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Monday, December 8, 2014

Advocates for Adults with Developmental Disabilities Needed Now More Than Ever



Take a minute and picture yourself at twenty-seven.

Chances are you’re thinking about things like the job you held at that age; maybe it was your first “real” job, and you soldiered through the endless grunt work just to get to Friday happy hours with coworkers.

Maybe you had your first apartment, and spent half the time contemplating that the exorbitantly high rent should at least ensure the heat worked properly. Or maybe you got married at twenty-seven, like I did. Perhaps you already had kids.

Whatever your situation, by the time you were twenty-seven your life had been determined by a series of decisions you made for yourself. However, there is a whole population of people who do not get to make those decisions for themselves. And those people need us now more than ever.

My sister Christine is twenty-seven, autistic, and intellectually disabled. As a result, she is unable to live independently. None of the scenarios presented above will ever be available to her. She lives with my parents, who are both sixty-one. My mother is a teacher and my father is retired from the postal service. He has a part-time job as a church sacristan. They are both still full-time parents.

Each weekday Christine gets picked up by a bus from Smart Pick and travels to HeartShare, where she participates in an adult day program. There she has the opportunity to learn life skills as well as partake in recreational activities. HeartShare is a wonderful program, and Christine seems very happy there. However, the decision to spend her week there wasn’t made by her; it was made by my parents, after countless hours of research, discussions, and visits to many different dayhab centers.

The fact that adults with developmental disabilities are not able to advocate or make decisions for themselves unfortunately often results in people treating them without the dignity they deserve. This devastating reality culminated for my parents and sister this past Wednesday night.

As I do on most Wednesdays, I went to my parents’ house after work for dinner. At around 3:30 we sat down on the porch to wait for Christine’s bus, expecting her to arrive home within the half hour.

As we chatted about our respective weeks, my mother and I realized the time was now approaching 4:30 and Christine still wasn’t home. A half hour late seemed cause for concern. “If she’s not home within the next fifteen minutes I’m calling the bus company,” my mother decided.

Fifteen minutes later she was on the phone with Joanne from Smart Pick, who claimed the bus had left the program almost an hour late because they had been waiting on an inspector’s visit. Additionally, there was a substitute driver that day. “We ask that you please be patient,” Joanne said. “The substitute drivers do the best they can since they don’t know the routes.”

My mother reminded Joanne that she was being patient, since the bus was already an hour late. And why hadn’t anyone from the company called if they knew the bus had been held up?

“We weren’t aware of the situation until now,” replied Joanne, who seemed to have a convenient excuse at her fingertips for every question tossed her way. “You’re the first parent who’s called us.”

My mother hung up, dissatisfied with Joanne’s dubious explanation. “If the bus had really left that late, HeartShare would have called. They always do. You can bet I’ll be asking them tomorrow if that was true.”

Spoiler alert: It wasn’t, and that turned out to be the first lie of many that Smart Pick fed my parents over the course of the next four hours. My mother called again a half hour later. This time patience wasn’t in the cards. She demanded to know the bus’s current location. “Main Street and 86th,” she was told. “They have three or four stops left to make.” A half hour after that? “Jamaica and Van Wyck, two or three more stops.”

So that would mean that, in a half hour, the bus traveled approximately a half mile and dropped off one person, if that. At this point my mother was becoming visibly upset. How were we supposed to believe anything they told us? The bus, and our Christine, could have been anywhere. And the company seemed to be making up whatever stories they thought would get us to stop calling.

At 7:00 my father, who had now taken over phone call duty, was told the bus was on Woodhaven Boulevard and had three more stops to make, despite the fact that we had been told two hours prior that it had “three or four more.” Woodhaven Boulevard is five blocks away from us, and the other two stops—one on Eldert Lane and one on 79 Street—would actually take the bus past my parents’ house, meaning it would then have to backtrack to bring my sister home. My father tried explaining this to Joanne, but we figured at least the bus was in Woodhaven and it wouldn’t be long until she arrived.

At 7:30 my father called the Interagency Transportation System (IATS), a state agency that oversees independent bus companies.  Rachel from IATS told us that the bus was heading to its next stop, and told her the address. “That’s in Glendale!” my mother cried. “They literally passed us right by! Now they’re going through to the other side of Forest Park? How much longer is this going to go on?”

8:00 rolled around and still no bus. Over the course of the next half hour we were given three more locations—Cypress Ave, Seneca Avenue and Grove Street, and 52nd and Metropolitan—each further away from us than the last. My mother got back on the phone, and this time it was with Seth, the owner of Smart Pick. “You are not hanging up this phone until my daughter is home,” she informed him. At 8:43 the bus finally pulled up, and a visibly tired and hungry Christine got off the bus. She was the last one dropped off, a twenty-seven-year-old woman on the bus in complete darkness with the substitute driver and attendant, two unfamiliar people.

In total, Christine was on the bus for just about six hours. Within those six hours, she had nothing to eat or drink, no opportunity to use the restroom, and two missed medication sessions. If she needed or wanted any of those things no one knew because she is incapable of asking for them. Therefore, she got nothing.

This shocking ordeal is unfortunately just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to how desperately developmentally disabled adults need advocates. According to NYC Family Advocacy Information Resources, in New York State alone approximately 6,400 people with ID/DD are awaiting residential services. The state has also presented an intermediate care facility (ICF) closure plan that will eliminate up to 1600 residential opportunities.

Exactly where does the state think all these people are going to live? My parents have been Christine’s caretaker for the past twenty-seven years, and will happily continue to play that role for as long as they can. But as my parents get older, Christine deserves options that will keep all their minds at peace.

People say that once you’re a parent, your job isn’t done after eighteen years; it’s a lifelong commitment. That of course is true, but when you’re the parent of a person with a disability it is less a colloquialism and more an absolute reality. Even the simplest indulgence like going out to dinner, something two people in their sixties normally wouldn’t think twice about, requires planning: phone calls to make, favors to ask. The only time my parents go on vacation alone is the week in August my sister is at sleepaway camp. They cannot just pick up and do whatever they want.

Though it may seem like reason enough to some people, this is not why my parents are so concerned with the bleak future of residential care. They have no idea if they will be physically capable of taking care of Christine several years from now, and they want to make sure an appropriate living arrangement is available. They also believe that Christine should have the opportunity to interact and live amongst her peers, as the rest of us do. Thousands of others are in the same situation, and with baby boomers approaching elder age status, there is even more competition for space in residential care.

The dismal statistics regarding residential care and my sister’s bus nightmare only serve to illustrate the immense challenges faced by adults with disabilities. They are tantamount to a forgotten population, even more so than children with disabilities. We expect a child to need 24-hour care; we are confounded and passive when an adult needs it, expecting it to be someone else’s problem.  If an autistic child had been left on a school bus for six hours, the principal of the school responsible would be on the evening news. Why do we look the other way when trauma befalls an adult with a disability?

We can look the other way all we want, but the people in need of appropriate housing will still be there. It is time the state stops looking the other way and begins looking toward the future of adults with ID/DD.

On Wednesday my sister spent six hours confused, in the dark, and headed nowhere fast. She shouldn’t have to spend the rest of her life that way. 

Saturday, February 22, 2014

The 4 Biggest Rip-Offs NYC Bars and Restaurants Would Have You Believe Are Great Deals

I'm always on the lookout for a great deal, especially if said great deal involves copious amounts of alcohol and food.

Some examples of great deals for foodies and alkies in NYC include:


  • Bottomless brunch at The Spot in Crown Heights: $14.95 for unlimited mimosas with a brunch item, and there are dozens more boozy brunch wins all over the city if you do a quick Google search
  • All-you-can-eat sushi at Bay Ridge Sushi: $21.95 for soup, salad, and AYCE sushi. And it's made fresh, not sitting under warm lights for hours in a buffet
  • The NYC Best Bar family: every day from 12-8 the entire bar is half price. That means Sam Adams pitchers for $9.50. And the 8 pm happy hour end time is perfect because it's around that time that they all get douched-up by former frat guys (or current frat guys, depending on how long it's taking them to graduate college). 

As a person in her thirties--albeit early thirties; let's not get ahead of ourselves--I've learned to sniff out the good deals and snuff out the crappy ones. But here's the problem: a lot of times the crappy deals are touted by restaurants and bars as can't-misses. And if you're not an experienced drunk, beware: you may fall victim to an enticing flyer posted by that run-of-the-mill sports bars in midtown you happened to like on Facebook. 

Fear not, alcohol amateurs. I'm here to help. Never, ever, agree to any of the following. If you do, you will experience remorse far worse than that last tequila shot can provide. Mark my words. 

1. Table-side Guacamole at Mexican Restaurants



I know the image in this photo looks delectable. Hell, I wish I had a big honking bowl of guac right now as I sip my red wine. I didn't put that picture there to torture you; I put it there to desensitize you to the deliciousness so that the next time a beautiful, raven-haired waitress dressed in off-the-shoulder "traditional" Mexican garb wheels her cart up to your table, you have the willpower to say, "NO!" 

Here's my problem with table-side guacamole. Restaurants seem to justify gross overpricing of guacamole by hyping up the fact that they MAKE IT RIGHT IN FRONT OF YOU SO YOU KNOW IT'S FRESH. In many cases an order of guacamole costs more than the entrees on the menu. And they give away salsa with the same freaking chips for free. 

Plus, have you ever checked out the price of an avocado in the supermarket? About a buck each, and pretty much all you have to do to make guacamole is mix one with some of the aforementioned salsa. They're banking on the fact that you're already too drunk on ginormous margaritas to care that they're charging you $16.95 for a pre-appetizer (let's be real: you order the guacamole, then an appetizer, then your entree when you go out for Mexican). 

Frankly, when I go out to eat I don't really want to see the food prepared in front of me. That's why I go out to eat. If I actually cared what happens in the kitchen, I'd stay home and learn how to do it myself. 

2. Holiday Prix-Fixe Menus


                
                                                              Note to self: order more pink balloons next year. 


The night before Valentine's Day seemed like the perfect time to make reservations for the faux-liday, at least according to the procrastinator in me. I called several restaurants before finding one that said you could order from the regular menu; most were only offering a prix-fixe. 

Unless you're paying for a party for 50 people and you don't want everyone ordering lobster and Johnny Walker Black, I happen to hate prix-fixe menus. Maybe it's because I went to Catholic school and had someone telling me what I was required to wear every day for twelve years, and now as an adult paying customer, I don't want a restaurant telling me what I should eat just because the calendar says it's a particular day. 

Not to mention that most prix-fixe menus look something like this: 


                             

                  VALENTINE’S DAY 2014 at PJ O’Callahan’s

   

Looking to impress a new date? Or maybe you’re stuck with the same person you’ve been with 
for the last 20 years and just hoping to get laid tonight?

For only $150 a person (that’s right, we’re jacking up the price since V-Day is a Friday this year…suck it) you get:

Appetizer
The oysters we couldn’t sell all month (hey, we’re an Irish pub...if you’re expecting decent seafood you’ve come to the wrong place)

Entrée
Prime Rib (read: NOT filet mignon)   

Dessert:
Some chocolate shit you’ll be too full from the crappy appetizer and fatty entrée to even care if you get

Beverage:
Your choice. (Beverages aren’t included in prix-fixe menus. So drink whatever you want, but you're paying extra for it.)

ENJOY YOUR MAGICAL EVENING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!




Okay, they don't really look like that. But they should. And the fact that "prix-fixe" is technically a French term does not make it worth any more money. 

3. NYC Restaurant Week

                                               

                                                                    Don't get too excited. These puppies are $12.50 a pop. 

This one is along the same lines as the prix-fixe menus. It kills me every year (or twice a year, because it certainly seems like Restaurant Week comes along more than annually) that lunch for $25 or dinner for $38 is supposed to be considered a deal. And the disclaimers listed on the website are as numerous as the restaurants that are boneheaded enough to participate in this shit show. They say: 

"*Saturdays excluded, Sundays optional. Beverages, gratuities, and taxes not included. Valid at participating restaurants."
In case you haven't figured it out by now, in my opinion, if said "deals" do not include beverages, then you've got no shot with me. But let's say you're not a lush; you're totally fine going out to lunch with a friend without having a drink. (A foreign concept to me, but whatever.) Let's just assume you're okay with tap water. You decide to go for lunch at, oh I don't know, 2 West (because it's the first participating restaurant on the list). You get a soup; choice of yellowfin tuna club, skirt steak, or jumbo scallops for entree; and a berry tart or cheesecake for dessert.

Are you seriously telling me most people would rather eat a freaking steak for lunch than have a glass of pinot grigio? I personally would rather eat light for lunch and have a drink, but maybe that's just my propensity to get drunk as cheaply as possibly.

In any event, you and your dining partner would be out about $64.00 for lunch ($50 food bill + $4.00 tax at 8% + 20% tip). And remember: that's lunch. With no drinks except tap water.

So feel free to enjoy Restaurant Week and try out some trendy NYC restaurants. Just make sure it's not on a Saturday.

4. Open Bar "Prizes" at Nondescript Party Bars

It's definitely happened to you: One night a few weeks ago, while patronizing The Tipsy Tortoise on 54th and 7th (totally made up, so don't go Googling it) the peppy little promoter wearing an over-sized tee shirt with a turtle turned on its back (and x's for eyes, natch) came up to you with a clipboard and shouted over the shitty cover band's rendition of "Don't Stop Believin,'" "Would you like to put your email address down for a chance for a free happy hour?" 

You were five Turtle Tanks in, so of course you obliged. You may have even put your work email down if it was happy hour and you were still in business mode. What you weren't anticipating was the flood of emails that would soon follow, everything from #ThrowbackThursdayDeals to e-flyers advertising the bar as The Best Place to Party on Arbor Day. 

                                                        
                                  Tag us in a pic of the tree you just planted and get a free kamikaze shot. #treesarepeopletoo


But inevitably, you and any of your friends who were also dumb enough to drunkenly sign souls away to the devil, will receive the email they would have you believe is the big prize:




To: elizabeth.turro@gmail.com
From: kelly@tipsytortoisebarnyc.com
Re: FREE HAPPY HOUR


Dear Elizabeth, 

CONGRATULATIONS!!! You have won a FREE HAPPY HOUR for you and your friends. That means YOU get free well drinks and domestic beers for TWO HOURS!!!! Here's how it works:

  • Choose an afternoon this month between Monday and Wednesday from 4-6 pm. (Holidays excluded.) 
  • Bring at least 10 friends with you. 
  • Your friends get an open bar for only $20 each! That's all the well drinks, domestic beers, and house wines they can drink for TWO HOURS!!!
  • Gratuities not included.
Looking forward to hearing from you! Call 212-555-3838 and ask for Kelly to book!!!!! 


What this means is they're willing to give a few free shitty drinks to one person if that person will bring ten other paying customers during non-peak hours. It's genius marketing, when you think about it: who among us can resist the siren song of "You've won!" and "Free" anything? 

But when you really break it down, it's not a free happy hour, even if you're the "winner." You still have to tip, unless you enjoy bodily fluids in your drink, and maybe even a little bit extra since you're technically not paying for the drinks. So let's say you're tipping $2 a drink. If you're paying anything more than that for Miller Lites or Georgi vodka on a random Tuesday, you're getting robbed, my friend. 

As for your friends, the good sports (read: stooges) who agreed to come along with you so you could claim your so-called prize, don't even get me started. Throw a stone in NYC and you can probably hit ten happy hour deals that include $3 domestic beers. That means your friends would need to down seven beers in those two hours to make the $20 they're paying at the door a deal. And I'm not even getting into tipping yet. For people who have to go to work the next day, it's probably not happening. 

So the next time your 22-year-old coworker begs you to come out on a Wednesday because he's got a "great deal" for you, feel free to pass on it.

Just don't expect him to show up for yours.