From the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
On a chilly night in April 2023, Charlotte Walker got a text message. Her sister, 68-year-old Barbara Walker, was in jail and facing a felony.
Barbara's crime: starting a fire to keep warm.
Charlotte was infuriated. Her sister, who has schizophrenia, should not have been living on the street at all.
Under an arrangement with the Social Security Administration known as the representative payee program, a staff member at the local nonprofit Outreach Community Health Centers was supposed to be assisting Barbara with housing.
That employee, Elizabeth Gabriel, was responsible for receiving Barbara's monthly disability benefit checks and using the money to help her secure food, medicine and housing. Since 2017, Gabriel had collected over $80,000 on Barbara's behalf, approximately $900 per month.
But over the past three years, Barbara’s siblings say their sister has consistently lived on and off the street while Gabriel has repeatedly failed to return phone calls, text messages and letters about their sister's care. They say neither she nor Outreach has provided insight into why Barbara was unhoused or how the funds were used. ...
Outreach declined to comment on the Walker family's complaints, citing federal privacy laws. Gabriel did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
3 comments:
Charlotte should have stepped up to be the rep-payee instead of being infuriated. Blaming others is easy.
Blaming others IS easy, but being a rep payee is not. Especially when the recipient has a significant mental illness like schizophrenia. Serving as a rep payee isn't within everyone's abilities.
THIS!!!!!
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