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A rare legal victory in aging Japan

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TOKYO — When her stay at the glamorous Grancreer residence turned into a nightmare of disrupted sleep and difficulti­es with the staff, retired harpist Yumi Makino opted out, and after a two-year legal battle got her deposit money back in a rare victory over a big real estate company.

Makino’s experience reflects the challenges faced by many older Japanese in finding suitable care and accommodat­ions in “superaging” Japan. Many assisted-living facilities demand hefty upfront payments on top of the usual rent and other fees — payments that are customary in Japan although they’ve been banned in other wealthy nations.

A resident who gets fed up usually has no option but to forfeit the money. But Makino, a 66-year-old widow, fought on and eventually got all $113,000 of her money back.

There are no official data, but the National Consumer Affairs Center of Japan, a government-backed agency, reports growing problems with residents of assisted living facilities who decide to leave but have a hard time getting those big onetime payments back.

“The reasons for such payments have always been unclear,” said Kosei Ogawa, Makino’s lawyer. “It serves as an expression of gratitude.”

Makino says she was unhappy with how staff at Grancreer treated her. But the strongest factor behind her win was a malfunctio­ning emergency alarm that kept going off at night, disturbing her rest. The management of Grancreer refused to fix it despite repeated requests, dismissing her as senile, she said.

“Why do we have to be treated as inferior when we are paying all this money?” said Makino, who spent much of her career on the move, including stays in Colombia and Mexico. “The appearance may be that of a gorgeous hotel, but the staff’s behavior was low grade.”

Tokyu Land Corp., which runs Grancreer and other similar facilities around Tokyo, refused to comment.

Five million of Japan’s 35 million people 65 and older are estimated to live in special-care facilities, according to the health ministry. Given the shrinking size of families as the birthrate declines, the need for group homes, hospices and assisted living accommodat­ions is skyrocketi­ng.

Shigenobu Ueoka, a consultant who advises families about nursing homes, says most facilities tend to focus more on pleasing government bureaucrat­s, who dole out aid, than about satisfying their customers.

Monitoring of quality and safety tends to be inadequate, with the worst facilities charging residents for food and adult diapers on top of regular fees, or restrictin­g family members’ visits as a nuisance, said Ueoka, who has visited hundreds of homes in Japan, and dozens in Europe and the United States.

He says the system’s troubles are partly related to Japan’s relatively generous support for its elderly, which limits the burden for those qualifying for government help to only 10-20 percent of the total costs. The rest is covered by the government, with the level of aid depending on an individual’s health and income.

Typically, a resident might pay $470 out of the total $3,700 monthly cost for food, housing and care.

Facilities with a good reputation aren’t cheap. “The best homes never have to advertise,” and they have long waiting lists, Ueoka said.

Makino’s win over Tokyu Land Corp. was the equivalent of an out-of-court settlement in the West.

The onetime insurancel­ike payment that she managed to get back, called an ichijikin, is standard in Japan — renters often have to pay a similar fee, called a reikin, for a new or renewed lease. Such onerous payments are honorarium­s of sorts that symbolize an expression of gratitude toward one’s higher-ups.

The government is phasing out such payments, but many places still demand them.

Still physically active and busy with her hobbies of knitting and Western-style calligraph­y, Makino opted to move back into an apartment. Many older Japanese stay in their own homes well into their 80s, getting relatively generous, government-subsidized help with cleaning, cooking and deliveries.

Makino’s solution was to sign up for daily lunch deliveries from a nearby convenienc­e store, not because she needs the lunch, she said, but to minimize the risk of dying alone and being found weeks later — a common and realistic concern among many who live alone. For dinner, to save trouble, she just has chocolate.

She has no children but adopted a huge black and white stray cat for company. She says she’s enjoying her peaceful life, but sort of misses her legal battle.

“It was fun,” Makino said. “How to pass your time is the biggest challenge of growing old.”

 ?? YURI KAGEYAMA/AP ?? Retired harpist Yumi Makino won a two-year legal battle to get her nursing home deposit back from Tokyu Land Corp.
YURI KAGEYAMA/AP Retired harpist Yumi Makino won a two-year legal battle to get her nursing home deposit back from Tokyu Land Corp.

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