logo
Senior living home files for bankruptcy wiping out residents' funds

Senior living home files for bankruptcy wiping out residents' funds

Daily Mail​10-07-2025
A retirement community on Long Island has filed for bankruptcy, wiping out millions of its elderly residents' savings. Harborside, a continuing-care retirement community in Port Washington, New York, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in October last year. Its elderly residents each paid a substantial entrance fee - between $425,000 and $1.7 million depending on the package - as well as thousands of dollars in monthly fees.
Entrance fees can be refunded to family members on a resident's death or returned to the retiree if they choose to leave the facility. However, when a facility such as Harborside enters bankruptcy the process ensures that secured creditors are paid before residents. This can mean that once debtors are paid the money due to families has been decimated.
Arlene Kohen, an 89-year-old resident at Harborside paid the standard $945,000 entrance fee by selling her Great Neck home for $838,000, according to The Wall Street Journal. Following the bankruptcy her family now expects to receive less than a third of the $710,000 refund the facility promised her.
'That's money that I'll never see,' Beverly Kohen Fried, Kohen's daughter, told the Journal. 187 out of the 210 current and former Harborside residents have accepted the Chapter 11 offer that returns 32 percent of their entry fees to them. Harborside had declared bankruptcy twice before its most recent filing.
The complex first opened in 2010 shortly after the housing market crash. In such a climate prospective residents found it harder to sell their homes to cover the steep entrance fees. As a result Harborside filled less than 60 percent of its 229 independent-living units in two years, the Journal reported. The company filed its first bankruptcy in 2014.
Then the pandemic once again halted the flow of new move-ins and the business filed for bankruptcy for the second time in 2021. Residents were unaffected by these first two filings because bondholders supported the proposed restructuring. However, when the company defaulted its bonds again in 2022 the new owner that bought Harborside began scaling back the care offered.
Most of the residents who either needed that care immediately or planned to incrementally increase their care over time were forced to leave. Among those residents were Bob and Sandy Curtis. The rollback of available care meant Sandy had to be moved to a specialized memory care facility in February. Sandy died in April at 85 years old after a fall. Curtis, 88, remained in Harborside and is hoping to receive a refund of $50,000 of his initial $840,000 entrance fee this fall.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why millions could work for longer under new state pension reform
Why millions could work for longer under new state pension reform

The Independent

time29 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Why millions could work for longer under new state pension reform

Work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall has announced a review of the state pension age, potentially leading to an increase, as she relaunched the Pensions Commission. Ms Kendall warned of a growing threat of pensioner poverty without major reform, noting that future retirees are projected to receive less than current pensioners. She highlighted that the state pension 's triple lock guarantee costs £31 billion annually and projected a significant increase in the pensioner population by the 2070s. Many individuals are not saving adequately for retirement, with nearly half of the working-age population and only one in five self-employed people not contributing to a pension. The newly relaunched Pensions Commission will provide recommendations by 2027 on how to boost retirement income, though it will not address the triple lock or the state pension age review.

New Astronomer CEO describes 'unusual and surreal' Coldplay 'kiss cam' scandal
New Astronomer CEO describes 'unusual and surreal' Coldplay 'kiss cam' scandal

NBC News

timean hour ago

  • NBC News

New Astronomer CEO describes 'unusual and surreal' Coldplay 'kiss cam' scandal

The new interim CEO of Astronomer issued a statement Monday on the viral moment at a Coldplay concert that thrust the data company into the spotlight. Pete DeJoy stepped into the role after the former CEO, Andy Byron, resigned on Saturday following the circulation of a clip of him and a woman in an embrace at Gillette Stadium in Massachusetts on Wednesday. Coldplay's "kiss cam" was displaying couples in attendance on the screens when it panned to a man, later identified as Byron, and a woman, who turned around to hide her face, while Byron quickly ducked out of the frame. The moment went viral, with users claiming that he is a married man. However, NBC News has not independently confirmed this or identified the woman. In his statement, DeJoy said that the incident received "a level of media attention that few companies — let alone startups in our small corner of the data and AI world — ever encounter." "The spotlight has been unusual and surreal for our team and, while I would never have wished for it to happen like this, Astronomer is now a household name," he wrote on LinkedIn. DeJoy continued that Astronomer, a New York-based company with under 500 employees, has "never shied away from challenges," including navigating financial issues and the global Covid-19 pandemic. "And yet, we're still here," he wrote. "We're here because Astronomer is built by people who live to solve hard problems, stay late to fix what's broken, and care deeply about doing things the right way. We're here because our customers trust us with their most ambitious data & AI projects. And, most importantly, we're here because the mission is bigger than any one moment."

Citi hires Vargas from JPMorgan to lead equity capital markets in North America
Citi hires Vargas from JPMorgan to lead equity capital markets in North America

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Citi hires Vargas from JPMorgan to lead equity capital markets in North America

NEW YORK, July 21 (Reuters) - Citigroup (C.N), opens new tab hired Bernal Vargas from JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N), opens new tab to lead its equity capital markets division in North America, according to a memo seen by Reuters on Monday. Vargas will be based in New York. He was most recently the head of Americas cash equity sales at JPMorgan, according to the memo signed by Doug Adams, Citi's global co-head of equity capital markets. Vargas previously worked at Merrill Lynch and Goldman Sachs. He will join later this year, the memo added, without specifying a date. Citigroup's head of banking, Viswas Raghavan, has been announcing high-profile hires as the bank expands its investment banking business and revenue. Citi hired David Friedland from Goldman Sachs as co-head of North America investment banking coverage. It also recruited two executives from JPMorgan for its financing business. The lender plans to raise its investment banking headcount in Japan by 10% to 15% over the next year and make new hires in Australia.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store