Real Heroes Need to Be Recognized   

Published in Pawtucket Times on November 3, 2003

Sometimes the actions of real heroes are not reported by newspapers, radio or television newscasts. While stories of poor care and abuse in the state’s nursing facilities quickly make headline news in local media outlets, the good deeds oftentimes go unreported.

Here’s a story about a fire in an East-Providence independent living facility that made the local news one evening in October, but the real story was left untold.

Although the Rhode Island Chapter of the Red Cross ultimately go the ink for being on the scene, there were others – nursing facility administrators, firefighters, police officers and the Alliance for Better Long-Term Care – who also came to the assistance of the elderly tenants that fall night.

On Friday, Oct. 3, a boiler fire at Taunton Plaza forced 117 elderly and handicapped residents from their heated apartments into the chilly night. The elderly tenants residing in this independent living facility  were ultimately not allowed to return until Monday, because of a power outage, smoke damage and concerns regarding environmental contamination by polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs).

Although the Santa Maria Club, on Broadway, offered a brief respite from the cool fall weather that evening, these residents needed overnight accommodations because they could not immediately return to their apartments. For that weekend, the majority of the elderly tenants went to the homes of family and friends, while others slept on cots at a temporary shelter site.

Roberta Hawkins, state ombudsman and executive director of the Alliance for Better Long-Term Care, remembered getting a phone call while watching a local television newscast about the fire.

“We really could use your help,” the Red Cross official said, asking her to immediately come to East Providence.

Ultimately, Hawkins and Kathy Heren, her agency’s staff nurse, quickly arrived at the Portuguese club and got down to the business of interviewing residents to learn about their medications, special needs and current health status. Some of the displaced elderly tenants were diabetic on insulin, while others were taking high blood pressure and heart medications.

Nursing home administrators, along with their directors of nursing, were also summoned to the fire site after receiving phone calls from Hawkins and Heren. These facilities would ultimately provide free accommodations for 18 elderly tenants whose health status required medical care  monitoring until they could return to their apartments.

Meanwhile, with information provided by Hawkins and Heren, East Providence firefighters and police officials entered smoke-filled apartments to retrieve prescription drugs. “Some of these seniors need to take their medications at the time of the fire,” said Hawkins.

Responding to a visibly shaken woman, an East Providence policeman even went into a smoke-filled apartment to rescue her cockatoo, a pet that might have died from smoke inhalation.

“The sobbing woman was so grateful that one would have thought the policeman had just rescued her child,” Hawkins said.

Administrator Orlando Bisbano Jr., of Orchard View Manor, came to Taunton Plaza that night of the fire with his director of nursing. He ultimately would take seven elderly tenants  back to his East Providence-based facility.

“We were willing to help in any way we could,” said Bisbano, noting the uncompensated care his facility provided totaled $ 2,300.

According to Bisbano, nursing assistants with wheelchairs were positioned outside Orchard  View Manor for more than a half an hour in the chilly night after the fire, waiting for the arrival of the traumatized elderly tenants.

“We called staff back to the facility who would later help to get them settled down and ready for bed,” he said. Management staff even came back to the facility to process the necessary paperwork that included a list of the new admission’s medications.

Ultimately, administrator Donna Amaral, of Eastgate Nursing and Recovery Center, along with administrators from Waterview Villa Nursing and Rehabilitation Center and Hattie Ide Chaffee Home, responded to Hawkins pleas for help for facilities to temporarily admit the displaced elder tenants.

“This was the first time in my 22 years as an administrator that I opened up my facility to help out in a crisis,” Amaral told All About Seniors, estimating  her East Providence-based facility provided at least $ 2,500 in free care, food and lodging, to six elderly residents.

Besides getting the residents fed and ready for bed, Amaral stressed how her staff had to locate medications for one of her unanticipated guests. One of her newly admitted tenants came without his insulin, and she quickly made arrangements with a local pharmacy for replacement insulin.

Hawkins recounted one elderly man was ultimately too confused to return to his apartment at Taunton Plaza and was late admitted to Amaral’s facility, Eastgate Nursing and Recovery Center.

Upon arriving with no shoes or jacket, Jack Heren, the facility’s food manager, took off his brand-new  sports jacket and gave it to a shivering man. “He sept wearing his new jacket that first night,” said Hawkins, who noted the man treasures the gifted jacket and has not taken it off since his admission to the facility.

Although the R.I. Red Cross and Picerne Management Group, the owners of Taunton Plaza, along with some of the elderly tenants and their families thanked the Alliance and nursing facilities for their assistance, local media did not report the acts of kindness.


It is disappointment the local press did not recognize the local nursing facilities were there and ready to take all of the residents, if necessary,” said Bisbano. “While it ultimately does not matter that we weren’t recognized, nursing facilities are here to serve the community and are prepared to deal with disasters like that fire.”

Hugh Hall, president of the R.I. Health Care Association, a trade group representing a majority of the state’s nursing facilities, added, “I don’t think that there is much positive news in general as we would like to see including positive articles about nursing facilities.

“When this type of crisis [fire] happens, the long-term care community rises to the occasion, to assist, and always will,” says Hall.

Hawkins weighted in on the issue of positive news coverage of nursing facilities, too.

“While local television stations covered this fire, they never really identified the real heroes, that is the nursing facilities, the police and firefighters, who in times of disaster help people they don’t even know,” she said.

“Couples fall in love and even get married in facilities with the assistance of staff. Nursing assistants oftentimes become family to residents, comforting them when they are sad, frightened or dying. We hardly read about these good deeds either,” said Hawkins.

For this columnist, hats off to the East Providence police and firefighters, the nursing facilities and their dedicated staff who briefly provided quality of care for the displaced traumatized elderly tenants and to the Alliance for Better Long-Term Care. Positive news and acts of kindness will be reported and real heroes recognized in this column.

Hall of Fame Inductees Make Great Role Models

Published in Pawtucket Times on October 28, 2002

Hundreds of people gathered Friday evening at Bobby’s Banquet Hall on Newport Avenue to celebrate the honors bestowed to six people with strong ties to Pawtucket who became the latest inductees into the Pawtucket Hall of Fame.

Since 1986, the Pawtucket Hall of fame Committee, ably led by Raymond S. Dalton, Sr., has recognized more than 60 persons for their love and positive contributions to the City of Pawtucket.

Over the years, the Pawtucket Hall of Fame Committee has selected and recognized those who were either Pawtucket-born residents , persons whose reputations were made while they resident in the city, Pawtucket business owners or those persons who have made an impact on the community.

The varied life experiences of the new inductees to the Pawtucket Hall of Fame can be an inspiration to both young and old, but more importantly to the city’s younger generation.

Although Abraham “Cappy” Asermely, 73, excelled in his life long profession as an educator in the Pawtucket School Department, he was recognized by making the city of Pawtucket a better place to live through organizing sports opportunities for all ages.

His love for basketball led him to create the first “three-on-three” elementary school basketball program in 1968.  Several years later, the three-on-three basketball concept would be used by Asermely when he created an “over-21 league” for the Pawtucket Recreation Department.

Like Asermely, William “Billy” Hulme, 92, had a very strong work ethic, working as a service man at Blackstone Valley Gas and Electric for 35 years. Hulme’s great love for music began at age 5 and continues to this day, when at the drop of a hat, he would write a song or pull out his harmonica and play. The World War II veteran is a shining example that creativity can be tapped during your later years. Although in his 90s, his creativity and passion for his music are still strong.

Born in Pawtucket in 1922, the late Captain Conrade E. LaGueux would later leave to defend his country during World War II. Parachuting into Nazi-controlled southern France, the Pawtucket resident and his fellow commandos joined up with the French underground to destroy a German supply train.

Meanwhile, LaGueux would later go into China, where he was given responsibility of training China’s Parachute Division. With the war ending, the Pawtucket war veteran would eventually join the CIA, where his French language skills and experience gained in the Chinese theater would be valuable for the CIA’s East Asian Division.

In the early 1970s, LaGueux would become the deputy chief of station in Saigon. Ultimately, he would be responsible for the planning and implementation of the evacuation of key Vietnamese leaders.  While residing outside of Pawtucket for most of his adult life, LaGueux would never forget his early ties to is hometown, his wife told the crowd in the room during the induction ceremony.

Last Friday, Patrick McCabe also joined the rank and file of the Pawtucket Hall of Fame.  Called the “Father of Irish in Pawtucket” the 96-year-old inductee was a strong supporter of his church, St. Mary’s Parish in Pawtucket. His work at Kaiser Shipyard during World War II brought him to Pawtucket.

His love of his Irish homeland led to purchase the Irish Social Club in Pawtucket, and the place quicky became the focal point of Irish get-togethers and events. As the grand marshal, McCabe led Pawtucket’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade. Commitment to his Irish heritage and to the parade led him to save the popular Pawtucket event when support for it dwindled.

At age 53, Louis C. Yip is one of the youngest inductees into the Pawtucket Hall of Fame. A native of Hong Kong, Yip came to America and now stands as Pawtucket’s shining example of the American dream. Along with running one of the best Chinese restaurants in New England, the China Inn. Yip has brought vitality to the city’s downtown by turning an old bank building into the Registry of Motor Vehicles and an old vacant mill into a thriving commercial property.

As a promoter of his Chinese culture, Yip provides strong support to the Rhode Island Association of Chinese Americans. He continually looks for ways to promote his adopted hometown, Pawtucket.

Lastly, William Meiklejohn, born in 1861, became a historical inductee to this year’s Pawtucket Hall of Fame. Coming to Pawtucket from Scotland, Meiklejohn was the founder of the Pawtucket Board of Trade, which ultimately became the Pawtucket Chamber of Commerce.

The new inductees in Pawtucket’s Hall of Fame provide us with a road map on how we can make positive changes not only to Pawtucket, but to our daily lives. That is quite a legacy that they leave us and the future generations that come after us.

The Best of…Age-beat Journalism Brings Issues Affecting Seniors to Light

Published January 28, 2002, Pawtucket Times

          Some people ritually read the sports or business sections, browse the stock listings, or even glance at the comics.  But a growing number of  middle-aged and senior readers are turning to the print or electric media for the latest info on aging.

          With the graying of America, news organizations are creating the age beat, where journalists cover various aspects of aging, including lifestyles, health care, politics, ethics and even economics.  A newly released national survey published in the San Francisco-based Age Beat, a newsletter disseminated to 700 journalists who cover aging, reflects this growing trend.

        Out of 580 non-random surveys sent to Age Beat readers, 152 responses were received. “This was better than a one-in-four response rate,” states Paul Kleyman, editor of Aging Today, the newspaper of the American Society of Aging and national coordinator of the Journalist Exchange on Aging.  The group was started in 1993.

        According to Kleyman, the third Age Beat survey findings indicated about 60 daily newspapers around the United States have a reporter partly assigned to the coverage of aging; 16 use a full-time reporter to cover the issue; and 24 newspapers use columnists.

       Although the findings of three surveys of age -beat reporters reflect a small growth of coverage in aging, it has been steady, Kleyman says.  While the age beat does not have economic clout in newsrooms (it is difficult to sell advertising around aging), this steady growth has occurred over the last 10 years through two economic slumps.

      There are more journalists covering the aging beat than last year, according to the survey report.

      The slow-but-steady growth of the age beat in journalism is a result of journalists – and their parents -aging, Kleyman noted. “Some of these aging journalists are finding this a very important area and have taken it upon themselves to begin to cover these issues.

       “There were more stories about aging because they are important in people’s lives- including those of reporters and editors,” Kleyman observed.  Thus, more than 90 percent of the survey respondents say that they now have direct personal experiences with the issues of aging, both personally or in their family, he said.

       Many of the respondents became interested in covering aging after they had to help their aging parents find a nursing home or move into a retirement community, Kleyman said.  “In doing this, they learned there is a huge amount of information they had to dig out and learn – [information] most of the public is unaware of.

       “Today’s journalists believe their personal experiences do not affect their objectivity in writing stories,” noted Kleyman.  Experience gives them both the perspective and information they need, but they still can approach each story with balance, he added.

       Kleyman said that journalists on the age beat will care about the issues enough to follow them over a longer period, and they will develop more sources and a greater depth of knowledge and understanding.

       “This is why they will write stories that are more technically accurate and factual,” he said.

       According to the survey, age-beat reporters who are devoting more of their time and energy to covering aging issues are generally veteran reporters.  On average, the respondents have more than 20 years of professional experience as journalists.

      Ageism occurs in the news media, says Kleyman.

      ‘”There is an atitude that all stories must have focus on medical and health care,” he said.  “This ageism centers on an attitude that getting older is getting sicker and becoming a burden on your family.  This is not so.”

      The Age Beat survey also found that, consistently across the board, 50 percent of the stories being weritten by age-beat reporters releate to health care and medical issues.  The other 50 percent cover different aspects of senior life.

      “Aging is about everything that people experience in their older years,” says Kleyman. “Stories range from sex and intimacy to housing, to income issues, to crrime, even to issues surrounding older drivers.”

       Finall, the survey revealed a growing percentage of reporters getting more requests from their editors and producers to tie their stories into the baby boomer generation, whose members are in their late 40s to mid-50s.  However, about two thirds of the reporters written by the respondents covered issues that affected those age 65 and over.

      The survey results were clear.  “Baby boomers are interesting, but the stories on those 65 and older stories are those that reporters feel must be told to readers,” Kleyman said.

      Like my colleagues on the age beat, this columnist will continue to bring you the latest, most informative coverage of aging issues you need to know about — stay tuned.

      Herb Weiss is a Pawtucket-based freelance writer covering aging, health care and medical issues for the Pawtucket Times.  He can be reached at hweissri@aol.com.