
 
        
         
		Adams visits Life’s WORC’s group home 
 Victoria Schneps, right, and Democratic mayoral candidate and Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, inside right, tour the Geraldo Rivera Home.  Photo Gabriele Holtermann 
 BY ANGÉLICA ACEVEDO 
 Brooklyn  Borough  President  
 Eric  Adams,  the  frontrunning  
 candidate for mayor  
 of  New  York  City,  visited  
 Life’s WORC  group  home  in  
 Little Neck to learn more  
 about  the  life  changing  services  
 the nonprofi t  provides  
 for individuals with disabilities  
 and their families. 
 On  Saturday,  Oct.  23,  Adams  
 joined Life’s WORC’s  
 Founder and Honorary  
 Board Member Victoria  
 Schneps,  Life’s  WORC  CEO  
 Janet Koch, Board Chairperson  
 Lynne Koufakis and staff  
 to  tour  the  organization’s  
 fi rst  group  home,  located  at  
 251-40  Gaskell  Rd.  in  Little  
 Neck. 
 The group home is named  
 the “Geraldo Rivera Home”  
 in honor of the noted journalist  
 who played an important  
 role alongside Schneps and  
 other activists in exposing  
 abuses at the Willowbrook  
 State  School  on  Staten  Island. 
  Rivera’s reports of Willowbrook’s  
 infamous history  
 of mistreating and neglecting  
 thousands of disabled  
 residents brought about public  
 outrage, and eventually  
 led to the facility’s closure,  
 with  its  residents  relocated  
 to smaller group homes. 
 In fact, the fi rst residents  
 at the Geraldo Rivera Home  
 were former Willowbrook  
 residents. 
 Life’s WORC  is  dedicated  
 to supporting people with intellectual  
 and developmental  
 disabilities as well as autism, 
   and  has  group  homes  
 throughout New York City. 
 Adams  recently  received  
 criticism after he said that  
 closing  Willowbrook  was  a  
 “mistake”  during  an  interview  
 on  “Morning  Joe”  on  
 MSNBC. 
 “A few employees harmed  
 those  who  were  patients  at  
 Willowbrook on Staten Island. 
   There  was  a  reaction  
 from  the  advocates  to  close  
 down Willowbrook, deinstitutionalize  
 those who needed  
 around-the-clock services,  
 but we didn’t balance that  
 with real programs to give it  
 to them,” Adams said in that  
 interview. 
 BRONX TIMES REPORTER, O 22     CT. 29-NOV. 4, 2021 BTR 
 Adams  later  clarifi ed  
 through a spokesperson that  
 while he was “disturbed by  
 the mistreatment at Willowbrook  
 decades ago,” he meant  
 that  “since  then,  New  York  
 has  systematically  eliminated  
 mental  health  beds  
 that can be greatly benefi cial  
 to those who need constant  
 care, leaving our city unable  
 to provide for them,” according  
 to amNew York Metro. 
 Schneps,  whose  daughter  
 Lara  had  been  a  patient  
 at Willowbrook, invited the  
 Brooklyn  borough  president  
 to learn more about Willowbrook  
 and Life’s WORC. 
 During his visit Saturday, 
  Adams again referred to  
 his comments about Willowbrook, 
  saying that he felt that  
 after  the  institution  closed,  
 the city and state “did not  
 give support to the families.” 
 “I just really felt as though  
 the city, the state just abandoned  
 those families with  
 children with  special  needs,  
 because behind every child  
 with  special  needs  is  a  special  
 parent,” Adams said.  
 “The challenge of what it  
 takes — that love and nurturing  
 and you just want your  
 child to have the dignity and  
 respect  that  they  deserve,  
 and that’s what every parent  
 wants. And I believe in it.” 
 During his visit at the Rivera  
 home, which included a  
 tour of the inside and outdoor  
 facilities,  Adams  met  with  
 residents  of  the  home  and  
 spoke  with  staff  about  the  
 many services  they offer beyond  
 their  residential  group  
 home,  including  behavioral  
 analysis  services,  community  
 habilitation, customized  
 employment services, day habilitation, 
  school-based services, 
  respite and family support  
 services, and trust and  
 fi nancial services, as well as  
 the  programs  and  services  
 offered by  its  Family Center  
 for Autism. 
 The Life’s WORC team  
 spoke with Adams about  the  
 challenges they face, particularly  
 relating  to  workforce  
 shortages. 
 Adams  offered  to  set  up  
 an  advisory  committee  to  
 help  address  some  of  these  
 challenges at the city level, if  
 elected mayor. 
 “If we could put together  
 a group like this, a cross section  
 … and just say, ‘Eric,  
 here  are  the  low  hanging  
 fruits  that  we  can  do  now,  
 here  are  some  of  the  things  
 that we can do later,’ and just  
 start putting us on a pathway,” 
  Adams said.  “We need  
 to be pouring our resources  
 into  those  who  have  barriers.” 
 Along  with  representatives  
 from Life’s WORC, the  
 event was attended by Inter- 
 Agency Council of Developmental  
 Disabilities Agencies  
 Inc. (IAC) Executive Director  
 Thomas  McAlvanah;  AHRC  
 New  York  City  CEO  Marco  
 R. Damiani; and Quality Services  
 for the Autism Community  
 (QSAC) NY Chairperson  
 Yvette Watts. 
 Disclosure:  Victoria  
 Schneps is publisher of  
 Schneps Media, the parent  
 company of Bronx Times Reporter/ 
 Bronx Times.