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Motion Television Country House Hospital - Home Plans & Blueprints ...
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Motion & amp; Country House and Television Hospital is a retired community, with individual cottages, and a fully licensed acute care hospital, located at 23388 Mulholland Drive in the Woodland Hills neighborhood of Los Angeles, in the state of California, USA. This is the service of Picture Motion & amp; Television Fund ("MPTF"), and provides services to members of the film and television industry.


Video Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital



History

In 1940, the then president of the Moving Image Assistance Fund Jean Hersholt found 48 acres (19 ha) walnuts and orange gardens at the southwestern tip of San Fernando Valley that sold for US $ 850 per acre ($ 0.21/m²²) ($ 40,800). The fund board purchased the package in the same year to build Rumah Negara Gambar Motion . To offset the cost for the first building, designed by architect William Pereira, 7 hectares (2.8 ha) was sold. Mary Pickford and Jean Hersholt broke ground first. Dedication was on September 27, 1942.

Motion Picture Hospital was dedicated to the Country House ground in 1948. The present were Ronald Reagan, Shirley Temple, and Robert Young, among other stars. The service was then extended to those working in the television industry as well, and his name was changed to reflect the changes.

Dozens of movie characters spend their last years here, so people are less well known from behind the scenes industry. Those who have money pay in their own way, while others, who have no money, pay nothing. Fees are based only on "ability to pay".

Individuals in film, TV, and other aspects of the industry, are accepted, such as actors, artists, backlots, cameramen, directors, extras, manufacturers, and security guards. To qualify for a cottage, applicants (or their spouses) must reach the minimum age of seventy, and should work steadily for at least twenty years in the production of the entertainment industry. Waiting times are usually several months, with no preference given to celebrities or those who can pay in their own way, according to officials from the fund.

The facility has an annual budget of $ 120 million.

In 1993, Motion Picture & amp; Dana Television Foundation was founded with Jeffrey Katzenberg as Founding Chairman. The Foundation continues to exist as a channel to collect the visions of their donors and philanthropy to the ever-evolving needs of the entertainment community it serves. The MPTF Foundation puts an annual event that helps raise millions of dollars, to continue its mission to help members of the entertainment industry in need. These events include Michael Douglas and Friends Golf Tournament, The Night Before and The Evening Before.

In 1998, the Woodland Hills campus was named The Wasserman Campus of the Motion Picture & amp; Television Fund to honor Long-term commitment and support from Mr and Mrs Lew Wasserman.

In February 2000, William Haug resigned as CEO of MPTF. This position is filled by Dr. David Tillman on May 16, 2000. who is one of the highest paid CEOs in the health care center, with the current annual salary which includes bonuses and bonuses of approximately $ 750,000.

In 2006, a breakthrough for the Saban Health and Fitness Center featuring Jodie Foster Aquatic Pavilion was held at Wasserman Campus. The center is named after donor Haim Saban and his wife Dr. Cheryl Saban. It opened on July 18, 2007 and featured aquatic and land-based therapy as well as MPTF's Center on Aging.

In addition to offering temporary financial assistance and operating Picture Motion & amp; The State House and Television Hospital, the MPTF service operates six outpatient health centers throughout the greater Los Angeles area as well as Samuel Goldwyn Foundation Children's Center.

In October 2008, the Directors of the Company MPTF voted unanimously to close acute care hospitals and long-term care facilities in October 2009. In December 2008 the MPTF Management Board voted unanimously to support the October Company Board decision. The voting is done without the knowledge of the population or family that will be affected by the closure. Until the end of November 2008, following a vote in October 2008 to cover acute care hospitals and long-term care facilities, residents were treated at Long Term Care centers under the impression that they will be there for the rest of their lives, only to learn several months later that the LTC unit will be closed.

In 2002, director Barry Avrich produced and directed a documentary film about MPTF called Glitter Palace . The film features an inside view of the MPTF and its renowned residents.

Maps Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital



The announced closing

On January 14, 2009, residents and families of long-term care units (LTCU) were notified by closing letters and locations that will soon be inhabited by parents and disabled under the care of MPTF. In a meeting held by former CEO Dr. David Tillman with concerned family members, revealed that the LTCU and the Acute Care Center will be closed. The meeting became very controversial because it was discovered that the reasons for the closure had been heating up for five years without the knowledge of people who had been accepted at the facility under the false promise of having a 'home for the rest of their lives'. The main reason given to the family is that LTCU lost $ 10 million per year, and this will eventually make the bankruptcy of funds. It is noted by actors John Schneider and David Carradine, who attended the meeting to support the family, that the MPTF did not meet their creed to "take care of themselves" and had failed to tell family and entertainment. industry closure in a precise and humane way. The CEO Foundation of Scherer has been profiled in 1996 as a rain-maker whose sharpness raising allows Home Image Motion to dramatically expand its services.

At the time of the announcement, 138 people received long-term care at the facility. Jeffrey Katzenberg, chair of the current MPTF Foundation Board, said the fund recognizes they have no choice but to close the facility, stating "acute care hospitals and long-term care facilities result in an operating deficit that could bankrupt MPTF within a few years."

There were over 500 hospital admissions and about 100 long-term residents alone in 2008. Fund administrators projected that their shortcomings would only grow as a result of a deteriorating economy.

The main sources of funding for long-term care and hospitals are Medicare and Medi-Cal. The facility claims to receive $ 20 million per year in reimbursement, although the operating costs are $ 30 million per year. The MPTF receives about $ 10,500 per patient per month from Medi-Cal. The California Healthcare Foundation found that MPTF received 80% of its patient funds from Medi-Cal.

Soon after, a grassroots organization Saving Our Own Lives (STLOOO) was created to organize citizens, family members, and supporters to counter the closure of the LTCU. A Facebook group is generated that quickly becomes over 3,500-strong, to also support residents and families facing eviction by MPTF. Soon after, the law firm of Girardi Keese came to the ship to represent residents and family members who were ad litem keepers for their elderly family members.

In the following months, the MPTF has to deal with a series of claims expressing inaccuracies in the alleged financial risk claim claim, and the absence of exposure from elderly residents to transfer trauma. According to a member of STLOOO, the son-in-law of a resident reached out to him over the Internet stating that his mother refused to eat on the second day at his new residence. Two weeks later the woman died after complications due to pneumonia. Bullying claims by social service workers and more deaths that can be attributed to transfer trauma reported to family members by other family members. In addition, in an act that could accuse intentional emotional pressure, the MPTF placed a fake prop studio police car that was painted to resemble a Los Angeles Police Department cruiser in the parking lot. It has an intimidating effect on elderly residents who know they are facing the 'expulsion' of the property. Again, Ken Scherer in an interview was quoted as saying the idea of ​​a prop police car was 'wrong', his confession shocked the family.

Articles published in the Los Angeles Times , Daily News and online by The Wrap.com and Nikki Finke Hollywood Daily > constantly hammering the Motion Picture and Television Fund with newly discovered facts, reporting population deaths, and other facts flying in front of what the MPTF claims.

In October 2009, when it was initially set to shut down LTCU, MPTF renewed their operating licenses from LTCU and the Acute Care Unit for another year. CEO David Tillman later resigned and was replaced by CEO of Panavision who ousted Bob Beitcher.

A Retirement Community Where Hollywood Takes Care Of Its Own : NPR
src: media.npr.org


Future

Through the tenacity of its supporters, MPTF is navigated through the storm of the fiscal crisis of 2009. By 2016, MPTCHH is still fully operational and has expansion plans, including a 400-unit non-profit luxury community for the elderly living on land adjacent to 18 acres (now growing tomatoes and basil ) that will pump money back into the organization. For her 99th birthday, actor Kirk Douglas blessed the MPTF with a $ 15 million prize to enable the creation of an 80-population Alzheimer's facility. The facility, to be named the Kirk Douglas Care Pavilion, has not been officially announced.

January 8, 1939 | Today in Labor History
src: todayinlaborhistory.files.wordpress.com


Famous citizen

* denotes death while living in hospital

A Retirement Community Where Hollywood Takes Care Of Its Own : NPR
src: media.npr.org


See also

  • Lillian Booth Home Actor

The MPTF Story: The First 50 Years - MPTF
src: www.mptf.com


References


Hollywood's Senior Living Facility Hit With Lawsuit Over Groping ...
src: cdn1.thr.com


External links

  • Official website
  • This hospital is in the CA Healthcare Atlas A project by OSHPD
  • "You Must Remember This" - 1991 Premiere home article
  • "No Comfort for Old Men" - 2011 article Vanity Fair about home

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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