As of two weeks ago, the home had $65,000 in reserves and a cash "burn rate" of $50,000 a month. It owes $11 million to creditors, including a bank, a construction company and firms that leased televisions, washing machines, DVD players, Nintendo Wii game systems and a karaoke machine, all part of the care package that families pay $7,500 a month to support.
"Hopefully, someone else will come in and take the home over, and take it to the next level," new B'nai Brith CEO Michael Mostyn said in an interview.