The facility had covered the state agency contact information on its bulletin board, making it impossible for any of the 74 residents to file complaints with Oklahoma health officials.

The violation came to light during a September 26 federal inspection triggered by complaints about the facility. Resident council members told inspectors they had tried to contact the state agency about a month earlier but were unable to locate the required complaint information.
"They wanted to contact the State agency a month ago, but could not," the inspection report states, documenting what resident council members told federal surveyors at 2:38 p.m. that day.
The residents specifically pointed to the information board near the facility entrance, explaining that the contact information for filing complaints with the state agency was covered and not visible to them.
Less than two hours later, at 4:06 p.m., the facility administrator acknowledged to inspectors that the complaint contact information was supposed to be posted at the information board by the entrance. But when inspectors and the administrator examined the board together at 4:08 p.m., the administrator admitted the contact information was not visible to residents.
Federal regulations require nursing homes to provide residents with clear access to complaint procedures in a format and language they can understand. The violation affected many residents, according to the inspection findings, though the specific number who attempted to file complaints during that month remains unclear.
The blocked information represents more than a paperwork problem. When nursing home residents lose access to outside oversight channels, they lose one of their few protections against substandard care. State health departments investigate complaints about everything from medication errors to neglect, often serving as the only external check on facility operations between routine inspections.
24th Place, located at 600 24th Avenue Southwest in Norman, serves 74 residents according to the administrator's count provided to inspectors. The facility's decision to cover the state complaint contact information effectively silenced an entire population of vulnerable residents during a critical period when they were seeking outside help.
The timing suggests residents were experiencing problems serious enough to warrant contacting state regulators, but the covered information board prevented them from taking that step. By the time federal inspectors arrived on September 26, residents had been blocked from filing state complaints for approximately 30 days.
The administrator's acknowledgment that the information was not visible demonstrates the facility knew residents couldn't access the required complaint procedures. Federal law mandates that nursing homes post this information prominently and keep it accessible to residents at all times.
Inspectors classified the violation as causing minimal harm or potential for actual harm, but the impact on residents' rights was significant. The resident council's specific mention of wanting to contact the state "a month ago" indicates this wasn't an oversight but a sustained period during which residents were denied access to external oversight.
The information board near the facility entrance serves as the primary location where residents and their families look for important notices and contact information. By covering the state complaint details, 24th Place essentially eliminated residents' ability to report problems to the agency responsible for investigating nursing home violations.
Federal inspectors documented the violation on October 2, 2025, following the complaint-driven inspection. The facility must now submit a plan of correction explaining how it will ensure residents have continuous access to state complaint contact information.
The violation reveals a fundamental breakdown in residents' rights protections. When nursing homes block access to complaint procedures, they create an environment where problems can escalate without external scrutiny. Residents who cannot contact state regulators have limited recourse when they experience inadequate care or unsafe conditions.
The resident council members who spoke with inspectors demonstrated remarkable persistence in seeking outside help despite the facility's obstruction. Their testimony provided the evidence federal inspectors needed to document the violation and require corrective action.
The covered complaint information at 24th Place left 74 residents without access to one of their most important protections against neglect or abuse. For an entire month, they were effectively silenced by their own facility's actions, unable to reach the state officials whose job it is to investigate their concerns and ensure their safety.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for 24th Place from 2025-10-02 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.