Carlson Place, a care facility in Norwalk, was ordered to relocate all residents after a state investigation found nearly two dozen public health law violations found. The list included insufficient food supplies, “heavily soiled” bathrooms and live bed bugs.
The attorney general’s office said Thursday that a new buyer has been found for the facility and that all residents are being moved out of the building for a full renovation.
In an emergency ordinance issued on June 8, state investigators compiled a long list of complaints against the 29-bed house. In addition to an inadequate food supply, the Department of Health said Carlson Place had failed to ensure adequate serving size and nutritional value to residents.
In addition, DPH officials, who conducted inspections from late April to early June, said the facility was insufficiently staffed to meet residents’ daily care and medication needs.
Listed manager of the facility, Diane Mortali, did not immediately respond to requests for comment Thursday morning.
The nursing homes licensed by the Ministry of Health offer residents a furnished single or double room and common areas. They are also said to offer three meals a day and some limited personal services.
At the time of the emergency decree, 27 people were living on Carlson Place, according to DPH. State officials said everyone was eligible to move to the nearby Westport Rehabilitation Complex.
A resident had already moved out on Wednesday.
A spokesman for Attorney General William Tong said in a press release Thursday that “a buyer has been identified who has agreed to buy and renovate Carlson Place at their own expense”.
Tong’s office announced that the state had agreed with the new owner, Dr. Syed Reza, has completed a pre-approval arrangement and that the arrangement includes extensive renovations that must be completed before a license is granted.
“Once this license is granted, the former residents of Carlson Place will be given the opportunity to return home safely,” said Tong’s office in a statement emailed to him.
DPH’s June ordinance contained a long list of health violations that directly impacted the daily lives of the people at Carlson Place.
The bathrooms were missing light covers, the entire furnishings were missing or bent floor tiles, chests of drawers in the resident’s rooms were broken or there were missing drawers and furniture in the lounge and in the television area of the center were according to the report broken and dirty.
“The bathrooms throughout the facility are badly soiled and dilapidated,” the report said. “Numerous ceiling tiles were wet, stained and had fallen to the floor due to the ingress of moisture.”
DPH officials wrote that mattresses were “cracked and dirty” and that “live bed bugs were found on the mattresses”.
As a result of the June 8 order, Carlson Place must stop new admissions, provide state officials with daily meal plans and menus until all patients are discharged, and give qualified inspectors immediate access to the building.
The public prosecutor’s office for residents of long-term care facilities praised the efforts to protect the residents of the facility.
“I was delighted to hear that there is a potential opportunity for residents to return to their homes in significantly improved circumstances,” said Mairead Painter, the state ombudsman for long-term care, in a statement emailed. “The previous conditions were totally unacceptable and maintaining quality homes should always be our priority.”