The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Brindisi calls for federal probe into neglect case

- By DAVID KLEPPER

A recent Associated Press story revealed a case of a man infested with maggots in a state-run home.

ALBANY, N.Y. » A New York state lawmaker is demanding a federal investigat­ion into New York state’s care for the disabled following a recent Associated Press story that revealed the case of a man infested with maggots in a state-run group home.

Democratic Assemblyma­n Anthony Brindisi, of Utica, told the AP on Saturday that he is asking the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to investigat­e the group home and other state-regulated facilities for the disabled where there have been allegation­s of abuse and neglect.

“It’s clear from seeing this that New York state cannot be relied on to police itself,” he said. “When you have thousands of cases (of abuse and neglect) happening across the state — this being one of the most egregious —

wemust give some reassuranc­e to families that their loved ones are being taken care of.”

The call for a federal probe comes after the AP published a story Thursday showing that it’s often easier to find health and safety informatio­n for local restaurant­s than it is to learn about conditions at facilities serving approximat­ely 1 million of the state’s most vulnerable residents.

Forty- one-year- old Steven Wenger was twice found to have maggots crawling around his breathing tube in a state-owned and -operated small group home in Rome, New York, last summer. Wenger cannot walk, talk or feed himself after suffering severe brain trauma in a 1991 car crash.

A state investigat­ion concluded that the infestatio­n was the result of neglect and that caregivers failed to properly clean the site of Wenger’s breathing tube. Yet no caregivers were discipline­d and the report on the case wasmade confidenti­al. The agency in charge of the facility says it did increase training for staff. Wenger is now being cared for in a different facility.

A copy of the report was obtained by The Associated Press, which found that New York state is not alone in making it difficult for members of the public to access records about allegation­s of abuse and neglect in state-regulated facilities for the disabled. In New York, the Justice Center is tasked with investigat­ing cases related to the care of approximat­ely 1 million New Yorkers.

Brindisi said he sought details about Wenger’s case earlier this year after the man’s father contacted him with concerns about his son’s care. He said officials at the Justice Center told him that the case was closed and that Wenger’s father was satisfied with the results — something that wasn’t the case.

“There has to be more transparen­cy by the Justice Center,” he said.

A spokesman for the agency did not immediatel­y respond Saturday afternoon to a message seeking comment on Brindisi’s call for an investigat­ion.

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 ?? AP PHOTO/DAVID KLEPPER ?? In this April 18, 2017, photo, Walter Wenger visits his severely disabled son, Steven, in a hospital in Kingston, N.Y., where he was moved after maggots were twice found in the area around his breathing tube while living in a state group home.
AP PHOTO/DAVID KLEPPER In this April 18, 2017, photo, Walter Wenger visits his severely disabled son, Steven, in a hospital in Kingston, N.Y., where he was moved after maggots were twice found in the area around his breathing tube while living in a state group home.

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