Pubdate: Wed, 07 May 2003 Source: Times Union (Albany, NY) Copyright: 2003 Capital Newspapers Division of The Hearst Corporation Contact: http://www.timesunion.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/452 Author: Brian Nearing Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) LEADERS OF DRUG PROGRAM CRY FOUL Albany-- Treatment Facility's Managers Say State Agency Didn't Provide Promised Funding To Fix Building, Then Ousted Residents Managers of a longtime South End drug treatment program blamed a state funding snafu Tuesday for forcing out its clients and leaving it on the verge of closing its doors. About two dozen men in treatment for drug and alcohol addictions at St. John's Project Lift were moved into a downtown motel late Monday after state officials declared the program's building at 37 S. Ferry St. a fire hazard. That left the program's executive director, Sharon Facteau, foul, saying the state Office of Alcohol and Substance Abuse Services -- which ordered clients out of building -- had been dragging its feet for more than two years on a promise of $1.5 million in aid needed to repair the 157-year-old former church rectory. An OASAS spokeswoman would not comment on the funding issue but confirmed the agency ordered the clients out for safety reasons. The program has rented the building for the last 25 years from St. John's/St. Ann's Church and hasn't been able to pay for all the needed repairs, Facteau said. Project Lift is paying $600 a day for motel rooms for its evicted residents, without state reimbursement for its services. "All we want is to keep our program. We'll put on jeans and start shoveling ourselves if we have to," Facteau said. "The state's been saying all along that the check is in the mail. We've been lied to and jerked around." Facteau said the state office promised the aid in 2000 but never delivered it. Facteau admitted the building has a number of safety issues, including a lack of fire sprinklers, a leaky roof, unsafe stairs and bad electrical and plumbing systems. The program would have tried to relocate to a newer building if not for the promised state aid, she said. "At the state's request, we submitted detailed renovation plans about a year ago," Facteau said. An inspection by state officials Monday that led to the clients' evictions was triggered by a report Facteau sent to the state office last week. In the report, a consultant outlined safety violations and indicated anything less than a total rehabilitation of the building was not feasible. Jennifer Marcellus, a spokeswoman for OASAS, could not immediately address Facteau's claims about state aid. "We responded as a result of information provided by (Facteau) that indicated the building was a fire hazard," Marcellus said. "Our inspector went out with officials from the county on Monday and found immediate danger to the health and welfare of the clients and staff." She said treatment continues for current residents under an emergency plan, but she could not say whether the sudden loss of state reimbursement could close Project Lift. Facteau declined to let program residents speak with a reporter, citing confidentiality issues. Robert Johnson, 40, the program's resident manager, was himself a client four years ago, when he faced a choice between treatment and a prison term. "I was here 11 months and it was here that I learned to be responsible," said Johnson, who kicked alcohol and heroin, and regained custody of his 11-year-old daughter. "People are turned around here." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk