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| | Chicago Reporter, February 2000: Time Runs Out for Mental Health Clinic in Englewood (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12) |
 | | In a May 1, 1998, letter to ECHO, Formigoni warned that the state would be forced "to intervene and ensure reliable, safe and effective service delivery for the seriously mentally ill clients in Englewood." ECHO would no longer receive funding "without evidence of clear, emphatic and demonstrable change," Formigoni wrote. |
 | | Formigoni noted that ECHO had made some progress, but he raised questions about the organizations crisis services, which were provided through emergency psychiatric care at St. Bernards Hospital, 326 W. 64th St., and at a neighborhood residential center. |
 | | ECHOs attorney, Clarence S. Wilson Jr., sent Bell and Dew letters advising them to "cease and desist" transition activities, which, he said, violated the due process rights of ECHO and the confidentiality of its patients. |
| www.chicagoreporter.com /2000/02-2000/022000ECHO.htm (2393 words) |
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