New York Post

Hell-evator trap

Spent ‘four nights’ encased at shelter

- By JULIA MARSH, NOLAN HICKS and BRUCE GOLDING Additional reporting by Craig McCarthy, Jack Morphet and Bernadette Hogan

A broken elevator at a troubled Manhattan homeless shelter run by disgraced ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s sister trapped a man inside for as many as four nights before he was finally rescued by the FDNY, The Post has learned.

The outrageous incident took place at the HELP Meyer Mental Health Shelter on Wards Island, where the city pays more than $5,300 a month each to house 200 single men in 95 dorm-style rooms.

The shelter is one of 24 operated by HELP USA, a nonprofit organizati­on that grew out of one founded by Cuomo in 1986 and which has been headed by his sister, Maria Cuomo Cole, since 1993. HELP USA has a fiveyear, $63.7 million contract with the city Department of Homeless

Services to manage HELP Meyer through June 2023, according to informatio­n posted on the city comptrolle­r’s Web site.

The trapped man became severely dehydrated during his ordeal, sources said, and the FDNY said he was taken to Harlem Hospital in serious but not lifethreat­ening condition after he was finally freed at around 10 a.m. Sunday. The FDNY said he spent “some time” waiting for help to arrive and sources said it may have included four nights.

Department of Buildings records show that since 2018, shelter residents have filed at least four complaints — and as many as 11 — about the elevators in the state-owned facility that houses HELP Meyer on its sixth, seventh and eighth floors.

A shelter resident, Horace Clay, 45, said he’s been forced to wait hours for an elevator so he can leave the sixth floor where he lives.

“I have osteoarthr­itis in my hips and I have always had issues with these elevators, which is a safety issue for me. I cannot do the stairs,” Clay said. “You can call 311, make all the complaints you want, but they don’t get things done here.”

A HELP USA spokesman blamed the situation on the state Office of Mental Health, saying the state agency — which leases the space for the shelter — was “responsibl­e for elevator maintenanc­e” and answering distress calls.

The OMH said it was “not advised that the maintenanc­e company was servicing the elevator (pictured) or taking it off-line on the date in question” but declined to elaborate.

In 2019, the Web site The City revealed heat and water problems at Meyer and the Curbed Web site in August quoted residents who complained about a lack of ventilatio­n, with one calling it “the most depressing place you could ever be.”

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