between Lamberton Creek and where the old Rankin building once stood.  And when it was finished, it failed inspection. Another year goes by and they finally get it done and residents are moving into it from the older buildings, but there are still problems with it.  

During the construction, they reduced the Grand Rapids home for Veterans population from about 750 down to about 150. And they slowly eliminated the domiciliary unit.

There is also another major difference between the Michigan and Tennessee homes. The Tennessee homes are ran as non profit entities. Veterans do not go without, and the homes are staffed by volunteers, with minimal paid state employees to run them. 

Michigan will run its homes as a for profit business. Administrative and grounds and maintenance personnel will be state employees, while many in the nursing and caregiving staff will be contract employees. 

This means they will charge exorbitant fees for a veteran to live there. This is not taking care of our veterans. 

So what has this all accomplished? Yes the 1,000 or so veterans the state once took care of, are now spread out across the state. We have 3 homes now actively housing veterans. 3 out of 5.  Two more are yet to be built. Will they do this? And at what cost? 

Are our veterans now better off than they were in 2009 when this whole nightmare started? I think the answer is clearly no!  While they have a new building to move into and now 3 locations to choose from, the fact remains the Administration of these homes is still way under performing.  The board of managers that ran the GR for Vets home has been or will be disbanded. A new bureaucracy will replace it, that will run the new Veterans homes with a new name. Michigan Veterans Homes.  All of them were and are being ran as a for profit business.  And under the new system the state will still be limited to less than 700 people in 5 homes, with a population of about 125 at each location, which is less than the number of people at the GR home, and does not count those at the Marquette facility. So after spending all that money, Michigan will still be caring for fewer vets, than beforeAnd there have been at least 3 different administrators at the GR home since Frank Sanarski left in 2010. This is not a good sign of things to come in the future.

And the new home is still highly restrictive to veterans and visitors. Some people have called it a "fancy warehouse for veterans to go to, to die".  WOW!, Even I have trouble agreeing with that one, as it seems a bit too extreme. But I do wonder if the quality of life will be better for the veterans at the new building. 

I stopped by there the other day and talked to a few residents who were outside the main entrance. According to them, there are still issues at the new home. Something to do with the shower drains being installed too high, and the water not being able to drain properly. One said the drinking water smells and tastes like something ran thru a toilet so the residents living there will not drink it.

The new home was built without sufficient staff space.  So now when they have to have a meeting, the staff has to take over the visitors area, which doubles as a day area where bingos are held, and thus residents and guests are unable to use the area at those times. 

Also, all that construction around the old train station seems to have disturbed the ground around its foundation and they found the walls in the basement of it are starting to cave in. Apparently the cost to restore it far exceeds its historic value and it may end up being demolished despite its being historic, and after all the effort not to do so when they built the new place. Now this is ironic as many said they never should have built in that location in the first place, and instead should have taken down the entire existing buildings and put the new one were the current one is. 

Also, there are 4 employees for every resident at the home now. Drive over there. Very little room for visitor parking. 

After 15 years, millions of dollars spent, and thousands of hours of talking heads spewing about what to do, how to do it, and where to do it, I think the outcome is very clear. Michigan is not capable of taking proper care of its veterans. 

So after all this the final question needs to be asked. Will Michigan remain at the bottom of the list for taking care of its veterans? If the last 15 years is any example, then I do believe  the answer is yes.  


Shame on us. 



Friday, April 22, 2022

Well, kind of an update?

April 2022.  Really not much to post. 


The home is still pretty much in lock down for the most part, to outside visitors. Those that do go there have to go thru a bunch of garbage just to be able to visit their family members.

It appears to be still closed to the general public. 

It is almost as bad as the Prison ran by a former administration under Sara Dunn. 

I am being told most of the remaining veterans are being slowly moved over to the new building and that this move should be completed by the end of this month, with just a few people remaining in the Domiciliary unit located in the main building of the old complex. You know, the one with the multi million dollar awning that doesn't even do what the new one was supposed to do? 

Well when the move is complete, and the place has finally settle down, and the last Dom unit person has either been moved to the new building, left the facility, or died off, it will probably be the end of this blog. 

10 years trying to get MICHIGAN to un-ass its head and start taking proper care of our veterans has been a dismal failure. We are still almost dead last out of 52 regions.  Millions of dollars spent. Some think wasted. And the place has become nothing more than a warehouse for dying people.  Shame on us all for allowing this to happen. 



Saturday, February 12, 2022

Time to replace the Jacobetti home in Marquette?

Interesting article posted recently. It has a feel of Dejavu to it. We have heard this before.  In fact I have been hearing it since 2012.  Yes the Grand Rapids Model was a failure, in part because of Michigan Politics and the congress's poor management of our states Veteran system which left Michigan in dead last place, 52 out of 52 regions, for taking care of our veterans. This resulted in an administration that was also totally mismanaged by unqualified people with little or no accountability or oversight being applied by the state legislature. Millions of dollars were lost and are still yet unaccounted for, among other problems that administration had.  The result was a call for a total overhaul of our veterans system. And today we are still in 52nd place out of 52 regions. This is the 50 states and Guam and Puerto Rico. 

And they still did not do it right. It was decided to follow the model of Tennessee, and move from 2 main facilities to smaller local ones, spread out throughout the state.  A new management team to oversee the new model as well. Lots of money being spent. BUT was it spent wisely? 

The Tennessee model is NON PROFIT. Michigan's model is FOR profit, and it shows. Anybody want to guess how much they are charging veterans per month to be at the Grand Rapids location? Better get out the Zeros, because it's over 10,000 a month. 

Again with the new Veterans homes, poor management is resulting in delays and other problems. First, the Grand Rapids home resulted in one of the few remaining old growth forest areas being eliminated. The new "home" was built at the cost of millions of dollars, and is still not yet fully certified to have residents. Only one quarter of it has passed state inspections. They had a grand opening this last year, and here we are months later and it is still not fully functional. How much more is it going to cost taxpayers before they get it right? 

They did manage to build a second home in Chesterfield, at a former military base. This place is located North East of Detroit on the edge of Lake Saint Clare and the Saint Clare River which separates Michigan from Canada.  Not getting many reports as to how well it is doing or if they are fully functional yet. 

Sens. Ed McBroom and Adam Hollier are proposing a generational investment in veterans with the construction of a new veterans home in Detroit and the replacement of the D.J. Jacobetti Home for Veterans in Marquette.

“Plans for both of these projects have been years in the making, and their construction was proposed by the 2016 Veterans Workgroup as a way to increase and improve the care our military veterans have earned through their service,” said McBroom, R-Waucedah Township. “The Michigan Veteran Facility Authority Board has included both of these projects as priorities since 2016 and now is the time to follow through.”

The Veterans Workgroup was created to address the shortfalls of the Grand Rapids Home for Veterans, with the establishment of the Michigan Veteran Facility Authority Board resulting from its recommendations. Since then, the authority board has overseen the construction of several facilities that now comply with federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services regulations, thus helping obtain essential funding to provide care to the state’s veterans.

“Wayne County has the state’s largest community of veterans and they deserve to have a facility near the Dingell VA,” Hollier said. 

Ok so let me understand this correctly. They have one new facility in chesterfield which is just north of Detroit and now they want a 2nd one IN Detroit?   They want it near the VA facility? Doesn't the federal VA already run a veterans home next to their VA facility in downtown Detroit? I am told they do. 

I understand the need to do something with the Jacobetti home in Marquette, but do we need another home in Detroit when we we still have a region not being served in Michigan's North west, or in the upper part of the lower peninsula?  Maybe that is where the other home should be built before we put another home in the Detroit area. 




Here is a link to the article: 

Senators call for Jacobetti home replacement, new home in detroit.

Thursday, January 27, 2022

14,000+ a MONTH to be at Grand Rapids Home for Veterans?

This has to be someone's idea of a sick joke. But I just got a call from an elderly lady who cannot care for her husband anymore. He is on dialysis 3 times a week, and pretty much is bed ridden.  He is currently in hospital recovering from a fall, and his wife is no longer able to care for him, so she looked at putting him in the veterans home.

She about fell over when she was told it would cost him over 14,000 a MONTH to be at the home.  

Well that should not surprise us when they run it as a FOR PROFIT institution. Heck back in 2010 they were charging Domiciliary guys nearly 7,500 a month, and that was the cheapest rate they had. Nursing unit guys got charged a LOT more. 

THIS is why Michigan is dead last of 52 regions for taking care of its veterans. 

Tuesday, January 25, 2022

2022 more of the same ole, same ole failures at the Veterans homes in Grand Rapids Michigan.

 Wow. This is depressing.  By this time I was hoping to be able to post some good news about these 2 places. I had high hopes. But once again the Michigan Legislature and their appointees have disappointed us. Oh we got them (the state congress) to get off their lazy butts and "Do something" about a situation that had become so bad, it was fast becoming a national embarrassment for the state. By that I mean the Grand Rapids Home for Veterans operational situation under the Cronyism administration of their puppet Sara Dunn.  

This forced the state to re-think how it cares for its veterans. At the time, Michigan was 52 out of 52 regions. Yes, 52. Guam and Puerto Rico did better than Michigan and we were dead last.

Today we still are. The state decided to go with a new model, and choose the model that the State of Tennessee used, but with a twist. Tennessee homes are NON PROFIT. The Michigan homes are FOR PROFIT.  That is correct. The State wants to make money from our Veterans. Now I don't know about you, but I call that NOT meeting its federal obligations to our Vets. 

So what did the state do? It decided to move from having 1 big home and one small home in the Upper Peninsula, to having 5 smaller homes scattered throughout the state, near major cities so that each home could draw on the resources from those areas, and so residents could be closer to their families. 

To do this, the old home at Grand Rapids would be eventually eliminated. A new home would be built. The old home held over 750 residents at one time, the new home about 125 or so. 

They began by destroying part of an old growth forest on the property, eliminating the picnic and band stand area, and removing the oldest wing of the G.R. Home. The historical building in the shape of a V for Veterans, the Rankin building was removed and the new Tennessee idea home was built on that spot.  And at the same time they slowly reduced the population at the remaining part of the old G.R. Home. Population there is now about 150 or so people. Yet I keep getting report that they have 400 staff working there to care for these 150 or so people!  How many does it take?! 

The Corona virus epidemic hit and the residents were placed in house arrest and the place was closed to the public and visitors including family member for a very long time. Many residents were forced into room restriction and not allowed to leave their rooms except on days when they had to take a shower or had doctors appointments outside the Vets home. And its been 2 years now under these conditions.

At the same time the construction of the new home began and the legislature had 2 different administrations operating at this location. The old administration running the old home and the new administration running the new home and the 2nd site being constructed over in Chesterfield Michigan. 

The Chesterfield site was completed first and from what I am being told, is now being used by veterans. It passed inspections and is fully functional, however I do not have validated proof of that claim. 

I do know that the Grand Rapids new home was completed, and it has FAILED inspection a number of times. Only 1/4th of it is usable at this time. So the States failures to complete this project is continuing. Oh they had the dedication and grand opening of the new G.R. home in September of 2021. That was 5 months ago!

But that grand opening is like having a grand opening for your new bathroom compared to the whole house.  And this one cost Michigan taxpayers MILLIONS of dollars. 

The Grand Rapids location is still in simi lockdown. The new building is still being fixed. And Michigan is still in last place for taking care of its Veterans.  

The only thing that has changed is the names and the people and the ever increasing costs and tax burden on the people of Michigan due to poor performance by our public employees. 

I was hoping to be able to give a better report on things. I was hoping I could post about the mass improvements and how much better it was for veterans. Sadly, I cannot. 

But even now, history of the past is fading from the minds of the general public. Out of sight, out of mind, no media coverage on the continuing problems at this location will cause people to forget what has happened here in the last 10 years. The only ones who will know will be those of us that were involved with it, that were affected by it, and those memories will haunt some of us for the rest of our lives.

Our veterans deserve better.