Sentences with phrase «nursing home developer»

As he rises from field laborer to horse trader, junk dealer, real estate owner, nursing home developer, multimillionaire, Oca's Pentecostal beliefs become increasingly important in his life and the life of his family.

Not exact matches

The state is hiding information about how a developer got approval to buy two NYC nursing homes just to turn them into luxury condos, according to a new lawsuit.
State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman on Friday announced a settlement with a shady real - estate group that bought city nursing homes and flipped them to developers who sought to convert them into luxury condos.
De Blasio administration officials accused the Allure Group, which bought the 45 Rivington Street property from VillageCare in February for $ 28 million, of deceiving the city by promising it would maintain the building as a nursing home, despite already being in contract to sell it to the condominium developers, the Wall Street Journal reported.
New memos debunk the de Blasio's administration's claim that its top officials knew nothing about deed restrictions lifted by a city agency on a nursing home on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, learning of it only in late February, after the building was sold to luxury condominium developers for $ 116 million.
NYC First Deputy Mayor Anthony Shorris was aware of a development scandal in late February — well before Mayor Bill de Blasio — but after a Lower East Side nursing home had been sold for $ 116 million to a condo developer.
Both men are part of a separate investigation by Bharara's office into Allure's sale of a nonprofit nursing home on Manhattan's Lower East side to a luxury condo developer after de Blasio's administration made the unusual decision to lift the deed restriction.
Then they learned that the owner of the toxic lot and the developer who wants to put a 20 - story nursing home there were represented by Kramer Levin, the same law firm that's now representing the mayor in a growing federal probe over possible campaign financing violations.
The mayor has personally blamed the real estate developers at the center of the scandal — accusing them of hoodwinking the city administration into dropping deed restrictions on the former nursing home.
The proposal was for a private developer to build housing and retail while replacing the aging Veterans Affairs facilities with a new nursing home, rehabilitation center and expanded outpatient facilities.
For months, the de Blasio administration has insisted that its top officials knew nothing about deed restrictions that were lifted by a city agency on a nursing home on the Lower East Side of Manhattan — learning of it only in late February, after the building was sold to luxury condominium developers for $ 116 million.
Last week, New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman announced that he reached a settlement with the Allure Group, following an investigation into the developer's practice of closing deed - restricted nursing homes and then converting them into luxury residential properties.
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman announced Friday that he is settling with the Allure Group, a real estate developer under investigation for closing deed - restricted nursing homes in Manhattan and Brooklyn that were then converted into luxury residential properties.
One donor, Park Developers & Builders, was subpoenaed by Attorney General Eric Schneiderman's office in recent weeks for its bid to raze a Bedford - Stuyvesant nursing home and replace it with a 241 - unit residential building, according to a source.
Under the deal, a developer called the Allure Group bought the property for $ 28 million, paid the city $ 16 million to remove the deed restrictions that required its use as a nursing home.
Hein has sold the county nursing home to private developers while other counties face mounting costs of operation.
Weiss» client is looking to rezone a manufacturing site in order to construct a nursing home at 141 Conover Street, and while the owner wouldn't be required to build any affordable housing, the city is including it in the MIH program in the event the site is later sold off to a residential developer, he explained.
The lifting of the restrictions allowed Allure Group, a for - profit nursing home provider, to flip the property at 45 Rivington St. to a luxury condo developer for $ 116 million.
The transactions included the lifting of a deed restriction on a Manhattan nursing home that enabled its purchase by a luxury condominium developer for $ 116 million.
Here's a summary of where some of Shafran's current contributions come from (total = $ 58,802): Political / Elected Officials / Candidates / Government $ 9,890 Donald Manes Associates and Intermediaries $ 4,200 Lobbyists (they show up on the NYC Lobbyist search) $ 1,500 Unions $ 8,450 Real Estate / Developers / Construction $ 4,275 Lawyers $ 1,675 Employees of: Epoch Times $ 1,850 Union Plaza Nursing Home $ 1,350 Parker Jewish Institute $ 800
He also initially represented the not - for - profit group whose sale of the Rivington House nursing home on the Lower East Side led to a developer grabbing it for condos — one of biggest municipal scandals of de Blasio's tenure.
Morales had been cooperating with investigators on two matters: the mysterious deed change that allowed the sale of a Lower East Side nursing home to developers, who netted a $ 72 million profit, and strong - arm efforts to cut Singh a sweetheart deal.
Among those matters: the lifting of deed restrictions on a Lower Manhattan nursing home that allowed it to be sold to luxury condominium developers at a $ 72 million profit; whether an animal rights group that supported removing horse carriages from city streets got favorable treatment in return for generous donations to the Campaign for One New York; and whether the mayor, or those acting with him, violated state election law in raising money for three Democratic candidates to help the party gain control of the State Senate in 2014.
Another donor, who gave at least $ 5,000, Park Developers & Builders, was subpoenaed by Attorney General Eric Schneiderman's office earlier this year for its bid to raze a Bedford - Stuyvesant nursing home and replace it with a 241 - unit residential building.
Using the health and safety excuse, CVS might build a big pharmacy in the core, or a developer might construct a 250 - bed nursing home.
Listen to home visiting supervisors participating in MIHOPE discuss their experiences talking about the study with families and referral partners, Dr. David Olds (developer of Nurse - Family Partnership) talking about the ethics of random assignment and the importance of continuing to build the evidence base, and the MIHOPE - Strong Start research team responding directly to questions from potential sites.
National home visiting model developers for Healthy Families America and Nurse - Family Partnership support MIHOPE - Strong Start and encouraged local program sites to participate in the study.
One success story has been the two Porter Hills Green House Homes in Grand Rapids, Mich., two properties next to each other that opened in 2008 by nursing home and seniors housing developer and operator Porter Hills Retirement Communities and Services.
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