Quantcast

Peyser: Putting Mental Patients in Their Own Apts is Crazy

03012010book.jpg

In this city of crazies, lots of people joked that a judge’s ruling to release mental patients from group homes and allow them to live in their own apartments was nothing special. But not Post columnist Andrea Peyser, who calls the decision (cue eye-roll) "insanity." Peyser opines that the move will strengthen “the army of the damned,” leading to more incidents like a 2005 stabbing by an unsupervised mental patient who went off his meds and attacked a baby. She also accuses the judge who made the ruling, Nicholas Garaufis, of a potential conflict of interest.

Judge Garaufis—the same who ruled in favor of minorities in several cases concerning racism in the FDNY—is married to a board member at the Fountain House, an institution that according to Peyser, “supplies the very "supported" housing units to the city that the judge so loves.” Garaufis says he disclosed that information back in 2007, and no one objected. The columnist says he declined further comment.

Peyser also suggests the mental patients will be pressured into accepting supported living, when they're not really ready to care for themselves. To back up the proposition, she turns to the owner of Wavecrest, one of the for-profit group homes that will likely lose residents as a result of the ruling: "Basically, the judge gave [supported living providers] the authority to harass these residents until they say yes," he says.

Despite a series of Times articles that exposed terrible, "warehouse-like" conditions in many group homes, Peyser thinks Garaufis's ruling is a step backward for the mentally ill. “Group homes are not perfect, but they're not the hell pits of yesteryear. They are the kindest solution for those who need help,” she says. And just wait until these newly-released patients find their way over to Peyer's hated Times Square pedestrian plazas!

Contact the author of this article or email tips@gothamist.com with further questions, comments or tips.

Comments [rss]

  • jaycjay

    Why are Peyser's insane/inane rants being repeated here?



    Sheesh, hire someone to write an opinion column if you want to publish opinion pieces. Don't just repeat her idiocy. Anyone of the couple of dozen people who care what Andrea Peyser thinks about anything knows that it can be found in the Post.

  • wow 14th street

    It's the undiagnosed that worry me but

    they are in my building already.

  • FelixtheCat & Christine Quinn'

    Yet they permit crazy people to write for the post.

  • FelixtheCat & Christine Quinn'

    Yet they permit crazy people to write to the post.

  • ANGRYGOD11

    Post columnist Andrea Peyser is playing the fear card the Post loves to use to boost sales. None of the people in question are violent nor currently confined in any way. To lump all of the mentally ill as violent crazies who will stab people in the streets is beneath even her.

  • Group homes are supposed to be a step. They are not supposed to live there forever. There are specific group homes for those who are mentally ill. They teach them how to shop, keep their place clean, go to the program etc. Meanwhile, they are watched for how they interact with their meds. These places are vital to then helping them find an apartment for themselves and for creating a self sufficient person. Are they removing them from these? If so, I am worried for all of us! This is necessary!

  • ides_of_march

    And putting them into elected office is even crazier.

  • MrManhattan

    Only a little less so than giving them a column in the "Post"!

  • inoyourider

    Different people need different types of care.

    I think for some a group home is a good idea.

    For others maybe not.

    Its a shame this seems like a money making ploy for the judges wife.

blog comments powered by Disqus

send a tip

tips@gothamist.com