Monday, October 12, 2009

Homeless Crisis? What Homeless Crisis?


Town Officials disputed that mismanagement of public funds and malfeasance contributed to the current homeless crisis in Hyannis and Greater Cape Cod. for eight years, homeless clients attempted to organize a lobby group to address concerns over negligent services. A number of advocates and clinicians dismissed concerns of homeless parties as "non-credible" and "inappropriate". A number of rapes and homicides occurred withing the homeless population for fifteen years as executives focused on an exclusive expansion project in the neighboring Town of Sandwich.

The Dana's Field Project, modeled after the Moltrup Farm in Sandwich, received acclaim and support from municipal figures, local politicians, and local news publications. Executives lobbied the Office of the late Senator Ted Kennedy and gained publicity on a documentary produced by CNN. What Rick Presbrey, Livia Davis and Tom Brigham didn't tell the residents of Cape Cod was that the planned 11.5 project included lavish plans for housing for executives, a pony and horse stables, an Olympic Size Pool and Recreation Facility and a dairy farm to be run by ex-convicts in a residential area.

Livia Davis and Rick Presbrey promised the members of The Sandwich Family Association that the applicants would be carefully screened into the projects because executives would be living on site with their families, and candidates and clients that failed at rehabilitation would be returned to Hyannis at a new and improved location. Executives and Barnstable Town Officials lobbied the Barnstable Airport Commission to place the new and expanded facility at "Fish Landing". The organization narrowed in on a location directly across from the Radisson Hotel owned and operated by real estate and business mogul, Stu Bornstein. The proposal was short lived.

Mr. William Henchy, Esq., attorney representing the Sandwich Family Association, and Jason Talerman, Esq., the attorney appointed to advise the Zoning Board of Appeals in Sandwich discovered that the organization was maintaining seven sub-organizations on a budget of $14,500 and had little funding for the proposed project. Davis had lobbied HUD for $250,000 to purchase a parcel of land in Sandwich. The property has already been mortgaged and is supporting Housing Assistance Corporation's other adventures.

A number of criminal records and materials were delivered to Mr. Bill Henchy. Henchy addressed concerns that the organization would admit less than qualified, unrecovered tenants to the project for financial reasons. A number of homicides were traced to the shelter organizations subsequent to the decision that effectively stalled the development of this project. This weeks posts will include financial tax returns and the schematic plans for this organizations lavish expansion project at tax payer expense.