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Boarding Homes

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Re “Boarding Home Abductions on the Rise,” Sept. 19:

The recent abductions provide a glimpse at a larger problem. Elderly and disabled persons are being abandoned in unlicensed “boarding homes,” which provide nothing more than meals and beds. At best, the boarding homes’ operators are untrained; at worst, as in this instance, the operators are capable of armed kidnapping.

If a facility houses elderly or disabled persons in need of care or supervision, the facility is required by law to have a board-and-care license. Unfortunately, unscrupulous operators ignore the law with little fear of ever being fined, prosecuted, or even pressured. The California Department of Social Services has little leverage--the department cannot revoke the license of a facility that has no license to begin with. Operation of an unlicensed facility is a misdemeanor, but potential cases generally are not pursued or prosecuted.

Abuses will continue until state and local prosecutors and the public put pressure on the shadowy operations of unlicensed facilities.

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ERIC CARLSON, Director

Nursing Home Advocacy Project

Bet Tzedek Legal Services

Los Angeles

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