Wednesday, June 2, 2021

GrowNYC June Volunteer Newsletter

 

June 2021
Computer Menu
Need to attend a Volunteer Orientation?

Register for our June - Virtual Volunteer Orientation
Tuesday, June 9th
5pm-6pm

Interested in volunteering with GrowNYC? Join our online orientation where our Volunteer Program Manager will provide information about GrowNYC, local agriculture and food access, safety protocols, and current and upcoming volunteer opportunities.

Orientation is open to all, however, GrowNYC volunteers must be 18 years of age or older. The volunteer orientation is required to participate in our volunteer opportunities. (sign up)
Volunteer of the Month!
This month we will highlight our amazing Greenmarket volunteer, Kate.
GrowNYC: How long have you been volunteering with us?

Kate: I have been volunteering with GrowNYC since October 2020.

GrowNYC: Tell us about yourself, what interests you and how do you spend your time?

Kate: During the week, I work as a Grants & Finance Specialist at World Resources Institute, an environmental & developmental nonprofit organization. In my free time, other than volunteering & shopping at the farmers market, I enjoy reading, running, doing yoga, and walking in the park with friends.

GrowNYC: Why did you decide to volunteer with GrowNYC especially now?

Kate: I decided to volunteer with GrowNYC as a way to get more involved with my community. I was drawn to GrowNYC by my interests in environmentalism, and I love that the Greenmarkets provide equitable fresh food access. I was pushed to volunteer especially during the pandemic, which made this need for food access even more urgent, and provided me with more time to help out!

GrowNYC: What has been your favorite moment/memory volunteering with GrowNYC so far?

Kate: My favorite memory from volunteering has been making friends with GrowNYC staff, volunteers, and farmers. They made my experience fun & joyful, and I will always hold them and the Greenmarkets in a special place in my heart!
Highlighted Volunteer Opportunities!
Fluent in Cantonese!?

Volunteer at the Bensonhurst Greenmarket - Sundays (sign up)
Looking to work with finished Compost?
Volunteer with GrowNYC's Compost Program! In preparation for the Compost Giveback Event in mid-June, we are seeking one volunteer who is willing to come down to the Demonstration Garden at McCarren Park! (sign up)
Greenmarket Volunteer Opportunities
Every week we are working to keep our Greenmarkets open with proper safety procedures to continue to provide food access sites for New Yorkers. You can help our staff inform and direct the public, from a safe distance, to practice awareness and social distancing.

Volunteers will be provided with single-use gloves, hand sanitizer, wipes, and masks if needed, but we request that you bring your own mask. These events are outdoors, rain, or shine. Please dress for the weather. Sign up for one or more opportunities at the following Greenmarkets (GM):

Brooklyn:
Brooklyn Borough Hall GM - Saturdays (sign up)
Fort Greene GM - Saturdays (sign up)
Grand Army Plaza GM - Saturdays (sign up)
McCarren Park GM - Saturdays (sign up)
7th Ave Sunset Park GM - Saturdays (sign up)

Manhattan: 
Inwood GM - Saturdays (sign up)
Tucker Sq GM - Saturdays (sign up)
Tompkins Sq GM - Sundays (sign up)
Columbia GM - Thu & Sun (sign up)
82nd St GM - Saturdays (sign up)
Abingdon Sq GM - Saturdays (sign up)
Union Sq GM - Saturdays (sign up)
79th Street GM - Sundays (sign up)               

Queens:
Sunnyside GM - Saturdays (sign up          
Compost Volunteer Opportunities!
Food scrap collection allows New Yorkers to take part in waste reduction and turn their waste into compost to grow food and care for New York City parks and trees.

Please visit our website for the dates and times of collections for sites that have already reopened as well as those that are soon to do so. Volunteers will be provided with single-use gloves, hand sanitizer, wipes, and masks if needed, but we request that you bring your own mask.

Volunteer Opportunities Include
Manhattan:
97th Street GM - Fridays (sign up)
William B. Washington Memorial Garden - Fridays (Sign up)
Inwood GM - Saturdays (sign up)
79th Street GM - Sundays (sign up)

Brooklyn:
McCarren Park GM - Saturdays (sign up)
Fort Greene GM - Saturdays (sign up)
Cortelyou (Flatbush) GM - Sundays (sign up)
Carroll Gardens GM - Sundays (sign up)

Queens
Jackson Heights GM - Sundays (sign up)
Be a Fresh Food Box Site Assistant 
GrowNYC's Fresh Food Box Program is a food access initiative that allows communities to purchase fresh, healthy, locally grown produce in pre-packed boxes containing the best of what’s seasonally available from regional farms.

Volunteers are needed to help our Fresh Food Box sites run efficiently as essential food access for New Yorkers. Volunteers will work with Fresh Food Box staff to implement proper safety protocols to ensure that the public, staff, and volunteers stay safe, and they will also pack Fresh Food Boxes. Volunteers will also help pack Fresh Food Boxes in paper grocery bags. Volunteers will be provided with single-use gloves, hand sanitizer, wipes, and masks if needed, but we request that you bring your own mask!

Bronx:
Montefiore (Longwood) - Fridays (sign up)

Brooklyn:
Bed Stuy FFB - Saturdays (sign up)

Manhattan:
Lenox Hill FFB - Tuesdays (sign up)
Uptown Grand Central FFB- Wednesdays (sign up)
East Harlem FFB - Thursdays (sign up)

Assemblymember Pichardo: Threatening an individual with deportation is a form of extortion

 

 

  “The acts of extortion and coercion—forcing another person to give up their property or change their habits by intimidation —are illegal under New York penal law. While these methods of intimidation often include threatening to press criminal charges, the act of threatening to call immigration authorities on an individual was not included in this definition, despite the fact that the consequences of deportation can be just as severe. That’s why I helped pass a bill which designates the threat of deportation as a crime on the same level as extortion and coercion (A.3412-A).

“Simply put: immigration status is not a bargaining tool. Using an individual’s immigration status against them is just as much a form of intimidation and blackmail as threatening to press criminal charges. Undocumented New Yorkers contribute so much to our communities and our economy. They should never have to live in fear of having their lives ripped out from under them. I’ll always do everything I can to protect and support New York’s vulnerable populations.”

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Files Suit Against Eleven Skilled Nursing Facilities And Their Management Company, Owner, And A Senior Employee For Fraudulently Billing Medicare For Unnecessary Services

 

Suit Alleges That Eleven New York-Based Facilities Fraudulently Inflated Medicare Reimbursements by Prolonging Patient Stays Without Regard to Patients’ Medical Needs and Billing for Excessive Rehabilitation Therapy That Patients Did Not Need

 Audrey Strauss, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and Scott J. Lampert, Special Agent in Charge of the New York Regional Office of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Inspector General (“HHS-OIG”), announced today that the United States has filed a civil healthcare fraud lawsuit against ISSAC LAUFER, TAMI WHITNEY, MONTCLAIR CARE CENTER, INC., EAST ROCKAWAY CENTER LLC, EXCEL AT WOODBURY FOR REHABILITATION AND NURSING, LLC, LONG ISLAND CARE CENTER INC., TREETOPS REHABILITATION & CARE CENTER LLC, SUTTON PARK CENTER FOR NURSING & REHABILITATION, LLC, SUFFOLK RESTORATIVE THERAPY & NURSING, LLC, OASIS REHABILITATION AND NURSING, LLC, FOREST MANOR CARE CENTER, INC., SURGE REHABILITATION & NURSING LLC, QUANTUM REHABILITATION & NURSING LLC, and PARAGON MANAGEMENT SNF LLC (collectively the “Defendants”).  The lawsuit seeks damages and civil penalties under the False Claims Act for fraudulently billing Medicare for unreasonable and unnecessary services provided to patients at eleven skilled nursing facilities located in New York (the “Facilities”).

The complaint alleges that, during the period from at least January 2010 through September 2019, Defendants systematically kept patients at the Facilities longer than necessary in order to maximize the amount billed to Medicare for the patients’ stays.  During those stays, the Facilities systematically put patients on higher levels of rehabilitation therapy than necessary based on their actual clinical needs in order to bill Medicare at the highest rate.  ISSAC LAUFER, who is a part owner of ten of the eleven Facilities and operates all eleven Facilities through PARAGON MANAGEMENT SNF LLC, and TAMI WHITNEY, the Coordinator of Rehabilitation Services for the Facilities, instructed and pressured staff to engage in these fraudulent practices.  As a result, according to the complaint, the Facilities submitted, or caused to be submitted, false claims for payment for rehabilitation services that were unreasonable and unnecessary, or in some cases, did not even involve the provision of skilled therapy.  

U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss said: “As alleged, ISSAC LAUFER, TAMI WHITNEY and the skilled nursing facilities ISSAC LAUFER owns and/or operates prioritized profits above their obligation to focus on their patients’ actual medical needs.  In clear violation of the governing regulations, the Defendants fraudulently inflated their Medicare reimbursements by unnecessarily prolonging patient stays and billing for therapy that offered little or no clinical benefit.  This Office will continue vigorously to pursue companies and individuals who engage in these practices at the expense of the public fisc.”

HHS-OIG Special Agent in Charge Scott J. Lampert said: “The Medicare program is designed to protect both beneficiaries and taxpayers.  When medical providers bill for unnecessary or improper services, patient care is put at risk and the financial integrity of our federal health care system is compromised.  Working with our law enforcement partners, we will continue to ensure that medical providers are held accountable for their billing practices and the services they provide.”               

The following allegations are based on the Complaint that was filed in White Plains federal court today: 

The eleven facility defendants are skilled nursing facilities located in the New York metropolitan area.  LAUFER is a part owner of ten of the eleven Facilities and operates all eleven Facilities through PARAGON MANAGEMENT SNF LLC.  WHITNEY is the Coordinator of Rehabilitation Services for the Facilities and as such is involved in decisions regarding the provision of, and billing for, rehabilitation services.

From at least January 2010 through September 2019, the Defendants systematically kept Medicare patients at the Facilities longer than reasonable or necessary, and put those patients on higher levels of rehabilitation therapy than reasonable or necessary.  These practices were designed to increase the amounts billed to Medicare beyond what was justified based on patients’ clinical needs.  In some instances, the Facilities went so far as to intentionally limit patients’ progress in order to create the appearance of a continued need for services.  In one instance, WHITNEY reported to LAUFER that the Facilities should not allow patients to go to the bathroom by themselves because they would then “think they are ready to go home.”  

LAUFER and WHITNEY directed the Facilities to engage in this conduct.  Specifically, WHITNEY carefully tracked the length of stay for each Medicare patient and expected staff at the Facilities to justify discharges scheduled to take place before the patient’s stay approached 100 days—the maximum compensable by Medicare.  Together with management at the Facilities, WHITNEY devised strategies for extending patient stays, including giving patients unnecessary tests to gauge their balance proficiency at the point they were ready for discharge to create a pretext for extending their stays.  WHITNEY reported on the success of these “discharge prevention” measures to Laufer, noting both areas where these measures succeeded and those where the Facilities had to work harder to prolong patient stays—such as for patients who were “younger and smarter” or “high level.”  LAUFER, in turn, received daily updates from the Facilities reporting the number of Medicare patients who had been discharged, and, on a number of occasions, instructed WHITNEY to curb discharges.  LAUFER gave these instructions without any information about the patients’ clinical needs and made explicit that they were designed to increase revenue. 

WHITNEY, with LAUFER’S knowledge, also instructed the Facilities to provide virtually all Medicare patients with therapy at the “Ultra High”—i.e., highest billing—level, without regard to the patients’ needs or whether, due to their conditions, they could benefit from this intense therapy.  To qualify for the Ultra High level, a patient must receive at least 720 minutes of skilled therapy services (i.e., physical, occupational or speech therapy requiring the services of a trained therapist) per week.  Employees understood that there was virtually no wiggle room when it came to determining how much rehabilitation therapy a patient would receive.  The pressure to provide this level of therapy in turn led the Facilities to bill for services that did not actually qualify as skilled therapy and thus were not eligible for Medicare reimbursement (such as simply moving the limbs of patients with severe cognitive impairments or assisting with routine self-care tasks).

LAUFER and WHITNEY’S efforts to keep Medicare patients at the Facilities for as close as possible to 100 days and to provide almost all patients, without regard to need, with therapy at the Ultra High level succeeded.  During the relevant period, the Facilities were significant outliers, compared to other skilled nursing facilities, with respect to Medicare patients’ average length of stay and levels of rehabilitation therapy.

These practices resulted in the Facilities submitting claims to Medicare for rehabilitation therapy that was not reasonable or necessary, was billed at a higher rate than appropriate, or did not involve the provision of skilled services and, accordingly, were ineligible for payment.  In addition, the Facilities made or used false statements and records that were material to false claims submitted to Medicare for payment for rehabilitation therapy that was unreasonable, unnecessary, or unskilled.

The Government intervened in a private whistleblower lawsuit before the Honorable Cathy Seibel that had previously been filed under seal pursuant to the False Claims Act.

Ms. Strauss thanked HHS-OIG for its assistance with the case.

Governor Cuomo Announces New York State 7-Day Average Positivity Rate Is Lowest in the Nation

 

Statewide 7-Day Average Positivity Rate is 0.64%; 58 Consecutive Days of Decline

1,007 Patient Hospitalizations Statewide - Lowest Since October 21

11 COVID-19 Deaths Statewide Yesterday

Citi Field to Expand to Full Capacity for 90 percent of Stadium for New York Mets games beginning Friday, June 11


 Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today updated New Yorkers on the state's progress combatting COVID-19. Additionally, the Governor announced that beginning Friday, June 11, Citi Field will expand full capacity sections for vaccinated individuals to 90 percent of the stadium for New York Mets home games. In total, this would enable more than 32,000 to attend games.

"Over half of all New Yorkers have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. To think that at this point last year the vaccine was a dream on the horizon is staggering. I am proud to lead the people of this state who have gotten us to where we are," Governor Cuomo said. "New Yorkers are tough and together we have carried each other through this pandemic and we are ever closer to emerging into a better, safer, reimagined state. Those who have not yet received the vaccine should take advantage of ongoing programs and do so for the greater good of New York."
 
Today's data is summarized briefly below:

  • Test Results Reported - 71,019
  • Total Positive - 431
  • Percent Positive - 0.61%
  • 7-Day Average Percent Positive - 0.64%
  • Patient Hospitalization - 1,007 (-25)
  • Patients Newly Admitted - 93
  • Patients in ICU - 252 (-3)
  • Patients in ICU with Intubation - 136 (-2)
  • Total Discharges - 182,472 (+88)
  • Deaths - 11
  • Total Deaths - 42,734
  • Total vaccine doses administered - 19,149,539
  • Total vaccine doses administered over past 24 hours - 68,355
  • Total vaccine doses administered over past 7 days - 521,361
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with at least one vaccine dose - 65.5%
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with completed vaccine series - 57.3%
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with at least one vaccine dose - 53.8%
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with completed vaccine series - 46.1%

COUNCILMEMBER RUBEN DIAZ UNVEILS EMMANUEL FRIAS STREET CO-NAMING

 

On Saturday, June 5, 2021, at 11:30 am Council Member Rev. Ruben Diaz will be unveiling the corner of Castle Hill Ave & Quimby Ave as “Emmanuel Frias Way”.
  
Emmanuel Frias graduated from Long Island University in May 2019, with a degree in Master of Science and a previous Bachelor’s Degree of Science in Kinesiology from the State University of New York College at Cortland. He worked at Castle Hill Medical Center providing patient care, assisting in the development of exercise prescriptions for reconditioning exercise, and educated patients through rehabilitation programs. 
 
Emmanuel Frias was a leader, advocate, and outspoken leader for his patients and the community. 

“As the City Councilmember representing the area of Castle Hill, I was able to obtain approval from the City Council to rename the corner of Castle Hill Ave & Quimby Ave as “Emmanuel Frias Way”. 

The street renaming ceremony will begin at 11:30 am all are welcome and encouraged to come as we pay tribute to Mr. Emmanuel Frias and celebrate his life. Elected officials, community leaders, friends of Emmanuel, and anyone else who would like to come together to remember Mr. Emmanuel Frias. 

Location: Castle Hill & Quimby Avenue Bronx, NY
 
Date: Saturday, June 5, 2021
 
Time: 11:30 am