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As a Specialty Care Hospital Prepares to Close, Patients Wonder What’s Next

The Goldwater campus of Coler-Goldwater Hospital, a rehabilitation facility on Roosevelt Island where many patients rely on wheelchairs. It is slated to close to make way for a new graduate school of technology.Michael Appleton for The New York Times The Goldwater campus of Coler-Goldwater Hospital, a rehabilitation facility on Roosevelt Island where many patients rely on wheelchairs. It is slated to close to make way for a new graduate school of technology.
Tjader Fogle, 71, a paraplegic, is among the patients who have been transferred from the Goldwater building to the Coler building in anticipation of Goldwater's closing. Michael Appleton for The New York Times Tjader Fogle, 71, a paraplegic, is among the patients who have been transferred from the Goldwater building to the Coler building in anticipation of Goldwater’s closing.

Frantz Lys enjoys sitting by the water gazing across the East River toward the Manhattan skyline. For the past 21 years, Mr. Lys has been a patient at Coler-Goldwater Memorial Hospital, a specialty care hospital and nursing facility on Roosevelt Island that offers long-term rehabilitation.

Mr. Lys, 38, moved into Goldwater in 1992, after a car accident fractured his spinal cord and left him paralyzed below the neck. “Here on the island you can go out and not worry about cars in the streets,’’ he said. “It’s safe.”

Over the years Roosevelt Island has proved to be a sanctuary for many disabled people. Not only is Coler-Goldwater Hospital home to one of the state’s largest population of disabled people, but the island also has limited traffic and offers easy access by public transportation to Queens and Manhattan.

The hospital consists of two separate campuses - Goldwater on the southern end of the island and Coler on the northern end. Together, the facilities house 1065 patients, with about 320 living at Goldwater.

But soon Goldwater will have to be emptied because it is scheduled to close in December to make way for the construction of Cornell University’s new graduate school of technology. The closing has left many residents anxious, especially longtime residents who have relished their ability to move about their neighborhood with relative ease.

Over the last two years about 200 Goldwater patients have already moved to private homes.

Many remaining patients will move either to the Coler campus or to a facility expected to open soon in East Harlem named after Henry J. Carter, the founder and chairman of Wheelchair Charities, an organization that has been supporting Coler-Goldwater for decades.

“We have a sufficient number of beds between the Coler campus and the new facility, Henry J. Carter, to accommodate all of the remaining patients,” said Robert K. Hughes, executive director of Coler-Goldwater Hospital.

But Mr. Lys, who was moved to the Coler campus in September, said the transition had been difficult because he believes Goldwater is better equipped to meet the needs of patients in wheelchairs.

He has taken to spending more time outdoors since his relocation. “It’s a sort of a therapy for me,” he said. “It helps me release my frustration, helps me release my anger, my depression.”

Another patient, who was transferred to Coler in July after spending five years at Goldwater, shares Mr. Lys’s view. “Coler is not as handicapped-equipped,” said the patient, who asked not to be identified because he feared retribution from the hospital. “The bathrooms are small; it’s hard to get the wheelchair to the showers.”

Goldwater Hospital was built in 1939 on the site of a demolished prison and was designed to treat patients with chronic illnesses, mostly people with tuberculosis. Over the years, however, its focus shifted to long-term care for people with disabilities. Coler Hospital opened in 1952, and also provided care to disabled patients. The two facilities merged in the 1990s with a combined capacity of 2,000 patients.

The hospital offers a variety of recreation activities, including movies and bingo nights, as well as art and creative writing classes. The facility also has a gym, which helps patients with their rehabilitation, a church and even its own Subway sandwich restaurant.

Unlike the residents of many similar facilities, Coler-Goldwater patients are provided with motorized wheelchairs through a program sponsored by Wheelchair Charities.

“You can imagine if you go to another facility where they don’t have motorized wheelchairs, you’d be forced to stay in bed,’’ Mr. Lys said. “Especially for someone like me who can’t use a manual chair.”

Armand Xama, who became a paraplegic after a diving accident six years ago, lived in different facilities in Queens and on Staten Island before moving to Goldwater in 2011.

“I’ve been to other places and I know what it is not to be in Goldwater,’’ Mr. Xama, 31, said. “In Staten Island you couldn’t go out at all - it’s like going to prison yourself.”

Some Goldwater residents are set to be transferred to a low-cost development in East Harlem that, when it is completed next year, will have studio and one-bedroom apartments for disabled people.

Mr. Xama hopes that’s where he will end up so that then he can try to find a job. “I want to work because I want to feel that I’m doing something, that I’m fulfilled,” he said. “Being more active and in working condition, will keep me even healthier.”



Video: What New Yorkers Think About New Limits on Tobacco Purchases

Shortly after Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg came to office, he passed what he considers one of his signature achievements, the banning of smoking in restaurants and bars in New York City. Now, on the eve of the end of the Bloomberg era, the mayor has signed a law banning the sale of tobacco products to anyone under 21 within the five boroughs.

The law, which Mr. Bloomberg signed on Tuesday, will take effect six months later, in mid-May, long after Mr. Bloomberg has handed his office over to Bill de Blasio, a liberal Democrat who has pledged to reverse many of Mr. Bloomberg’s policies that, Mr. de Blasio said, favored the moneyed class in the city. Mr. Bloomberg’s health initiatives seem secure.



A Boxer With an Unfriendly Owner

Dear Diary:

I love dogs, so it’s not unusual for me to stop while walking my 60-pound mutt â€" or when I’m just headed somewhere â€" to reach over and pet one on the street. I always ask the owner first if it’s O.K., and usually, they’re as accommodating as I am because, after all, they understand!

While out at lunchtime on a recent Thursday, a beautiful boxer caught my eye, and, as usual, I walked over to get a few minutes of dog time during my workday.

“Is she friendly?” I asked the owner, getting ready to bend down and get a slobbery kiss.

“She is, but I’m not,” the lanky, well-dressed man said, as he yanked on the leash and pulled her away.

Read all recent entries and our updated submissions guidelines. Reach us via email diary@nytimes.com or follow @NYTMetro on Twitter using the hashtag #MetDiary.



New York Today: Hiring Time at City Hall

The mayor-elect awaits your resume.Chang W. Lee/The New York Times The mayor-elect awaits your resume.

Want to apply for a job in the Bill de Blasio administration?

It’s easy.

Go to the Transition NYC website. Click “apply for jobs.” Fill out the form.

But you might have to wait a while for a callback.

For the first time in more than a decade, the city’s leadership is turning over.

Thousands of resumes have arrived, via every possible method, at the de Blasio transition office.

“The response has been overwhelming,” the office said in a statement.

A new mayor also means new opportunities for patronage.

Most city jobs are civil service positions.

But City Hall still controls hundreds of upper and mid-level jobs: commissioners, deputy and assistant commissioners, and managers at dozens of agencies.

Democratic politicians, mindful that a Democrat has not occupied City Hall in 20 years, will undoubtedly push preferred candidates.

Mr. de Blasio’s defenders contend that he won the election without much support from the political establishment, and so has relatively few favors to repay.

Nathan Leventhal, the transition chairman for Mayors Bloomberg and Dinkins, said the knocks will come at the door nevertheless.

“There always are people submitting names for political reasons in any administration,” he said.

Here’s what else you need to know for Thursday.

WEATHER

Would you trade warmer temperatures for less sunshine? You have no choice. Near 50, mostly cloudy.

Up ahead: rain likely tomorrow, freeze Saturday night, maybe snow Sunday.

COMMUTE

Subways: Click for latest status.

Rails: Click for L.I.R.R., Metro-North or New Jersey Transit status.

Roads: Click for traffic map or radio report on the 1s.

Alternate-side parking is in effect today and Friday.

COMING UP TODAY

- Mayor Bloomberg makes an announcement at City Hall at 11:30 a.m. (Details to come.)

- The New York Hispanic Clergy Organization prays that Alex Rodriguez beats his steroid suspension, outside the offices of Major League Baseball at 11:30 a.m.

- Why did no one think of this before? The first ever Pro Wrestling Film Festival kicks off in the East Village. [$10]

- The Williamsburg Independent Film Festival gets under way, too. [$13]

- Two benefits for Philippine typhoon victims: the Gin Blossoms (remember “Hey Jealousy”?) at Stage 48 in Midtown at 8 p.m. [$25] and a Lou Reed tribute lineup at Jalopy Theater in Brooklyn at 9 p.m. [$10]

- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.

IN THE NEWS

- A 34-year-old man was arrested in a string of gropings of preteen girls in Park Slope. [Gothamist]

- Not only did John F. Kennedy once live in the Bronx, so did Lee Harvey Oswald. [New York Times]

- The Upper West Side has the dirtiest air in the city. [DNAinfo]

- Barneys and Macy’s did not show at a City Council hearing on racial profiling of shoppers. [New York Times]

- Happy now? After public outrage at the idea of renaming NY1 “TWC News,” Time Warner has decided to rename it Time Warner Cable News NY1. [Observer]

- A new one-day subway ridership record was set four Thursdays ago: 5,985,311 rides. [New York Times]

- A subway robber has mugged five riders in three days, in Manhattan and Brooklyn. [WABC-TV Eyewitness News]

- Alex Rodriguez walked out of an arbitration hearing on his suspension for steroid use, declaring himself “disgusted with this abusive process.” [New York Times]

- Scoreboard: Pacers roar past Knicks, 103-96 in overtime. Bobcats nip Nets, 95-91. Devils roast Ducks, 4-3 in overtime.

Joseph Burgess contributed reporting.

New York Today is a morning roundup that stays live from 6 a.m. till about noon.

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