CHAPTER XXVII
Aron Manor was the first of my nine nursing homes that were my clients. Prior to my acquiring these health care institutions, my clientele was primarily in the ladies ware industry. Because of the high risk of survival in the fashion industry due to the rapid and volatile change of styles, one good season could ensure a manufacturer several years of fiscal endurance. A poor season could very well lead to bankruptcy. In fact, the average survival in the dress business was five years.
As I related previously, most mfrs. started on a shoe string and were financed by factors, who received accounts receivable invoices as collateral. Consequently, the accountants in this industry would receive monthly phone calls from the factors and banks requesting general ledger trial balances which would be given over the phone. These trial balances informed the lenders as to the fiscal status of the borrower. The former were primarily interested in the liquidity of the firm. All current assets and current liabilities i.e. cash, accounts receivable, accounts payable, notes and loans payable were submitted via phone; also, net sales were also divulged.
In addition, certified financial statements were prepared annually and monthly financial break-even statements also were furnished the clients. These reports stated what the inventories should be in order to break-even for the month. Taking physical inventories together with management’s personnel was an important factor in certified statements. Soliciting confirmation of cash in banks, accounts receivable, accounts payable, notes and loans payable by mail was an additional requirement for these statements. Fortunately, by the time I obtained my first nursing home client, I only had one in the garment industry.
Being an accountant in the health care field required preparation of different reports. I would prepare monthly financial statements relating the profit or loss for the month; this was easy since no inventories were involved. However, annual certified reports were submitted to the various states dept. of health. Before remuneration based on costs were instituted, these statements were necessary to divulge the fiscal feasibility of the home.
When I became
the accountant for Aron Manor, which serviced 120 patients, remuneration by
N.Y. State to nursing homes was based on 3 categories depending on the patient
care necessary for each patient. The monthly amounts were $ 160, $ 170, and $
180. Approximately ten years later, a
This strong
proponent of increasing the degree of patient care assumed that, if the homes
would spend more money, the patients would benefit. Consequently, the old
method of remuneration was scrapped and annual Medicare and Medicaid cost
reports were submitted to a Federal agency (Medicare) and to the NYS Dept. of
Health in
I remember
rising at a Metropolitan Nursing Home Association meeting held in one of the
Manhattan hotels when this new remuneration method was proposed and making a
very concerned prediction if this new method was accepted by the governmental
agencies. I stated that Harry Truman became President of the
Unfortunately, my prediction was correct as many operators would pad their costs with expenditures for their homes and other personal needs. What galled me was the fact that the homes were all doing well financially and didn’t have to resort to criminal acts to survive. After 10 years of cost-plus, it finally came to light what some of the homes were engaged in, resulting in the convening of the Hynes Commission headed by Charles Hynes who is presently District Attorney of Kings County.
It was a very difficult time for nursing home accountants at this time as many operators were able to persuade them to cheat lest they lose the account. In 1974, I had 7 nursing home clients and only one of these operators wanted me to file a false report to no avail. A few years later after the scandal was over, I told him that I kept him out of jail.
One of the bookkeepers at this client advised me that this operator, in a phone conversation with another nursing home owner, who later was convicted as a result of his criminal nursing home acts, remarked that his accountant, Mr. Prager, was a bum because I wouldn’t allow him to steal.
In order to employ every bit of space for patient rooms in order to increase the revenue, Aron Manor, as some of my other nursing home clients, allowed a very little area for the office which was approximately 150 sq. ft. In this crowded space were three desks, filing cabinets and cabinets for office supplies. When I and a man from my office arrived to perform the monthly audit, one of us had to work in the lobby where patients were congregated. Being claustrophobic, I sure didn’t enjoy working there.
Archie Friedman from Harby Dress Co. introduced me in 1954 to his
brother-in-law Carl Michaels who owned a firm who manufactured custom made therapeutic shoes. Carl always wanted me
to do the monthly audit on a Thursday as he convened a dinner conference in the
restaurant in his building around
Hilda’s Aunt
Buddy, who was divorced, had a boy friend Bill Warfman who was in the carpet
business. That same year, Bill and his partner, Irving Zucker, engaged me as
their accountant. The name of the company was Carpet House and was located on
Our lease at
Throughout the 43 years that we resided in this house we had no plumbing repairs to speak of since the house was built with brass plumbing, a far cry from the homes that were constructed after the war. The entire plot was 190 ft. x 25 ft.; the house was 100 ft. x 25ft. You walked up 3 stairs to the entrance and a fairly large patio.
The entrance led to a tiny vestibule leading to a 24 x 18 living room. From the latter, you entered through an arch to a 22 x 18 dining room and then to a 30 x 18 kitchen and dinette area. A stair case on the far side of the dining room led to the second floor where there were 3 bedrooms and a long, narrow hall. The master bed room faced the front of the house, Kenny’s room faced the rear and Dennis’s room faced the driveway on the side of the house. We had a garage but a large car could not fit into it; we used it primarily for storage and for the bamboo poles which I used to place on my succah (a temporary abode commanded by the Torah).
As soon as
Hilda and I saw this house, we decided to buy it. We purchased it at the asking
price of $ 16,500 from a lovely elderly couple whose name was Jarret. He was an
importer of Dutch chocolates and on his travels to
We placed a 15 year mortgage of $ 9,000 on the house which I was able to handle quite comfortably. The basement contained 3 rooms; laundry room, a very large room which I converted for an office and a furnace room consisting of an oil burner for heat, hot water heater and 2 large fuel oil tanks. Several years later, we converted our heating to gas and were able to dispense with the huge tanks. All the walls were of cinder block so, a few years after the purchase, we covered all the basement walls with wood paneling.
After living in the new home for about a year, we made a chanukas habais (a house warming) in the basement and invited about 75 relatives and friends. My father-in-law made a beautiful speech and publicly gave Hilda and me a generous gift of $ 2,000 for which we were most grateful. We raised our two sons in this house and have nothing but good memories of our stay in this house.
In this same
year, 1954, Dennis started his academic career, starting in the first grade at
Yeshiva Rambam. Also, although we were satisfied with our sons’ summer camp the
previous year at
Shelley was
executive director of Kingsway and I found him to be extremely efficient in
that capacity; therefore, I assumed that he conducted his camp activities with
the same energy and competence. My assumption proved to be correct as we
continued to send our boys to his camp for many years. Kenny went there through
the usual program; camper, waiter and counselor finishing his camping career as
life guard; Dennis was a camper. When he arrived at the age of being a
counselor, he opted to go to
On the two Sundays the parents would visit their children, Hilda and I chose to spend weekends at the camp instead of just on the Sundays. The camp had a very comfortable guest house and we made good friends with other parents on these weekends. Among others, we met the Avners of whom I wrote previously. On Saturday nights, several of the parents, including myself, competed against the counselors in basketball games under the lights. Kenny was an exceptionally good athlete so I enjoyed playing against him.
We also
enjoyed the company of Seymour and Hermia Reinhard whom we knew from Yeshiva
Rambam. Their boy twins, Andy and David, were also campers at Winsoki for many
years.
When Dennis
was a counselor at Massad one summer, we received a phone call around
We
immediately left in our car with much trepidation, again not knowing what is
awaiting us. Arriving at the hospital about
Fortunately, despite his condition, he was able to relate to us in detail all the facts of the accident. The car he was driving was an old car that Hilda had given him when she purchased a new one. Perhaps the brakes were bad and that may have caused the accident. Dennis and his companion were counselors at Massad and on their day off decided to go visit the areas around the camp.
They were returning to the camp in the late afternoon and, at a very sharp turn on a narrow road, the car hit a concrete wall. We were not interested as to whether Dennis or the car was at fault; we simply were concerned with the health of Dennis and the girl. He told us that the car was totaled-completely destroyed-. He also told us that he picked up a young couple who were hitch-hiking. Fortunately, they were let off a few minutes prior to the accident. Had they still been in the car, they would have been killed since the rear seats of the car suffered the most damage and the entire roof was shorn off and landed on those seats.
After a day or two, Dennis and his passenger were discharged from the hospital and returned to the camp. Sometime later, we viewed pictures of the demolished car and couldn’t believe that our son and the girl survived with relatively minor injuries. A few months later, the girl’s father sued me, as the owner of the car, despite the fact that Dennis was doing his daughter a favor by giving her a lift on her day off. He evidently felt that since I was insured, any award granted to him would not come out of my pocket. Of course he was wrong since for the next three years my insurance premiums were increased substantially. If the shoe was on the other foot, I do not believe that I would have sued him.
In 1955, the
partners of Aron Manor Nursing Home, except for Samuel Nirenstein, decided to
expand their interest in the health care industry by bidding on the purchase of
the Brooklyn Thoracic Hospital. The building was about 75 years old and was
located on the corner of
This hospital had previously housed patients infected with tuberculosis. With the discovery of new drugs and equipment, the number of those suffering from this disease decreased greatly; consequently, the hospital was no longer needed. The edifice was put up for sale to the highest bidder. The two highest bidders were my clients and Rabbi Bergman, who already owned several nursing homes in the metropolitan area. After a brief period of negotiation, Rabbi Bergman consented to withdraw his bid.
After some renovation, the building was converted to a nursing home, called the Garden Nursing Home which housed 300 patients on four floors, practically all being paid for by Medicaid. The staff, other than the nurses, consisted of many relatives of Aron Maged, Leo Rapaport and Al Moskovits. Hilda, not very enamored with housework, jumped at the opportunity to be the asst. administrator under Mr. Maged, who was the administrator.
Since Dennis was now 7 years of age, his mother felt it was time to go to work. She hired a wonderful Negro woman named Ethel who had 3 sons; Dennis adored her and the feeling was mutual. In fact, until his teen-age years, she was his confidante through his troublesome period at school about which I will relate later on.
During the 20 years that I was the accountant and Hilda was the asst. administrator, we became very close to the patients who loved us. One of the women patients in her late seventies addressed me as “papa” and Hilda as “mama”. Every month, when I came to do the audit, I would visit her in her room and speak to her. She would write letters to me as a child would write to her father and give them to Hilda to bring to me.
We had season
tickets to the Philharmonic, N.Y.C. Ballet and the Metropolitan Opera, all at
We were concerned about the patients lying in their urine and feces as though we were owners of the facility. On arriving at the Home, Hilda and I would go with the nurse’s aides with flashlights and inspect all 300 patients on the 4 floors to be assured that they were sleeping comfortably in a dry condition; she inspecting the women patients and I inspecting the male patients.
On Xmas day,
Kenny and Dennis would go with us to the Home to speak to the patients and
bring the
Every Xmas
Eve, the four of us would visit Ethel and her sons at her apartment in
Bedford-Stuyvesant a section of
We kept in touch with Ethel for many years after she ceased working for us. Whenever she took ill, she would phone us and we immediately visit her at her home and once in the hospital. She probably has passed away since we no longer hear from her and there is no answer at her home when we called.
Perhaps, the Almighty has blessed our family for the deeds expressed above, especially for our actions at the nursing home where we were only the accountant and an employee.