Pubdate: Fri, 14 Jan 2000 Source: Plain Dealer, The (OH) Copyright: 2000 The Plain Dealer Contact: 1801 Superior Ave., Cleveland, OH 44114 Website: http://www.cleveland.com/news/ Forum: http://forums.cleveland.com/index.html Author: Olivera Perkins, Plain Dealer Reporter DRUG REHAB PROGRAM'S BUILDING SHUT DOWN Citing "extremely hazardous" building and housing violations, the Cleveland Fire Department closed a building in the St. Clair-Superior neighborhood yesterday that housed El Fuente de Esperanza, a social service agency operating a drug and alcohol rehabilitation program. The action came just days after Councilman Joe Cimperman complained that people in the program were mistreated. Fire Chief Kevin Gerrity ordered El Fuente de Esperanza (Fountain of Hope) to vacate the building it owns at 7403-05 St. Clair Ave. until the violations are corrected. He said in a news release that the unsafe conditions included overcrowding and a lack of required sprinklers and smoke detectors. Fire and housing inspectors also found "deficient and dangerous" electrical and heating systems. Saul Ramos, an official with the treatment program, said that the 60 participants, many of whom had moved from Puerto Rico to Cleveland for treatment, had been placed in other programs run by churches and social service groups. Cimperman notified city officials this week that El Fuente de Esperanza was running a drug rehabilitation program that was allegedly substandard. The program is not in his ward, but he said he was motivated to do something after speaking with men in the program who said they had been mistreated. "They were basically prisoners," said Cimperman. "The men never received the money their families sent them. They were starved on Wednesday. No food was served." Ramos said Cimperman's allegations are untrue. Ramos said there was a direct relationship between Cimperman's allegations and the city's decision to close the building. "We knew about the violations, and the city was letting us fix them as the money came in," Ramos said. "After the councilman made his allegations, the city decided to close us down." The building is in Councilman Bill Patmon's ward. He said he was aware of the allegations but wanted to investigate them first before taking action. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D