SERV Behavioral Health At SERV we share our experience, support and guidance with children,  adults and families as they work to recover from and cope with mental  illness, addictions, challenging behaviors, and developmental  disabilities

 


 

     SERV consumers flourish at Bloom House

Donated farmhouse is home to 5 women in new program

 By Ida Furente Doolan
 Director of Communications

   For 150 years, the large country  kitchen of this farmhouse in  Middlesex County has been an  inviting place for several generations  of the Bloom family to welcome  guests as they enter through the  rear door. 
   The warmth of this room is no  different today, as three of Bloom  House’s five residents greet a visitor  on a recent autumn morning.            A 150-year-old farmhouse in Middlesex
 Jen, Sue and Tresea graciously offer  County that is home to five SERV women
 their guest a cup of coffee and sit     recovering from severe and persistent
 down at the long table where they    mental illness. This high-independence
 have enjoyed many conversations     program is the first of its kind for SERV
 during the last two years.                Centers of New Jersey.
   These women and two others, Marion and Linda, are residents of  Bloom House, a two-year old permanent supportive housing program  operated by SERV Behavioral Health System, Inc.  This  high- independence program for individuals recovering from severe  and persistent mental illness is the first of its kind for SERV Centers  of New Jersey.
   In 2006, SERV acquired the lovely, old farmhouse through a  generous donation from John and Marjorie Bloom in appreciation for  the care given to their son, a consumer of SERV Centers Middlesex  County.  The Blooms have since moved to Monroe Township.
   According to SERV Centers Middlesex County Director Tammy  Wilson,  the development of this program in 2007 was unique in its  own right.  “Normally, we find out what programs are needed, what  the residents need, and (determine) how to fill the gap. In this case,  we had a building and had to figure out how best to (use the house)  and get funding for a new program.  We were constantly on the  lookout for proposals going out (from the state).”
   The issue in Middlesex, according to Ms. Wilson, was that SERV’s  Middlesex residents did not have access to traditional supportive  housing, which was earmarked for recovering individuals coming  directly out of psychiatric hospitals. “We had (consumers) ready to  move (to more independent living arrangements) but did not have  the opportunity unless they had enough money to finance an  apartment on their own.  Very few of our residents ever do.” And,  she added, some preferred the company of others in a home setting.John and Marjorie Bloom
   Requirements for state  vouchers,  which pay for part  of an individual’s rent  in  supportive housing, had  specified  that an individual  must live alone.  “That setup  insinuates that you would  want to live alone. There  was no other  option,” says  Ms. Wilson.
   SERV sought to find  another option.  Directors  and staff recalled when they, Marjorie and John Bloom, seen here during a SERV
 after college, had lived in      Thanks For Giving dinner, donated their family
 homes or  apartments with    farmhouse in Middlesex County to SERV in 2006
 other adult  housemates or   in appreciation for the care given to their son, a
 roommates and were able to consumer of SERV.
 share expenses and provide  support and companionship to one  another.  Therefore, they asked, if  people without a severe mental  illness  benefited from sharing housing with others, why were people  in recovery from a severe mental illness expected to live alone as a  sign of their success?
   SERV applied for and was able to obtain five program-based  vouchers from the Department of Human Services, Division of Mental  Health Services. SERV used its own resources to rehabilitate the  house.  The consumers are responsible for paying their portion of the  rent for their room and common areas.
 The next obstacle for SERV Middlesex was to find five residents who  not only might be compatible, but also tended to function better in  small group settings rather than living alone.  The process took a  little more than a year for just the right mix of residents, according  to Ms. Wilson. 
   Now, the Bloom House is shared by five women, all of whom are  graduates of SERV’s traditional supervised residential programs. Two  transferred from the group-home level and three transferred from the  apartment level. They are all in the 40s and 50s age range. 
 In implementing the new program, SERV staff adhered to the  Recovery philosophy to support the individuals in developing  personal independence, in finding their own support system outside  the mental health system, and learning how to build a community  within their peer group.
   “Our ladies are to be congratulated for their success at the Bloom  House,” says William O’Brien, Chief Operating Officer of SERV  Centers of New Jersey.  “It really is remarkable what can happen  when several resourceful individuals come together, offer support to  one another, and recognize that they can individually accomplish so  much by working together.”
    Unlike at some other permanent shared-housing programs  operated  at other SERV Centers locations where staff is on-site  24/7, the  Bloom House residents are highly independent and receive  staff support as needed. 
   When Bloom House first opened in May 2007, staff support was  provided 18 hours a day to aid the women in transitioning to their  new home.  As the women progressed and needed less support, staff  pulled back, all the while encouraging more independence as well as  greater interdependence among the women. Now, a staff member  visits the house three times a week, two staff members check in by  phone every day, and Bloom House coordinator Laura Stanley visits  in person one or two times a month.  SERV also provides additional  visits if needed.Jenandsueatthebloomhouse
   According to Ms. Stanley, the bond  that has developed among the women –  especially between Sue, Jen and Tresea  – has been especially heartwarming.   “The ladies look out for each other,  drive each other around or assist with  transportation,” she says.  “The women  have become a family,” adds Ms.  Wilson, noting that one is particularly  protective toward the others, and that  others will invite a housemate to their  families’ homes for the holidays.
   Together the women have worked out  an arrangement for cleaning the large,  two-story farmhouse. “They do a  remarkable job,” says Ms. Wilson.  
 Each of the women has decorated her    Jen, left and Sue are residents of
 own room according to taste.  Sue is     Bloom House.
 artistic and likes to display her drawings and arts and crafts items.   Tresea, who also likes to draw, has a tidy room with a beach theme.  Jen’s room, where the housemates like to congregate for a chat  session, is lined with books and stuffed animals and has a statue of  the Infant Jesus of Prague as a focal point.
   Sitting around the kitchen table on a recent fall afternoon, Sue, Jen  and Tresea (housemates Linda and Marion were not available) have  an easy rapport and are open with their visitor about their new home  and their goals.  
   “The three of us are like a family,” offers Sue, who says she keeps  very busy during the day cleaning the house and cooking for the  group.  A former painter, she now likes to work on her drawings and  arts and crafts, which she hopes to sell at Englishtown Flea Market.  To facilitate her entrepreneurial goal, she and Jen, who works on  Bargello needlepoint on plastic canvas, would like to turn one of the  spare upstairs rooms into an arts and crafts studio.   
   Jen is the self-described “mother hen” for any one of the  housemates who might need help with paperwork or other business.   The former elementary school teacher, who taught English as a  Second Language, would like to some day teach ESL to adults.  She  says she knows a little French, Spanish and American Sign  languages.  Knowing the importance of education, she encouraged  Tresea to go back to school to get a certificate as a Certified Nurse’s  Assistant.   
   Tresea, a two-time SERV Foundation scholarship recipient, is  working toward that goal and hopes to work at The Elms of Cranbury  nursing facility, where she currently is a certified home health aide.  With her ready sense of humor, she ticks off on her fingers her  top- four hobbies: “Number 1 hobby, get all the stuff together to go  the school; No. 2 hobby, drive Jen to the doctor; No. 3, take Sue to  the library; and No. 4, lay down and listen to the stereo and study.”
   All three dream of winning the Mega Million lottery and some day  owning a home the three can share with a Golden Retriever or Collie.  “And it better not have ONE flea,” Tresea warns with a laugh. 

 

 

 

 

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