Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bankruptcy at an Illinois retirement community affects residents, families

- BY ROBERT MCCOPPIN

At age 88, World War II veteran Robert Kroll moved to Friendship Village of Schaumburg, Illinois, a retirement community where he would be taken care of until death, and so his children would get their inheritanc­e after he died.

He paid an entrance fee of $124,000, plus about $2,400 a month, to guarantee that he would always get housing and medical care even if he ran out of money, with the understand­ing that his family would get 90% of his remaining entrance fee after expenses upon his passing.

Kroll died in 2019, but his family still hasn’t gotten their money back. In June, Friendship Village, citing problems caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, in which officials say operations will continue as usual, but with some debts unpaid. A company has bid $115 million to buy the facility, but the bankruptcy proposal includes only $2 million to pay back families of former residents — about 10% of what is owed.

“Our family has been waiting for four years with no resolution,” Kroll’s daughter, Michelle Barnes, told the Tribune. “I wanted to share our story to help inform the public and put pressure on our politician­s to change the laws in Illinois that will protect seniors from this type of deception in the future.”

BETTER THAN NOTHING

Her dispute is over Friendship Village’s policy of only paying back entry fees upon the resale of a resident’s unit. The facility — the largest not-for-profit retirement community in Illinois, with 815 units — didn’t resell Kroll’s onebedroom unit, so hadn’t paid his family back.

Now that Friendship Village has entered bankruptcy, families of former residents are unlikely to ever receive full repayment, which Barnes and other families see as a betrayal of what they were promised.

Friendship Village officials say the contracts were clear about the arrangemen­t, which had worked well for decades since the retirement community opened in 1977.

“We never expected this to happen,” CEO Mike Flynn said.

Friendship Village provides a full continuum of care from independen­t living to assisted living and skilled nursing residences. It has a three out of five star overall rating from Medicare.gov, and residents and others the Tribune interviewe­d spoke highly of the staff and facilities there.

But in 2020, COVID-19 was particular­ly deadly for older victims, and prompted Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker to close general access to nursing facilities. That prevented Friendship Village from showing its units to new customers, and prevented the sale of what normally was a turnover of some 100 units a year. Some expenses increased while demand for nursing homes dropped.

The owner of Friendship Village, Evangelica­l Retirement Homes of Greater Chicago, estimated allowed claims by bondholder­s total almost $132 million, for current residents $78 million, and for former residents $20 million. But the bond debt is secured, meaning its repayment is backed by the collateral of the property itself.

The facility has more than 200 creditors, including dozens of residents and family members, many owed hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Because Friendship Village is deemed a not-forprofit business, it does not pay property taxes. It did pay $23 million in employee compensati­on in 2022, including $406,000 to its prior CEO, Stephen Yencheck. Bankruptcy attorney Bruce Dopke reported he’s been paid $350,000 for legal services, and would be paid for any additional costs. Before bankruptcy, the company had a prospectiv­e buyer, but the deal fell through.

The amount available to repay debtors depends on the amount offered by a buyer in auction. The highest bid was recently reported at $115 million by Encore Healthcare Services of New York.

“It would have been nice if somebody stepped up and honored the entrance fee refund,” Flynn said. “That didn’t happen, but at least they’re getting something.”

AT EQUAL RISK

Besides former residents like Kroll, current residents are also worried about their investment.

Ed and Toby Gordon, age 88 and 87, respective­ly, moved into Friendship Village in January, in part to be close to their daughter, Michelle Miller, and because they knew they would need more care. They paid more than $300,000 as an entrance fee, Miller said. Under the bankruptcy proposal, residents who die or leave would be repaid over about 16 years.

Miller is upset that her parents did not know about the facility’s dire financial situation.

“My parents should have known how bad those numbers were,” she said, “because they could have been renters instead.”

Residents are concerned that they won’t get the continuing care they expected and won’t get the refunds they were guaranteed. “A lot of people are just scared and don’t know what’s going to happen to them,” she said.

Friendship Village issued a statement reassuring residents that they will be taken care of.

Within the new ownership contract, the statement read, “there are provisions to take care of the current residents who entered the community under an entrance fee agreement for the rest of their lives, regardless of the level of care needed. There is also a benevolent fund that has been doubled by the new owner for those who run out of money through no fault of their own.”

In response to complaints even before the bankruptcy, state Rep. Michelle Mussman, a Democrat whose northwest suburban district includes Friendship Village, introduced a bill that would require repayment of entrance fees in order of those who leave, rather than upon resale of each individual’s unit.

But after getting pushback from the industry, Mussman is taking a step back and talking to stakeholde­rs. Chronologi­cal repayment may not be as fair to residents who paid for more desirable units that sell faster, and may impair the ability to care for residents still living there, Mussman said.

“It’s not perfect,” she said. “We’ve not been able to find the right combinatio­n that would work.”

Angela Schnepf, president and CEO of LeadingAge Illinois, which represents the senior care industry, said entrance fees are like an insurance policy. The community takes on the risk of caring for residents even if they run out of money, while residents carry the risk of not getting their fee back until their units sell.

She said some residents see the queue system as paying other residents when their own unit sells.

“If their neighbor gets their refund sooner just because they put their unit up for sale sooner, they find this very unfair,” Schnepf said.

If retirement communitie­s were forced to pay back before selling units, she said, it might put them at financial risk.

But under the current arrangemen­t, current and former residents are at risk because of the bankruptcy. A creditors’ committee continues to investigat­e the management of funds in the case.

 ?? STACEY WESCOTT/CHICAGO TRIBUNE/TNS ?? Michelle Barnes poses in her front yard on Oct. 26 in Schaumburg, Ill. Her father, World War II Navy veteran Robert Kroll, died in 2019, but Friendship Village hasn’t returned his deposit.
STACEY WESCOTT/CHICAGO TRIBUNE/TNS Michelle Barnes poses in her front yard on Oct. 26 in Schaumburg, Ill. Her father, World War II Navy veteran Robert Kroll, died in 2019, but Friendship Village hasn’t returned his deposit.

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