Date: Fri 15-Sep-1995
Date: Fri 15-Sep-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
FHH-Middletown-lawsuit-
Full Text:
Middletown Officials File Suit To Block Fairfield Hills Closing
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
Middletown officials have filed a suit in Hartford Superior Court to halt the
closing of Fairfield Hills Hospital and Norwich Hospital and the consolidation
of the state's mental health services at the Connecticut Valley Hospital (CVA)
in Middletown.
The suit, filed last Friday by the town's attorney, John King of Updike Kelly
and Spellacy of Hartford, seeks both a temporary and a permanent injunction
against the state until an environmental impact study is completed.
Robert Bourne, executive assistant to Middletown Mayor Thomas Serra, said the
state is required to conduct environmental impact studies for such projects.
"An environmental impact study doesn't just look at air quality and water
quality," Mr Bourne said. "It also is expected to look at the economical
impact and the need for social services that the consolidation would create."
Mr Bourne said former hospital patients would wind up living in Middletown and
relying on city services.
"Patients from the substance abuse and detox facilities can't be compelled to
return to their home towns when they are released," Mr Bourne said. "They tend
to stay in Middletown. We expect to have more group homes, more outpatient
facilities, because of the trend in de-instutionalization."
Mr Bourne said Middletown already carries a large burden because in addition
to CVA the city is also the site of Whiting Forensic Institute, a maximum
security facility for the criminally insane, and the Long Lane School, the
state's only incarceration facility for juvenile offenders.
Mr Bourne said the town's attorney also has filed a motion to attempt to force
the state to provide more information about what its agencies are doing in
their plans to consolidate the mental health hospitals.
"We realize that Middletown is in the center of the state but we want to know
whether the planned consolidation actually will save the state money," he
said. "There are a lot of dilapidated buildings which will require renovation.
And we want to know whether the state sought alternative sites."
The state said it has no plans to do the kind of environmental impact study
requested by Middletown and still expects to close Fairfield Hills by December
15. Robert Taylor, a spokesman for the Department of Mental Health and
Addiction Services which operates the three hospitals, said that the
Department of Environmental Protection is reviewing some concerns raised by
city officials in Middletown but most of their concerns do not fit the scope
of an environmental impact study.
