Saturday, August 27, 2011

N.F.L. lockout could cost the former Lineman for dementia care facility

78-year-old man, Bruce Schwager, spends most waking hours staring at the NFL Network, quietly consoled himself by images of players run and block and tackle the way he did as a lineman for the United States Merchant Marine Academy so long ago. He noted not his wife, Bette, quietly packing his clothes and pictures to move boxes, and do not understand when she accuses the Union players that her husband still belongs.

Since July 2009, the charitable arm of the N.F.L. players Union voluntarily paid the Schwagers medical bills, which eventually topped $ 250,000. Schwager never played in a regular season game — he joined the Union by taking part in two training camps — and the Club players are treated him as one of its own.

But on March 14, the first day after the N.F.L. account lockout began and Union ready for what could be a long and costly work stoppage, a union official called Schwager's son, and said the aid would cease immediately.

With his family, who cannot pay for continued care at Silverado Schwager is scheduled to be removed on 2 July. Bette Schwager said she had yet to find a facility that would take care of her husband, who is still big, strong and combative when upset. Schwagers doctor said in an interview to force him to move from their usual surroundings, given his advanced heart disease, could bring in a fatal heart attack.

Schwager situation will as the Football League's players are faced with the prospect that the tumbling incomes during the negotiations on a new contract for work – in which it is trying to increased benefits for retired players — and at all football wrestles with how to compensate veterans whose neurological disease is attributed to more and more football.

Three players Association officials, including Executive Director DeMaurice Smith, did not respond to messages seeking comment about the Schwagers cases. In an April 4 letter to the Schwagers Attorney, Cy Smith, DeMaurice Smith wrote, "we have been, and remains deeply concerned at the financial and medical welfare Mr. Schwager and his family during this crisis," but he added that there was no "agreement to pay such expenses indefinitely into the future."

DeMaurice Smith does not refer to the account lockout policy in his letter. But Schwager's son, Joshua, said that the operation is terminated so soon after the work stoppage began "cannot be a coincidence."

Bette and Joshua Schwager admitted that the Union had no legal obligation to help his family two summers ago by player assistance Trust. Aid seemed to derive partly from the way the EU Director of retired players, Andre Collins, played cards with Joshua Schwager at Penn State in the twenties and knew the family.

Bette and Joshua Schwager argues, however, Collins has never mentioned any limit on players aid confidence would give support, and that they relied on his promises. E-mail she shared with The New York Times, Collins originally wrote that "N.F.L.P.A. PAT Fund is responsible for hospice" and eight months later, that the Union "is still fully committed" Schwagers care.

"We build everything in our lives to what they said – that they would take care of him," Bette Schwager said while packing her husband's belongings. "I sold my home and signed the lease agreement rent right around the corner from here so I could be close to him. Now my whole world falls apart. "

Schwager was born and raised in Brooklyn near the two soon become prominent football families, Lombardis and Paternos, as Jewish as they were Italian. (This day good friends call Schwager "Ben", short for his Hebrew name, Binyomin.) He was 6 feet 3 inches and 260 pounds and turned down scholarships at several prominent college programs to enroll in the program, engineering from the United States Merchant Marine Academy in Kings Point, N.Y., mainly for the discipline of a military environment.

Chicago Cardinals selected him late in the 1955 draft cut him in his first camp, then refused to trade him outside their reserve list, despite its request for an opportunity with another team. Cardinals kept him under contracts throughout his service in the Navy from 1956 through 1958 and refused to release him until April 1959, when the team felt he was no longer in the game.

Schwager played one year in Canada and attended the camp with the New York Titans (now the Jets) in 1960, but he was wounded and cut before the season began. He went on to work for Grumman, a prominent supplier of aircraft to the military, then moved to Houston to work with NASA, whom he helped in the design for this module, the lunar landing which relieved Neil Armstrong and others to the moon. He later went to the restaurant business and his mid-60s, he began showing signs of early-onset dementia, he was institutionalized two years ago.

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