Cardinal Hayes brings adult group home to Millbrook

MILLBROOK — Cardinal Hayes Home for Special Children plans to turn one of its buildings in the Bennett Complex into a group home. Executive Director Fred Apers and Executive Director of Operations Wayne Frenzel approached the Village Board on June 26, for an informal discussion with the village trustees. The building, part of the Bennett Complex, is on Exmore Lane. Cardinal Hayes has occupied the building since 1984, Apers said, explaining it was part of the 1978 Bennett Complex subdivision known as Lot 4. Cardinal Hayes wants to convert the building into a group home in the form of a single-family unit. Under the New York Mental Hygiene Law, the Cardinal Hayes group home on Exmore Lane is considered a single-family unit. It also falls under this category according to the village’s zoning requirements. However, the Village Board can choose to approve the site as a suitable location for the single family unit, suggest another location or object to the usage based on saturation. The Village Board did not object, and approved the site as a single-family unit during the meeting. This will be the first Cardinal Hayes single-family unit outside of the main campus located in the town of Washington. Cardinal Hayes has other group homes in LaGrange, Pleasant Valley, Pine Plains and Red Hook. The home will be a residential location for elderly clients who are severely disabled. Apers said often, once those who are severely disabled age out of the school system, it is difficult to find them adequate care and residency.“This particular project first and foremost is geared toward serving very old adults who are part of the transition of the Wassaic Developmental Center,” Apers said. “We have met these adults, they know our need and they are closing down. They have substantial need and they know these people are going to pass on eventually. That allows us backfields for our young adults. The reality is we met these ladies and one gentleman there in the last stage of a life that they lived institutionally. But they were well cared for and will continue to be well cared for.”Apers said Cardinal Hayes has accepted 13 people between the ages of 82 and 98 to be the first to move into the new group home. In the future they will be succeeded by severely disabled people of the same diagnosis, though likely much younger. Apers told the board the group home will be state-of-the-art, fully equipped to take care of its residents with around-the-clock staff.“Every building I have worked with them on has been first class,” said Frenzel, who has been employed by Cardinal Hayes for more than 38 years. “Every concern people bring up is always addressed, whether it’s lighting, circulation or landscaping, they are an exemplary operation. They run a great operation.”Cardinal Hayes has 110 residents countywide and 60 residents at the main campus in Millbrook, along with 350 full-time employees. Apers thanked the board for approving the plan for the site.

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